/r/askhistorians
The US presidential election of 1876 had the greatest voter turnout in American history, with 81.8% of the voting age population voting. What were the factors that caused such a major turnout?
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TIL that between 1857 and 1858 there was a war in Utah between the US Government and Mormon rebels that involved armed skirmishes and several massacres. What happened and why have I never heard of this before?
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I think there is a slave grave on my property (GA). How can I confirm this and where should I go to find a local expert?
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In Philip K. Dick's alternate history novel "The Man in the High Castle", the victorious Nazis are depicted as having completely wiped out the native population of Africa. Was a genocide like the Generalplan Ost in the Nazis' longterm plans for Africa?
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In a recent interview with Joe Rogan, Jordan Peterson claimed: "Now, in many ways, the first book was the Bible. I mean, literally." To what extent (if at all) is this true?
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How did "white people" become one race in the United States when there used to be so many nationality distinctions?
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At the time of US independence, the 13 colonies had 2+ million inhabitants, whereas the mother country, Britain, had only 8+ million. How is it possible a colony could grow organically to 25% of home population in such a short time? No other colonial power faced the same power disparity.
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