User:Milowent/Creations

Though I seem to spend a lot of time fixing up articles that need help, I have created some as well.

As of 1 April 2024, on List of Wikipedians by article count, I am #950 with 805 articles created. My list below has less, I think the official list include redirects.

Here are some of my creations that have seemed to get the most attention over the years.
 * 1) Death by vending machine (July 2022)
 * 2) Birds Aren't Real (December 2021). The group had been around awhile, but once the NYTimes wrote on it, there would be no notability fight.
 * 3) Virginity auction (April 2014). Maybe some of these are real, but most fall thru and draw lots of internet attention.
 * 4) August Alsina (Sept 2013). Just dumb luck that i wrote one on someone that looked notable but became more famous later.
 * 5) Plunge for distance (July 2011).  A spring of joy for many people, the sources have quotes that are just delightful when discussing this sport.
 * 6) Segregated prom (March 2010).  Something that merited an article with real sourcing to document this sad American phenomenon.

English wikipedia

 * 1) The Spoil'd Child (November 2023).  Late 1700s play.
 * 2) Doug Llewelyn (September 2023)
 * 3) Children in the Wood (August 2023).  1793 play.
 * 4) The Three and the Deuce (August 2023).  1795 play.
 * 5) Durry (band) (August 2023) American rock band.
 * 6) Carlee Russell disappearance hoax (July 2023)
 * 7) Joseph Hutton (playwright) (July 2023) Early 19th century American playwright
 * 8) Ann Carson (June 2023).  notorious early 19th century American criminal
 * 9) The Brimming Cup (April 2023). 2d best-selling novel in United States in 1921
 * 10) Howard Teichmann (December 2022), Broadway playwright and biographer
 * 11) Fred Stewart (actor) (December 2022), American actor, appeared in lesser roles in some major plays in the 1950s
 * 12) Anton Horner (December 2022), Popularized the French Horn in the United State; learned from this that horns didn't have valves until the 1800s!
 * 13) John M. Kemper (December 2022), fascinating person. Started WWII historical program during WWII, headmaster as Andover for 23 years, effectively started the AP program.
 * 14) Endre A. Vadnay (December 2022), Hungarian TV writer, hoped to find more on him
 * 15) Matuganti (December 2022).  Native village off-road in Panama
 * 16) Santa Cruz de Cana (December 2022). Spanish village/gold mine in Panama in 1660s-1729, how didn't this exist yet? Wikipedia is never finished.
 * 17) Sobiaquirú (November 2022).  Native village off-road in Panama
 * 18) Bruno Pittini (November 2022).  Famed hairdresser in 80s.
 * 19) Luther D. Lovekin (November 2022).  American marine engineer, pulled from 1937 NYTimes obits for the day I wrote it.
 * 20) Jack Hurley (November 2022).  Boxing promoter. If boxing was as still big today in the US as it was in his life, this article would have been written long ago.
 * 21) Robert L. Meyer (November 2022).  US Attorney in CA during Nixon admin; intriguing.
 * 22) Lauren B. Hitchcock (October 2022), early anti-air pollution advocate in 1950s
 * 23) Cliff Hall (comedian) (October 2022), vaudeville, radio and early TV comedian
 * 24) The Secret Mine (August 2022), 1812 equestrian play
 * 25) Death by vending machine (July 2022)
 * 26) Carlie Craig (July 2022), comedian/musician
 * 27) Linnaean Botanic Garden (June 2022) 18th century American culture still fruitful area for new articles
 * 28) Arnold Horwitt (June 2022). writer/lyricist for Broadway mid 20th century
 * 29) Herbert Mayes (June 2022).  Mid 20th century magazine editor
 * 30) Le Bel Age (June 2022).  French retirement magazine
 * 31) Farm Journal (June 2022).  Oldest US agricultural magazine
 * 32) Bruce Gould and Beatrice Blackmar Gould (June 2022). 20th century magazine editors
 * 33) Loring Schuler (June 2022).  Magazine editor, 20 century
 * 34) William R. McAndrew (May 2022).  US Tv news director, NBC, mid 20th century
 * 35) Lee Garnett Day (May 2022).  He got the NYT Obit treatment in 1968, explorer and later executive
 * 36) Leigh White (May 2022).  American journalist who seems sorta overlooked now
 * 37) J. Franklin Ewing (May 2022).  Priest/scientist died 1968
 * 38) Milk & Mocha (April 2022).  how do we miss internet pop culture like this so long? when its not American.
 * 39) Alcaeus Hooper (March 2022). Old mayor of Baltimore
 * 40) William Carter (Philadelphia) (March 2022), Mayor of Philly 1710-1711 woo hoo!
 * 41) John Henry Walrath (March 2022), Mayor of Syracuse 1922-25
 * 42) Rolland B. Marvin (March 2022), Mayor of Syracuse 1930-41.
 * 43) Joseph Willcox (March 2022), Mayor of Philadelphia 1705-06
 * 44) Griffith Jones (mayor) (March 2022), Mayor of Philadelphia 1704-05
 * 45) Stephen Hugh Claycomb (March 2022), Lieutenant Governor of Missouri 1889-93
 * 46) Robert Alexander Campbell (March 2022), Lieutenant Governor of Missouri 1881-85
 * 47) Thomas Hilson (February 2022), early 19th century English/American actor
 * 48) Courted Into Court (February 2022), 1896 Broadway play
 * 49) Theresa Vaughn (January 2022), Popular American singer and comedian in 1890s
 * 50) Excelsior, Jr. (January 2022), Popular 1895 Broadway play
 * 51) Hubert Druce, (January 2022) English/American actor from late 1880s until 1931
 * 52) Bernard A. Reinold (January 2022), American stage actor
 * 53) Mrs. J.H Allen (January 2022), popular American actress in 1850s
 * 54) Cora Tanner (January 2022), popular American stage actress 1880s-1902
 * 55) James H. Stoddart (January 2022), popular American stage actor, active from 1854-1905
 * 56) The Sporting Duchess (play) (December 2021), Popular 1895 Broadway adaptation of an English play
 * 57) Dr. Syntax (play) (December 2021), Popular 1894 play
 * 58) Deburau (December 2021), 1918 French play
 * 59) Two Nights in Rome December 2021).  1880 low-brow play
 * 60) Maude Granger (December 2021), popular American stage actress of late 19th/early 20th century.
 * 61) The First Year (play) (December 2021) Popular 1920 play, was still running in NYC 100 years ago from when i created this.
 * 62) Birds Aren't Real (December 2021)
 * 63) Mocorón (November 2021).  Remote village in Honduras
 * 64) The Great American Traffic Jam] (October 2021).  A bad 1980 TV movie.
 * 65) National Drivers Test (September 2021).  Award winning 1965 TV special where we learned Americans can't drive
 * 66) Killing of Gabby Petito (September 2021).  She wasn't known to be dead when I started it.
 * 67) Oliver Doud Byron (August 2021).  19th century American stage actor.
 * 68) Alison Smith (critic) (July 2021).  American film critic of first part of 20th century
 * 69) Harriette Underhill (July 2021).  First prominent American female film critic
 * 70) Queed (March 2021). Bestselling 1911 novel.
 * 71) Hannah Farnham Sawyer Lee (March 2021). Author of famous 1837 novellette "Three Experiments of Living"
 * 72) Love Everlasting (2016 film) (March 2021).  2016 film that seems to have popularity online.  Over 700+ daily pageviews its first full two days after creation.
 * 73) A Terrible Temptation (March 2021). 1871 novel by Charles Reade
 * 74) Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Valley Division (February 2021).  Also a redirect target for non-notable stops, which are a current AFD drive of some editors.
 * 75) Saratoga (play) (February 2020).  1870 play.  This was playing in NYC 150 years ago this month.
 * 76) Rollo's Wild Oat (January 2020).  This was playing in NYC 100 years ago this month.
 * 77) Diplomacy (play) (December 2020). Popular 1878 play.
 * 78) What Happened to Jones (play) (December 2020). Popular 1897 play.
 * 79) Savoy Theatre (New York City) (December 2020). Broadway theatre of early 20th century
 * 80) Timour the Tartar (November 2020). Popular 1811 play.
 * 81) Sam H. Harris Theatre (November 2020).  Broadway theatre of 1910s until early 30s.
 * 82) George M. Cohan's Theatre (November 2020).  Broadway theatre of 1910s-20s.
 * 83) Allan Pollock (November 2020). British stage actor
 * 84) A Bill of Divorcement (play) (November 2020).  Popular 1921 play.  So typical of Wikipedia that we had articles of three movies made from the play, but not on the play itself.
