Models Use These 7 Beauty Tricks to Stay Fresh No Matter What

Even though I’ve never wanted to be a model, I’d be lying if I said I didn’t wish I looked like a model. Well, with the help of these 7 tricks, it might be possible – but only if I (and you!) find the motivation to follow them!

#7. Throw a scarf over your head while changing clothes to keep your makeup from smudging.

Photo Credit: Twitter

Because the only thing worse than deodorant smears is foundation smears around the collar.

#6. Use your hand to support your chin.

Photo Credit: Instagram

This is helpful for diminishing the appearance of a double chin in photographs, but also for keeping good posture and checking that the skin around your chin and neck doesn’t sag. Give it a try the next time you’re just sitting around!

#5. Exfoliate.

Photo Credit: Instagram

Use a scrub on your legs both before and after you shave to keep them silky smooth and soft.

#4. Wash your face differently.

Photo Credit: YouTube

Soap-based products remove your makeup…along with the outer layer of your skin’s protective layer. For a gentler approach, use wipes or a hydrophilic oil you follow up with toner.

Fun fact: you can swap sparkling water for toner and save some serious $$!

#3. Check your underwear drawer.

Photo Credit: The Knot

Pick something nude that fits close to the skin, in a fabric that doesn’t cling to other fabrics – you’ll have the confidence to sport any outfit in a photo!

#2. Soft and shiny skin.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

The trick? Use something with reflective particles, like glittery eyeshadow or a bit of highlighter. You can mix it in with your favorite moisturizer for a one-stop-shop!

#1. Perfect your lipstick.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

A simple dab of vaseline on your lips will keep the color shiny – and right where you want it.

h/t: Brightside

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12 People Share How Their Best Friend Became Their Ex-Best Friend

While some friendships last a lifetime, the truth is that most of them fall apart in one way or another. Perhaps you moved too far away from each other, or maybe someone did something wrong. Whatever the reason, it’s never easy to lose a best friend.

These 12 people remember the exact moment it happened…

#12. We haven’t spoken since.

“We were both in the military when we were younger. I still to this day owe this guy a debt of gratitude. I was a pretty shy kid growing up but this guy, I’ll call him A, would always pump me up by quoting the movie Swingers and telling me: “You’re so money. You’re so money and you don’t even know it.” Maybe he was paraphrasing. We got into our squabbles as young guys in the military will do, but for the most part he was an absolute standup guy.

The years progressed and he visited me at my next duty assignment on the west coast; we were originally on the east coast. We didn’t see each other as much but when I deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan he’d always let me stay the night with him in his apartment, taking me out on the town and just being a really good dude.

The years continued to go by and he even came out to stand as one of the groomsmen in my wedding, giving me a great toast and telling me how proud he was of how much I’d changed since we first met.

But when I got stationed overseas back in 2011 we really lost contact. We talked off and on for the 3 years I was away but when I got back I heard from his sister what happened.

He got out of the military and took a job as a civilian contractor. He was doing well but had to take a lifestyle polygraph test in order to get a better job. He failed miserably. He lied about soliciting prostitutes and smoking weed after he got out of the military. The polygrapher knew was lying and then he admitted to it, thus screwing himself even more. Not only did he not get the clearance but he lost his existing clearance.

He left the east and moved down south, trying to finish his masters degree. But he couldn’t. Strike number two. He failed out of that program. He was still able to get a decent job working at an IT company but he got fired from that after it was found that he was behaving inappropriately with a few of his female co-workers. He was always a lothario but apparently had gone too far in this case.

This all ended up with him getting super depressed and threatening to kill himself, pointing a gun at his head while the cops stood him down. He was involuntarily committed to a mental institution and was just never really the same.

I was flabbergasted when I heard all of this and immediately tried to make contact. A kept avoiding my calls but I was finally able to get a hold of him. He just sounded so different and distant on the phone. I told him I was here for him and would do whatever he needed, but he told me in an ice cold voice something that still kind of haunts. “I’m not the same person that you used to know.”

And he was right.

I kept trying to engage with him over the next couple of months but he’d never pick up or answer my calls. Finally I was able to get a hold of him when he was able to get in work in Texas but he was gone by this point. But I told A how much he meant to me and still means to me, how he brought me out of my shell and was a big part of becoming the person I was today. He didn’t really care one way or the other and after that day (which was around 3-4 years ago now) we haven’t spoken since.”

