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MEME PACMAN FACTS and Side to side ((the hudred year war only lasted…
MEME PACMAN FACTS and Side to side
hitler stopped the german economic depression by stoping paying WW1 reperations and expanding the millitary
hitler fought in WW1
Joseph stalin fought in ww1
the war of 1812 happenned in 1812
the british and french almost got involved in the american civil war
the hudred year war only lasted about 60 years
in 1726 Mary Toft convinced doctors that she gave birth to rabbits
the first copy of the communist manifesto was published in 1838
George washington had no pollitical education and was elected based on his millitary expirence
Hitler shaved his mustache that iconic size so that he could have a mustache and wear a gas mask at the same time
Roman Catholics in Bavaria founded a secret society in 1740 called the Order of the Pug. New members had to wear dog collars and scratch at the door to get in.
the BTK killer's name was derived from how he killed his victimes, Bind Torture Kill
r.
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The Civil War began on the farm of Wilmer McLean, who then moved more than a hundred miles away to escape the fighting, only to have the war end inside his new house at Appomattox.
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One of history's longest wars likely lasted for 335 years and was between the Netherlands and the Isles of Sicily. Not a single person was killed.
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Romans used urine as mouthwash. Urine contains ammonia, which is one of the best natural cleaning agents on the planet.
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The current 50 star U.S. flag was designed by 17-year-old Robert Heft for a school project. He received a B-.
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A passenger who lived through the traumatic fire and sinking of a ship in 1871 faced his fears and boarded the Titanic in 1912. He sank with the ship.
51 of 56
In 1838, Edgar Allan Poe wrote The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, a book about four crewmen on a whaling ship who ended up stranded and having to draw lots to see who would be eaten. The lot landed on a cabin boy named Richard Parker. Forty-six years later, a yacht named Mignonette bound for Sydney, Australia capsized en route from London. The three crewmen then killed and ate their cabin boy named Richard Parker.
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A would-be assassin threw a grenade at George W. Bush in 2005, but it didn't explode.
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People were buried alive so often in the 19th century that a safety coffin was invented so the "dead" would have the ability to alert those above ground if they were still alive.
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Civil War soldiers on both sides were offered bounties upon enlistment, causing some men to enlist and escape again and again in order to collect multiple bounties. One man collected 32 before he was finally caught.
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Lord Byron kept a pet bear in his dorm room while studying at Cambridge University.
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Serial killer Ted Bundy once saved a young child from drowning and also received a commendation from the Seattle Police Department for chasing down a purse snatcher.
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Instead of saying 'cheese,' Victorians said 'prunes' when their picture was about to be taken.
46 of 56
The Civil War began on the farm of Wilmer McLean, who then moved more than a hundred miles away to escape the fighting, only to have the war end inside his new house at Appomattox.
47 of 56
One of history's longest wars likely lasted for 335 years and was between the Netherlands and the Isles of Sicily. Not a single person was killed.
48 of 56
Romans used urine as mouthwash. Urine contains ammonia, which is one of the best natural cleaning agents on the planet.
49 of 56
The current 50 star U.S. flag was designed by 17-year-old Robert Heft for a school project. He received a B-.
50 of 56
A passenger who lived through the traumatic fire and sinking of a ship in 1871 faced his fears and boarded the Titanic in 1912. He sank with the ship.
51 of 56
In 1838, Edgar Allan Poe wrote The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, a book about four crewmen on a whaling ship who ended up stranded and having to draw lots to see who would be eaten. The lot landed on a cabin boy named Richard Parker. Forty-six years later, a yacht named Mignonette bound for Sydney, Australia capsized en route from London. The three crewmen then killed and ate their cabin boy named Richard Parker.
52 of 56
A would-be assassin threw a grenade at George W. Bush in 2005, but it didn't explode.
53 of 56
People were buried alive so often in the 19th century that a safety coffin was invented so the "dead" would have the ability to alert those above ground if they were still alive.
54 of 56
Civil War soldiers on both sides were offered bounties upon enlistment, causing some men to enlist and escape again and again in order to collect multiple bounties. One man collected 32 before he was finally caught.
55 of 56
Lord Byron kept a pet bear in his dorm room while studying at Cambridge University.
56 of 56
Serial killer Ted Bundy once saved a young child from drowning and also received a commendation from the Seattle Police Department for chasing down a purse snatcher.
45 of 56
Instead of saying 'cheese,' Victorians said 'prunes' when their picture was about to be taken.
46 of 56
The Civil War began on the farm of Wilmer McLean, who then moved more than a hundred miles away to escape the fighting, only to have the war end inside his new house at Appomattox.
47 of 56
One of history's longest wars likely lasted for 335 years and was between the Netherlands and the Isles of Sicily. Not a single person was killed.
48 of 56
Romans used urine as mouthwash. Urine contains ammonia, which is one of the best natural cleaning agents on the planet.