 * 85) The Mirage (play) (October 2020). 1920 play.
 * 86) The Ken Murray Show (September 2020).  Very early CBS variety TV show, 1950-53.  They'd drink Budweiser (their sponsor) on set.
 * 87) Phyl & Mikhy (September 2020). 6-episode 1980 sitcom.
 * 88) Life Goes to the Movies (September 2020). 1976 TV documentary.
 * 89) Albert W. Aiken (August 2020). 19th century American author/playwright of low-brow fare.
 * 90) San Francisco and San Joaquin Valley Railroad (July 2020). A drive to purge location articles on former stations led me to realize this article would be much more useful for readers.
 * 91) J. K. Tillotson (March 2020).  19th century American playwright of a few popular and forgotten plays.
 * 92) Olive May (March 2020).  19th century American stage actress of some popularity.
 * 93) Orlando Ferguson (May 2019). A fun flat earther of the late 19th century.  Or Square Earther, if you prefer!
 * 94) William Addison Lathrop (April 2019). American author and playwright.
 * 95) 92nd Scripps National Spelling Bee (April 2019)
 * 96) Joseph C. Foster (March 2019). 19th century clown and later American theatre manager of popular low-brow fare.
 * 97) Emma Grattan (February 2019).  Another one of the British Blondes of Lydia Thompson in Forty Thieves
 * 98) Lisa Weber (February 2019).  One of the British Blondes of Lydia Thompson in Forty Thieves
 * 99) The Forty Thieves (1869 play) (February 2019). Hit play of 150 years ago this month in New York.
 * 100) Great Chesapeake Bay Hurricane of 1769 (February 2019).  Huge storm 250 years ago, found after writing below entry.
 * 101) North-Carolina Gazette (February 2019).  First newspaper in colony of North Carolina.
 * 102) Brooks County race war (January 2019).  December 1894 lynchings in Georgia, United States, randomly found after reading about illegal migrants issues in Brooks County, Texas.
 * 103) The Concert (play) (December 2018).  1909 German play.
 * 104) Paul M. Potter (December 2018).  Late 19th/Early 20th century American playwright.
 * 105) Edwin F. Thorne (December 2018).  19th century American stage actor.
 * 106) New York Leader (19th century) (December 2018).  19th century American literary/political organ newspaper.
 * 107) Lew Vanderpoole (December 2018).  Fascinating story.  19th century writer/publisher/fraudster.
 * 108) Andrew Carpenter Wheeler (November 2018).  Prominent American drama critic in 2nd half of 19th cenutry.
 * 109) Richard J. Finnegan (November 2018).  Prominent Chicago newspaper from 1910s-1950s.
 * 110) Chicago Daily Times (November 2018).  The NY Daily News of Chicago, one of the papers that became the Chicago Sun-Times (created from redirect)
 * 111) Chicago Daily Journal (November 2018).  Second-tier Chicago newspaper from 1844-1929 (created from redirect).
 * 112) Eddie Wittstein (November 2018).  Probably Connecticut-band leader from early 1900s-1960s.
 * 113) Diana Allen (November 2018).  Ziegfeld girl and silent film actress.
 * 114) An Amateur Orphan (November 2018).  1917 silent film starring Gladys Leslie.
 * 115) Divorcees Anonymous (October 2018).  For a woman in America in the 1950s, divorce was to be avoided per this group.
 * 116) Keyser's Pills (October 2018).  18th century mercury-based patent medicine to treat syphilis.
 * 117) William Weyman (October 2018).  Printer in colonial America.
 * 118) New-York Gazette (October 2018). The first newspaper in New York.
 * 119) William Lestocq (September 2018). British theatre manager who worked with Charles Frohman.
 * 120) Harrow Chequers F.C. (September 2018). Re-created after AfD, wrote a proper article on this 19th century English football club.
 * 121) The Runaways (1975 film) (August 2018). A teen and an escaped leopard became friends and TV movie hit in 1975.
 * 122) Gloucester sea serpent (August 2018).  In 1817-19, everybody knew about this.
 * 123) The Lottery of Life (July 2018).  1867 play.
 * 124) The South-Carolina and American General Gazette (June 2018). 1750s-80s colonial American newspaper.
 * 125) William W. Van Ness (June 2018).  New York politician of early 19th century.
 * 126) Journal de Paris (June 2018).  The first daily French newspaper still didn't have an article?!?  (The French wikipedia has for 12 years.)
 * 127) Charles E. Hill (June 2018).  Early 20th century academic.
 * 128) Clairo (May 2018).  New pop star.
 * 129) Boy Pablo (April 2018).  New indie rock phenoms.
 * 130) Bom Nome (April 2018).  Village in Brazil.  Still not hard to find populated places without articles.
 * 131) John Chamberlin (April 2018).  Famous DC restaurateur of latter 19th century.
 * 132) The Illustrated American (April 2018). Late 19th century periodical.
 * 133) Henry Guy Carleton (April 2018).  American playwright who had some success in 1890s.
 * 134) The White Heather (play) (April 2018).  Popular 1897 melodramatic play.
 * 135) El Mundo (El Salvador) (March 2018).  Leading daily newspaper in El Salvador.
 * 136) 91st Scripps National Spelling Bee (February 2018)
 * 137) The Sea of Ice (play) (December 2017).  1850s melodramatic play.
 * 138) Town and Country (play) (December 2017). Popular 19th century play first performed in 1807.
 * 139) The College Widow (play) (December 2017). Popular 1904 play.
 * 140) Dorothy Tennant (actress) (December 2017). Popular stage actress in first decade of 20th century.
 * 141) Under the Gaslight (December 2017).  1867 play, perhaps the most notable melodrama.
 * 142) Maud's Peril (December 2017). 1867 play.
 * 143) Eşek Island (November 2017).  Island in Turkey.
 * 144) My Old New Hampshire Home (November 2017).  Popular 1898 song.
 * 145) 3 Girls 3 (November 2017).  Short-lived 1977 American television show.
 * 146) Life's Most Embarrassing Moments (November 2017). 1980s bloopers TV show.
 * 147) Chicago, Kansas (October 2017).  Western Kansas ghost town
 * 148) Lucerne, Kansas (October 2017).  Western Kansas ghost town
 * 149) Policewoman Centerfold (October 2017).  1983 television movie
 * 150) The Kid from Left Field (1979 film) (October 2017). 1979 television movie
 * 151) Richard and Clara Winston (September 2017).  Prominent 20th century translators of German works
 * 152) Dream West (September 2017).  1986 television miniseries
 * 153) The Long Journey Home (1987 film) (September 2017).  1987 television movie
 * 154) A Tailor-Made Man (1917 play)  (August 2017). 1917 Broadway play
 * 155) Nick Adams (commentator) (August 2017).  Conservative commentator liked by Trump
 * 156) Peter Ibbetson (play) (August 2017). 1917 play.
 * 157) Leona LaMar (August 2017).  Early 20th century stage mentalist
 * 158) Peter Bale (August 2017).  Journalist and WikiTribune head
 * 159) Henry Irving Dodge (August 2017).  American writer d. 1934
 * 160) Marjorie Bonner (19th century actress) (August 2017)
 * 161) A Parisian Model (July 2017). 1906 play
 * 162) South Bend News-Times (May 2017).
 * 163) Harry Hawk (May 2017).  The actor on stage when Lincoln was shot.
 * 164) Montreal Telegraph Company (April 2017)
 * 165) Orrin S. Wood (April 2017).  Early American telegraph pioneer
 * 166) Timeline of North American telegraphy (April 2017)
 * 167) Margaret Hosmer (March 2017). 19th century YA writer
 * 168) Hard Cash (novel) (March 2017). 1863 novel.
 * 169) George Vandenhoff (March 2017). 19th century English actor
 * 170) Griffith Gaunt (February 2017).  Big 1866 novel.
 * 171) Richard R. Baker (February 2017).  Spelling bee announcer in mid-20th century
 * 172) DZIDZIO (February 2017). Popular Ukrainian band.
 * 173) 90th Scripps National Spelling Bee (February 2017).
 * 174) Hugh Gaine (January 2017).  18th century American publisher.
 * 175) Newspaper endorsements in the United States presidential election, 1996 (October 2016)
 * 176) Newspaper endorsements in the United States presidential election, 1904 (October 2016)
 * 177) Cheerful Moments (October 2016)
 * 178) Newspaper endorsements in the United States presidential election, 1900 (October 2016)
 * 179) Almon M. Clapp (September 2016).  First Public Printer of the United States
 * 180) National Republican (newspaper) (September 2016)
 * 181) Regina Pinkert (September 2016)
 * 182) 64th Scripps National Spelling Bee (September 2016) et al.