#11. I never heard from either one again.

“I had 2 best friends through grade school, middle school and the start of high school, they didnt know each other, two unrelated friendships, but basically when i was doing something i was with one of them or one of them were at my house. My parents had pointed out a few times that I was always the one to call them (this was before mobile phones and texting), and why did they never contact me to play over (or hang out as we got older). It started gnawing at me and at one point I decided to see if these guys who called me their best friend cared enough to contact me.

So one day I stopped calling them to hang out. Weeks went by and then months. I never heard from either one again. I guess we weren’t that good friends or there would have been some contact.”

#10. What bothers me.

“I let him stay with me for a week while he was in between apartments. 3 days in, he loses his headphones but doesn’t tell me, and 2 days later he looks through my stuff and finds my pair of headphones of the same brand, takes them, and claims they’re his. I ask for them back and he says I can borrow them. The next day he marches into my room at 1AM and yells at me for 10 minutes about how I’m an asshole for stealing his headphones and I’m a terrible friend and I’m an idiot, etc. He leaves for 2 hours and then comes back like nothing happened. I give him the headphones (they were only like $30, I just bought another and didn’t care too much) and politely tell him that our friendship means more to me than headphones, so he can take them but can no longer stay with me due to his behavior, even though he only had a couple more days. Haven’t talked to him since, but several mutual friends are pissed at me because he told everyone I stole his headphones, yelled at him, and then kicked him out for no reason. Fun.”

#9. As long as she’s happy.

“We’d been best friends for 20 years+ years. Knew everything about each other. Our fears, our hopes, our dreams, our kinks. About the only thing we didn’t know is what the other looked like naked.

We were always there for each other. Every time she met a guy, dated him, and ended up dumping him or getting dumped i was there for her.

Then she hooked up with her current guy. He’s someone we’ve known since high school. They dated for about 6 months, then got married back in March.

She hasn’t spoken to me since. I’ve tried calling her a couple of times, but she won’t answer her phone. I’ve texted her a few times, no response.

I miss my best friend, but as long as she’s happy I won’t press the issue.”

#8. She didn’t believe me.

“She never believed I was sexually assaulted as there was no video proof of it happening, and she has continued being friends with my assaulter, even after the assaulter is now stalking me.”

#7. It’s none of my business.

“I knew my best friend since middle school. Went to the same college and graduate school. We both moved across the continent to Silicon Valley. We’d go out biking every weekend and sometimes even during the work week in the early morning or afternoon.

After his girlfriend cheated on him (baby included) he decided to stay with her. No problem for me: it’s not my woman… We’d still hang out once per week for a couple more years, though I never once saw her or the new kid. It was as if he was leading two completely separate lives.

We could finish each others sentences.

And then, 4 years ago, they got married and she decreed that he couldn’t see me anymore. She’s so insecure about her earlier cheating that she thinks everyone of his friend judges her for it. I’m truly indifferent about it. It’s none of my business. Whatever makes them happy.

A few times per year, we do a short lunch bike ride. She doesn’t know about those. (Those are his only rides on Strava that he marks as private so she can’t see them.)

But I’m essentially out of his life. He hasn’t been to the new house that we bought 3 years ago. I haven’t even seen his new kid yet. (He’s 2 now.) My request to visit them due to the new baby was rejected. (“Maybe later…”)

I still bike multiple times per week, often the same trails as the ones we did together. It still bothers me that this was taken away from me.

(When I’m in a really bitter mood, I wish she’d cheat again. I’d be a bad Nelson Mandela.)”

#6. Of course, word spread.

“We were best friends from preschool to 8th grade. One night while her parents were at a wedding, her older cousin was staying the night with. Her cousin was downstairs all night and my friend invited her friend (boy) who was two years older than us over. I was already a little uncomfortable because my friend lied to her cousin saying this boy was the same age as us. While we were upstairs in her room, we were listening to music and reading magazines. Out of no where my friend took her shirt off and was dancing around in her bra. This boy told her to dance in her underwear too so she did. He asked me to and I said no. My friend started making fun of me and calling me a prude. He then held me down and kept trying to yank my pants off, I kept kicking him, so my Friend started helping him. He got my pants half way down and he kept reaching in my underwear and under my bra. So I started yelling for him to stop and I kicked him hard in the face. He stopped and went home. when he left I got in a fist fight with my friend. Her cousin (who was asleep the whole time) never found out. I walked home and I was too embarrassed to tell my mom. The next day I felt like I needed to talk to Someone so when I went for a walk with another friend, I told her what happened. She told her mom, her mom called my mom, and we went to the police station (bc my other friend told the boy my mom called her mom and told her what happened, so his mom ran to the police station to press charges on us for making up lies about her son). Of course, word spread around school and I was completely embarrassed and depressed. My friend lied to everyone saying that I was the one who was taking my clothes off and trying to get him to have sex with me, and he didn’t want to so I made up lies about him. Ended our friendship and it made it hard for me to become close to any other friend again.”

