allthatsinteresting.com

33 Feel-Good Stories From History That Will Restore Your Faith In Humanity

  • ️Kaleena Fraga
  • ️Wed Sep 15 2021

1 of 34

After growing up in poverty in the Philippines, Manny Pacquiao found success — and wealth — as a boxer. He decided to give it back by building 1,000 homes in his native country in 2016.

“I feel what they’re feeling because I’ve been there,” he said about his decision. “I’ve slept in the street. That was my life before. So hard. That’s why I feel what they’re feeling right now.”

rcelis/Wikimedia Commons

2 of 34

For 30 years, Black musician Daryl Davis has traveled the country with a powerful mission. He wants to befriend members of the Ku Klux Klan.

“I never set out to convert anyone in the Klan," Davis said, although he has convinced hundreds of people to leave the KKK. "I just set out to get an answer to my question: ‘How can you hate me when you don’t even know me?'”

Daryl Davis/Facebook

3 of 34

Life became perilous for Dutch Jews after the Nazis invaded the Netherlands in 1940. As watchmaker Corrie ten Boom watched her friends and neighbors disappear into trains, she decided to quietly take action.

The ten Boom family helped some 800 Jews flee to safety by hiding them in a secret room in their house before they were arrested in 1944.

Yad Vashem/The World Holocaust Remembrance Center

4 of 34

After he heard about a man threatening to kill himself, boxer Muhammad Ali got into his car and sped to the scene. Whenever anyone else got close, the man shouted, “I’m no good. I’m going to jump!”

But Ali didn't give up, coaxing the man inside by saying, "You’re my brother! I love you, and I couldn’t lie to you.”

YouTube

5 of 34

In the years before World War II, Doris Miller spent his days on the USS West Virginia in the kitchen, since Black servicemen were barred from combat. But when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, Miller sprang into action.

He fired at the enemy aircrafts and helped his wounded shipmates escape to safety. Eighty years later, the U.S. Navy named an aircraft carrier after him.

U.S. Navy/Wikimedia Commons

6 of 34

Susan Ahn Cuddy, far right, didn't hesitate when World War II broke out. She wanted to serve her country, so she signed up for the Women's Reserve of the U.S. Naval Reserve (WAVES).

Although WAVES initially rejected Cuddy, a Korean-American, based on her race, Cuddy reapplied and became the first female Navy gunnery officer at the end of 1943.

Department of Defense

7 of 34

In 2013, the city of Novosibirsk, Siberia in Russia unveiled a surprising statue: A mouse knitting a strand of DNA. In fact, the statue commemorates the sacrifice of mice used in the service of conducting genetic research. Its official title is "Monument to the Laboratory Mouse."Irina Gelbukh/Wikimedia Commons

8 of 34

After the Nazis invaded France in 1940, the French mime Marcel Marceau took immediate action. He joined the French resistance and helped smuggle hundreds of children into neighboring Switzerland. And he used his mime techniques to keep them quiet and entertained during the perilous journey. Public Domain

9 of 34

Morgan Freeman is more than a movie star. He's also out to save the world. In 2014, Freeman revealed that he'd transformed his 124-acre Mississippi ranch into a bee sanctuary, citing the importance of honeybees to earth's ecosystem.

“There is a concerted effort for bringing bees back onto the planet,” Freeman said. “We do not realize that they are the foundation, I think, of the growth of the planet, the vegetation.”

James Patterson/Getty Images

10 of 34

They came from separate worlds. But after Little Caesar founder Michael Ilitch learned that civil rights icon Rosa Parks was struggling to find a new apartment after being robbed, he volunteered to pay her rent. From 1994 until her death in 2005, Ilitch sent Parks $2,000 a month. National Archives; Dave Sandford/Getty Images

11 of 34

In the 1950s, Black jazz musician Ella Fitzgerald was rejected from performing at The Mocambo, a popular Hollywood nightclub. When Marilyn Monroe heard, the movie star promised to be at The Mocambo every night in the front row — as long as they booked Fitzgerald.Bettmann/Getty Images

12 of 34

In 1847, the Choctaw Nation sent Ireland $170 — more than $5,000 today — while the Irish suffered through the Great Hunger. In 2020, as Native Americans suffered from the coronavirus pandemic, Ireland returned the favor. An Irish GoFundMe raised millions of dollars to help the Navajo Nation and Hopi Reservations. Gavin Sheridan/Wikimedia Commons

13 of 34

The colorful children's game "Candy Land" came from a surprising place — the polio ward of a hospital. There, a retired schoolteacher schoolteacher named Eleanor Abbott invented the game to distract children from their suffering. After the game became popular, Abbott donated all her royalties to children in need. The Strong Museum

14 of 34

Though he hasn't been president since 1980, Jimmy Carter is still serving his country. Now in his 90s, Carter has helped build 4,000 houses across 14 countries over the last 35 years through his Carter Work Project. Erik S. Lesser/Getty Images

15 of 34

The Diary Of Anne Frank brings a human perspective to an incomprehensible global tragedy, the Holocaust. But it's thanks to a woman named Miep Gies that we can read Frank's story.

Not only did Gies shelter Frank and her family for two years, but she also saved Frank's diary and returned it later to Frank's father.

Bettmann/Getty Images

16 of 34

Mary Bowser was a Civil war spy. But she wasn't just any spy — she was a former slave embedded in the Confederate White House. There, Bowser used her photogenic memory to repeat what she saw "word for word" to the Union Army. American Battlefield Trust

17 of 34

Al Capone is best known as a ruthless gangster. But when his city of Chicago suffered through the Great Depression in the 1930s, Capone stepped up. He opened a soup kitchen that served free meals to some 2,000 Chicagoans daily. FBI

18 of 34

Wildlife and highways don't mix. That's why places around the world are building wildlife bridges — overpasses that stretch over roads — which allow wild animals to cross safely.