 * 183) Stephen Braun reporter.  (August 2016)
 * 184) V.V.'s Eyes (August 2016)
 * 185) Mike Makes His Mark (June 2016). 1955 educational film.
 * 186) A Desk for Billie (June 2016). 1956 educational film.
 * 187) Laura Krey (June 2016). stub.
 * 188) Julian Messner (May 2016).
 * 189) Joy Street (novel) (May 2016).
 * 190) Belle Story (May 2016).
 * 191) John Rathbone Oliver (May 2016)
 * 192) Exploding watermelon stunt (April 2016). Oy vey.
 * 193) The Nest (2016 novel). (April 2016). Currently best-selling novel.
 * 194) Brescia Explosion (April 2016).  No question this would exist already if it happened in an English-speaking country.
 * 195) Paulina Andreeva (April 2016). Popular current Russian actress
 * 196) Marceline Orbes (March 2016).  World renowned clown of late 19th/early 20th century.
 * 197) Good Times (musical) (March 2016).  Overblown 1920 Broadway offering.
 * 198) El Diario (Argentina) (March 2016).  Primary newspaper in Paraná, Argentina
 * 199) The Midnight Sons (March 2016).  Popular 1909 Broadway play.
 * 200) Davy Crockett (play) (March 2016). Very popular 1872 American play.
 * 201) Confessions of a Republican (March 2016).  Donald Trump laid his hands upon me to make this.
 * 202) 89th Scripps National Spelling Bee (March 2016).  Coming soon.
 * 203) The Deliverance (March 2016). Popular 1904 novel.
 * 204) The Forgotten Law (March 2016). 1922 silent film.
 * 205) Caroline Abbot Stanley (March 2016). American author.
 * 206) Fred Deutsch (February 2016). South Dakota politician.
 * 207) The Dutchman's Fireside (February 2016). Stub on popular 1831 novel.
 * 208) Lovejoy's Hotel (February 2016). 19th century New York City hotel.
 * 209) Howard Hotel (February 2016). 19th century New York City hotel.
 * 210) Hattie Starr (January 2016).  Late 19th/early 20th actress
 * 211) Charles Felton Pidgin (January 2016).  Author, statistician, inventor.
 * 212) Eben Holden (January 2016).  The first best-seller of the 20th century, it has been called.
 * 213) Golf course community (December 2015).  Sometimes you realize something familiar is not documented yet.
 * 214) Monument Cemetery (December 2015).  Defunct Philadelphia cemetery.
 * 215) Boston Ideal Opera Company (December 2015)
 * 216) The Kaffir Diamond.  (December 2015). Forgotten 1888 play.
 * 217) The Queen's Mate (December 2015).  Forgotten 1888 play.
 * 218) The Oolah (December 2015).  Mostly forgotten 1889 play.
 * 219) The Merry Monarch (play) (December 2015). Forgotten 1890 play.
 * 220) Broadway Theatre (41st Street) (December 2015). Once prominent Broadway theatre
 * 221) Browne's Chop House (December 2015).  One popular NYC restaurant, closed 1925
 * 222) Putnam, the Iron Son of '76 (December 2015).  Hit 1844 play.
 * 223) Stephen Woolls (November 2015). 18th century actor.
 * 224) Joseph Harper (actor) (November 2015). 18th century actor.
 * 225) John Henry (actor) (November 2015). 18th century actor.
 * 226) The Father (Dunlap play) (November 2015) 1789 American play.
 * 227) Giles Leonard Barrett (November 2015). 18th century actor.
 * 228) The Italian Father (November 2015).  1799 American play.
 * 229) The County Chairman (play) (November 2015).  Popular play of 1903.
 * 230) A Gentleman from Mississippi (November 2015).  Popular play of 1908.
 * 231) My Official Wife (October 2015).  Popular 1891 novel.
 * 232) The Prodigal Judge (October 2015).  Popular 1911 novel, later a play and film
 * 233) 1990 Hajj stampede (September 2015). (I could say a lot about this one and don't know where to say it. Parking here for now.  Of course I was spurred to create this due to the 2015 Hajj stampede in the news yesterday; I was not really aware of the ongoing cycle of large tragedies during the Mecca pilgrimages.  1,426 people died in this 1990 event, probably one of the largest stampede tragedies in world history, yet we didn't have an article on it.  We did have some coverage scattered in various places, with two sentences at Incidents during the Hajj, which interestingly enough was an article first created when the 2006 Hajj stampede occurred, and was developed into a broader article.  It seemed we had matured enough to create an article on the 1990 event alone, considering the huge death toll, and the ready availability of news sources from 1990 using Google news and other sources not as readily available online in 2006.  Even a small death toll in a Western incident would never go so long without an article, which says something about our natural bias to be concerned about things closer to home.  / Also troubling to me is how the victims of this accident pretty much died in vain, and I can't see any real evidence of steps being taken to correct what happened.  Now it is possible stuff did happen that is not readily available in Western sources, but one can see a bit of bias in the perception that "oh just a bunch of asian muslims died here;" surely Indonesia and Malyasia were upset about it.  In fact, it seems quite likely that more than 1,426 people died, but that's the only official number ever reached.  I can't even determine where the tunnel was, if it still exists, and when it was built. / I am far from an expert on the hajj, but here is what I learned -- millions of muslims stream into Mecca, many staying in huge air conditioned tent cities.  Its a logistical nightmare to handle this volume of people in an area with mountainous areas (hence the tunnels) and the nature of the events. People are there from across the muslim world, with many languages and cultures in play.  The "Stoning of the Devil" ritual requires pilgrims to throw pebbles at three stone pillars meant to represent the devils which tempted Abraham.  This is all nice I suppose for a religious ritual, but the volume of people involved today have turned it into a nightmare.  The prior pillars got so crowded that people were inadvertently missing and throwing rocks at each other.  The Saudis built a bridge around the pillars in the early 1960s to allow more people to toss their rocks at once.  After the 2006 tragedy, they tore down the bridge and basically built a multi-story parking garage (though for pedestrians) which surround three long rock walls (the "pillars" now), see Jamaraat Bridge.  Absolute hordes of people stream by these pillars; there are many crowd control measures but the volume of people is incredible.  I am not sure how it is humanly possible for the Saudis to prevent these tragedies unless they apply quotas (which muslim countries will howl at) or further build things that increase the ridiculous level of the Disneyworld they've created to handle the crowds.  Presumably they could build people mover systems to make it more like a ride.  I presume Islam cannot be interpreted to allow them to build duplicate Meccas (I'm not really joking), just as you can't build duplicates of sites in Israel.  But only Islam apparently has this concept of a required pilgrimage that is not scale-able with current human populations that early Muslims could never have foreseen.)
 * 234) Sheer Mag (September 2015).  70s classic rock/punk hybrid band on the rise.
 * 235) The Butter and Egg Man (August 2015).  The hit Broadway play of 1925, still performed today.
 * 236) Buddies (August 2015). Popular 1919 Broadway musical.
 * 237) Deez Nuts (politician) (August 2015). Fictional candidate for US president in the news
 * 238) Gambling (play) (July 2015).  Popular 1929 Broadway play.
 * 239) Secrets (1922 play) (July 2015).  Popular 1922 English play.
 * 240) Ray Cox (July 2015).  Early 20th century comedienne.
 * 241) John Westley (actor) (July 2015). 20th century American stage actor.
 * 242) Chaturbate (July 2015). Extremely popular porn cam site.
 * 243) William Harris Jr. (July 2015).  Popular early 20th century Broadway producer.
 * 244) Västanåfallet (July 2015).  Swedish waterfall.
 * 245) Laura H. Carnell (July 2015).  First dean of Temple University.
 * 246) Twin Beds (1914 play) (July 2015).  Very popular 1914 Broadway play.
 * 247) Wedding Bells (play) (July 2015).  Fairly popular 1919 Broadway play.
 * 248) 46th Scripps National Spelling Bee (July 2015).
 * 249) 45th Scripps National Spelling Bee (July 2015).
 * 250) 44th Scripps National Spelling Bee (June 2015).
 * 251) 66th Scripps National Spelling Bee (June 2015).
 * 252) 43rd Scripps National Spelling Bee (June 2015).
 * 253) 42nd Scripps National Spelling Bee (June 2015).
 * 254) 41st Scripps National Spelling Bee (June 2015).
 * 255) 40th Scripps National Spelling Bee (June 2015).