49 of 56
The current 50 star U.S. flag was designed by 17-year-old Robert Heft for a school project. He received a B-.
50 of 56
A passenger who lived through the traumatic fire and sinking of a ship in 1871 faced his fears and boarded the Titanic in 1912. He sank with the ship.
51 of 56
In 1838, Edgar Allan Poe wrote The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, a book about four crewmen on a whaling ship who ended up stranded and having to draw lots to see who would be eaten. The lot landed on a cabin boy named Richard Parker. Forty-six years later, a yacht named Mignonette bound for Sydney, Australia capsized en route from London. The three crewmen then killed and ate their cabin boy named Richard Parker.
52 of 56
A would-be assassin threw a grenade at George W. Bush in 2005, but it didn't explode.
53 of 56
People were buried alive so often in the 19th century that a safety coffin was invented so the "dead" would have the ability to alert those above ground if they were still alive.
54 of 56
Civil War soldiers on both sides were offered bounties upon enlistment, causing some men to enlist and escape again and again in order to collect multiple bounties. One man collected 32 before he was finally caught.
55 of 56
Lord Byron kept a pet bear in his dorm room while studying at Cambridge University.
56 of 56
Serial killer Ted Bundy once saved a young child from drowning and also received a commendation from the Seattle Police Department for chasing down a purse snatcher.
45 of 56
Instead of saying 'cheese,' Victorians said 'prunes' when their picture was about to be taken.
46 of 56
The Civil War began on the farm of Wilmer McLean, who then moved more than a hundred miles away to escape the fighting, only to have the war end inside his new house at Appomattox.
47 of 56
One of history's longest wars likely lasted for 335 years and was between the Netherlands and the Isles of Sicily. Not a single person was killed.
48 of 56
Romans used urine as mouthwash. Urine contains ammonia, which is one of the best natural cleaning agents on the planet.
49 of 56
The current 50 star U.S. flag was designed by 17-year-old Robert Heft for a school project. He received a B-.
50 of 56
A passenger who lived through the traumatic fire and sinking of a ship in 1871 faced his fears and boarded the Titanic in 1912. He sank with the ship.
51 of 56
In 1838, Edgar Allan Poe wrote The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, a book about four crewmen on a whaling ship who ended up stranded and having to draw lots to see who would be eaten. The lot landed on a cabin boy named Richard Parker. Forty-six years later, a yacht named Mignonette bound for Sydney, Australia capsized en route from London. The three crewmen then killed and ate their cabin boy named Richard Parker.
52 of 56
A would-be assassin threw a grenade at George W. Bush in 2005, but it didn't explode.
53 of 56
People were buried alive so often in the 19th century that a safety coffin was invented so the "dead" would have the ability to alert those above ground if they were still alive.
54 of 56
Civil War soldiers on both sides were offered bounties upon enlistment, causing some men to enlist and escape again and again in order to collect multiple bounties. One man collected 32 before he was finally caught.
55 of 56
Lord Byron kept a pet bear in his dorm room while studying at Cambridge University.
56 of 56
Serial killer Ted Bundy once saved a young child from drowning and also received a commendation from the Seattle Police Department for chasing down a purse snatcher.
45 of 56
Instead of saying 'cheese,' Victorians said 'prunes' when their picture was about to be taken.
46 of 56
The Civil War began on the farm of Wilmer McLean, who then moved more than a hundred miles away to escape the fighting, only to have the war end inside his new house at Appomattox.
47 of 56
One of history's longest wars likely lasted for 335 years and was between the Netherlands and the Isles of Sicily. Not a single person was killed.
48 of 56
Romans used urine as mouthwash. Urine contains ammonia, which is one of the best natural cleaning agents on the planet.
49 of 56
The current 50 star U.S. flag was designed by 17-year-old Robert Heft for a school project. He received a B-.
50 of 56
A passenger who lived through the traumatic fire and sinking of a ship in 1871 faced his fears and boarded the Titanic in 1912. He sank with the ship.
51 of 56
In 1838, Edgar Allan Poe wrote The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, a book about four crewmen on a whaling ship who ended up stranded and having to draw lots to see who would be eaten. The lot landed on a cabin boy named Richard Parker. Forty-six years later, a yacht named Mignonette bound for Sydney, Australia capsized en route from London. The three crewmen then killed and ate their cabin boy named Richard Parker.
52 of 56
A would-be assassin threw a grenade at George W. Bush in 2005, but it didn't explode.
53 of 56
People were buried alive so often in the 19th century that a safety coffin was invented so the "dead" would have the ability to alert those above ground if they were still alive.
54 of 56
Civil War soldiers on both sides were offered bounties upon enlistment, causing some men to enlist and escape again and again in order to collect multiple bounties. One man collected 32 before he was finally caught.
55 of 56
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