#5. Drugs.

“Drugs. Promised we wouldn’t let that ever come between us. We did. But now we’re both trying to put it back together again. This time without drugs.”

#4. Money.

“Money. As we got older money borrowed didn’t get paid back and the person started treating me like a second income. Forgiving past debt didn’t do it, but cutting them off from using me as secondary income did.”

#3. No regrets.

“My best friend of almost 20 years told my 13 year-old child that she’d need plastic surgery, to diet, and an entire new wardrobe to fit in at her new school. He also tried to convince me that I wasn’t an addict, I had 2 months clean at the time and was fresh out of treatment. Multiple times offered me numerous substances trying to get me to break. He had agreed to let us move in to escape the unsafe home we were in but he went maniacally insane. The last straw was him making some off the cuff remarks to me about “not wanting to associate with anyone who didn’t fit his image of celebrity”.

I wrote a Dear John note, packed my shit and took my kid while he was at work. Blocked him on every conceivable social media and haven’t spoken to him since. No regrets.”

#2. He cut me off.

“He came up to me at lunch one day and asked me if I knew a girl. I said no and he said that he thought she was super hot but had no classes with her, no friends in common, nothing to talk to her but he found out that she goes to the church his mom goes to so he asked if I wanted to go to church so he could get at her. Go to church to pick up girls? My sixteen year old mind thought that was fucking genius. So Sunday rolls around he picks me up and we go.

He was a good looking guy, super athletic but socially awkward. I’m okay at best looking, pudgy, but pretty outgoing so pretty solid combo when it comes to spitting game, he brings them in I keep them entertained. So we spot her and we join the group get to talking and making friends and it was actually really cool so we went back the next week and the week after that. All of a sudden it’s been six months and we’re heavily invested in this church youth group. That girl turned out to have a boyfriend but we liked all the other people anyway.

I’m an atheist so I was just there to kick it with my boy and other people my age but he got super invested in the religion aspect. Decided he wanted to be a pastor and started cutting off all our friends besides me since they were in his mind the cause of sin in his life. He then would only ever talk to me about God not our actual shared interests so eventually I told him I wasn’t going to attend the youth group anymore. He got furious and cut me off too. I kept being friends with a few of the girls there but not him. The friends that he all cut out and I got even closer after Highschool and now he’s in the navy.

Tldr: Went to church for the pussy, he stayed for the religion. I left.”

#1. New friends.

“We went to college, and she found newer “cooler” friends and froze me out. Sucked since we had been friends since kindergarten and lived together in our first dorm freshman year.”

h/t: Reddit

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These 5 Fan Theories Will Change How You View Some of Your Childhood Faves

There are things in the TV shows and movies we watched when we were kids that we didn’t ever question. But now, as adults, some of us can’t help but think about how strange they were. And now that we have the beautiful thing called the internet, we can put our heads together to come up with the most outlandish, but totally plausible, theories.

So buckle up and check out some of the what-ifs and might-have-beens of some of your childhood faves.

#5. Rugrats is really a story about death.

Photo Credit: Nickelodeon

In this super dark theory, Angelica made up all the babies, who actually died or were never born in the first place. Chuckie died with his mother, which is why his dad is always so nervous and Tommy Pickles was stillborn, explaining his father’s “inventions” meant to help him cope with the son he never had. The twins aren’t twins but were aborted, and Angelica never knew whether it was a boy or girl, so she made up both.

If this totally freaks you out (it should), rest assured that co-creator Arlene Klasky confirmed it isn’t the slightest bit true.

#4. Karate is a euphemism for Spongebob.

Photo Credit: Nickelodeon

For something not exactly safe for kids, so read on with that in mind.

