PODCAST · history
Snarkives: The Fire
by Professor Angie Bouma PhD
Snarkives is real history with a side of chaos and absolutely zero perfection.I’m Professor Angie, your friendly neighborhood history gremlin. I stay up too late, drink too much coffee, and fall down archive rabbit holes while my fluffy sidekick Moxie supervises from the couch and occasionally judges my life choices.Around here, we do not care about memorizing dates. We care about the people who got steamrolled by bad laws, petty power trips, and “good intentions.”She disagreed with her husband and ended up in an asylum.A rumor snowballed until someone’s whole life came apart.One tiny line in a law quietly wrecked a whole family.To keep the chaos slightly organized, I file stories into five collections:• Oops Clause – when one little line in a law flips a life upside down.• Dirty Laundry – scandals, cover ups, and reputations scrubbed “for the greater good.”• Chain of Shame – decisions made in comfortable rooms, consequences for people who never had a say.• Cabinet of Curiosi
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Bennington Triangle: Five Vanishings Explored Triangle: Five Vanishings Explored
Between 1945 and 1950, five people disappeared in the wilderness of southwestern Vermont near Glastenbury Mountain. A 74-year-old hunting guide who knew the area well. An 18-year-old college student in a red coat. A 68-year-old veteran on a bus. An eight-year-old boy. A 53-year-old hiker taking a shortcut to camp. None of them came back. In 1992, a writer named Joseph Citro called it the Bennington Triangle. The cases are still open. If you want to help keep the lights on, Moxie in treats, and me caffeinated enough to keep posting episodes, you can toss a few dollars in the tip jar: https://ko-fi.com/snarkives Sources Joseph A. Citro, Passing Strange: True Tales of New England Hauntings and Horrors (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996). Bennington Banner, November 1945; December 1946; October and November 1950. Burlington Free Press, December 1949. Ruth Franklin, Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life (New York: Liveright, 2016). Tyler Resch, Glastenbury: The History of a Vermont Ghost Town (Charleston: History Press, 2009). Sharon A. Hill, "Bennington Triangle Cases," Doubtful News, doubtfulnews.com. Vermont State Police, institutional history and Welden case records, available at vtrooper.com.
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4
The Bone Wars: Dinosaurs and Destruction
In the 1870s, two paleontologists set out to discover dinosaurs and ended up discovering new depths of human pettiness instead. Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh started as friends, became enemies over a fossil quarry in New Jersey, and spent the next thirty years dynamiting each other's dig sites, planting spies in each other's camps, and going to war in the newspapers. They both died broke. The dinosaurs, at least, were real. Snarkives Podcasts will always be free to listen. If you want to help keep the lights on, Moxie in treats, and me caffeinated enough to keep posting episodes, you can toss a few dollars in the tip jar: https://ko-fi.com/snarkives Sources Mark Jaffe, The Gilded Dinosaur (Crown, 2000) https://amzn.to/4nKaK4V Leonard Warren, Joseph Leidy: The Last Man Who Knew Everything (Yale University Press, 1998) Jane P. Davidson, The Bone Sharp: The Life of Edward Drinker Cope (Academy of Natural Sciences, 1997) Paul D. Brinkman, The Second Jurassic Dinosaur Rush (University of Chicago Press, 2010) New York Herald, January 12 and 19, 1890 — "Scientists Wage Bitter Warfare" Episode image: O.C. Marsh, Stegosaurus illustration, US Geological Survey, 1896. Public domain.
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The Drums of Tedworth Manor Mystery
In 1661, a magistrate in Wiltshire confiscated a vagrant drummer's drum. Then the drum started playing itself. For two years. This is the story of the haunting that terrified Restoration England, attracted a Royal Society fellow with a notebook, and left fingerprints on the Salem witch trials. Snarkives Podcasts will always be free to listen. If you want to help keep the lights on, Moxie in treats, and me caffeinated enough to keep posting episodes, you can toss a few dollars in the tip jar: https://ko-fi.com/snarkives Sources Michael Hunter, "New Light on the Drummer of Tedworth," Historical Research 78 (2005) Joseph Glanvill, Saducismus Triumphatus (1681) — available via Internet Archive Julie Davies, Science in an Enchanted World: Philosophy and Witchcraft in the Work of Joseph Glanvill (Routledge, 2022) Cotton Mather, Wonders of the Invisible World (1693) A.L. Beier, Masterless Men: The Vagrancy Problem in England 1560–1640 (Methuen, 1985) Episode art: engraving from Glanvill, Saducismus Triumphatus (1681). Public domain.
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The Ear That Launched a War
A whole war. Fifty thousand dead. Six hundred ships lost. And it might have started with a jar containing a severed ear that may or may not have ever been shown to Parliament. This week I found the War of Jenkins' Ear and I cannot stop thinking about it. Snarkives Podcasts will always be free to listen. If you want to help keep the lights on, Moxie in treats, and me caffeinated enough to keep posting episodes, you can toss a few dollars in the tip jar: https://ko-fi.com/snarkives Sources Robert Gaudi, The War of Jenkins' Ear: The Forgotten Struggle for North and South America, 1739-1742 (Pegasus Books, 2021) https://amzn.to/42ql3Bt J.K. Laughton, "Jenkins's Ear," English Historical Review 4 (1889): 741-749 Evan M. Graboyes and Timothy E. Hullar, "The War of Jenkins' Ear," Otology and Neurotology 34 (February 2013): 368-372 Philip Woodfine, Britannia's Glories: The Walpole Ministry and the 1739 War with Spain (Royal Historical Society/Boydell Press, 1998) Jeremy Black, Walpole in Power (Sutton, 2001) Pennsylvania Gazette (Benjamin Franklin), October 7, 1731 Treaty of Utrecht, 1713
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The Great Cat Massacre
Paris, 1730s. Apprentices. Starving. Their master's cats eating better than them. What happens next is exactly as unhinged as it sounds. Snarkives Podcasts will always be free to listen. If you want to help keep the lights on, Moxie in treats, and me caffeinated enough to keep posting episodes, you can toss a few dollars in the tip jar: https://ko-fi.com/snarkives Sources Robert Darnton, "The Great Cat Massacre and Other Episodes in French Cultural History" (Basic Books, 1984) - https://amzn.to/4dnaC7T Nicolas Contat, "Anecdotes typographiques" (Oxford Bibliographical Society edition, 1980) Roger Chartier, "Texts, Symbols, and Frenchness," Journal of Modern History, Vol. 57, No. 4 (1985) Dominick LaCapra, "Chartier, Darnton, and the Great Symbol Massacre," Journal of Modern History, Vol. 60, No. 1 (1988) Harold Mah, "The Epistemology of the Sandwich," in Intellectual History and the Return of Literature (1991)
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Snarkives is real history with a side of chaos and absolutely zero perfection.I’m Professor Angie, your friendly neighborhood history gremlin. I stay up too late, drink too much coffee, and fall down archive rabbit holes while my fluffy sidekick Moxie supervises from the couch and occasionally judges my life choices.Around here, we do not care about memorizing dates. We care about the people who got steamrolled by bad laws, petty power trips, and “good intentions.”She disagreed with her husband and ended up in an asylum.A rumor snowballed until someone’s whole life came apart.One tiny line in a law quietly wrecked a whole family.To keep the chaos slightly organized, I file stories into five collections:• Oops Clause – when one little line in a law flips a life upside down.• Dirty Laundry – scandals, cover ups, and reputations scrubbed “for the greater good.”• Chain of Shame – decisions made in comfortable rooms, consequences for people who never had a say.• Cabinet of Curiosi
HOSTED BY
Professor Angie Bouma PhD
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