 * 256) 39th Scripps National Spelling Bee (June 2015).
 * 257) 67th Scripps National Spelling Bee (June 2015).
 * 258) 52nd Scripps National Spelling Bee (June 2015).
 * 259) 68th Scripps National Spelling Bee (June 2015).
 * 260) Kalief Browder (June 2015).  Wrongly imprisoned young person.
 * 261) Love Story Magazine (June 2015).  Popular American pulp magazine, 1921-47
 * 262) Smith's Magazine (May 2015).  American magazine, 1905-1922
 * 263) Charles Alfred Byrne (May 2015). Stub.
 * 264) The Journalist (newspaper) (May 2015).  Precursor to Editor & Publisher magazine.
 * 265) Nick Whiffles (May 2015).  Pure 19th century American pop culture.
 * 266) Henry Francis Keenan (May 2015).  19th century American parody writer.
 * 267) The Lure of the Mask (April 2015). Popular 1908 novel.
 * 268) Emma Padilla (April 2015). Mexico's first film star.
 * 269) The Girl on the Train (novel) (April 2015).  Huge bestselling 2015 novel.
 * 270) Young Mrs. Winthrop (play) (April 2015). Popular 1882 play.
 * 271) Carrie Turner (actress) (April 2015).  19th century American actress with unusual epitaph.
 * 272) The Willow Copse (March 2015). Popular mid-19th century play.
 * 273) George Clarke (actor) (March 2015).  19th century American actor.
 * 274) Checkmate (play) (March 2015).  Popular 1869 English play.
 * 275) Obława (March 2015).  Best Polish film of 2013.
 * 276) National Association of Women Lawyers (February 2015).
 * 277) Godbold's Vegetable Balsam (February 2015).  Saw a 1797 advertisement, fell down rabbit hole.
 * 278) Thompson Buchanan (February 2015).  American writer, 1877-1937
 * 279) In 1999 (February 2015).  Amusing antiquated 1912 vaudeville sketch.
 * 280) Mother (1910 play) (February 2015). 1910 play.
 * 281) Minnette Barrett (February 2015).  American vaudeville actress.
 * 282) Abel Clemmons (January 2015).  Killed entire family in 1805.  Found perusing 1806 newspapers.
 * 283) Carrie Renfrew (January 2015).  (1858-1948), author from Hastings, Nebraska
 * 284) Marjorie Patterson (December 2014) (1891-1948).  American author and actress, minor heyday was in 1910s
 * 285) Gerald Bordman (December 2014) (1931-2011).  Amazing musical theatre historian, I've used his sources many times.
 * 286) Regardie's (December 2014).  1980-92 quirky Washington D.C. magazine.
 * 287) Richard Bradley (writer) (December 2014).  Former Regardie's and George editor, early debunked of Rolling Stone rape story recently.
 * 288) Hugh Meredith (December 2014).  Lovable short-term partner of the bestest U.S. founding father, Benjamin Franklin
 * 289) Horse-Shoe Robinson (December 2014).  Hit 1835 American novel.
 * 290) The Woman of Andros (November 2014).  Thornton Wilder's 1930 followup to The Bridge of San Luis Rey
 * 291) Eleanor Markham (November 2014).  DONT BURY ME BRO.
 * 292) Annie Mack (actress) (November 2014).  Popular 19th century American stage actrss.
 * 293) Horatio D. Sheppard (November 2014). The oft-overlooked inventor of the penny press.
 * 294) The Heir at Law (October 2014).  1797 comedic play which enjoyed popularity for close to a century.
 * 295) Edward Marble (October 2014). 19th century American songwriter and actor
 * 296) Joseph Proctor (October 2014).  Popular 19th century American actor.
 * 297) Dotty Dripple (October 2014).  1944-1974 American comic strip
 * 298) Frederick W. Wurster (October 2014).  The last mayor of Brooklyn!
 * 299) Pony express (newspapers) (October 2014)
 * 300) William M. Singerly (October 2014) (Philadelphia newspaper publisher)
 * 301) J. David Stern (October 2014) (Philadelphia / New York newspaper publisher)
 * 302) New York Evening Express (October 2014) (1836-1881 New York newspaper)
 * 303) Zack, Texas (October 2014) (Formerly populated place in Texas, was on requested US articles list)
 * 304) Galbraith Lake (October 2014) (Alaska lake in North Slope Borough)
 * 305) Isaac Mitchell (October 2014) (19th century American author and newspaper publisher)
 * 306) The Yemassee (September 2014) (Bestselling 1835 American novel)
 * 307) Nick of the Woods (September 2014) (Bestselling 1837 American novel)
 * 308) Hearth and Home (September 2014) (1868-1875 illustrated weekly American magazine)
 * 309) Mrs. Julian Heath (September 2014) (1920s radio personality)
 * 310) Today's Housewife (September 2014) (1917-1928 popular magazine)
 * 311) Edith Kellogg Dunton (September 2014) (American author wrote "Betty Wales" YA series 1904-1917)
 * 312) Lucy Furman (September 2014) American author active from 1890s-1920s
 * 313) Exile (1930 novel) (September 2014) 2nd bestselling novel in United States in 1930
 * 314) Elizabeth Page (novelist) (September 2014) Author of 1939 bestseller The Tree of Liberty
 * 315) Elinor Macartney Lane (September 2014). Fairly popular author of first decade of 1900s.
 * 316) Peter (novel) (September 2014). A bestselling novel of 1908 and 1909.
 * 317) J. Will Callahan (September 2014). Early 20th century lyricist.
 * 318) Stephanie Schriock (September 2014). Current president of EMILY's list
 * 319) Gender diversity (September 2014).
 * 320) Back labor (September 2014).  How did this not exist?
 * 321) Charles Walter Couldock (September 2014).  Popular 19th century character actor.
 * 322) Zahaimar (August 2014) (2010 Egyptian film)
 * 323) Sandrananta River (August 2014) (Madagascar river)
 * 324) Jess Greenberg (July 2014) (popular youtuber)
 * 325) Jonathan Falconbridge Kelly (July 2014) Mid-19th century American humorist
 * 326) Dan Marble (July 2014). Popular lowbrow American actors of 1830s-1840s.
 * 327) Charles W. Taylor (July 2014). American actor and playwright, first to adopt Uncle Tom's Cabin to stage, though without success
 * 328) New Street Adventure (July 2014).  British neo-soul band
 * 329) 76th Scripps National Spelling Bee (July 2014) (the 2003 contest)
 * 330) 36th Scripps National Spelling Bee (July 2014) (the 1963 contest)
 * 331) 77th Scripps National Spelling Bee (July 2014) (2004 contest)
 * 332) 35th Scripps National Spelling Bee (July 2014) (1962 contest)
 * 333) Lotty Hough (June 2014) (19th century actress)
 * 334) Yampil, Donetsk Oblast (June 2014)
 * 335) Tourist village (June 2014)
 * 336) Karlivka, Donetsk Oblast (May 2014)
 * 337) Fultonhistory.com (May 2014)
 * 338) Swaim's Panacea (May 2014)
 * 339) The Inside of the Cup (May 2014)
 * 340) The Seven Sisters (play) (April 2014)
 * 341) Richard M. Hooley (April 2014)
 * 342) Mademoiselle D'Jeck (April 2014)
 * 343) Nathaniel Bannister (April 2014)
 * 344) Pique (play) (April 2014)
 * 345) List of Broadway shows that have held title of longest-running show (April 2014).  A fun compilation to research.
 * 346) Alfred Klein (April 2014)
 * 347) William Young (playwright) (April 2014)
 * 348) The Rajah (play) (April 2014)
 * 349) John Needham's Double (April 2014)
 * 350) Albert Nelson Marquis (April 2014)
 * 351) Marie Burroughs (April 2014)
 * 352) Virginity auction (April 2014).  Its a thing now, apparently.
 * 353) Donetsk Regional State Administration Building (April 2014)
 * 354) Grace Kimball (April 2014). 19th century actress
 * 355) Food truck rally (April 2014)
 * 356) Harry Conor (March 2014). Popular US actor in 1890s-1910s.
 * 357) Donetsk City (March 2014).  Shopping mall in eastern Ukraine
 * 358) A Winsome Widow (March 2014).  1912 Ziegfeld musical.
 * 359) Annie Yeamans (March 2014).  19th century actress.
 * 360) The Major (play) (March 2014).  1881 Harrigan & Hart hit play.
 * 361) Panthini (Feb 2014).  Another village in India.
 * 362) Sangam (Warangal district) (Feb 2014).  District containing below village.
 * 363) Bollikunta (Feb 2014). Village in India.