There’s an entire episode where both Spongebob and Patrick have an insatiable appetite for karate. The person explains his (or her) theory like this on Reddit:

“The episode starts with Spongebob coming home, looking for Sandy to do karate with. Why would Sandy already be in his house, if they were not in a relationship? He looked around, sees she isn’t there, then sits on the couch. She appears shortly after and tries to tackle him. Before Spongebob starts to go at it, he runs off, puts on his safety helmet and gloves, says ‘safety first,’ then winks at the camera before charging at Sandy,” the cartoon theory-crafter wrote on Reddit, making it obvious that Mr. Squarepants had another kind of “safety” in mind.

He later gets fired because all he could think about was karate with Sandy.

I’m buying it. Are you?

#3. Sid is the hero in Toy Story 3.

Photo Credit: Disney

Sid is everyone’s nightmare as a child, and poetically grows up to be a garbage man….but is he the intentional hero, as well?

The argument goes that Sid is the only person who knows the toys are alive, so he eventually gets a job that helps him ensure no toy is actually thrown out in the trash (we see toys he personally salvaged in the movie), and so he’s the person who saves the toys instead of destroying them.

Team Sid, anyone?

#2. The reason Ash never ages in Pokemon.

Photo Credit: Pokemon

The show has been around for over 20 years, yet Ash Ketchum remains a sweet 10-year-old boy. Well, here’s why: in the first episode, Ash sees a Ho-oh in the sky and “it is said that anyone seeing it is promised eternal happiness.”

What’s happier than forever being free to follow your dreams and ambitions at 10? Nothing, obviously!

#1. Willy Wonka handpicked Charlie to find a Golden Ticket and inherit the factory.

Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures

This popular theory holds that Bill “The Candy Man” secretly worked for Wonka and knew which candy bar had the last Golden Ticket – a ticket he was instructed to give only to a poor, local, unselfish kid who might be the best person to inherit his factory.

Supporting facts include the winning bar being displayed in a case where only Bill could choose it and Wonka telling Charlie – and only Charlie – that he read about him in the “papers.” Who’s to say he meant the newspaper and not a secret report?

I like it.

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The Next Time You Feel The Need to Mansplain Use This Flowchart

The term “mansplaining” was officially added to Merriam-Webster earlier this year, but if you’re active in social media spheres, you’ve likely been hearing it for years.

If you’re a woman who knows anything about “guy” stuff (superheroes, cars, books, politics, on and on) then you’ve been dealing with it your entire life.

Mansplaining: When a man talks condescendingly to someone (especially a woman) about something he has incomplete knowledge of, with the mistaken assumption that he knows more about it than the person he’s talking to does.

Photo Credit: Twitter

Thankfully, we now have this handy chat to hand over to the men in our lives. If begins with the question “did she ask you to explain it?” If yes, then feel free to proceed. If no, well…you’re only left with three outcomes:

Probably mansplaining, definitely mansplaining, and just stop talking now. It’s kind of a progression, really, because some men just can’t seem to stop talking, even when every instinct and any ability whatsoever to read the room should tell them that they’ve stuck their foot squarely in their mouth.

Because for all they know, they’re pontificating to someone who is as well – or better – versed on the subject than they are.

The chart was tweeted by @KimGoodwin, and even though most of the ladies in her mentions were all applause, she did get some less than enthusiastic (gasp!) responses from the men in the crowd.

Photo Credit: Twitter

Perhaps this happens to men on occasion, but anyone who uses the hashtag #notallmen instantly loses all credibility. Sorry. It’s just true.

Photo Credit: Twitter

Goodwin was quick to “regular” explain why he’s wrong.

Photo Credit: Twitter

And the responses from the ladies really drove home her point.

Photo Credit: Twitter

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And then there were the people asking the big questions. We need to know!

Photo Credit: Twitter

So there you have it – hats off, Kim Goodwin. You’re a gem.

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This Artist Created an Adorable Illustrated Guide to the Dogs of the World

Artist Lili Chin has charmed her way into our hearts with this poster series entitled “Dogs of the World” that shows what parts of the world different dogs come from.

Because of how successful this series was, rumor has it that she might do a cat series in the future. Fingers crossed!

Check out Chin’s Etsy shop to see all the great art she has for sale.

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These 15 Funny Tweets about Parenting Will Bring a Smile to Your Face

Parenthood is a trying experience. Thankfully, Twitter is a place where parents can vent all their funny frustrations.

