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VISUAL FLOW

Updated: Nov 24, 2025


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Country Rank 11493 ↓30
Country United States
Language English

Latest Posts

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May 12, 2025, 4:07

On this day, 12 May 1940, 20-year-old Austrian Jewish University of Edinburgh student Edgar Lion was arrested by British police. His friends wouldn't see him or hear from him for years.
Lion was taken to a police station, then shipped to the Isle of Man alongside thousands of other Jewish detainees where they were locked up in hotels surrounded by barbed wire.
He was then taken to a dockyard and told to choose between two ships. He chose the one on the left, and so was taken to Canada – the other would end up in Australia.
In Canada, Lion was then interned alongside 2,300 other Jewish refugees in camps alongside German Nazis. Here the refugees were forced to perform harsh and boring physical labour for almost no pay: in Lion's camp, Sherbrooke, detainees could choose to make fishing nets or socks.
The refugees were held in camps in appalling and unsafe conditions for nearly three years.
Learn more about the treatment of Jewish people in Britain at this time…

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May 11, 2025, 19:41

Love history from below? Help us keep working class stories alive! ✊
Working Class History is completely independent — no corporate or government sponsors — just the support of our listeners and readers and listeners. While we get most of our support through Patreon, if you prefer you can also support us on the open source contribution platform Liberapay.
Your contributions help us research, produce, and share the voices of everyday people who changed the world. Just visit https://liberapay.com/workingclasshistory/

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May 10, 2025, 20:56

On this day, 10 May 2009, leading Ecuadorian Indigenous rights activist and revolutionary Tránsito Amaguaña died a few weeks away from her 100th birthday in her native village of Pesillo.
Born into a Quechua family of hacienda workers, Amaguaña took part in a strike in 1931 demanding an eight-hour working day and Sundays off, amongst other improvements. Then, she later recounted, “the soldiers arrived. Fifty at every hacienda. They destroyed houses and arrested the leaders, tying them up and beating them.”
Amaguaña joined the Communist Party and helped found some of the first unions in the country for agricultural workers, and later helped set up rural cooperatives to provide land for other Indigenous people. She also helped establish schools for rural poor children teaching in Spanish and Quechua, and was jailed by authorities several times.
In the 1940s, campaigning was successful in achieving the abolition of forced taxes by the Catholic Church. Amaguaña recalled:…

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May 9, 2025, 19:26

On this day, 9 May 1763, what became known as Pontiac's war began when warriors from several Indigenous nations under the Ottawa leader Pontiac attacked British colonial troops at Fort Detroit in present-day Michigan.
While Fort Detroit itself did not fall, Native American fighters captured several forts, with Seneca warriors seizing Venango and Le Boeuf.
Despite British forces massacring unarmed Native Americans, and attempting to spread smallpox among the Native population, fighting continued into the following year, causing around 450 British casualties. The eventual peace agreement reached ensured important concessions to Native Americans, including a ban on colonisation west of the Appalachian ridge, and the loss of several forts.
Learn more about Indigenous peoples' history in these books: https://shop.workingclasshistory.com/collections/all/indigenous
Pictured: Painting of the Siege of Fort Detroit by Frederic Remington