 * 364) Kenny Powers (stuntman) (Feb 2014).  The rocket lincoln fail of 1979!
 * 365) Charles Selby (Feb 2014).  Playwright/translator with smidge of fame connected to Lincoln assassination.
 * 366) Old Hannibal (Feb 2014).  Pick up a random 1859 newspaper and end up with this.
 * 367) Polyphrasmon (Feb 2014).  Greek playwright.
 * 368) David R. Slavitt (Jan 2014).  Serious writer better known for his 1960s novels pandering to masses.
 * 369) Goodbye, Janette (Jan 2014).  Best-selling smut novel of 1981.
 * 370) Louise Forsslund (Jan 2014).  Successful author around 1901-1910
 * 371) The Dwelling-Place of Light (Jan 2014).  Best-seller of 1917.
 * 372) Wesleyan Female College (Wilmington) (Jan 2014).  1837-1885 college for women.
 * 373) Frederick Ungar Publishing Company (Jan 2014).  Well regarded academic publisher of 1940-1985
 * 374) Adeline Trafton (Jan 2014).  1870s novelist.
 * 375) The Leather Patch (Dec. 2013).   Famous play if you still lived around 1886.
 * 376) New York Dramatic Mirror (Dec. 2013).  Bible of theatre coverage from 1879 to early 1920s.
 * 377) John A. Stevens (Dec. 2013).  19th century actor, biggest role was in play "Unknown".  Googling all this up was a challenge.
 * 378) John W. Blaisdell (Dec. 2013).  19th century actor
 * 379) George C. Boniface (Dec. 2013). 19th century actor
 * 380) Millie Cavendish (Dec. 2013).  19th century actress, she sang a naughty song for a few months.
 * 381) Annie Kemp Bowler (Dec. 2013).  19th century actress.  Annie and three above were all in The Black Crook (1866) a groundbreaking Broadway musical.
 * 382) Helen Dauvray (Dec. 2013).  Old actress, once married to a big baseball player of 1880s.
 * 383) The Senator (play) (Dec. 2013).  Big play of 1890, a fun one.
 * 384) Sydney Rosenfeld (Dec. 2013).  Fascinating playwright of much heart and limited talent of late 19th and early 20th century
 * 385) Neetzan Zimmerman (Dec. 2013).  Gawker dude making us all dumber, much much dumber.
 * 386) Harry Lacy (Dec. 2013).  Star of hit 1880s play, The Still Alarm.
 * 387) Isaac Brock (supercentenarian) (Nov 2013).  After seeing very old ads all over claiming he was the oldest man alive, I had to look up his amusing story.
 * 388) A Parlor Match (Nov 2013).  Big play of the 1880s, now almost completely forgotten due to lack of any real plot.  These are the Gangham Style's of our past.
 * 389) John Hodgkinson (actor) (Nov 2013).  18th century actor, most talented British actor of his time to come (flee!) to America.
 * 390) American Citizen (newspaper) (Nov 2013). Early 1800s newspaper.
 * 391) New York Daily News (19th century) (Nov 2013). No relation to the current fine publication with the same name.
 * 392) Henry Wood (minstrel) (Nov 2013).  The brother who wore blackface is likely to be the one history wants to forget.
 * 393) John Spray (Nov 2013).  Popular singer of late 1700s and early 1800s in England and Ireland.
 * 394) New York High School (Nov 2013).  High school in New York City from 1825-31, I actually found a drawing of it.
 * 395) John Griscom (Nov 2013).  Correcting wikipedia's bias against notable academics just because they lived in the 1700s.
 * 396) Scudder's American Museum (Nov 2013).  Lots of fun to learn about this one.
 * 397) Colonel Chaffin (Nov 2013).  I can't remember sometimes how i run across these 1800s oddities.
 * 398) Just a Wife (Nov 2013).  1910 play and 1920 silent film.
 * 399) Leander Richardson (Nov. 2013).  Journalist associated with Morning Telegraph, finally got around to it.
 * 400) Elisha Jay Edwards (Nov. 2013).  Influence and fame is fleeting among financial journalists, I guess.
 * 401) Hot Corn (Oct 2013).  Forgotten best seller, the Gangham Style, of 1854.
 * 402) The Caxtons (Oct 2013).  Popular novel of 1849.
 * 403) Jane Cable (Oct 2013).  Popular novel of 1906.
 * 404) The Art Assignment (Oct 2013).  Latest in the John Green empire.
 * 405) Poochinski (Oct 2013). Rewritten to defy any possible deletionists.
 * 406) Kevin Thomas (film critic) (Oct 2013).  He like movies, doesn't make him not notable.
 * 407) All I Need Is Everything (Oct 2013).  1984 single by Atzec Camera
 * 408) The Mississippi Bubble (Sept 2013).  Popular 1902 novel.
 * 409) August Alsina (Sept 2013).  Popular hip-hop singer white people don't know crap about.
 * 410) Hello Central, Give Me Heaven (Sept 2013).  Popular 1901 song.
 * 411) New York Star (1800s newspaper) (Sept 2013).  NY newspaper from 1868-91 that had many troubles.
 * 412) Elliott Crayton McCants (Aug 2013).  South Carolina author.
 * 413) The Terrorist (1994 film) (Aug 2013).  Important Egyptian film; why is it left to me to create these? Hmmm.
 * 414) Morgan J. O’Brien (Aug 2013).  Old New York judge.
 * 415) Sex drive-in (Aug 2013).  I did not make this up.
 * 416) James Finney (swimmer) (Aug 2013).  Part of the swimmer kick, popular 1880s English swimmer.
 * 417) Fred Beckwith (Aug 2013).  Same as above.
 * 418) James L. McCusker (July 2013).  Popular 1890s American swimmer.
 * 419) Harry Parker (swimmer) (July 2013). Popular 1870s British swimmer.
 * 420) Joseph Nuttall (July 2013).  Popular 1880s-90s British swimmer.
 * 421) James H. Tyers (July 2013). English swimmer of 1890s.
 * 422) Horace Davenport (July 2013).  Influential English swimmer, first ran across when doing Plunge for distance
 * 423) Nicholas Nickleby (1912 film) (July 2013).
 * 424) John P. Jewett (May 2013).  1850s Boston publisher
 * 425) Penelope Mitchell (May 2013).  Actress, listed at WP:TOPRED
 * 426) Isabel Mallon (May 2013).  Popular gossip and advice columnist of 1890s
 * 427) Cornelia Walter (May 2013).  First women editor of a major U.S. newspaper, in 1840s.
 * 428) Vysoky Zamok (newspaper) (April 2013). Ukrainian newspaper
 * 429) James Keeley (April 2013). Managing editor of Chicago Tribune, 1898-1914
 * 430) George Wheeler Hinman (April 2013).  Publisher of Chicago Inter Ocean
 * 431) Cross Kauwa (April 2013).  Town near Baga (below).
 * 432) Damasak (April 2013).  Village with old history in NE Nigeria
 * 433) Komadugu Gana River (April 2013).  Nigerian river.
 * 434) Baga, Nigeria (April 2013).  In the news today due to fighting.
 * 435) Jana Winter (April 2013).  Seemed to cross into notability over last month.
 * 436) Julia K. Wetherill Baker (April 2013).  Poor stub for now.
 * 437) Julia Schayer (March 2013).  Julie has basically been forgotten for over 80 years.
 * 438) Anne Hampton Brewster (March 2013).  19th century writer, "feminist" of her day cuz she didn't get married. whoo.
 * 439) Robert C. Hilliard (March 2013).  "Handsome Bob" matinee idol of late 1800s.
 * 440) Emily Rigl (March 2013).  19th century stage actress.
 * 441) The Great Ice Rip-Off (March 2013).  1974 TV movie of the week.
 * 442) Brown's Business College (March 2013).  The Kaplan University of 1910!
 * 443) Lincoln Business College (March 2013).  Long defunct little school, building still exists in Lincoln.
 * 444) Quest Education Corporation (March 2013)
 * 445) Walter H. Jurgensen (March 2013).  Another NE lt. gov., a toughie and that scandal seems very weird
 * 446) Roy W. Johnson (March 2013).  NE lieutenant governor project.  Only 5 left!
 * 447) Charles J. Warner (March 2013). NE lieutenant governor project
 * 448) Philip C. Sorensen (March 2013).  NE lieutenant governor project
 * 449) Mananara River (March 2013).  Another river.
 * 450) Dalma Garden Mall (March 2013). First shopping in Armenia.
 * 451) Nosivolo River (March 2013).
