History Facts

Recent Content

The Secret Formula That Controls Your Financial Life

The Secret Formula That Controls Your Financial Life

A private company's secret algorithm decides if you get a house, a car, or a loan — and almost nobody knows exactly how it works.

Read more
This Country Had No Government for 589 Days — and Nobody Cared

This Country Had No Government for 589 Days — and Nobody Cared

Belgium went 589 days without an elected government — and life barely changed. No chaos, no collapse. Just street parties and free beer.

Read more
How Big Water Made Tap Water the Enemy

How Big Water Made Tap Water the Enemy

The bottled water industry spent billions convincing you tap water is dangerous. The truth about what's actually in that bottle will shock you.

Read more
The Dark and Bloody Origin of the Teddy Bear

The Dark and Bloody Origin of the Teddy Bear

The world's most beloved children's toy was born from a brutal hunting trip, a political cartoon, and a bear that was clubbed unconscious and tied to a tree.

Read more
The Disturbing Truth About How Memory Actually Works

The Disturbing Truth About How Memory Actually Works

Researchers have successfully implanted entirely false memories into real people's minds. The scary part? The subjects were completely convinced they were real.

Read more
See All Content

When the Government Deliberately Poisoned Alcohol

Prohibition era bottles and warning signs

During Prohibition in the 1920s, Americans kept drinking alcohol despite it being illegal. The government tried everything to stop them—raids, arrests, massive crackdowns. Nothing worked. So on Christmas Eve 1926, the U.S. government decided to try a different approach: they deliberately poisoned the alcohol supply.

Here's what happened: Industrial alcohol was still legal because it was used in products like paint, medicine, and cleaning supplies. Bootleggers would steal this industrial alcohol, "wash" it to remove the added chemicals, and sell it as drinkable liquor. The federal government knew this was happening, so they ordered manufacturers to add even deadlier poisons—ones that couldn't be easily removed.

They added methanol (wood alcohol), which causes blindness and death. They added kerosene, gasoline, chloroform, and acetone. One particularly nasty formula included mercury salts and nicotine. The government literally created a poison cocktail and released it into the supply chain, knowing Americans would drink it.

The idea was simple: if people knew the alcohol was poisoned, they'd stop drinking. But people didn't stop. They kept drinking, and they started dying by the thousands. On New Year's Day 1927, just one week after the new poisoning policy began, 31 people died in New York City alone from tainted alcohol.

The medical examiner's office was overwhelmed with bodies. Victims showed up at hospitals blind, convulsing, their organs shutting down. Some died screaming in agony. Others went into comas and never woke up. The government's response? They blamed the victims for breaking the law and continued the poisoning program.

By the time Prohibition ended in 1933, an estimated 10,000 Americans had been killed by their own government's poisoning program. Historians believe the actual number is much higher since many deaths in rural areas were never officially recorded, and doctors often listed cause of death as "alcoholism" rather than "government-sanctioned poisoning."

The craziest part? The government never hid what they were doing. Wayne Wheeler, a major Prohibition advocate, openly defended the policy in newspapers: "The government is under no obligation to furnish the people with alcohol that is drinkable when the Constitution prohibits it. The person who drinks this industrial alcohol is a deliberate suicide."

Even more disturbing: the program specifically targeted poor people. The wealthy could afford imported liquor smuggled from Canada or Europe, which wasn't poisoned. The deadly industrial alcohol ended up in cheap speakeasies in working-class neighborhoods. The government essentially created a system that killed poor Americans while rich ones drank safely.

Think about this: The U.S. government looked at a public health crisis and decided the solution was mass poisoning of its own citizens. They knew people would die—that was the point. They wanted to create enough fear and death to enforce a law that the public clearly didn't support. It's one of the darkest chapters in American history, and most people have never even heard about it.

Related Content

History Facts

07 March 2026

Post

The Dark and Bloody Origin of the Teddy Bear

The world's most beloved children's toy was born from a brutal hunting trip, a political cartoon, and a bear that was clubbed unconscious and tied to a tree....

History Facts

12 March 2026

Post

The Dirty Petri Dish That Accidentally Saved Millions

Alexander Fleming forgot to clean his lab before vacation. The moldy petri dish he came back to changed medicine forever — and has saved over 200 million lives....

History Facts

17 March 2026

Post

Why Wearing the Wrong Color Could Get You Executed

For centuries, wearing the wrong color — especially purple — was illegal across Europe and punishable by death. Your outfit was literally a legal document....

History Facts

17 February 2026

Post

You’ve Been Doing This Wrong… Sleeping Longer Isn’t Helping

For years we’ve heard: “Just get more sleep.” But new sleep data shows something surprising...

History Facts

17 February 2026

Post

This Sounds Fake… But Your Groceries Are Secretly Shrinking

You’re not imagining it. That cereal box feels lighter. That chip bag seems emptier. That snack pack looks… smaller....

History Facts

06 February 2026

Post

How Monopoly Games Helped POWs Escape Nazi Camps

British intelligence hid maps, compasses, and real money inside WWII Monopoly games sent to POW camps. Hundreds escaped—Germans never discovered it....

History Facts

05 February 2026

Post

The Space Pen Myth (And What Really Happened)

The space pen myth is backwards. Fisher spent his own $1M, sold pens to NASA for $6 each. Russia bought them too—pencils were too dangerous in space....

History Facts

02 February 2026

Post

Why Treadmills Were Originally Punishment Devices

Treadmills were invented in 1818 as prison torture devices. Inmates climbed for hours daily grinding grain or nothing. We now pay gyms to use them voluntarily....

History Facts

21 January 2026

Post

The War That Started Over a Severed Ear

A captain preserved his severed ear in a jar for 7 years, then showed Parliament. Britain declared war on Spain, and it lasted 9 years....

History Facts

17 January 2026

Post

The War That Was Fought Over a Bucket

In 1325, two Italian cities fought a war over a stolen bucket. Thousands died. The bucket is still locked in a tower today, and they still won't give it back....

History Facts

27 December 2025

Post

How January 1st Became New Year's Day

Julius Caesar picked January 1st as New Year's Day in 46 BC. Before that, the new year was March 1st—which is why our month names don't make sense....

History Facts

22 December 2025

Post

The Paranoid History Behind Clinking Glasses During Toasts

Clinking glasses before drinking started as a medieval poison detection method. Now it's mandatory etiquette that nobody questions....

History Facts

08 December 2025

Post

How Wrapping Paper Was Invented by Accident

Decorative wrapping paper was invented by accident in 1917 when a Kansas City store ran out of tissue and sold fancy envelope linings instead. It sold out....

History Facts

29 November 2025

Post

Thomas Edison's Publicity Stunt Created Christmas Lights

Christmas lights weren't a tradition – they were Thomas Edison's marketing stunt to sell electricity....

History Facts

27 November 2025

Post

The Disturbing Origin of the Term "Black Friday" Revealed

Retailers claim "Black Friday" means stores turn profitable, but that's a cover story. The real origin involves police chaos and desperate rebranding....
Terms and ConditionsDo Not Sell or Share My Personal InformationPrivacy PolicyPrivacy NoticeAccessibility NoticeUnsubscribe
Copyright © 2026 Fun Fact Feed