It’s hard to believe, but Lyndon B. Johnson made quite a statement after a reporter annoyed him by repeatedly asking why American troops were still overseas in Vietnam.
Perhaps Johnson momentarily forgot how to use his words, instead of whipping out his “johnson” and exclaiming “THIS IS WHY!”
Two Famous Presidents Died on Independence Day
Both John Adams and Thomas Jefferson signed the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776. Little did they know, the independence of the United States wasn’t the only historical event that would occur on July 4th.
Oddly enough, 50 years later both Adams and Jefferson would die on July 4th, 1826. Could it be a coincidence? Or was it fate?
President Warren G. Harding Had a Special Knack for the Written Word
Just because they had to use slow-moving snail mail didn’t mean its content couldn’t be racy.
Back in the day, President Harding used to write extra steamy letters to Carrie Phillips, his mistress at the time.
A Circus Train Made History but for Reasons You Might Not Think
In 1918, after falling asleep at the wheel, a train engineer accidentally crashed into the back of another train. This secondary train happened to be a circus train, transporting circus performers.
86 people died in the crash, some of which included a trapeze artist and two brothers who put on a strongman act. Perhaps running away with the circus isn’t such a good idea after all.
The Sinking of the Titanic May Have Been Predicted in a Book
Fourteen years before the Titanic would sink, a man named Morgan Robertson wrote a novel about a British ship named the Titan. Just like the Titanic, the Titan was called “unsinkable” but proceeded to hit an iceberg and sink. The book even included details about there not being enough lifeboats to hold the passengers onboard the Titan.
Perhaps Robertson was clairvoyant because fourteen years after the book was published in 1898, the Titanic emerged and sank in a way that exactly mirrored the sinking of the Titan.