PODCAST · history
1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries Podcast
by Jon Hagadorn Podcast Host
Where History Comes Alive! A fast-paced, well-researched weekly podcast covering a wide range of historical events, persons, places, legends, and mysteries, Hosted by Jon Hagadorn, the selection of stories and interviews includes 'Found In The Footnotes" 5-10 minutes history shorts, lost treasure, unsolved mysteries, unexplained phenomenon, WWII stories, biographies, disasters, legends of the Old West, American Revolutionary history, urban legends, movie backstories, author interviews and much more. Available wherever podcasts are found, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Comcast, & others. Episodes air Sundays at 12pm ET and Thursdays at 6am ET.Follow us at www.Facebook.com/1001Heroes and Twitter @1001podcast. All archives available and categorized at www.bestof1001stories.com
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REINCARNATION AND KARMA: THE EDGAR CAYCE INTERVIEWS
"Reincarnation and Karma: The Edgar Catce Interviews": Two of mankind's greatest mysteries are discussed here- Reincarnation and Karma, as we sit down with noted author, hypnotherapist, and Cayce expert Peter Woodbury to discuss questions that include "is there life after death", "why do bad things happen to good people", and many others. Peter has dozens of great stories of past life cases and of Edgar Cayce and his sons to share, and you find a wealth of information here on Edgar Cayce's readings as well. www.edgarcayce.org for all the info on A.R.E. Enjoy over 2,000 of my stories at www.bestof1001stories.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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PETER FRANCISCO, VIRGINIA'S GIANT TEEN HERO OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION & OTHER STORIES AMERICA 250
A collection of diverse stories including 1) The origin of the croissant, 2) The race for the atom bomb- it was closer than you think 3), Peter Francisco, teen hero of the revolution, 4,) Annie Oakley misses her chance,5) Brother Can You Spare A Dime, 6), The Legend of the Silver Madonna, 7) Steve Goodman and the City of New Orleans. Link to "the City of New Orleans: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fF1lqEQFVUo Catch ALL of our shows at one place by going to www.BESTOF1001STORIES.COM Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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"THE SWOOSE"- THE WWII FLYING FORTRESS THAT WOULDN'T DIE AMERICA 250 REMEMBERED
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — AMERICA 250 SPECIAL PRESENTATION THE SWOOSE: The Plane That Refused to Die Narrated by Jon Hagadorn 1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries Podcast In this America 250 special presentation, host Jon Hagadorn brings listeners the extraordinary true story of The Swoose — the oldest surviving B‑17 Flying Fortress and the only B‑17D to serve from the opening days of World War II all the way to the end. Told through the voice of an older veteran standing before the aircraft now located at the National Air Force Museum near Dayton Ohio, this immersive, five‑chapter narrative explores how a patched‑together, battle‑scarred bomber became one of the most remarkable survivors of the Pacific war. From the fiery skies over the Philippines to the desperate retreat to Australia, from makeshift repairs to high‑stakes missions, The Swoose emerges as a symbol of American ingenuity, grit, and determination. Listeners will learn: How The Swoose escaped destruction during the Japanese attack on the Philippines Why she became known as the "patchwork fortress" How her resilience earned the respect of legendary aviator Colonel Frank Kurtz Why she is the last surviving B‑17D in the world What her story reveals about the young men who flew and maintained these iconic aircraft This episode honors the legacy of the B‑17 crews — many of them barely out of high school — who faced staggering losses and unimaginable danger. It also reminds younger generations just how important these aircraft were, how many were sacrificed, and why the few that remain deserve to be remembered. A powerful tribute to courage, survival, and the spirit of a nation at war, THE SWOOSE stands as a fitting story for America's 250th anniversary — a reminder that even in the darkest moments, some legends refuse to die. Freedom never comes cheap. Enjoy over 2,000 stories at our website at www.bestof1001stories.com today! Support us monthly at Patreon.com/1001storiesNetwork-Thahks!
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BOB HOOVER AND THE HEROES OF FLIGHT AMERICA 250
THE STORY OF LEGENDARY AMERICAN PILOT BOB HOOVER- FOR AMERICA 250 The 20th century brought a tremendous amount of innovation but none so tremendous and awe-inspiring as flight. By the 1920's "barnstormers" were putting on death-defying airshows all across rural America, and by the 30's these shows, like the National Air Races in Cleveland, were moving to major cities, where they became a very risky venture for not only the flyers but the spectators as well. Many men and women fliers became international celebrities. Todays story surrounds the incredible career of early barnstormer turned test pilot, WWII hero, and stunt flyer Bob Hoover and is based in part on his autobiography "Forever Flying". Get all of our shows at one website: WWW.BESTOF1001STORIES.COM REVIEWS NEEDED . My email works as well for comments: [email protected] SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! https://.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated). YOUR REVIEWS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS AT APPLE/ITUNES AND ALL ANDROID HOSTS ARE NEEDED AND APPRECIATED! LINKS BELOW... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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WAITING FOR HOUDINI
The incredible story of America's greatest magician Harry Houdini, who came over from Hungary with his family as a young boy, saw his share of poverty, and decided to make it on his own, using his brain and his God-given talents. He learned magic, married a woman named Bess who became his partner, and worked his way up through stage shows and vaudeville doing hand cuff escapes and card tricks- until an agent suggested that he do escape acts. By 1908 he had toured the US and Europe and was making the equivalent of $9,000 US per week. As a professional magician he railed against imposters, especially mediums who performed seances which promised to connect with lost relatives. He became good friends with author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, (who believed in Spiritualism- the ability to connect with the dead) until their differences became too great. We discuss his life and his legacy, and prepare you for next weeks episode on Spiritualism and the mysterious origins of the Ouija board. Get all of our shows at one website: www.BESTOF1001STORIES.COM REVIEWS NEEDED . My email works as well for comments: [email protected] SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! www.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated). YOUR REVIEWS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS AT APPLE/ITUNES AND ALL ANDROID HOSTS ARE NEEDED AND APPRECIATED! LINKS BELOW... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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THE SURPRISING ORIGINS OF SOME OF AMERICA'S FAVORITE FOOD & DRINKS
In this special episode of 1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries, we explore the surprising, often accidental, and always fascinating origins of America's most iconic foods and drinks. Only in the United States — the great melting pot of the world — could so many cultures, traditions, and chance discoveries collide to create the dishes we now consider classics. From the potato chip born out of a chef's frustration… to the pizza that crossed an ocean and reinvented itself… to nachos improvised after closing time… to the TV dinner created because of a frozen‑turkey disaster… this is the story of how America built its table, one invention at a time. Along the way, we uncover: The accidental birth of the potato chip How pizza became an American obsession The spring‑break stunt that created Sex on the Beach The two competing origin stories of the Long Island Iced Tea Why popcorn became Hollywood's favorite snack The many claimants to the first hamburger How a man named Nacho invented nachos Why French fries aren't French How a Thanksgiving mistake created the TV dinner The dentist who helped invent cotton candy The Virginia legacy behind the ice cream cone The late‑night creation of Buffalo wings And many more~ reviews appreciated!!!!
