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The past is broader, more nuanced, and much more complex than it first appears. Even if you think you know everything there is to know about a historical figure or event, you might have some knowledge gaps you’re not aware of.

The ‘True Stories’ Facebook page aims to give you a deeper understanding of history by sharing interesting facts about the public figures who shaped life in the United States. Scroll down to learn something new and to find motivation to keep digging deeper.

#1

By The 1930s Hattie Mcdaniel Was One Of The Most Recognizable Black Women In Radio

Portrait of an important American personality, smiling woman wearing earrings and a decorative brooch in vintage attire.

Lending her voice to shows that reached millions while her face remained mostly unseen. Hollywood followed slowly and narrowly. The roles were stereotypes. Maids. Servants. Comic relief. Hattie understood the trap immediately. But she also understood the math. Playing those roles paid rent and opened doors that silence never would.

Then came Gone with the Wind in 1939.

Her performance as Mammy was commanding, intelligent, and unsparing. She gave the character authority the script did not always offer. When she won the Academy Award in 1940, she became the first Black actor to ever receive one.

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Michael Largey
Community Member
1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The Academy was not going to let her attend the ceremony until Clark Gable stepped in. Even then, she had to sit apart from all the whites.

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    #2

    By The Time Mayim Bialik Was Nineteen, Hollywood Executives Were Already Discussing How To Reshape Her Body, Soften Her Intellect, And Age Her Just Fast Enough To Be Marketable

    Young smiling woman holding yellow and white flowers against purple background representing American personalities.

    On The Big Bang Theory, she came back as something the system could not easily rewrite. A real scientist playing intellect without apology. No makeover arc. No submission to desirability as currency. She negotiated boundaries that younger Mayim would have been punished for.

    And the backlash followed immediately.

    She was called difficult. Cold. Unlikable. Too much. Too rigid. The exact labels handed to women who step outside the upgrade pipeline but still expect a seat at the table.

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    Upstaged75
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    She's so awesome! It's been cool to follow her career from Blossom to Big Bang.

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    #3

    Tony Bennett Reignited A Global Love For Classic Vocals. And At An Age When Most Entertainers Retired, Tony Stood Onstage With Lady Gaga

    Older man in a light blue suit holding a vintage microphone, representing important American personalities in entertainment.

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    The internet has changed so much, it's hard to recognize it sometimes.

    Forbes, reporting on the 2024 Imperva Bad Bot report, states that bots now account for nearly half of all internet traffic around the world, with human user traffic dropping to just 50.4%. So-called ‘bad bots’ are responsible for a whopping third of all traffic.

    "Automated bots will soon surpass the proportion of internet traffic coming from humans, changing the way that organizations approach building and protecting their websites and applications. As more AI-enabled tools are introduced, bots will become omnipresent. Organizations must invest in bot management and API security tools to manage the threat from malicious, automated traffic," explained Nanhi Singh, the general manager for application security at Imperva.

    #4

    By 1973 Shirley Ann Jackson Earned Her Doctorate In Physics, Becoming The First Black Woman In Mit’s History To Do So

    Portrait of an important American personality wearing glasses and a red blazer, smiling confidently in a natural setting.

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    #5

    Muhammad Ali Gave Up The Heavyweight Championship, Millions Of Dollars, And His Freedom At Age 25 Because The U.S. Government Asked Him To Fight Overseas While Denying Him Dignity At Home

    Wax figure of an important American personality wearing red boxing gloves and a red robe in a museum setting.

    When his name was called for U.S. Army induction, he did not step forward. He stood still. Three times. Federal agents moved in. The heavyweight champion of the world was charged with draft evasion on the spot.

    The cost was immediate and measurable. The World Boxing Association stripped his title within hours. Athletic commissions banned him from fighting. Promoters vanished. At his peak earning power, Ali lost an estimated $5 million in fight purses between 1967 and 1970. He faced up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. America did not applaud. It condemned him.

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    Mark Alexander
    Community Member
    1 day ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    He announced he was going to do this, and when. White people went crazy. (source: white person that remembers.) Link to his speech about why in reply.