Check out these laughter-inducing tweets from parents who just need to let it all out.

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These 7 Historical Buildings Have Been Completely Relocated

Some buildings really were built to last. Take The Great Pyramid of Giza, for example. That thing ain’t going anywhere any time soon.

But not all buildings last that long. And sometimes they need to be picked up from their original foundations and relocated, even occasionally to different continents. Read on to learn about 7 historical buildings that were relocated to other parts of the globe.

1. Newark Liberty International Airport Building 51 – Newark, New Jersey

Photo Credit: Library of Congress

Newark Airport’s Building 51 was one of the most state-of-the-art airport terminals in the world back in the 1930s and 1940s. When the airport expanded and built new terminals, Building 51 was turned into office space.

The structure faced demolition as the airport continued to expand, and the decision was made to save and relocate the Art Deco building. It was moved three-quarters of a mile and now serves as administrative offices. The Art Deco lobby is open to the public.

2. London Bridge – Lake Havasu, Arizona

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Not a building, per se, but a significant historical structure that a lot of people don’t realize is now in Arizona. In the mid-20th century, London Bridge was crumbling. The Brits decided to build a new bridge, and the old one was put up for auction in 1968.

A businessman named Robert McCulloch was building the resort community of Lake Havasu, Arizona and he believed the landmark bridge would boost tourism. McCulloch paid over $2 million for the bridge, which was shipped to the U.S. in pieces and rebuilt in Arizona.

3. Belle Tout Lighthouse – Beachy Head, England

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

This lighthouse was built in 1832 but as the years passed, the cliff it was located near continued to erode, making the lighthouse dangerously close to the edge. In 1999, the owners finally decided that the Belle Tout Lighthouse needed to be moved if it was going to survive. The structure was lifted, in one piece, and moved 56 feet back from the cliff. It is now a bed and breakfast.

4. Hamilton Grange – New York, New York

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Alexander Hamilton lived in what is now Harlem in New York City in this home on 32 acres. Hamilton’s widow sold the house in 1833 and the city continued to grow around it. The house was moved for the first time in 1889 only 250 feet to be closer to a church and prevent its destruction from street construction.

By 2008, the house needed a renovation. The National Park Service moved it a few blocks away to a spot with more land and so it could be restored to its former glory.

5. The Temple of Dendur – New York, New York

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

The Temple of Dendur was completed in Egypt in 10 BCE. A dam and lake construction project in the 1960s threatened the temple and in 1965 Egypt gave the temple to the United States for their efforts in saving artifacts from the new lake as it covered 2,000 square miles of ancient Egyptian lands.

The temple was taken apart in Egypt and shipped to the U.S. From there it was reassembled at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where it has been on exhibit since 1978.

6. Abu Simbel Temples – Abu Simbel, Egypt

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

As was the case with the Temple of Dendur, the Egyptian dam project put these two temples that date back to the 13th century BCE at risk. The temples were originally built into sandstone cliffs that overlooked the Nile River.

Archaeologists carved the temples into 20-ton blocks, and moved them to an artificially built 200-foot hill atop the original location.

7. St. Bernard de Clairvaux Church – Miami, Florida

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

William Randolph Hearst was incredibly eccentric, and in the 1920s he dispatched teams of people across Europe to buy artwork for the castle he built for himself in San Simeon, California.

One of the items his teams bought was a 12th-century Spanish cloister (a covered walk or gallery) that was shipped to New York in 11,000 crates. The crates were impounded due to fear that the hay they were packed with might contain hoof-and-mouth disease. The hay was eventually burned and the crates were deemed safe for transit, but by that time the stock market had crashed and Hearst had lost mountains of money.

In 1952, one year after Hearst died, the pieces of the cloister were put up for auction. Two Florida men bought the pieces and rebuilt the cloister in Miami, hoping it would become a tourist attraction. The tourists never came, and eventually the structure was donated to a local church.

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6 Famous People You Didn’t Know Earned Purple Hearts

Over the course of U.S. history, many brave men and women have received Purple Hearts for their service.

Before they hit the big time, these famous people fought with distinction and received Purple Hearts as a result of being wounded in combat.

1. Charles Bronson

Photo Credit: The Cannon Group

Bronson is one of the best known Hollywood tough guys of all time. Before he starred in the Death Wish films (and many more), Bronson served in the Army Air Corps during World War II as a tail gunner. Bronson was injured during the war and received a Purple Heart for his actions.