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URBAN LEGENDS #10 HAUNTED DOLLS & LONELY DUMMIES
(Not For Kids or Doll Lovers) Our 10th Urban Legend episode highlights the stories of some of the more famous "haunted" dolls. including Robert, Chuckie, and Annabelle, among others. The notion that an inanimate object such as a toy, a stuffed animal, a doll, or a ventriloquists dummy can incorporate a human soul or take on human characteristics has been with us for eons. There are people who collect replicas of "famous" haunted dolls, and moviemakers have done very well bringing them to life. The second half of this episode covers the career of radio and TV's famous ventriloquist Edgar Bergen and his wooden alter ego Charlie MacArthy, who managed to land a nice inheritance when Bergen died, leaving Bergen's daughter Candice with nothing. Get all of our shows at one website: www.bestof1001stories.com REVIEWS NEEDED . My email works as well for comments: [email protected] SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! https://.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated). YOUR REVIEWS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS AT APPLE/ITUNES AND ALL ANDROID HOSTS ARE NEEDED AND APPRECIATED! LINKS BELOW... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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REMEMBERING LEGENDARY TEXAS RANGER FRANK HAMER: AMERICA 250 FAMOUS LAWMEN
🎙️ SHOW NOTES — 1001 Heroes, Legends, History & Mysteries Remembering Legendary Texas Ranger Frank Hamer America 250: Famous Lawmen In this episode, Jon takes listeners deep into the life and legacy of Texas Ranger Frank Hamer, one of the most formidable and complex lawmen in American history. Long before he became known nationwide for tracking down Bonnie and Clyde, Hamer spent decades walking the razor's edge between frontier justice and the rapidly modernizing world of the early 20th century. Jon explores Hamer's early years as a cowboy and ranch hand, his rise through the ranks of the Texas Rangers, and the fearless reputation he earned confronting bootleggers, bank robbers, political corruption, and organized crime. Listeners will hear how Hamer's sense of duty, his unshakable calm under fire, and his deep belief in personal justice shaped a career that spanned more than 50 gunfights and countless investigations. The story also examines the complicated legacy of the Bonnie and Clyde manhunt, separating Hollywood myth from historical reality. Jon highlights Hamer's strategic brilliance, his relentless pursuit across multiple states, and the toll the case took on him personally. Along the way, he shares anecdotes, lesser‑known episodes, and the moral dilemmas Hamer faced as the world around him changed. This is a portrait of a man who embodied the final chapter of the Old West — a lawman whose courage, contradictions, and unwavering resolve still echo through American history. For many more stories like this follow 1001 Heroes, legends, Histories & Mysteries Podcast and see our website at www.bestof1001stories.com 📚 Sources & Further Reading These sources were used to support the historical details in this episode: Texas Ranger Hall of Fame & Museum – Official biography of Frank Hamer "I'm Frank Hamer" by H. Gordon Frost & John H. Jenkins (Jenkins Publishing, 1968) "Go Down Together: The True, Untold Story of Bonnie and Clyde" by Jeff Guinn (Simon & Schuster, 2009) Handbook of Texas Online – Texas State Historical Association (TSHA) FBI and contemporary newspaper archives documenting the Bonnie & Clyde investigation Library of Congress
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TRAIN SONGS AND PAIN SONGS: RIP DON SCHLITZ
🎙️ PODCAST SUMMARY — "Train Songs and Pain Songs" In this nostalgic, first‑person reflection, Jon looks back on 50 years of loving country music and the two currents that have always run deepest for him — the train songs and the pain songs. Borrowing Mickey Newbury's unforgettable line from "Luckenbach, Texas," Jon explores the roots of the great American train song tradition, from "Wabash Cannonball" to "City of New Orleans," and the way those rolling rhythms shaped the sound of a nation. From there, he turns to the heartbreak side of country music — the "pain songs" — with a tribute to Hank Williams, whose timeless classic "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry" still stands as one of the most haunting expressions of loneliness ever recorded. The episode then shifts to honor the recent passing of legendary songwriter Don Schlitz, whose humble beginnings in Nashville led to some of the most enduring songs in country history. Jon revisits the unlikely journey of "The Gambler," the hit everyone turned down until Kenny Rogers turned it into a cultural landmark, and highlights several of Schlitz's other masterpieces — from "Forever and Ever, Amen" to "When You Say Nothing at All." Along the way, listeners will hear stories, insights, and the lasting impact Schlitz had on the artists he helped launch. It's a heartfelt remembrance of the songs that shaped a lifetime — and a final thank‑you to Don Schlitz for the stories, the wisdom, and the music that will live on forever.
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THE GHOSTS OF THE ALAMO (PT 2) THE FALL, REVENGE AT SAN JACINTO, THE GHOSTS
In part two we tell the true story of the fall of the Alamo, the revenge at San Jacinto, and the ghosts that still occupy San Antonio
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THE GHOSTS OF THE ALAMO (PT 1) THE RISING STORM AMERICA 250
Part One: In 1836 Mexico had won its independence from Spain and was being ruled by a dictator named Santa Anna, who had a large army and used it mercilessly to hold on to his power. His biggest threat was an area we now call Texas, where both Americans and Mexican Tejanos who sought freedom were gathering and offering the promise of land to those who would fight to create a new republic called Texas. Men like Jim Bowie, William Travis, and Davey Crockett believed that the fight was worth their lives- and March of 1836 found them defending an old mission called The Alamo. This is their story and the story of the defenders, who came from all over the country- up until the day of the major attack. In Part Two we cover the fall of the Alamo, the victory at San Jacinto, and the ghosts that still haunt the Alamo and the town of San Antonio,
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THE LEGEND OF THE BELL WITCH
🎙️ SHOW NOTES PATREON BONUS WRITE‑UP Behind the Story: The Legend of the Bell Witch A Haunting That Became an American Legend For this week's episode, I dove into one of the most enduring and unsettling pieces of American folklore: The Bell Witch of Tennessee. It's a story that has survived more than two centuries—passed from cabin to cabin, whispered across campfires, and retold in countless books and investigations. But beneath the ghostly theatrics lies something deeper: a rare frontier mystery with more eyewitness testimony than almost any haunting in early American history. In preparing this episode, I revisited the original accounts from the Bell family, neighbors, ministers, and even the story involving Andrew Jackson's visit to the farm. What struck me most wasn't just the intensity of the encounters, but how consistent the reports were. This wasn't a tale that grew over time—it arrived fully formed, terrifying, and impossible to ignore. For me, the Bell Witch stands out because it captures the tension of early American life: isolated families on the edge of the frontier a culture steeped in faith, superstition, and survival and a community forced to confront something they couldn't explain Whether you believe in the supernatural or not, the Bell Witch story reveals how fear, rumor, and 👻 What You'll Hear in This Episode • The origins of the Bell Witch legend and how the disturbances first began • The escalating encounters that terrorized the Bell family • The entity's strange intelligence, voice, and shifting personality • Historical accounts and eyewitness testimonies that made the case famous • The connection to Andrew Jackson, who reportedly visited the Bell farm • The mysterious death of John Bell, still debated more than 200 years later • Why the legend endures, and how it shaped American ghost lore Jon blends folklore, documented history, and the eerie atmosphere of the Tennessee frontier to create a vivid retelling that honors both the mystery and the cultural impact of the Bell Witch story.