Shown here is the 200-foot-long Eco-Link bridge in Singapore that connects two wildlife reserves.

CheekyAsian/Bored Panda

19 of 34

Everyone suffered during the Siege of Leningrad — including animals at the city's zoo. Belle the hippo's skin began to dry out from lack of water, so her caretaker, Yevdokia Dashina, rubbed it every day with warm water and camphor oil.

Belle survived the war, and died in 1951 of old age.

Big Picture Russia

20 of 34

Later in life, John F. Kennedy shrugged off his Navy and Marine Corps Medal and Purple Heart, saying, "It was involuntary. They sunk my boat." But in truth, the future president showed great bravery during World War II.

After a Japanese attack sunk his PT boat, Kennedy saved a fellow soldier by holding his life jacket strap in his teeth and swimming for four hours to shore.

John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum

21 of 34

Sebastião and Lélia Salgado were dismayed by the brutal deforestation in their home country of Brazil. So, they planted trees – two million of them. Eighteen years later, the barren wasteland had transformed into a lush forest. Instituto Terra/Facebook

22 of 34

Robert Smalls escaped slavery in May 1862 by stealing a Confederate ship with his family. He sailed to Union waters — and to freedom. Once free, Smalls served as a ship pilot for the Union Army.

After the war, he was elected to the House of Representatives for South Carolina, and used his earnings to buy the house where he'd grown up as a slave.

Library of Congress

23 of 34

Captain Tom Moore, a 99-year-old British WWII veteran, wanted to help his country during the coronavirus pandemic. So, he set up a fundraiser for the U.K.'s National Health Service. To the astonishment of the nation, Moore raised $9 million — simply by walking with his walker in his backyard. Moore Family

24 of 34

During the 1980s, a terrifying disease circled the globe — AIDs. People with AIDs were shunned by society, and many patients died lonely deaths.

But Princess Diana changed perceptions of the disease when she visited a new AIDs ward at the Middlesex Hospital in London on April 9, 1987. There, she shook the hand of an AIDs patient on camera, dispelling the stereotype that it could be passed through casual contact.

Anwar Hussein/Getty Images

25 of 34

As a Black woman growing up at the end of the 19th century, Mary Church Terrell fought on two fronts — for African Americans and for women. She helped found the NAACP and stood up to white suffragists who wanted to distance themselves from Black activists.

“Seeking no favors because of our color, nor patronage because of our needs, we knock at the bar of justice, asking an equal chance," Terrell said.

Library of Congress

26 of 34

In 1925, residents of Nome, Alaska faced a sudden wave of deadly diphtheria cases. Desperate for an antitoxin, town officials sent out dogsled teams to bring back the lifesaving medicine.

Six days later, a sled team led by Balto the dog and Norwegian musher Gunnar Kaasen came powering through the blizzard, just in time to save the town.

Brown Brothers/National Institute of Health

27 of 34

As a child, Oprah Winfrey suffered through poverty and sexual abuse. But she did so well at being a Chicago news anchor that she earned her own talk show. From there, Winfrey became one of the few Black billionaires in America — and someone who has given away hundreds of millions to charities. Steve Jennings/Getty Images

28 of 34

In the first half of the 20th century, Americans feared few things more than polio, the paralytic disease which largely impacted children. Although he could have made billions with his polio vaccine, Jonas Salk refused to patent it.

Declaring that the vaccine belonged to the people, Salk said in 1955, “There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?”

Yousuf Karsh/Wikimedia Commons

29 of 34

Plenty of men fought in the Mexican Revolution (1910 – 1920). But they were joined by a group of fierce women known as Las Soldaderas, some of whom even became officers and led men into battle. Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images

30 of 34

Bob Marley made the Buffalo soldiers famous in his song of the same name. But this group of Black soldiers were even more impressive than he suggests.

They were the first all-Black peacetime regiments in U.S. history who served on the Western frontier after the Civil War. In fact, they played an especially crucial role in protecting America's national parks, which they patrolled in 1899, 1903, and 1904.

Library of Congress

31 of 34

In 1946, Albert Einstein traveled to Lincoln University, the nation's first degree-granting HBCU (Historically Black College and University). There, Einstein received an honorary degree, lectured on relatively and spoke out against racism. Racism, he said, was a "disease of white people," and Einstein did not "intend to be quiet about it."Temple University Libraries/via Twitter

32 of 34

As conditions around Europe became increasingly terrifying for Jews in the late 1930s, hundreds of thousands tried to flee to Switzerland. Though many were turned away, one border guard named Paul Grüninger quietly admitted 3,600 Jewish refugees by falsifying their documents.

“I am proud to have saved the lives of hundreds of oppressed people," Grüninger said, after he was caught, fired, and arrested. "My personal well-being, measured against the cruel fates of these thousands, was so insignificant and unimportant that I never even took it into consideration.”

Federal Department of Foreign Affairs, Switzerland

33 of 34

In 1971, the city of Dunham, North Carolina called a series of meetings to discuss desegregating schools. There, something remarkable happened — a civil rights activist named Ann Atwater befriended a Ku Klux Klan member named C.P. Ellis, and swayed him to her side. Ellis even tore up his KKK card in front of a crowd.Jim Thornton/The Herald Sun Collections/University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Libraries