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    #6

    In 1870 Victoria Woodhull And Her Sister Tennessee Opened Woodhull, Claflin And Company, The First Female Run Brokerage Firm In The History Of Wall Street

    Portrait of an important American personality from history wearing vintage clothing and posing thoughtfully.

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    In this day and age, with so much misinformation, bias, and fake news spreading online, it’s more important now than ever to see the difference between reliable and unreliable sources, facts, and claims. Proper media literacy ensures that you’re not manipulated (well, as much as this can be accomplished).

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    Broadly speaking, reliable sources tend to value transparency, honesty, and objectivity. Unreliable sources, on the other hand, are highly subjective, secretive, often have an agenda, and present opinions as facts.

    #7

    Dorothy Dandridge Became The First Black Woman Nominated For The Academy Award For Best Actress

    Portrait of an important American personality smiling with elegant jewelry against a bright red background.

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    Mel in Georgia
    Community Member
    Premium
    8 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Beautiful, talented woman!

    #8

    Elizabeth Taylor Signed Film Contracts So Powerful They Forced Hollywood To Rewrite How Actresses Were Paid And Studios Hated Her For It

    Actor in Cleopatra costume with Egyptian style makeup and gold jewelry, representing important American personalities.

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    #9

    Mary-Claire King Told The Medical World In The 1970s That Breast Cancer Could Be Inherited

    Portrait of an important American personality with short blonde hair wearing a blue jacket and a gold necklace.

    The reaction was not curiosity. It was resistance.

    At the time, cancer research leaned heavily on environment and chance. Suggesting inheritance raised dangerous implications. If a single gene could predict cancer, doctors would have to confront prevention, early surgery, and life-altering decisions for women who were still healthy. Many preferred uncertainty

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    tee-lena
    Community Member
    18 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    We,the women of the world,we thank you so very much.

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    Trustworthy outlets try to back up their claims, either by mentioning or linking to the sources that inform their claims, and are always willing to correct their mistakes.

    Untrustworthy outlets, however, don’t care about genuine facts. They’re either very secretive about where they get their information from, or they intentionally misinterpret data for the sake of whatever agenda they’re pushing.

    #10

    Mary Edwards Walker Walked Onto A Civil War Battlefield In Trousers And A Surgeon’s Coat, Knowing Capture And Disgrace Were More Likely Than Gratitude

    Black and white portrait of an important American personality from the 19th century wearing a dark dress with a medal.

    While treating civilians and wounded soldiers near enemy lines in Virginia, Mary Edwards Walker was captured by Confederate forces. They did not treat her as a doctor. They treated her as a spy. She was imprisoned in Richmond’s Castle Thunder, a brutal Confederate prison, surrounded by disease and threat.

    She stayed there for four months.

    She was never proven guilty of espionage. She was exchanged only because the Union insisted she was a medical officer in everything but paperwork. When she was released, she returned to work immediately. No retreat. No apology.

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    #11

    Phil Collins Sang Some Of The Most Joyful Songs On Earth While His Body Quietly Collapsed Underneath Him

    Bearded man in a red cap and gray hoodie posing for a portrait of important American personalities.

    The injuries arrived slowly, then all at once. Chronic back problems led to spinal surgery in 2007. During the operation, Collins suffered nerve damage that affected his hands. He lost sensation in his fingers. A drummer who could not reliably feel the sticks kept playing anyway. He taped them to his hands. He adjusted his grip. He hid the panic.

    It got worse. Years of strain caused a condition called drop foot, linked to the spinal damage. By 2014, Phil Collins could barely stand for extended periods. He fell multiple times at home and on tour. In 2017, he performed shows sitting down, his son Nic Collins playing drums behind him.

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    #12

    Tip O’neill Was Sitting In His Cambridge Living Room In 1974 When A Federal Judge Delivered A Warning About The Unfolding Watergate Crisis

    Elderly American man with white hair wearing a suit and tie among a group of important American personalities.

    When Watergate erupted, O’Neill served as House Majority Leader.

    Privately, he told colleagues that the evidence against President Richard Nixon was already overwhelming.

    Publicly, he insisted Congress follow procedure and not vengeance.

    He read transcripts, questioned staffers, and built consensus for a fair impeachment process.