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JOAN OF ARC (PART 2) DREAMS NEVER DIE
Joan of Arc leads France to a series of victories against the English until she is captured and imprisoned. She is given an unjust and illegal trial and the Catholic Bishop declares her to be a heretic- after which she is burned at the stake.. We discuss what the world might look like had France not won its freedom against England, and most historians believe that Joan of Arc was primarily responsible for France winning the One Hundred Years War. Support us at Patreon! Visit www.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork today and pledge. Thank You!
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JOAN OF ARC (PART 1) THE PROPHECY
In 1425 France was reeling from decades of war with with England and almost all hope was gone, The French people, never giving up hope, found solace in an old prophecy that had come from centuries ago. The prophecy stated "A woman shall loose France...but it shall be redeemed once again by a virgin from the border of Lorraine". The first part of the prophecy had been fulfilled when the Queen of France, Queen Isabeau, had committed the ultimate treason- she had signed a treaty with the King of England declaring that her eldest son Charles was illegitimate and promised the hand of the next in line to succession, her daughter Catherine, to the King of England, As city after city fell to the invading army of England, all hope rested on the 26 year old Dauphin Charles, who refused to give up his right to the throne despite his mother's dealings with England. At the same time a young peasant girl from a small village of Donremy near the border of Lorraine had a series of visions in which God had asked her to drive the English out of France and see to it that Charles was crowned King. She had everything against her from the start- but she had two enduring qualities-faith and courage. Get all of our shows at one website: www.bestof1001stories.com CALLING ALL FANS.. REVIEWS NEEDED SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! www.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated). YOUR REVIEWS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS AT APPLE/SPOTIFY ARE GREATLY APPRECIATED
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REMEMBERING THE USS YORKTOWN AT MIDWAY AMERICA250
SHOW NOTES America250: Remembering the Heroes of the USS Yorktown (CV‑5) A 9‑Chapter Audio Documentary for 1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries In this special America250 presentation, we tell the full, sweeping story of the USS Yorktown (CV‑5) — the carrier that helped turn the tide of World War II, the ship that refused to die, and the men whose courage shaped the course of history. Told in first‑person narrative, supported by journalist accounts, Navy communiqués, and DoD historical summaries, this series brings listeners from the depths of the Pacific to the burning skies over Midway, and finally to the quiet seafloor where Yorktown rests today. ⭐ Episode Overview Chapter 1 — The Ghost Beneath the Pacific We begin in the present day, at the moment of Yorktown's rediscovery three miles beneath the Pacific. The ship appears not as a ruin, but as a memorial — upright, dignified, and frozen in time. This chapter frames the entire story: why Yorktown matters, why her legacy endures, and why millions of Americans have never heard her name. Chapter 2 — The Coral Sea: The First Carrier Duel in History Using journalist‑style reporting and official Navy accounts, we follow Yorktown into the Coral Sea — the first carrier‑versus‑carrier battle in history. We explore her sudden transfer to the Pacific, the sinking of Shōhō, the crippling of Shōkaku, and the damage that nearly ended her career before Midway even began. Chapter 3 — Seventy‑Two Hours to Save the Pacific After Coral Sea, Yorktown limps back to Pearl Harbor. She needs three months of repairs. She gets three days. Meanwhile, American codebreakers uncover Japan's plan to strike Midway. This chapter captures the urgency, ingenuity, and determination that sent Yorktown back to sea patched, battered, and ready for the fight of her life. Chapter 4 — The Sky Erupts Over Midway The Battle of Midway begins. We follow the Japanese attack on the island, the American counterstrike, and the dive‑bombers who changed the course of the war in five explosive minutes. Yorktown launches her aircraft, takes bomb hits, recovers, and launches again — a testament to her crew's resilience. Chapter 5 — The Ship That Wouldn't Die Yorktown becomes the primary target of the last operational Japanese carrier, Hiryū. Torpedoes strike. Fires rage. The ship lists dangerously. Captain Buckmaster orders "Abandon ship," but the crew returns to fight for her once more. The destroyer Hammann sacrifices herself in the attempt to save Yorktown. Finally, after days of struggle, the carrier slips beneath the waves. Chapter 6 — The Battle That Changed the World We step back to examine the strategic impact of Midway. Four Japanese carriers destroyed. Their elite aircrews lost. The momentum of the Pacific War reversed. Yorktown's sacrifice becomes central to the victory that changed the 20th century. Chapter 7 — The Search for a Fallen Giant Decades later, Dr. Robert Ballard and his team set out to find Yorktown. Using deep‑sea technology, they locate her upright and astonishingly intact. This chapter explores the emotional and historical significance of the discovery — a war grave, a time capsule, and a monument to the men who served. Chapter 8 — Why Yorktown Still Matters Yorktown becomes a symbol for new generations. Her story is taught in classrooms, museums, and naturalization ceremonies. She stands as a reminder of courage, sacrifice, and the cost of freedom — especially for Americans who may be hearing her story for the first time. Chapter 9 — The Men Who Made Her Mighty (Final Chapter) We end with the human story: the pilots, gunners, deck crews, engineers, and officers who brought Yorktown to life. Their backgrounds, their bravery, their sacrifices. Yorktown's legacy becomes their legacy — a testament to ordinary Americans who did extraordinary things when the world needed them most. 🎧 What This Series Offers • A cinematic, narrative‑driven retelling of one of America's most important naval stories • Authentic historical grounding through journalist accounts and official Navy records • A focus on the human experience — the men behind the steel • A message that resonates with new Americans and lifelong citizens alike • A tribute to courage, sacrifice, and the fight against tyranny Why This Story Matters for America250 Yorktown's story is not just about a ship. It's about what America stands for — and what generations before us were willing to risk to defend it. This series honors them. And it ensures their story will not be forgotten. Enjoy many more stories at www.bestof1001stories.com!
