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🤯 INCRÍVEL: 29 Facts You “Weren’t Taught In School” To Help You Get A Complete Picture Of The Past 😲

If you start to delve into events, one can often find that certain things end up being covered or “simplified” to perhaps not make some folks uncomfortable. But history is history, it can be fascinating, cruel, dull and often a lot stranger than fiction.

Someone asked “What’s one historical fact that they won’t teach you in school?” and people shared their examples, ranging from “I didn’t pay attention” to some things that are truly obscure. So get comfortable as you read through, upvote your favorites and be sure to share your own thoughts in the comments below.

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Historic stone building with visitors entering, illustrating facts you weren’t taught in school about the past. The guys defending the Alamo were the bad guys.

Texas was Mexico at the time. To attract settlers to the land, Mexico allowed American farmers to move there and bring their enslaved workers with them. Slavery was not something Mexico was crazy about and soon banned slavery in the entire country except for Texas. A few years later, they tried to ban it in Texas. That’s when the Texas Revolution started. The Texans were fighting to keep slavery, not for freedom from an oppressive government.

Not everyone at the Alamo died. The enslaved workers were spared and are largely the reason we know what happened. If you visit the Alamo today (or at least when I did in 2022) most of the information is left out of the booklet and signage. It does mention the enslaved workers by name, but that’s about it. Fighting to preserve slavery isn’t the narrative they want to display today. I remember learning about the Alamo in school and slavery wasn’t mentioned. And then how absent it was from the actual site.

nowhereman136 , Ken Lund / flickr Report

Person wearing a traditional feathered headdress sitting by a pond, illustrating facts you weren't taught in school about history. Treaties between Indigenous Tribes and America are still broken to this day! (My tribe was directly attacked in 2020) We still fight for the Earth and our place in this terribly poisoned and loveless society.

TonightIConfess , EyeEm / freepik Report

Aerial view of a coastal mountain range with clear ocean waters, illustrating facts you weren’t taught in school history. How Hawaii came to be a part of the US. Basically, a bunch of white guys living on the islands didn’t like to be ruled by a monarchy of natives, so they grabbed some guns and started a revolt. When it was clear they weren’t going to win, they called US for help, and the US Government sent in the marines to occupy the islands and eventually annex them. It’s only recently that the government has finally admitted it was in the wrong to do so.

ChronoLegion2 , EyeEm / freepik Report

Native American man wearing a wide-brimmed hat and fur draped over shoulder, symbolizing untaught facts to complete history. Texas and MacMillan Books removed important Native American history like ‘Trail of Tears’ from their textbooks .

vigilantesd , freepik Report

Black and white photo of a girl in vintage dress sitting with a dog, illustrating facts about history not taught in school. That Helen Keller (that we all learned about in school) led a Children’s March to Washington DC to push for a REDUCTION in the hours children were made to work, all so they could attend school. source: People’s History of the United States.

catharsisdusk , City of Boston / flickr Report

Historical figure with pipe writing at desk surrounded by papers, illustrating facts about history not taught in school. That Stalin was a real piece of work. 9 million + people died as a direct result of Stalin’s policies. He doesn’t get the same demonization as a certain Austrian that tried to take over Europe because the Soviets were on the winning side of WWII.

Aggravating_Kale8248 , Wikimedia Commons Report

American bison grazing in a field, illustrating 30 facts about history you weren’t taught in school. All throughout school they told us the buffalo died from natural causes. I only just learned a couple months ago that they died out because the American settlers k**led them out for sport to cut off the native Americans food supply.

qleptt , Thomas Shahan / flickr Report

Illustration of historic figures in traditional attire depicting facts about the past not taught in school. The Ottoman Empire systematically k**led over 1mil Armenians during WW1 via camps and it remains largely unacknowledged by Americans because the US wants to keep positive relations with Turkey who oscillate between denying it ever happened and saying they were justified because they were fomenting armed rebellion.

Never seen it in any American textbook or course. I, like many others in the US, have only learned about it because of the advocacy of the band System of a Down.

User , travelogues.gr Report

Three women with words like equality and freedom written on their arms, symbolizing history and social justice facts. Every major change in the last 150 years that benefited the average American had to be bought with blood and violence – from the American labor movement, to Women’s Suffrage, to Civil Rights.

