Abigail Adams' 'Remember the Ladies' Letter Misunderstood for 250 Years

What Happened On March 31, 1776, as the Continental Congress debated independence, Abigail Adams penned what would become her most quoted correspondence. Writing to her husband John Adams, she urged him to “remember the ladies” as he helped draft America’s new laws. But according to new historical analysis marking the letter’s 250th anniversary, this iconic phrase has been fundamentally misunderstood by generations of Americans. The letter, written during the height of revolutionary fervor, wasn’t an anachronistic demand for women’s voting rights.

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The 'Kennedy Curse': Separating Tragedy from Myth in America's Most Famous Family

What Happened: The Kennedy Family’s Historical Tragedies The so-called “Kennedy Curse” encompasses a documented series of premature deaths and tragedies that have struck America’s most prominent political family since the 1940s. The pattern includes deaths from warfare, aviation accidents, assassinations, skiing incidents, and medical complications spanning three generations. The tragic timeline includes some of America’s most shocking political murders: President John F. Kennedy’s assassination in Dallas in 1963, followed by his brother Robert F.

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