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DEVIL DOGS K COMPANY 3RD BATTALION GUADALCANAL TO OKINAWA INTERVIEW W AUTHOR SAUL DAVID
Devil Dogs: K Company, 3rd Battalion — From Guadalcanal to Okinawa This episode follows the extraordinary combat journey of K Company, 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines—one of the most battle‑tested units in the history of the United States Marine Corps. Drawn from Saul David's powerful narrative, this is the story of the Marines who fought their way across the Pacific in WWII, from the steaming jungles of Guadalcanal to the blood‑soaked ridges of Okinawa. These were the original "Devil Dogs" of the modern era—young men hardened by hunger, disease, exhaustion, and relentless combat. Their campaign reads like a tour through hell: • Guadalcanal, where they held the line against a determined Japanese force in the first major American offensive of the war • Cape Gloucester, a nightmare of mud, monsoon, and jungle fighting • Peleliu, one of the most brutal battles in Marine Corps history, where K Company was nearly destroyed • Okinawa, the final and deadliest island, where the Marines faced kamikaze attacks, entrenched defenders, and the psychological toll of a war nearing its end Through letters, diaries, and eyewitness accounts, the story captures the grit, fear, humor, and unbreakable brotherhood that kept these Marines going when everything around them was falling apart. It's a portrait of ordinary Americans performing extraordinary acts under impossible conditions. Themes highlighted in the episode include: • Courage under fire in some of the harshest environments on Earth • The Marine ethos: discipline, loyalty, and never leaving a man behind • The cost of victory, measured not in territory gained but in lives changed and lives lost • The evolution of the Pacific War, from early uncertainty to the grinding, desperate push toward Japan By the time K Company reached Okinawa, they were no longer the fresh recruits who had landed on Guadalcanal. They were veterans—scarred, seasoned, and carrying the weight of every island behind them. This is the story of a company that fought from the first major Marine offensive to the last. A story of sacrifice, endurance, and the legacy of the men who earned the name Devil Dogs the hard way. Enjoy all our stories and interviews at www.bestof1001stories.com
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AMERICA 250 THE FIGHT FOR BRYAN'S STATION (PT 2): SIMON GIRTY'S REVENGE
Summary of the Fight for Bryan's Station & Simon Girty's Revenge 🌾 The Fight for Bryan's Station (August 15–17, 1782) Bryan's Station, a frontier fort in Fayette County, Kentucky, came under attack when Capt. William Caldwell led a combined force of Shawnee and Delaware warriors along with Canadian Rangers. The defenders—frontier families and militia—held out under constant skirmish fire. Reinforcements from Lexington arrived later that day, helping secure the fort. The attackers, unable to break the defense, burned crops and killed livestock before withdrawing. Though the fort survived, the withdrawal was a trap: Caldwell's force moved north and set an ambush that would lead directly to the Battle of Blue Licks. 🔥 Simon Girty's Revenge (Battle of Blue Licks, August 19, 1782) In the aftermath, Simon Girty, the infamous Loyalist frontiersman allied with Native forces, finally got the revenge he had been waiting for. According to the historical narrative preserved in the 1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries podcast, the settlers at Bryan's Station knew an attack was coming—but the real blow fell days later. At Blue Licks, one of the final battles of the American Revolution, Girty and the allied Native force decisively defeated the pursuing Kentucky militia, delivering a crushing loss to the frontier settlers. This defeat is often described as Girty's moment of "revenge," as he had long been vilified by Kentucky settlers and had suffered personal grievances during the war. A monument was erected in 1896 to commemorate the battle, later restored in 2019.
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AMERICA 250: KENTUCKIANS FIGHT FOR BRYAN'S STATION (PT 1): "BORN WITH THE BARK ON"
1001 hEROES JOINS THE AMERICA 250 CELEBRATION WITH TRUE AMERICAN HISTORY: American colonists in Kentucky were truly tough people-men and women, and their fight against the British and their Indian and loyalist allies helped save this country from being ruled by a king. The expression for Kentucians was "born with the bark on" and their courage in the defense of Bryan's Station is told here. This is real American history- the way it happened.
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WHY DO BUNNIES LAY EGGS AT EASTER?
Found in the Footnotes –Why Do Bunnies Lay Eggs At Easter? In this light‑hearted Easter special, we dive into one of history's most delightfully confusing questions: Why on earth do bunnies lay eggs at Easter? The answer, as it turns out, is a wonderfully tangled mix of ancient mythology, Roman spring festivals, Christian symbolism, and one very determined rabbit. The story begins "long ago," when the animals of the forest held a springtime meeting to decide who would deliver the Official Symbol of New Life: the Egg. Chickens assumed they had the job locked up—until a bold little rabbit volunteered. With a bit of magical help from the spring goddess Eostre's legendary egg‑laying hare, the rabbit became the unlikely hero of the season. From there, the tale blends humor with history as we explore how Roman fertility festivals, pagan spring rituals, and Christian Easter traditions all merged into the holiday we know today. Along the way, we meet Ironpants—a Roman official whose attempt to regulate spring celebrations (and ban the egg‑laying hare) failed so spectacularly that he became a footnote in holiday history. The episode also takes a fun tour through the many roles eggs have played over the centuries: • Fabergé eggs crafted for Russian royalty • Egg races and egg rolling traditions • Idioms like "he's a good egg," "egg on your face," and "don't put all your eggs in one basket" Finally, we explain why Easter moves around every year, revealing the astronomical rule behind it: Easter falls on the first Sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox. This year, that places Easter on April 5th. Blending myth, history, humor, and a dash of cosmic scheduling, this episode uncovers how a magical hare, a confused Roman bureaucrat, and centuries of tradition all combined to give us the Easter Bunny—and his famous eggs. And for all you Christians- He is Risen!
