The Eradication of Smallpox
On May 8, 1980, officials from the World Health Organization announced that smallpox, the disease which had ravaged humanity across the world for millennia, had been eradicated. Over the last century before the eradication of smallpox, it is estimated to have killed half a billion people. Learn more about humanity’s deadliest disease and how it was eradicated on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Why are French Fries called French Fries?

Why are French Fries called French Fries?

Everyone loves french fries. It is one of the few things which most people can agree on in the world today. The average American consumes over 16 pounds of them every year, and they have become a stap...

26 Aug 20209min

The Last US Civil War Pension

The Last US Civil War Pension

On May 31, 2020, Irene Triplett passed away at the age of 90. Her life was rather unremarkable save for one important fact: she was the last person who received a pension from the United States govern...

25 Aug 20207min

Happy Birthday To You: The Most Famous Song in the World

Happy Birthday To You: The Most Famous Song in the World

If there is one song almost everyone knows it is Happy Birthday to You (yes, that is the actual title of the song, even though everyone just calls it Happy Birthday). Not only has the song been sung a...

24 Aug 202010min

The US/Canadian Border

The US/Canadian Border

The border between the United States and Canada is the longest border between any two countries in the world. The total length of the land border is 8,891 kilometers or 5,525 miles long. In addition t...

23 Aug 202012min

The English Longbow: The Weapon That Changed Medieval Warfare

The English Longbow: The Weapon That Changed Medieval Warfare

The longbow was one of the most devastating weapons in medieval Europe. It was a weapon that could launch projectiles hundreds of yards and pierce the heaviest of armor. It was the battlefield trump c...

22 Aug 202010min

Norman Borlaug: The Man Who Fed the World

Norman Borlaug: The Man Who Fed the World

Which person can be credited with having saved the most human lives in history? There might not be a direct answer to that question, but one person whose name always comes up is that of Normal Borlaug...

21 Aug 20208min

Why Doesn't the US Use the Metric System?

Why Doesn't the US Use the Metric System?

Of the 193 countries in the United Nations, exactly three haven’t adopted the widespread use of the metric system: Myanmar, Liberia, and the United States of America. Of those three, the US is the cou...

20 Aug 202012min

The Cursus Honorum: The Political Career Path of Ancient Rome

The Cursus Honorum: The Political Career Path of Ancient Rome

In the Roman Republic, men of senatorial rank could compete for political offices which were placed in a set order and had to be earned sequentially. This hierarchy was known as the Cursus Honorum. Th...

19 Aug 202012min

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