    He believed the nation needed clarity more than speed.

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    otiose
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Impeachment of a president for "Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors." Bribery, in the context of impeachment, refers to the corrupt a***e of power for personal gain. Now, what do we do when congress is not acting on the constitution? VOTE.

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    Of course, you have to be realistic about how much time and effort you can put into verifying claims, checking facts, and putting sources under the microscope. Most people have tons of responsibilities (work, studies, chores, family, hobbies, social life, exercise, travel, etc.) that take up most of their day.

    So, instead of double-checking and cross-referencing every specific claim you come across (which you can still do), you can save time by focusing on the reliability of the source that shares that claim. While no news source is ever ‘perfect,’ they are not all made the same.

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    There is a vast abyss between random, bot-like, provocative social media accounts pushing a particular agenda and trustworthy news outlets with rigorous editorial standards and a history of objectivity and fact-checking.

    #13

    Barbara Jordan Became The First Black Woman Elected To The Texas Senate Since Reconstruction

    Smiling American personality wearing glasses and a colorful outfit with a medal, representing important American personalities.

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    Michael Largey
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Went on to serve in Congress on the Judiciary Committee and was a key figure in the fall of Richard Nixon. Back when criminals were expelled from the White House, not returned to it.

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    #14

    Dick Cavett Sat Under Studio Lights In The Late 1960s, Slim Tie Perfectly Straight, Asking Questions No Late-Night Host Was Supposed To Ask

    Black and white photo of an important American personality wearing a suit and speaking in a formal setting.

    In 1972, he suffered a public mental breakdown and was hospitalized for severe anxiety and depression.

    He later admitted he could barely breathe during tapings. “I was as nervous as a man could be and still function,” Cavett said. Medication kept him upright. Fear kept him honest.

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    Michael Largey
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Friend and protege of Groucho Marx. Writer for both Jack Paar and Johnny Carson.

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    #15

    Walter Lantz Repaired Cars To Earn Money For Art Classes As A Teenager. By Twenty He Was Animating Silent Film Gags, Adding Humor To Worlds Without Sound

    Smiling important American personality seated at desk surrounded by classic cartoon characters and animation sketches.

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    Mike F
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    That name is synonymous with Woody Woodpecker.

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    Another thing to consider is how certain ‘facts’ or claims make you feel. Untrustworthy sources often like to play with your emotions because it’s easier to manipulate the audience that way. They often over-dramatize events, over-generalize, provoke outrage, and make things seem world-shattering, even if they’re rather mundane.

    #16

    In 1968 With Bullitt Peter Yates Constructed A Car Chase That Did Not Rely On Explosions Or Chaos

    Portrait of an important American personality wearing a black hat and coat in a candid moment outdoors.

    It relied on breath, pacing, camera angles that placed audiences inside the chase rather than watching from a distance. The scene redefined action cinema

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    Wij
    Community Member
    23 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    With two of the coolest cars to grace this earth

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    #17

    In The 1950s Jack Paar Took Over The Tonight Show And Detonated The Format. He Treated Late Night Not As Filler Before Sleep, But As Conversation Worth Attention

    Older American man in a suit with a thoughtful pose, representing important American personalities in a studio setting.

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    Michael Largey
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Among talk show hosts, the only one with any claim to being an artist.

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    #18

    In The Early 1950s, When Late Night Television Barely Existed, Steve Allen Took Control Of A Loose, Undefined Time Slot

    American personality wearing glasses and a black tuxedo, smiling against a bright red background in a formal portrait.

    He refused to fill it with empty cheer. He talked to the audience instead of at them. He improvised. He brought jazz musicians onstage. He invited comedians to fail and try again live. The Tonight Show was not a format yet. Steve invented it by doing whatever felt honest in the moment.

    His comedy baffled executives. He refused predictable laughs. He played with language, logic, and absurdity that trusted the audience to keep up. Viewers stayed because they felt included rather than instructed. Steve made intelligence conversational, not elite

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    Multa Nocte
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Absolutely adored Steve Allen and we watched it religiously when I was young. Hysterically funny and had some of the best guests ever, as well as some cast members that couldn't be beat - Tom Poston, Tim Conway, Louis Nye, Don Knotts, Bill Dana, etc. Brilliant man, brilliant show. (Also brilliant wife.)