 * 452) Masomeloka (March 2013).  Sorta just moving down the coast.
 * 453) Onive River (March 2013).  You could do rafting here, as long as you never get injured.
 * 454) Sakanila River (March 2013)
 * 455) Ambodiharina (March 2013).  Village at mouth of below.
 * 456) Mangoro River (March 2013).  One would assume articles on every major river in the world were started years ago.  One would be wrong.
 * 457) Bitch Creek (March 2013).
 * 458) T. B. Ripy House (March 2013)
 * 459) Gwendoline Taylor (February 2013).  From WP:TOPRED list, then friend tells me she appeared nude on her current show probably generating every such request.
 * 460) Rich Homie Quan (February 2013).  See talk of redlinked rappers at "double mention" at User_talk:West.andrew.g/Popular_redlinks
 * 461) Friedrich Harkort (February 2013).  Early German industrialist, foresaw promise of railroads.
 * 462) Henri de Solages (February 2013).  Priest who died in town below in 1832, had a fr.wiki article already.  Made a stub.
 * 463) Andevoranto (February 2013)
 * 464) Maintinandry (another Madagascar village) (February 2013)
 * 465) Antanambao Manampotsy (another Madagascar village) (February 2013)
 * 466) Route nationale 2 (Madagascar) (February 2013).
 * 467) Antsampanana (February 2013).  Rest stop village in Madagascar.
 * 468) Murtal District (February 2013).  District in Austria formed January 2012 through merger, somehow no one created it yet.
 * 469) mieten, kaufen, wohnen (January 2013).  German House Hunters type show
 * 470) Georgina Bülowius (January 2013).  Similar to below, but more Paris Hilton like.
 * 471) Claudelle Deckert (January 2013).  German reality show person, German wikipedia version had over 500,000 views in past 30 days.  Let's see how the English one fares.
 * 472) Marolambo (January 2013). Another random village in Madagascar, these places are exceedingly remote to Western standards.
 * 473) Mahanoro (January 2013).  A random village of 40,000 people in Madagascar.
 * 474) Aki Higashihara (January 2013).  The world is a funny place.
 * 475) Norfolk College for Young Ladies (January 2013).  Former women's college.
 * 476) A Traveller In War-Time (January 2013).  1918 non-fiction book.
 * 477) A Modern Chronicle (January 2013).  Best-seller of 1910.
 * 478) Trillion Dollar Coin (January 2013).  Buddy can you spare a coin?
 * 479) Steve Crowder (December 2012).  Maybe not wise, have to police it apparently.
 * 480) Lake Maumelle (December 2012).  Large lake in Arkansas created in 1950s.
 * 481) George A. Billings (December 2012).  It helps to look a lot like Abraham Lincoln when someone is making a silent film that needs one, no experience required.
 * 482) A Kentucky Cinderella (December 2012).  1917 silent film.
 * 483) Gouverneur Morris (novelist) (November 2012).  I briefly thought a U.S. Founding Father wrote pulp fiction, learned he did not.
 * 484) Jules Eckert Goodman (November 2012).  Playwright who was most popular in 1910s.
 * 485) Ruth Cranston (November 2012). A women who led two lives.
 * 486) Kate Langley Bosher (November 2012).  Popular novelist - chick lit of 1910s.
 * 487) Robert Neilson Stephens (November 2012).  Popular novelist in 1890s-1900s.
 * 488) Cosmé McMoon (November 2012).  the internet always teaches me more.
 * 489) Little Tuesday (November 2012).  Child actress of brief popularity in 1890s.
 * 490) Do They Miss Me At Home? (November 2012) Hit song of 1852 and during U.S. Civil War
 * 491) Oscar Serlin (November 2012). Broadway producer big in 1940s.
 * 492) Publishers Weekly list of bestselling novels in the United States in the 1890s (October 2012)
 * 493) Radio Corazón (October 2012).  2007 Chilean film
 * 494) Sandy (novel) (October 2012).  2nd most popular book in the U.S. for 1905.
 * 495) Albert Sterner (October 2012).  Illustrated below book.
 * 496) The Marriage of William Ashe (October 2012).  Best-selling book in United States in 1905
 * 497) Byline strike (October 2012).  When was the first?
 * 498) Ulrich Franzen (October 2012).  Is this what The Brutalist Bricks was about?
 * 499) Laird & Lee (October 2012).  Publisher of the below novel and many other treats of the age.
 * 500) The Jucklins (October 2012).  Low-brow popular novel of 1896
 * 501) Stanley Brodsky (October 2012).  a top united states theoretical physicist
 * 502) Louis (parrot) (October 2010).  Historical duty called me to write this.
 * 503) Kareteci Kiz (September 2012). 1973 Turkish movie that English speakers laughed at this week.
 * 504) Russell Janney (September 2012).  Wrote 1946 best seller Miracle of the Bells
 * 505) Cavill family (swimming)(September 2012).
 * 506) A Roman Singer (September 2012).  1884 pleasure reading.
 * 507) Albert Pulitzer (September 2012).  The funnest Pultizer
 * 508) The Broad Highway (September 2012).  #1 novel of 1911.
 * 509) Peterson's Magazine (September 2012).  Woman's periodical (1842-1898)
 * 510) Charles Jacobs Peterson (September 2012) Founder of above.
 * 511) Al-Nas (TV station) (September 2012).  The present intervenes.
 * 512) The Hidden Hand (novel) (September 2012)
 * 513) The Gunmaker of Moscow (September 2012)
 * 514) The Gates Ajar (September 2012)
 * 515) Mr. Barnes of New York (September 2012).
 * 516) A Singular Life (September 2012)
 * 517) The Seats of the Mighty (September 2012)
 * 518) A Lady of Quality (September 2012)
 * 519) Malcolm Fraser (artist) (September 2012). This stub calls out to you.
 * 520) Edward Everett Rose (September 2012).  If you had a best-selling novel around 1900, this guy would grind out a play for you to maximize your profits.
 * 521) The Battle of the Strong (September 2012)
 * 522) Andrea Saul (August 2012).  Press secretary for Romney campaign.
 * 523) Tom Grogan (August 2012)
 * 524) The Adventures of Captain Horn (August 2012). #3 U.S. fiction seller of 1895.
 * 525) How to Be a Jewish Mother (August 2012).  Best selling non-fiction book in the U.S. in 1965.
 * 526) Fred Mecklenburg (August 2012).
 * 527) Henry Aldridge (August 2012).
 * 528) Mr. Keegan's Elopement (August 2012).
 * 529) Mr. Crewe's Career (August 2012).  Best selling novel in the U.S. in 1908, by the same guy who wrote the best selling novels of 1901, 1904, and 1906.
 * 530) Coniston (novel) (August 2012).  The best selling novel in the United States in 1906.
 * 531) Nana Meriwether (August 2012).  Miss Maryland USA 2012, 1st runner up Miss USA 2012.
 * 532) Hobart Chatfield-Taylor (August 2012).  Actually his legal name was Hobart Chatfield Chatfield-Taylor.
 * 533) Maria Taylor Beale (August 2012).  late 19th century author, not super famous but sources existed.
 * 534) William Gowans (August 2012). Famous 19th century New York City bookseller
 * 535) Walter Raymond (August 2012).  English novelist, some popularity in 1890s.
 * 536) Julia Cruger (August 2012).  Popular novelist in 1890s, harder to track down "best sellers" this far back.
 * 537) Sloane Gordon (August 2012). Popular political journalist in 1st qtr of 20th century.
 * 538) Edwin Pugh (August 2012).  Popular British working-class novelist of 1890-1920s.
 * 539) The Spoilers (Beach novel) (August 2012).  #8 best selling novel of 1906.
 * 540) Stephen McKenna (novelist) (August 2012).  Wrote forty-seven novels, some fairly popular (the Sonia series).  You could write articles 24/7 about people like this that don't have articles yet.
 * 541) Maria Thompson Daviess (August 2012).  Wrote hit novels of 1910s.
 * 542) Rafalca (July 2012).  Ann Romney's horse.  It amazes me that horse lineages are better documented than 99% of humans'.
 * 543) Ivo Serdar (1933-1985) (July 2012).  Popular Croatian actor of his time, probably the first coherent bio (though short) ever written in English about him.
 * 544) Tatjana Jurić (July 2012).  Croatian Top Model host.
 * 545) Stevo Karapandža.  (July 2012). Everyone's favorite celebrity chef of the former Yugoslavia.