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MK-ULTRA (PT 2): THE VICTIMS SPEAK, THE STORIES OF CIA ABUSE OF POWER, THE HEARINGS, THE GUILTY WALK FREE
SHOW NOTES — MK‑ULTRA Pt. 2: The Victims, The Stories & The Outcome Episode Summary In Part Two of our MK‑ULTRA investigation, we move from the paper trail into the human cost of one of the most disturbing intelligence programs in American history. Last week, we traced how LSD leaked from CIA laboratories into universities, art circles, and eventually into the bloodstream of the 1960s counterculture. But behind that cultural explosion were people—ordinary Americans—who never volunteered, never consented, and never understood why their lives suddenly spiraled into fear, confusion, or tragedy. In this episode, we hear their stories. We meet the psychiatric patients who lost days of their lives. The soldiers who were dosed during "readiness tests." The prisoners who were told they were taking vitamins. The families who buried loved ones without ever knowing the truth. And we follow the investigation as it finally collides with the CIA itself—leading to congressional hearings, public outrage, and the first official acknowledgment that MK‑ULTRA was real, far‑reaching, and devastating. We close with the outcome: the partial apologies, the destroyed records, the unanswered questions, and the long shadow this program still casts over American intelligence today. This is the conclusion of our two‑part series— MK‑ULTRA Pt. 2: The Victims, The Stories & The Outcome. Sources & Further Reading These sources informed the narrative and provide deeper context for listeners who want to explore the history behind MK‑ULTRA: • The Rockefeller Commission Report (1975) – Official investigation into CIA domestic activities. • The Church Committee Hearings (1975–76) – U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, documenting MK‑ULTRA and related programs. • "The Search for the Manchurian Candidate" by John Marks (1979) – Seminal work based on surviving MK‑ULTRA documents obtained through FOIA. • CIA FOIA Electronic Reading Room – Declassified MK‑ULTRA subproject files and internal memos. • **"A Terrible Mistake: The Murder of Frank Olson and the CIA's Secret Cold War Experiments" by H.P. Albarelli Jr
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TORNADO: REMEMBERING THE 2011 SUPER OUTBREAK & HOW TO SURVIVE THE NEXT ONE
1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries Podcast TORNADO: REMEMBERING THE 2011 SUPER OUTBREAK & HOW TO SURVIVE THE NESXT ONE The 2011 Super Outbreak stands as the largest, deadliest, and most destructive tornado outbreak ever recorded in the United States, a four‑day onslaught of violent storms that carved a scar across the South, Midwest, and East from April 25–28, 2011. It was a meteorological event so vast and so violent that even seasoned forecasters struggled to describe it. Over those four days, the atmosphere produced 368 confirmed tornadoes, a record for a continuous outbreak, with 224 tornadoes touching down on April 27 alone, the most ever recorded in a single 24‑hour period. A Perfect Storm of Atmospheric Ingredients The outbreak was driven by a rare collision of weather systems: warm, moisture‑rich air surging north from the Gulf of Mexico; cold, dense air dropping from Canada; and a powerful jet stream sweeping across the central U.S. The resulting wind shear created ideal conditions for supercells—towering, rotating thunderstorms capable of producing long‑track, violent tornadoes. On April 27, these ingredients aligned with near‑perfect efficiency, spawning multiple EF4 and EF5 tornadoes across Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Georgia. The Human Toll The outbreak killed 324 people, with an additional 24 deaths from related hazards such as straight‑line winds, hail, and flash flooding—bringing the total to 348 fatalities. More than 3,100 people were injured. Alabama alone suffered 238 tornado‑related deaths, making it the hardest‑hit state. Entire neighborhoods were leveled, families were torn apart, and communities that had stood for generations were reduced to rubble in minutes. The Cost in Property and Infrastructure The destruction was staggering. The outbreak caused $10.2 billion in damage in 2011 dollars—equivalent to $14.6 billion today—making it the costliest tornado outbreak in U.S. history when adjusted for inflation. Homes, schools, hospitals, and businesses were obliterated. Critical infrastructure—power lines, water systems, communication networks—collapsed under the strain. Some towns, like Hackleburg, Alabama and Smithville, Mississippi, were nearly wiped off the map. Record‑Setting Tornadoes The 2011 Super Outbreak set or tied multiple records: • Largest tornado outbreak ever recorded: 368 confirmed tornadoes across 21 states. • Most tornadoes in a single day: 224 on April 27. • Four EF5 tornadoes, including the catastrophic Hackleburg–Phil Campbell tornado with winds over 200 mph. • One of the highest Destruction Potential Index (DPI) scores ever measured, reflecting the immense size and intensity of the tornadoes. The EF5 tornadoes were especially devastating. These storms scoured pavement from roads, hurled vehicles like toys, and left behind damage so complete that entire blocks were reduced to bare foundations. In Tuscaloosa and Birmingham, Alabama, an EF4 tornado carved a deadly path through densely populated areas, leaving behind scenes of destruction that would become iconic images of the outbreak. Communities Forever Changed The outbreak's impact extended far beyond the physical damage. Survivors described the storms as sounding like freight trains, jet engines, or explosions. Many had only seconds to take cover. In some cases, tornadoes struck so quickly and with such force that even well‑built homes and storm shelters offered little protection. In the aftermath, communities rallied. Volunteers poured in from across the country. Churches, schools, and civic groups became relief centers. But the emotional toll lingered. Many survivors struggled with trauma, grief, and the daunting task of rebuilding their lives from the ground up. Lessons Learned Meteorologists and emergency managers studied the outbreak extensively. They found that: • Warning systems worked, but the sheer number and intensity of tornadoes overwhelmed communities. • Public complacency—the belief that "it won't happen here"—contributed to fatalities. • Better communication, especially through mobile alerts and social media, has since become a priority. • Building codes in tornado‑prone regions have been reevaluated to improve structural resilience. The outbreak also underscored the importance of preparedness. Even with modern forecasting, tornadoes can form and intensify rapidly. Having a plan—knowing where to shelter, how to receive warnings, and how to protect your family—can mean the difference between life and death. A Storm Etched Into Memory The 2011 Super Outbreak remains a defining moment in American weather history. It was a reminder of nature's raw power and unpredictability, and of the resilience of the communities that faced it. For many, the scars—both physical and emotional—are still visible. But so too is the determination to rebuild, remember, and prepare for whatever comes next. As we look back on the outbreak in this episode of 1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries, we honor the lives lost, the heroes who emerged, and the lessons learned.
