Spy’s guilt still in doubt a century on
A century ago exotic dancer and double agent Mata Hari was executed for espionage but she may have been innocent.
A century ago exotic dancer and double agent Mata Hari was executed for espionage but she may have been innocent.
ROCKER Little Richard threw his gold rings, worth thousands of dollars, into an Australian river in a strange moment in rock ’n’ roll history.
MOST Sydneysiders know where Camperdown is, but how many know it is actually named after the Dutch town of Camperduin and a battle that took place 220 years ago today?
WHEN a music critic said on show that jazz great Thelonious Monk’s style involved playing “the wrong notes”, Monk got wind of it. He called up the radio station and said “The piano ain’t got no wrong notes.”
NORTH Vietnamese Communist forces had encircled Saigon as Vietnamese war orphans airlifted to Australia 40 years ago were escorted from Sydney to new homes across Australia.
Many believed that Gallipoli would be the making of Australia. While it was a military disaster some men emerged from the smoke of battle to become successful in the halls of power
If you think this week’s weather is foul spare a thought for those living in Sydney and beyond back in July, 1912, when the full fury of a winter storm hit the city.
A century ago today, Australian and New Zealand troops were enjoying the balmy beauty of Lemnos, just 50km from the Turkish coast and gateway to the Dardanelles. Most had never heard the term Anzac.
From wax headwear to shoes with 50cm-long toes, we’ve always had some strange ways of keeping up with fashion.
There was bad blood between Lawrence of Arabia and Australian commander Harry Chauvel, who was born 150 years ago today.
When childbirth became an increasingly medicalised event in the 20th century, one woman came along to take control away from the doctors and give it back to the parents.
The first woman to throw her hat into the ring for the position of US president did so before women could even vote.
On this day in 1975, 27 bus passengers were gunned down, sparking the start of a civil war that would wrack Lebanon for 15 years.
Amid grand plans in the 1880s boom years, two ambitious New Zealand engineers proposed building a 2km tunnel under Sydney Harbour. Their vision was a century in the making.
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/today-in-history/page/109