 * 546) Alfred Dickey
 * 547) Pelham A. Barrows
 * 548) James Pearson (Nebraska politician) (July 2012)
 * 549) Melville R. Hopewell (July 2012)
 * 550) Edward A. Gilbert (July 2012)
 * 551) Edmund G. McGilton (July 2012).  Nebraska Lieutenant Governor series installment.
 * 552) Yelverton P. King (July 2012). 19th century diplomat.
 * 553) Beaufort Taylor Watts (July 2012). 19th century diplomat.
 * 554) Antonina Riasanovsky (July 2012).  Wrote 1940 best seller, The Family
 * 555) Isabel Scott Rorick (July 2012).  I Love Lucy would not exist without her.
 * 556) Adria Locke Langley (July 2012).  1945 best seller author.
 * 557) Elizabeth Pickett Chevalier. (July 2012).  Wrote book hyped as new Gone with the Wind in 1942.
 * 558) Percy Marks Published the Animal House of 1924.  (July 2012).
 * 559) Cincinnati Commercial Tribune (July 2012)
 * 560) Charles Frederic Goss (July 2012).  Had a bestseller in 1900!
 * 561) Conway Whittle Sams (July 2012).  Wrote against women's suffrage in 1910s.
 * 562) Mel Krantzler (July 2012).  Wrote 1974 bestseller "Creative Divorce", product of its times.
 * 563) Seidman and Son (July 2012).  Jewish comedy novel of 1958, play of 1962.
 * 564) Dennis Murphy (screenwriter) (June 2012).  The Big First Novel of 1958, then, well, no second novel.
 * 565) Alexandra Ovchinnikova (June 2012).  President of Yakutia, 1963-80
 * 566) Edwin Gilbert (June 2012).  Wrote a few bestselling novels in the 1950s.
 * 567) Clare Barnes, Jr. (June 2012)
 * 568) Alt for Norge (TV series) (June 2012).  Norway's #1 reality series.
 * 569) Harry Allen Overstreet (May 2012).  Popular pop-psych author of 1950s.
 * 570) Dan Riehl (May 2012). Conservative blogger. (Deleted September 2018 Articles for deletion/Dan Riehl)
 * 571) John L. Hervey (May 2012).  American turf historian.
 * 572) Wallace's Monthly (May 2012). 19th century horse racing magazine.
 * 573) Union Course (May 2012). Famous 19th century race course.
 * 574) Sins of the Parents (May 2012). 1914 silent film.
 * 575) Harry Kennedy (songwriter) (May 2012)
 * 576) I Want A Girl (Just Like The Girl That Married Dear Old Dad) (May 2012). A big hit of 1911.
 * 577) The Echo of Youth (May 2012).  A bad silent film of 1919.
 * 578) James E. Harris (May 2012). 8th Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska
 * 579) John E. Everroad (May 2012).  28th Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska
 * 580) Alice Dunning Lingard (May 2012). 19th century actress
 * 581) Frank Marsh (Nebraska) (May 2012). 29th Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska
 * 582) Jason Rogers (publisher) (May 2012). Early 20th century newspaper publisher
 * 583) J. Barry Mahool (May 2012).  Early 20th century mayor of Baltimore
 * 584) Samuel Hasell (May 2012). 18th century mayor of Philadelphia
 * 585) The North American (May 2012)
 * 586) Morton McMichael (May 2012).  19th century mayor of Philadelphia
 * 587) Hilario Ascasubi (Villarino Partido) (May 2012)
 * 588) J.H. Filbert (April 2012).  Company that invented I Can't Believe Its Not Butter.
 * 589) William J. Youden (April 2012) Statistician.
 * 590) Ääni ja Vimma (music competition) (March 2012).  For upcoming Finnish bands.
 * 591) Haywood High School (March 2012)
 * 592) Pennsylvania Packet (February 2012)
 * 593) Feeding Like Butterflies (February 2012). Canadian celtic-rock band
 * 594) Gerald T. Whelan (February 2012)
 * 595) Roland A. Luedtke (February 2012).  Haven't done one of these recently.
 * 596) Maureen O'Connor (journalist) (February 2012).
 * 597) Raphael Blau (February 2012).  Screenwriter, co-wrote Bedtime for Bonzo
 * 598) Griff Barnett (February 2012).  Doctor/lawyer role actor of 1930s-50s.
 * 599) Jessie Millward (February 2012).  Another actress.
 * 600) Laura Burt (February 2012).  Actress of some popularity from 1890s-1920s.
 * 601) Joseph Arthur (playwright) (February 2012).
 * 602) Put Me Off at Buffalo (December 2011).  1895 ditty by the Dillon Brothers.
 * 603) Dillon Brothers (December 2011).  No relation to the below.
 * 604) John Dillon (comedian) (December 2011).  died 1913, was very popular long ago.
 * 605) When the Corn Is Waving, Annie Dear (December 2011).  what the kids were listening to in 1860.
 * 606) Austin Mahone (singer) (December 2011).  the newest Elvis.
 * 607) Duprez & Benedict's Minstrels (December 2011)
 * 608) Stephen Schlossberg (December 2011).  Saw his obit today, we need more hard news biographies like this.
 * 609) Charles H. Duprez (December 2011).  Another forgotten 19th century minstrel show leader, very popular in 1860s-1870s.
 * 610) A Mother's Confession (November 2011).  1915 silent film with bigamy and incest story lines.
 * 611) Frank Dumont (November 2011).  Another forgotten, but once-famous, minstrel performer.  interesting how we selectively forget the past.
 * 612) Johannes de Peyster (October 2011).  Brother of Abe, Mayor of NYC 1698-99
 * 613) Abraham de Peyster (October 2011). Mayor of New York 1691-94
 * 614) Miss Earth New Zealand (October 2011).
 * 615) Daniel A. Currie (October 2011)
 * 616) Mark Block (October 2011).  Herman Cain's lovable Chief of Staff!
 * 617) Fourteenth Street Theatre (October 2011).  Old Manhattan theatre, big in 1870s-1900 or so.
 * 618) One Law for Both (October 2011). 1917 silent film.
 * 619) Vincent Serrano (October 2011).  Once famous actor, died 1935.
 * 620) Motion Picture News (October 2011).  Another one (1913-1930)
 * 621) The Moving Picture World (October 2011).  Early film industry trade journal (1907-27)
 * 622) Edwin McKim (October 2011) director of the below film, among others.  Father of Ann Dvorak.
 * 623) Should a Woman Divorce? (October 2011). 1914 silent film
 * 624) Married in Name Only (October 2011). 1917 silent film drama about eugenics.
 * 625) Wildness of Youth (October 2011).  1922 silent film that Carl Sandburg trashed.
 * 626) Zena Keefe (October 2011) - Dies at hands of evil abortionist in film listed immediately below. Silent film actress 1910s-20s.
 * 627) Enlighten Thy Daughter (1917 film) (October 2011) - SEX IS EVIL!
 * 628) The Still Alarm (October 2011) - Incredibly popular play in 1880s-90s, and silent films, incredibly obscure today.  Probably because it was kinda bad.
 * 629) Ivan Abramson (October 2011) - 1910s-20s silet firm director and one of the "most important artists in the history of Yiddish cinema"
 * 630) Burns Mantle (October 2011) - Famous theater critic, influential through 1943 retirement.
 * 631) A Child for Sale (October 2011) - 1920 silent film
 * 632) The Heart of Paula (October 2011) - 1916 silent film
 * 633) Rose Massey (September 2011) - 1860s-70s actress, would be total People magazine fodder today, I suspect.
 * 634) Rollin Howard (September 2011) 1860s-70s drag queen minstrel blackface performer.
 * 635) Blue Jeans (play)(September 2011)  Big play of 1890s and 1917 silent film, now mostly forgotten pop culture, but quite popular in its time
 * 636) Julie Farr, M.D. (September 2011) - Short lived 1978 U.S. television series
 * 637) James Austin Butterfield (September 2011) - 19th century composer of big 1866 hit When You and I Were Young, Maggie
 * 638) Charles Blamphin (September 2011) - 19th century British composer and harpist
 * 639) Grace McDonald (September 2011) - Briefly popular actress in 1940s.
 * 640) Thomas Brigham Bishop (September 2011) - Fascinating 19th century music composer/charlatan
 * 641) Gladys Leslie (September 2011) - Silent film star of 1910s-20s, long forgotten
 * 642) Charles E. Pratt (September 2011) - American pop music composer of 1870s-1870s.
 * 643) Samuel N. Mitchell (September 2011) - Wrote lyrics to blockbuster hits of the 1870s.
 * 644) William Cauldwell (August 2011) - NY state senator, proprietor of NY Sunday Mercury, early baseball booster.