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552
DR. PEMBERTON'S CURE
Dr. John Pemberton's "cure" wqas a patent medicine created in 1886 to treat morhine addiction, nerve pain, headaches, and hangovers. His remedy consisted of Bordeaux wine mixed with coca leaves and kola nuts, with the coca leaves providing 6mg of cociane. His cure and his company went through a number of changes through the years becoming one of the most recognized brands in the world= this is the story-which was "Found In The Footnotes" JH 1001 Heoes, Legends, Histories & Mystyeries Podcast every Wednesday at 4pm ET.
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551
MK-ULTRA THE DEADLY CIA BRAIN CONTROL PROGRAM THAT FUELED THE 60'S LSD COUNTERCULTURE (PT 1) HOW THEY WERE CAUGHT
Beginning in the late 1950's our government's CIA, feeling that our enemies were leading us in the science of mind control, began a program of experimentation on both volunteer and unknowing subjects using the hallucinatory drug LSD. The program grew out of control quickly, one result being their manufacturing and distributing free LSD throughout San Francisco and other cities , using CIA safehouses as distribution points, performing experimentts on unknowing prisoners and soldiers and on their own people. Some died and the deaths were covered up. In San Francisco and New York the "hippie" counterculture bloomed with the drug craze as a result. When a CIA snalyst threatened to expose the program he was "neutralized" by being tossed out of a hotel window in New York City to his death, which the CIA called suicide. . In part two we'll let the victims tell their story, and we will reveal the results of the Congressional hearings which took place in 1974-5. Had it not been for journalists who actaully investigated the crimes without fear we would probably never have known. One of those men who told truth to power was my friend Dr.Stanton Friedman, Nuclear Physicist and staunch UFO advocate whom I interviewed here at 1001 Heroes, and to whom this story is dedicated.
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550
BIGFOOT: THE SCIENCE BEHIND THE SEARCH
Does Bigfoot really exist? We'll give you all the known science and let you decide! Stop by our new website where you can browse all 12 1001 shows and enjoy over 1,500 stories at www.bestof1001stories.com and leave a review after signing up for our monthly newsletter-Thanks!
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549
BORN ON A MOUNTAINTOP IN...FRANKLIN?
The Ballad of Davy Crockett begins this way "Born on a mountaintop in Tennessee, Greenest state in the land of the free...", but Tennessee wasn't always Tennessee... actually it was named Franklin when the independent thinking people there decided that Carolina didnt even know they existed. So they got together and named their own state with its own boundaries. This is their story... My footnote: I grew up in Pasadena CA and in my neighborhood Mrs Tobin always held a big back yard Christmas show where the kids were invited to perform.I was 5 or 6 and when my turn came I was supposed to render a tried and true Christmas song. But before the performance dad pulled me aside and asked me to sing my favorite song instead, which happened to be the Ballad of Davy Crockett .(I was a coonskin cap wearing Crockett fan back then). So when my turn came I sang 'Born on a mountaintop in Tennessee...."with lots of energy. Mom had a look of shock on her face. Dad was laughing and slapping his knee, which he did when he was really pleased. Mom eventually forgave me. Whether she ever forgave dad or not I never knew. But I'll never forget Mrs. Tobin's Chriastmas parties in Pasadena.
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548
THE TRUE STORY THAT INSPIRED 'THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO'
The True Story That Inspired 'The Count of Monte Cristo' — A Four‑Part Special at 1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries Fresh off our full narration of Alexandre Dumas's The Count of Monte Cristo at 1001 Stories for the Road, we turn to the true story behind the novel — a story every bit as dramatic, heroic, and heartbreaking as the fiction it inspired. And with PBS MASTERPIECE releasing its sweeping new eight‑episode adaptation of The Count of Monte Cristo starring Sam Claflin as Edmond Dantès and Jeremy Irons as Abbé Faria, there has never been a better moment to explore the real history behind the legend. This four‑part series uncovers the extraordinary life of General Thomas‑Alexandre Dumas, father of the novelist and the real inspiration behind both The Count of Monte Cristo and The Three Musketeers. Born enslaved in Saint‑Domingue, he rose to become one of the most celebrated generals of the French Revolution — only to be betrayed, imprisoned, and forgotten by the nation he served. His suffering, courage, and moral conviction shaped the imagination of his son and became the emotional foundation of Dumas's greatest works. Summary of the Series • Part One traces Dumas's origins in the Caribbean, his rise from enslavement to freedom, and his meteoric ascent through the French military. • Part Two follows his legendary Alpine campaigns, his rivalry with Napoleon, and the political tensions that set the stage for his downfall. • Part Three enters the fortress where Dumas was imprisoned for two years — a harrowing ordeal that directly parallels Edmond Dantès's suffering in the Château d'If. • Part Four explores his final years, his early death, and the way his son resurrected his legacy through literature, transforming tragedy into timeless adventure. This is the story of a man whose real life was larger than fiction — a hero whose courage shaped a literary masterpiece and whose legacy still resonates today. And as you enjoy the new PBS MASTERPIECE adaptation — beautifully filmed, richly acted, and faithful to the spirit of Dumas's novel — remember that nothing compares to experiencing the original words of Alexandre Dumas, with all their nuance, history, and emotional depth. You can hear the full narrated novel at 1001 Stories for the Road. If you enjoy our shows, please share them with friends, leave a review, and help others discover the stories that shaped our world. Your support keeps these histories alive and allows us to bring you more great storytelling every week.
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547
UFO FILES: THE BETTY AND BARNEY HILL INCIDENT
⭐ Summary: The Betty and Barney Hill Incident On the night of September 19, 1961, Betty and Barney Hill—an interracial, middle‑class couple from Portsmouth, New Hampshire—were driving home from a vacation in Canada when they noticed a bright light in the sky that seemed to follow their car. As the object drew closer, Betty became convinced it was a craft; Barney, more skeptical, stopped the car to get a better look. Through binoculars he saw what he later described as a structured, disc‑shaped craft with humanoid figures inside. Terrified, the couple fled down the highway. What happened next became the heart of the mystery. The Hills arrived home hours later than expected, with two missing hours they could not account for. In the weeks that followed, they suffered nightmares, anxiety, and fragmented memories. Under separate hypnosis sessions, both described being taken aboard a craft, subjected to medical examinations, and shown a star map—details that would later be linked by ufologists to the Zeta Reticuli system. Their account became the first widely publicized alien‑abduction story in the United States, inspiring the bestselling book The Interrupted Journey and the 1975 TV film The UFO Incident. ⭐ Why This Case Became Legendary • First major U.S. abduction claim: Historians and researchers widely regard the Hills' experience as the first fully developed alien‑abduction narrative in American culture. • The couple's credibility: Betty was a social worker; Barney was a postal worker and civil‑rights activist. They were respected, grounded, and not seeking publicity—qualities that made their story harder to dismiss. • Cultural impact: Their descriptions helped shape the now‑iconic image of the "Grey" alien—large head, small body, dark eyes—an image that later dominated science fiction and UFO lore. • Cold War anxieties: Their story emerged during a period of heightened interest in flying saucers, secrecy, and the unknown, making the public more receptive to extraordinary claims. ⭐ Why It Still Matters The Hill incident remains one of the most studied and debated UFO cases in history. It sits at the crossroads of psychology, folklore, Cold War culture, and the human need to explain the unexplainable. Whether viewed as a genuine encounter, a shared trauma, or a cultural phenomenon, the Hills' story continues to influence how Americans imagine extraterrestrial contact. Catch ALL our stories at www.bestof1001stories.com and leave a review-Thanks!