2. Kurt Vonnegut

Photo Credit: Public Domain

One of the most celebrated American authors of the 20th century also served with distinction in World War II and earned a Purple Heart. Kurt Vonnegut was taken prisoner during the Battle of the Bulge and survived the bombing of Dresden, Germany.

3. James Jones

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

Jones became famous for writing two books about World War II that became successful films, although the films were released over 40 years apart. Jones’ books were From Here to Eternity and The Thin Red Line, released as films in 1953 and 1998, respectively.

Jones drew on his own experiences in World War II to write his famous books. He received a Purple Heart due to injuries received on Guadalcanal. He also covered the Vietnam War as a journalist.

4. James Garner

Photo Credit: ABC

Garner is best known for his roles in Maverick and The Rockford Files. He joined the Merchant Marine near the end of World War II, served in the National Guard after the war, and enlisted in the Army during the Korean War.

He was injured twice in Korea and received two Purple Hearts.

5. Oliver Stone

Photo Credit: Wikipedia

The man who brought us the films PlatoonJFK, and Born on the Fourth of July dropped out of Yale, requested combat duty in Vietnam, and earned a Purple Heart after he was shot in the neck. Platoon was based on Stone’s experiences in Vietnam.

6. Rod Serling

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Rod Serling’s combat experiences during World War II caused him severe mental trauma and he suffered from nightmares and trauma for the rest of his life after the war. Serling fought the Japanese in the Philippines in an incredibly violent region and his platoon was nicknamed “The Death Squad” because of the high number of casualties.

Serling was injured a couple of times during the war and he received a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star.

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What Happened to All the Confederate Leaders After the Civil War?

In school and in history books, we are taught a lot about what happened leading up to and during a war, but what happened after is arguably just as important. Take the Civil War, for example. Most Americans can name a few major battles and generals, but how much do you know about what became of them after 1865?

This is what happened to 10 Confederate leaders after they were defeated in the Civil War.

1. John Bell Hood

Photo Credit: Public Domain

The Confederate general was a successful businessman for several years until an economic crisis ruined his business. He caught yellow fever and died shortly thereafter.

2. Alexander Stephens

Photo Credit: Public Domain

The Vice President of the Confederacy was held in prison in Boston until six months after the war ended. Stephens remained a rabid racist and became the governor of Georgia.

3. Robert E. Lee

Photo Credit: Public Domain

The most famous Confederate general of the Civil War was not arrested when the battles ended. Lee served as the head of Washington College. He was revered in the South and he often had to speak out against resuming the Civil War, as many Southerners wanted.

4. George Pickett

Photo Credit: Public Domain

The man who led the famous Pickett’s Charge believed he was going to be prosecuted for war crimes and he fled to Canada. He was pardoned two years later and then returned to the U.S. He was in ill health for the remainder of his life and died in 1875.

5. Jefferson Davis

Photo Credit: Public Domain

The President of the Confederacy spent two years in a Virginia prison. After his release, Davis spent time in Canada, Cuba, and England before he operated an insurance company. He hired only former Confederate officers for his business.

6. Joe Johnston

Photo Credit: Public Domain

The controversial General had interests in railroad and insurance and became a relatively successful businessman after the war. He also served one term as a Democratic congressman. He became a friend of Union General William Sherman, caught a cold at Sherman’s funeral and died soon after.

7. P.G.T. Beauregard

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Beauregard was a businessman after the war and, although he still held anti-black beliefs, he worked to establish black rights, as he believed it was for the good of the country.

8. Simon Buckner

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Bucker ran a newspaper after the Civil War, amassed a fortune, and also worked in politics in his native Kentucky. He lived until the age of 90 and died in 1914.

9. Nathan Bedford Forrest

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Nathan Bedford Forrest was the first leader of the Ku Klux Klan. Later in his life, he denounced violence and racism and became an advocate for civil rights. He died in 1877 at the age of 56.

10. James Longstreet

Photo Credit: Public Domain

Longstreet embraced the Union cause after the war, making him a pariah in the South. Longstreet was shot and captured during The Battle of Liberty Place, an election fight that broke out in New Orleans in 1874. After his release, he became a turkey farmer and named his farm “Gettysburg.” He died in 1904.

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