Christmas in Early America

Christmas in Early America

By Donald N. Moran. The Celebration of Christmas on America has been through a lot of changes down through the decades and centuries. In fact, there was a time in New England when it was illegal to celebrate what is now perhaps our favorite holiday. But at least as early as 1608, Americans, white- and…

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Benito Mussolini’s Surprising Pen Pal

Benito Mussolini’s Surprising Pen Pal

By Marc Roland. Here is a shocker: Winston Churchill carried on personal correspondence with his “deadly enemy,” Benito Mussolini, not only before but during World War II. More extraordinary still, just wait till you learn the contents of those remarkable letters. [Read the entire article as PDF…] Taken from The Barnes Review, September/October 2010: Lady…

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How the South Might Have Won ‘Lincoln’s War’

How the South Might Have Won ‘Lincoln’s War’

Pat Shannan. If the south had won its war for independence, as the United States did some 80 years earlier, the world might today be a much better place for all of us—Northerners and Southerners, white and black alike, believe it or not. The author shows how it could rather easily have happened, had the…

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Revenge of the Neanderthal

Revenge of the Neanderthal

By Willis Carto. According to a novel theory put forth by several diverse writers and researchers, Neanderthal man may not have died out after all, but his descendants (intermixed with others) may still be living among us today and are known collectively as “the Jews.” Not only the author but others have independently theorized that…

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Antony & Cleopatra: A Populist Point Of View

Antony & Cleopatra: A Populist Point Of View

By Thomas E. Watson. Egypt has ever been a land of unsolved mystery, of tragedy and dramatic episodes. Her myths are so mingled with her history and prehistory that her authentic origins are even more uncertain than once were the sources of the Nile. The Western world has always been fascinated by Cleopatra, the last…

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Euro-American Heritage Project: The Swiss

Euro-American Heritage Project: The Swiss

By Arthur Kemp & John Tiffany. If you are Swiss, you have something to celebrate. Switzerland and America have some shared history, interests in common and, more importantly, a shared future. For such a small country, Switzerland has much to be proud of. In many ways Switzerland and America are similar—America is (at least theoretically)…

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Arminius: The Liberator of Europe

By Merlin Miller. Two thousand years ago a hero lived, a charismatic man who changed the course of global history. Yet his name, Arminius, or Hermann, or Armin, is seldom heard. The Germanics probably called him Armin, but his name became Hermann in the centuries to follow (generally attributed to Martin Luther). The Romans knew…

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Red Man vs. White Man: The Seventh Great Race War

Red Man vs. White Man: The Seventh Great Race War

By Arthur Kemp. There have been eight major racial wars involving the white race. The first six were: with Attila and his Huns, A.D. 372-454; the crusades, the Moorish invasion of Spain; the trouble with the Bulgars, Avars, Magyars and Khazars; then Genghis Khan and his Mongols; then the Ottoman genocide. The era of the…

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