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546
THE GREAT MOLASSES FLOOD OF BOSTON 1919
DROWNING IN MOLASSES — SHOW NOTES Overview On January 15, 1919, Boston's North End was shattered by one of the strangest and most devastating industrial disasters in American history: the Great Molasses Flood. A massive steel tank—poorly built, poorly maintained, and filled to the brim with fermenting molasses—exploded without warning. A tidal wave of sticky, suffocating syrup tore through the neighborhood at nearly 35 miles per hour, killing 21 people, injuring more than 150, and leaving a path of destruction that took years to fully repair. Key Themes • Corporate negligence — The tank's owners ignored repeated warnings, complaints, and visible leaks. • Human cost — Ordinary residents, laborers, and children were caught in a disaster no one imagined possible. • Chaos and heroism — First responders fought to save lives in a landscape transformed into a suffocating swamp. • Legal aftermath — The resulting lawsuit became one of the first major class‑action cases in U.S. history. • Legacy — The disaster reshaped building regulations and industrial safety standards nationwide. Historical Background • The tank belonged to the United States Industrial Alcohol Company, which rushed its construction during WWI to meet demand for industrial alcohol. • Residents complained for years that the tank leaked so badly children collected molasses in cups. • The company painted the tank brown to hide the leaks rather than fix them. • On the morning of the explosion, temperatures rose rapidly, fermenting the molasses and increasing internal pressure. The Explosion • At 12:40 p.m., the tank ruptured with a sound witnesses compared to machine‑gun fire or a collapsing building. • A 25‑foot‑high wave of molasses surged outward, destroying buildings, buckling elevated train tracks, and sweeping people and horses into the harbor. • The nearby firehouse was crushed, trapping firefighters in a rising pool of syrup. • Survivors described the molasses as "quicksand"—thick, heavy, and impossible to escape. Casualties and Damage • 21 dead, including workers, children, and first responders. • 150+ injured, many permanently. • Entire blocks were coated in molasses up to three feet deep. • Cleanup took months, and the smell lingered in the North End for decades. Investigation and Lawsuit • The company blamed anarchists and sabotage. • Investigators found: • Thin steel plates • Poor riveting • No engineering oversight • Ignored warning signs • After a lengthy trial, the company was found liable and paid $628,000 in damages (about $10 million today). • The case helped establish modern building inspection and safety standards.
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545
THE 1899 CENTRAL PARK KIDNAPPING THAT SHOOK NEW YORK CITY
THE CENTRAL PARK KIDNAPPING EDWARD H.SMITH There are stories in American history that arrive like a thunderclap—stories that seize the public imagination, shake a city to its core, and leave behind a permanent change in how people live their daily lives. In the spring of 1899, New York City was gripped by exactly such a story. It began in the most peaceful place imaginable: a sunny afternoon in Central Park, where mothers pushed prams beneath the elms, nurses chatted on benches, and children played within sight of the great stone arches. Sound cue: a sudden, jarring chord—then silence. And then, in an instant, the unthinkable happened. A baby vanished. Not wandered off. Not misplaced. Taken.Lifted from a carriage in broad daylight, in the heart of the nation's largest city, at a time when the idea of "child kidnapping" was almost too horrifying to imagine. Newspapers exploded with headlines. Crowds gathered at police stations. Mothers refused to let their children out of sight. And in an era before radio, before telephones were common, before any kind of centralized law enforcement communication, it was the newspapers—yes, the newspapers—who stepped in to investigate. Reporters were dispatched like detectives. Editors demanded answers. And the public followed every twist and turn as if the fate of their own families hung in the balance. This was the case that changed how America thought about child safety.This was the case that made "stranger danger" a national conversation—decades before the phrase existed.And this was the case that inspired one of the most gripping true‑crime accounts of the early 20th century. Travel Sidebar: Walking the Scene of the Central Park Kidnapping New York City's Central Park is one of those rare places where the past never quite lets go. Walk its winding paths today and you'll find joggers, dog‑walkers, and families on picnic blankets—but beneath all that life is a quieter layer, a memory of the park as it once was: wilder, less patrolled, and full of blind corners where a person could vanish in an instant. If you want to stand where the story's tension first took shape, start at the Mall and Literary Walk, that long, cathedral‑straight promenade lined with American elms. In the late 19th century, this was one of the few places in the park where wealthy families felt safe enough to stroll. Nurses pushed prams. Children played tag between the benches. And yet, even here, the trees cast long shadows. From there, drift toward Bethesda Terrace, the heart of the park. The stone staircases, the echoing arcade, the angel rising above the fountain—this is where the city's elegance meets its undercurrent of mystery. In 1899, the terrace was a crossroads of strangers: vendors, musicians, wanderers, and the occasional pickpocket watching from the balustrade. Continue north and the terrain changes. The paths narrow. The trees thicken. The air feels different. This is the Ramble, a tangle of trails and rocky outcrops designed to mimic a natural forest. Even today, it's easy to lose your bearings for a moment. In the era of the kidnapping, it was even more secluded—a place where sound didn't carry far and where a single scream could be swallowed by the leaves. Finally, step out onto the Bow Bridge, one of the park's most photographed spots. Its graceful ironwork spans a quiet arm of the lake, and from the center you can see both the skyline and the woods. It's a reminder of how close civilization and wilderness sit in Central Park—sometimes only a few feet apart. These locations aren't just scenery. They're characters in the story. They shaped the investigation, the fear, and the urgency that gripped New York. And when you walk them today, with the city humming around you, you can still feel the echo of that long‑ago afternoon when a child disappeared and the park became the center of a mystery that refused to fade.