They don’t teach it in schools because if you knew what it took to fix the problems in society you might actually start planning a way to make it happen.

capnhist , freepik Report

Hands warming by candle flames during an outdoor gathering illustrating facts you weren’t taught in school history. The pilgrims weren’t seeking religious freedom. They practiced religious repression and executed people for the crime of being Quakers.

CalagaxT , freepik Report

Medieval scholars studying historical instruments and manuscripts, illustrating facts about history not taught in school. I didn’t know much about the Byzantine Empire and the Islamic Golden Age until I was in college. I really feel like a lot of history classes seem to gloss over the so-called Dark Ages.

WhaleSharkLove , Nikos Niotis / flickr Report

Portrait of a historical figure representing lesser-known facts from the past to complete your picture of history. The circumstances surrounding the death of Meriwether Lewis (of Lewis and Clark) are shrouded in conspiracy. In the months leading up to his death many people reported that Lewis had become paranoid, claiming that he was being followed and that his life was in danger. In a desperate attempt for help, he sent a letter to his close friend, and then president Thomas Jefferson to request an audience. While traveling along the Natchez Trace, he stayed a night at an inn. During the night, the owner reported hearing multiple gunshots but never went out to check on the source. In the morning, Lewis was found dead in his cabin, sitting against the wall looking at the door, rifle in hand and shot in the back. In addition, while the room was ransacked, the only missing objects of note were Lewis’ riding back and personal documents.

After an official investigation, his death was ruled a s***ide and all further inquiry into the instance have been barred by the Us government. While Lewis himself did not have any immediate descendants, his extended family have submitted requests every year to have his body exhumed in order to confirm the cause of death. To this day their requests have unanimously been denied.

mossedman , Charles Willson Peale Report

Seal of the Central Intelligence Agency on floor representing facts about history you weren’t taught in school to understand the past. The CIA deposed or destabilized many democratically elected leaders to install leaders who were more friendly to us (read: us business) policies, causing enormous loss of life and suffering all over the world.

smamler Report

A diverse historical group waving and waiting at a train station illustrating facts not taught in school history. The mass deportation of Mexicans, yep the US tried it before under Hoover. Many were US citizens.

User , timelessmoon Report

Historic battle scene depicting soldiers in 18th-century uniforms, illustrating facts you weren’t taught in school about the past. When I went to school, we were taught that the American Revolution came about because King George III arbitrarily imposed taxes on the American colonists.

Many years later, talking to a historian of the 18th century, I learned that the colonists had begged England for aid during the earlier French and Indian War, promising to repay it all, but then once the war was over, reneged on that promise. After repeated (and repeatedly rebuffed) requests for repayment, and after fair warning, Parliament imposed taxes on the Colonies (which were still lower than the taxes British subjects actually living in England were paying) in order to recoup those costs.

Bonus fact: I also learned that, contrary to what I was taught in school, it was the colonists who drew first blood in the Revolution (the H.M.S. *Gaspee* incident, which oddly none of my history teachers had mentioned).

JohnSmallBerries Report

Mushroom cloud of a nuclear explosion at dusk illustrating impactful facts about history not taught in school. When the United States detonated the first hydrogen bomb, Castle Bravo, on Enewatak Atoll in the Marshall Islands in 1958, it was many times more powerful than calculated. The residents of Enewatak and Bikini Atolls had previously been forcibly relocated to Rongelap Atoll. Rongelap was downwind from the Castle Bravo radiation cloud. The US did not evacuate them for two days, and allowed them to return only a week later, even though the radiation levels were highly unsafe as we understand now. From 1958 to 1984, the US repeatedly refused to evacuate the Rongelap residents even as the birth defects and cancer rates continued. It was finally Greenpeace in 1984 who assisted in moving many of them to Mejatto island in kwajalein atoll. If you go to Mejatto today, the signs on the church and school still say Rongelap. There is evidence that this refusal to evacuate was a calculated decision to study the long term effects of radiation exposure in humans.

Edit: corrected Castle Bravo to 1958.

douglas_creek , pickpik Report

Stacked gold bars in a vault representing hidden facts about history and valuable insights not taught in school. That modern money came into existence by people storing their gold in banks and getting notes as proof that their gold was there.

Banks found out they could write more notes of gold than there was actual gold being stored there.

User , Bank of England / flickr Report

Classroom scene with children raising hands, engaging in a lesson about history facts not taught in school. The Great War of Africa like, *just* happened, historically speaking. And over five million people died. As far as I’m aware, it’s not being taught in schools.

Heffe3737 , gpointstudio / freepik Report


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