Hindenburg Elected: First Direct Vote in Weimar Germany
Hindenburg didn't just win; he crushed his rival with nearly 53% of the vote, ending months of bitter infighting among conservatives who'd rather have backed anyone but Marx. But behind that landslide lay a quiet tragedy: the nation's deep trauma from WWI had turned voters away from politicians like Marx and toward the man they once called their savior. People didn't see the cracks forming in his resolve; they saw a shield against chaos. He became president, yet the very title he claimed would soon be used to sign away democracy itself.
April 26, 1925
101 years ago
What Else Happened on April 26
He climbed 6,000 feet of rock just to read his own letters in the wind. Petrarch didn't come for the view; he came because he felt trapped inside a stone tower.…
A fresco of the Virgin Mary and the Christ Child reportedly materialized on the wall of a half-finished church in Genazzano, Italy. This event transformed the s…
Giuliano's heart stopped under a chalice, his blood soaking the altar steps while Lorenzo ran for his life. The Pazzi conspirators thought they'd toppled Floren…
Blood soaked the marble altar as knives struck during High Mass in the Duomo. Lorenzo de' Medici survived by diving into the sacristy, but his brother Giuliano …
A muddy river, a crowded church, and a father who needed to pay his parish dues before the local constable knocked. That was the cost of William Shakespeare's e…
English colonists made their first landfall at Cape Henry, Virginia, on April 26, 1607, before proceeding up the James River to establish Jamestown on May 14. T…
Talk to History
Have a conversation with historical figures who witnessed this era. Ask questions, explore perspectives, and bring history to life.