In 1896, Norwegian immigrant Helga Estby faced the foreclosure of her family's Washington farm. To pay the debt she accepted a wager to walk across the United States within seven… Read the rest of the article: In 1896, Helga Estby set out to win $10,000 by walking across the United States
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Futility Closet In the 1930s the world's best-known conservationist was an ex-trapper named Grey Owl who wrote and lectured ardently for the preservation of the Canadian wilderness. At his death, though, it… Read the rest of the article: Grey Owl, the world's best-known conservationist in the 1930s, turned out not to be who he'd claimed
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Futility Closet 1930 saw the quiet conclusion of a remarkable era. The tiny population of St. Kilda, an isolated Scottish archipelago, decided to end their thousand-year tenure as the most remote community… Read the rest of the article: Britain's most remote community gave up their unique way of life in 1930
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Futility Closet At the turn of the 20th century, a rogue tiger terrorized the villages of Nepal and northern India. By the time British hunter Jim Corbett was called in, it had… Read the rest of the article: In 1907, hunter Jim Corbett stalked a Nepalese tiger that had killed 434 people
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Futility Closet Here are six new lateral thinking puzzles to test your wits and stump your friends — play along with us as we try to untangle some perplexing situations using yes-or-no… Read the rest of the article: Six lateral thinking puzzles
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Futility Closet In the winter of 1931, a dramatic manhunt unfolded in northern Canada when a reclusive trapper shot a constable and fled across the frigid landscape. In the chase that followed… Read the rest of the article: In the winter of 1931, a mysterious fugitive led police on a 300-kilometer chase through northern Canada
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Futility Closet As the Civil War fractured Washington D.C., socialite Rose O'Neal Greenhow coordinated a vital spy ring to funnel information to her beloved Confederates. In this week's episode of the Futility… Read the rest of the article: Socialite Rose O'Neal Greenhow was a surprising spy for the Confederacy
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Futility Closet In 1961, Goya's famous portrait of the Duke of Wellington went missing from London's National Gallery. The case went unsolved for four years before someone unexpectedly came forward to confess… Read the rest of the article: In 1965, a retired truck driver was convicted of one of the greatest art heists in British history
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Futility Closet In the 1940s, Frances Glessner Lee brought new rigor to crime scene analysis with a curiously quaint tool: She designed 20 miniature scenes of puzzling deaths and challenged her students… Read the rest of the article: Frances Glessner Lee created miniature death scenes to train investigators in the 1940s
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Futility Closet In 1909, 22-year-old Alice Huyler Ramsey set out to become the first woman to drive across the United States. In an era of imperfect cars and atrocious roads, she would… Read the rest of the article: In 1909, Alice Ramsey set out to cross the United States by car
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Futility Closet In 1822, Irish thief Alexander Pearce joined seven convicts fleeing a penal colony in western Tasmania. As they struggled eastward through some of the most inhospitable terrain on Earth, starvation… Read the rest of the article: In 1822, a desperate band of convicts fleeing a Tasmanian penal colony ended up resorting to cannibalism
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Futility Closet In 1902, scam artist Cassie Chadwick convinced an Ohio lawyer that she was the illegitimate daughter of steel magnate Andrew Carnegie. She parlayed this reputation into a life of unthinkable… Read the rest of the article: In 1902, scam artist Cassie Chadwick claimed to be the illegitimate daughter of Andrew Carnegie
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Futility Closet In 1978, two luminaries of South Korean cinema were abducted by Kim Jong-Il and forced to make films in North Korea in an outlandish plan to improve his country's fortunes.… Read the rest of the article: In 1978, Kim Jong-Il abducted two South Korean cinema stars to make films in North Korea
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Futility Closet One night in 1631, pirates from the Barbary coast stole ashore at the little Irish village of Baltimore and abducted 107 people to a life of slavery in Algiers —… Read the rest of the article: In 1631, Barbary pirates abducted 107 people from an Irish village and forced them into a life of slavery
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Futility Closet Ferdinand Demara earned his reputation as the Great Impostor: For over 22 years he criss-crossed the country, posing as everything from an auditor to a zoologist and stealing a succession… Read the rest of the article: The amazing career of Ferdinand Demara, "The Great Impostor"
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Futility Closet In 1929, detective novelist Arthur Upfield wanted to devise the perfect murder, so he started a discussion among his friends in Western Australia. He was pleased with their solution —… Read the rest of the article: Detective novelist Arthur Upfield invented the perfect murder, then watched a killer adopt it
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Futility Closet Here are seven new lateral thinking puzzles to test your wits and stump your friends — play along with us as we try to untangle some perplexing situations using yes-or-no… Read the rest of the article: Seven lateral thinking puzzles
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Futility Closet In the 19th century, an enormous hedge ran for more than a thousand miles across India, installed by the British to enforce a tax on salt. Though it took a… Read the rest of the article: In the 1800s, Britain grew a thousand-mile hedge across India
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Futility Closet In 1868, Scottish sailor Jack Renton found himself the captive of a native people in the Solomon Islands, but through luck and skill he rose to become a respected warrior… Read the rest of the article: In 1868 a Scottish castaway had to make a new life among the people of the Solomon Islands
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Futility Closet In 1968, Richard Proenneke left his career as a heavy equipment operator and took up an entirely new existence. He flew to a remote Alaskan lake, built a log cabin… Read the rest of the article: Richard Proenneke lived alone for 30 years in the Alaskan wilderness in a cabin he built himself