 * 645) Mary Kay Andrews (August 2011) - American chick-lit author, best sellers cranked out
 * 646) Robert E. Moore (August 2011) - 7th lieutenant governor of Nebraska
 * 647) Reuel Colt Gridley (August 2011) - famously raised funds for wounded U.S. veterans by auctioning a sack of flour in 1864.
 * 648) Blanche Massey (August 2011) - actresses of some popularity in 1890s
 * 649) Khonuu (August 2011) - local administrative village in Siberia
 * 650) Plunge for distance (July 2011) - now-forgotten swimming event, used to get headline news into 1920s
 * 651) Mayor Buratovich (July 2011) - a town in Argentina
 * 652) New York Age (July 2011) - as part of a cleanup of The New York Globe
 * 653) Nathalie Nordnes (June 2011) - Norwegian singer
 * 654) George Clifford Shedd (June 2011) - novelist son of entry below
 * 655) Hibbard H. Shedd (June 2011) - 4th Lieut. Gov. of Nebraska
 * 656) William E. Nichol (June 2011) - Lieut. Gov. of Nebraska (1987-1991)
 * 657) Andrea Peyser (June 2011)
 * 658) Frederic Hudson (May 2011)
 * 659) Alfred McClung Lee (May 2011)
 * 660) New York Atlas (May 2011) notable 19th century New York City newspaper
 * 661) Pskov Krom (May 2011)
 * 662) Robert Reidt (May 2011) - how did someone not create this before?
 * 663) Nikolai Sevryugin (May 2011).  Governor of Tula oblast 1991-97.
 * 664) Ray William Johnson (comedian) (March 2011).  Befuddled to learn he did not have one.
 * 665) Café con piernas (March 2011)
 * 666) The Beggar (film) (January 2011) - popular 1983 Egyptian comedy
 * 667) Vanity Theft (January 2011) - rare to see a band with rising popularity like this that didn't have one yet.
 * 668) Alfred W. Agee (January 2011) - 3rd lieutenant governor of Nebraska
 * 669) Othman A. Abbott (January 2011) - 1st lieutenant governor of Nebraska
 * 670) Horatio Hastings Weld (December 2010) - 19th century newspaper editor and minister, briefly involved with Brother Jonathan
 * 671) Brother Jonathan (newspaper) (December 2010) - weekly American newspaper/magazine, first illustrated publication in US (1842-62)
 * 672) The Danish Experience (December 2010) - very popular 2003 Egyptian (Arabic) comedy, probably feels like a 70s film to Westerners.
 * 673) Terrorism and Kebab (December 2010) - very popular 1992 Egyptian (Arabic language) film.
 * 674) On the Right Track (December 2010) - feature film debut of Gary Coleman in 1981.
 * 675) Mary Edwards Bryan (November 2010) - 19th century American writer I can across when working on Elizabeth Bisland
 * 676) Sunday Mercury (New York) (November 2010) - very popular 19th century weekly newspaper in United States
 * 677) Edmund C. Carns (November 2010) - 2nd lieutenant governor of Nebraska
 * 678) Kearney Hub (November 2010) - Nebraska newspaper
 * 679) Elizabeth Bisland(November 2010) - part of a fascinating hoopla in 1889-90 to go around the world in less than 80 days
 * 680) Leo Mishkin (November 2010) - well known mid 20th century film critic for the New York Morning Telegraph
 * 681) 1911 Chicago International Aviation Meet (November 2010)
 * 682) Luo Yufeng - Chinese internet celeb/meme (November 2010)
 * 683) Edward Russell Thomas (October 2010) - early 20th century business and newspaper man
 * 684) William Coleman (editor) (October 2010) - first editor of what became the New York Post, killed adversary in 1804 duel.
 * 685) Jacob Hyer (October 2010) - the so-called first professional U.S. boxer, broke arm in mythical 1816 match
 * 686) Dog Island, Anguilla (October 2010) - Surprised to find an island of this size (500+ acres) with no article.
 * 687) Posta (newspaper) (October 2010) - 2nd largest circulation paper in Turkey.
 * 688) Joachim Friedrich Henckel (October 2010) (18th century German surgeon, adapted from German wikipedia)
 * 689) Rust Communications (September 2010) (media company based in Missouri)
 * 690) Fort Scott Tribune (September 2010)
 * 691) The Morning Sun (Pittsburg) (September 2010) (regional Kansas newspaper)
 * 692) Dodge City Daily Globe (September 2010) (regional Kansas newspaper)
 * 693) Oxnard Press-Courier (September 2010) (California newspaper, closed up in 1994 after 95 years)
 * 694) Brush-Moore Newspapers (September 2010) (Ohio based newspaper group 1923-67, largest newspaper deal in history when sold)
 * 695) Southeast Missourian (September 2010) (Missouri newspaper, has good Google news archive for source hunting)
 * 696) Lucius Tiberius Claudius Pompeianus (September 2010) (Roman counsel in 231, started from German wiki version)
 * 697) Franz Eichhorst (September 2010) (Nazi war artist, developed from German wikipedia version)
 * 698) Muriel Wace (September 2010) (British author, wrote popular children's books about ponies in 1920s-40s)
 * 699) The Reminder (Flin Flon) (August 2010) - northwestern Manitoba's finest newspaper
 * 700) Etelä-Suomen Sanomat (August 2010) - southern Finland's finest regional newspaper
 * 701) Sanko Park (July 2010) - the bestest shopping mall in southeastern Turkey
 * 702) Ali Kosh (July 2010) - archaeological site in Iran first settled in about 7500 BC
 * 703) Keskisuomalainen (July 2010) (stub) - fairly large circulation Finnish newspaper with a scary-hard to remember/spell name.
 * 704) Chogha Bonut (July 2010) - archaeological site in Iran first settled in about 7200 BC
 * 705) Tureng Tepe (July 2010) - archaeological site in northern Iran first settled in about 4000 BC
 * 706) William Hellmuth (July 2010) - prominent US architect
 * 707) Juliet Corson (June 2010) - 19th century leading in U.S. cookery education
 * 708) Matilda Heron (June 2010) Popular U.S. actress of 1850-60s.
 * 709) Surra de Bunda (June 2010)
 * 710) Lakhandei river (May 2010)
 * 711) Fort Saskatchewan Record (May 2010)
 * 712) Annoying Orange (April 2010).  (This is already frighteningly popular as of May 21,2010.)
 * 713) Terre Noire, Nova Scotia (April 2010)
 * 714) Rankin School of the Narrows (April 2010)
 * 715) Segregated prom (March 2010)
 * 716) Kentucky New Era (March 2010) Smaller regional paper now on Google news archives
 * 717) Homart Development Company (March 2010) The arm through which Sears influenced US suburban growth
 * 718) Bikini barista (March 2010) Yeah, its what you think (made DYK)
 * 719) Bentley Mall (February 2010) Northernmost mall in North America
 * 720) Thin Lizard Dawn (February 2010) Late 90s alt-rock band
 * 721) Suburban Square (February 2010) one of the earliest shopping centers in the U.S.
 * 722) Spartanburg Herald-Journal (February 2010).  Southern newspaper owned by the NY Times
 * 723) Market Square (Lake Forest, Illinois) (February 2010). one of the earliest shopping centers in the U.S.
 * 724) Kokopelli Winery (January 2010)  Largest winery in U.S. state of Arizona
 * 725) Flag Hill Winery (January 2010) Largest winery in U.S. state of New Hampshire
 * 726) Nassau Valley Vineyards (January 2010) Largest and first winery in U.S. state of Delaware
 * 727) Chaddsford Winery Largest winery in U.S. state of Pennsylvania
 * 728) Quintard Mall (December 2009)
 * 729) Jessica Corry (November 2009) Conservative pro-cannabis politico
 * 730) Hold Everything (store) (November 2009) Now defunct home organization chain
 * 731) Storables (October 2009) home organization chain
 * 732) Organized Living (October 2009) Now defunct home organization chain
 * 733) Foreign Body (internet series) (May 2008) internet web series created to promote Robin Cook novel

Other wikipedias

 * de:Girl on the Train (May 2015)
 * mg:Winston Churchill (mpanoratra) (September 2014)
 * mg:Morrissey (September 2014)
 * mg:John Green (September 2014)
 * ru:Грин, Джон (John Green) (June 2014)
 * af:The Replacements (December 2013)
 * mg:The Kinks (March 2013)
 * de:Des Moines Register
 * hr:Hüsker Dü
 * ka:რებეკა ბლეკი

Where

 * 3/1/2021: 967, 713
 * 3/15/2021: 966, 716