    On top of that, you have to think about the complexity of the information that you’re reading. Real life, unlike fiction, is often much greyer and less clear-cut than what you see on the silver screen, in fantasy books, and in video games.

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    There are rarely any situations and events where things are perfectly black-and-white, with clear valorous heroes and moustache-twirling villains.

    #19

    Sarah Polk Banned Music, Dancing, And Alcohol From The White House Because She And Her Husband Were Executing A War Timetable, Not Hosting A Presidency

    Portrait of an important American personality from history, showcasing notable features and period clothing in black and white.

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    Multa Nocte
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    A president who didn't spend his term ripping down the White House for a ballroom but rather who focused on the country? Heaven forfend! 😱

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    #20

    Chris Columbus Was Twenty Two When He Mailed Steven Spielberg A Script Written In A Cramped Dorm Room And Received A Reply

    Smiling American man in a suit and tie at an event, representing important American personalities you might not know.

    The reply that was so enthusiastic he thought it was a prank. Columbus read the letter three times, realized it was real, and understood he had just been handed the chance that writers twice his age never got.

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    #21

    During The French Revolution Elizabeth Monroe, Wife Of President James Monroe, Walked Straight Into La Petite Force Prison To Visit Adrienne De Lafayette

    Portrait of an important American personality from history dressed in elegant early 19th century attire with dark background.

    Adrienne de Lafayette, wife of the famed general had been condemned by association, her husband branded an enemy by radical factions. Elizabeth did not plead. She arrived with calm dignity, her presence signaling that America was watching. Parisians paused. If the American minister’s wife walked into a place of death, perhaps this prisoner deserved reconsideration. Days later, Adrienne was spared.

    The moment became legend. Parisians began calling Elizabeth the heroine of Lafayette’s salvation

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    So, if you’re reading a very simplistic historical narrative with clear heroes and villains, it might be worth considering that it’s an oversimplification. This makes the info more approachable, sure, but it loses some of the nuances.

    That’s not to say that there are no heroes or villains throughout history. There are plenty. But these figures are often much more flawed and ethically messier than what you see in fictional accounts. It’s often best to dig deeper and look for nuance and complexity.

    #22

    Being Jewish In 1930s America Meant Carrying Insults As Regularly As Equipment. But Hank Greenberg Signed With The Detroit Tigers

    Black and white portrait of an important American personality in a Detroit baseball uniform and cap, focused and serious expression.

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    #23

    When George Washington Took Command Of The Continental Army In 1775 He Held It Together By Sheer Will When Collapse Seemed Inevitable

    Portrait of an important American personality, highlighting historical significance in American figures and heritage.

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    Multa Nocte
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    OK, I'll grant that Washington ended up American, but originally . . . . ;-)

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    #24

    Dolley Madison Did Not Run From The White House Fire In 1812. She Stayed Inside, Insisting That A Full Length Portrait Of George Washington Be Carried Out Even As British Troops Closed In

    Portrait of an important American personality from history, wearing a satin dress with lace details and a headpiece.

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    Multa Nocte
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    And she made marvellous bakery products. ;-)

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    The ‘True Stories’ page is a fairly new addition to Facebook. Its curator created it on January 28, 2025. In the span of less than a year, the project has garnered 115k followers and 11k likes on the social network.

    As the curator of the project points out, they offer “a deeper look at the figures who shaped American life through the moments that defined them.” So, there’s a specific focus on the United States and its history.

    #25

    In 1971 John Deacon Joined Queen As The Final Member, The Youngest

    Young American personality with long dark hair and a flower accessory, against a red background in a portrait style.

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    Multa Nocte
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    OK - the current article title is "35 American Personalities Who Worked Hard And Made History" and the second paragraph states that "The ‘True Stories’ Facebook page aims to give you a deeper understanding of history by sharing interesting facts about the public figures who shaped life in the United States." Please correct me if I am wrong, but I believe that this gentleman is from Leicester, United Kingdom. Maybe I need some sleep . . . .

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    Note: this post originally had 35 images. It’s been shortened to the top 25 images based on user votes.

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