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544
A CURIOUS VANISHING: AGATHA CHRISTIE'S 11 DAY DISAPPEARANCE IN DEC 1926
When the most famous writer of crime fiction mysteriously disappeared in December of 1926, leaving behind her parked car with headlights on and her personal items, the public and the press feared the worst. An intensive search began and lasted for 11 days until...... Join us at 1001 Stories For the Road for my narration of the classic Christie mystery "The Seven Dials Mystery'", and you can also catch up on 'The Count of Monte Cristo', , which I recently completed there. Link to 1001 Stories For The Road: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-for-the-road/id1227478901 Our website: www.bestof1001stories.com
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543
REMEMBERING MERRILL'S MARAUDERS: THE JUNGLE RAIDERS OF WWII
REMEMBERING MERRILL'S MARAUDERS THE JUNGLE RAIDERS OF WWII This episode explores the extraordinary story of Merrill's Marauders, an elite American long-range penetration unit that operated in the treacherous jungles of Burma during World War II. Known officially as the 5307th Composite Unit (Provisional), these soldiers endured brutal conditions, intense combat, and relentless terrain to disrupt Japanese forces in Southeast Asia. Key highlights include: The formation and unique mission of Merrill's Marauders as a specialized jungle warfare unit. Their grueling march through dense jungle and mountainous terrain, covering over 1,000 miles. The strategic importance of their operations in Burma and their impact on the Allied campaign. Personal stories of bravery, sacrifice, and camaraderie among the Marauders. Recognition of their valor with the Congressional Gold Medal decades later, honoring their outstanding service and legacy. This episode blends historical facts with cinematic storytelling to bring to life the courage and endurance of these unsung heroes of WWII. Listeners are invited to reflect on the challenges faced by soldiers in unconventional warfare and the lasting significance of Merrill's Marauders in military history. For more immersive historical narratives, subscribe and follow our podcast series. Join us next time for another journey into heroes, legends, histories, and mysteries. Heard here veterans Bob Passanisi, Gil Howland, James Richardson, Vincent Melillo, James Collins
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542
PEG ENTWHISTLE AND THE GHOST OF THE HOLLYWOOD SIGN
Episode 2 — Peg Entwistle & the Ghost of the Hollywood Sign ⭐ EPISODE SUMMARY PEG ENTWHISTLE AND THE GHOST OF THE HOLLYWOOD SIGN In 1932, a young actress named Peg Entwistle climbed the ladder behind the Hollywood Sign and jumped to her death. Her tragic story became one of Hollywood's most enduring legends — and for nearly a century, hikers, rangers, and tourists have reported seeing her ghost wandering the hills, smelling her gardenia perfume, or hearing her footsteps near the "H." This episode explores Peg's early success, her heartbreaking decline, the pressures of the studio system, and the cascading disappointments that pushed her toward despair. We also dive deep into the ghost sightings — from 1930s newspaper reports to modern‑day ranger encounters — and examine why Peg's spirit seems unable to leave the hills she chose as her final stage. 🧭 TRAVEL GUIDE — VISIT THE LOCATIONS Brush Canyon Trail Best for ghost sightings Park at Canyon Drive Hollyridge Trail Known for gardenia scent reports Beachwood Village Peg's last residence Hollywood Sign Overlook Best view of the "H" 📚 SOURCES & FURTHER READING Los Angeles Times archives (1932–present) Hollywood Sign Trust historical documents Hollywoodland Homeowners Association history LAist: "The Ghost of Peg Entwistle" Atlas Obscura – Hollywood Sign legends KCET: "The Tragedy of Peg Entwistle" Haunted Los Angeles blog archives
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541
THE MAN WHO SURVIVED TWO ATOMIC BOMBS
This is the true story of the only man who suvived two atomic bombs, one in Nagasaki, and the the other in Hiroshima,, His name wqas Tsotumo Yamaguchi. -Found In The Footnotes JH website: www.bestof1001stories.com
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540
THE CURSE OF GRIFFITH PARK: A CHILLING CALIFORNIA LEGEND
⭐ EPISODE SUMMARY THE CURSE OF GRIFFITH PARK (CALI LEGENDS #1) Griffith Park is one of Los Angeles' most beloved landmarks — 4,300 acres of hiking trails, wildlife, and postcard views. But beneath the sunshine lies a darker history: a land dispute soaked in betrayal, a dying woman's curse, a string of mysterious deaths, killer trees, decapitated remains, rampaging ostriches, and unsolved murders beneath the Hollywood Sign. In this episode, Jon explores the chilling legend of Dona Petronilla's curse, the violent downfall of Griffith J. Griffith, the catastrophic 1933 fire, the eerie mysteries of Grizzly Flats, and the strange, often forgotten stories that have earned Griffith Park its reputation as one of California's most haunted landscapes. Whether you believe in curses or not, Griffith Park's long chain of tragedies and bizarre coincidences makes one thing clear: Some places remember. 🧭 PARANORMAL EXPLORER TRAVEL GUIDE — VISIT THE LOCATIONS 1. The Old Zoo Ruins Parking: Griffith Park Merry-Go-Round Lot What to see: Abandoned cages, stone enclosures, eerie tunnels Best time: Early morning or late afternoon 2. Griffith Observatory Overlook Parking: Observatory lot or DASH Observatory bus What to see: Suicide Rock, panoramic views of the cursed hills 3. Fern Dell & Trails Café Area Parking: Fern Dell Drive What to see: Historic trails tied to the original rancho 4. Mineral Wells Area (1933 Fire Site) Parking: Near the golf course What to see: Quiet, reflective area honoring the fire victims 5. Hollywood Sign Trails Access: Brush Canyon Trail or Hollyridge Trail What to see: Locations tied to multiple unsolved murders 📚 SOURCES & FURTHER READING (All publicly accessible, reputable references.) Historical Background & Rancho Los Feliz Los Angeles Public Library – Rancho Los Feliz history KCET: "The Curse of Griffith Park" Los Angeles Times archives on the Feliz family Griffith J. Griffith California State Archives – Griffith J. Griffith papers Los Angeles Times (1903–1905) coverage of the Arcadia Hotel shooting LA Parks Department historical timeline 1933 Griffith Park Fire Los Angeles Times (1933) fire coverage LA Fire Department Historical Society LAist: "Remembering the Griffith Park Fire" Killer Trees & Park Accidents LA Weekly: "The Widowmaker Trees of Griffith Park" Los Angeles Daily News reporting on falling‑limb fatalities Grizzly Flats & Decapitated Remains LAPD public case summaries Los Angeles Times reporting (1920s–1970s) LAist: "The Darkest Corners of Griffith Park" Ostrich Farm History Cawston Ostrich Farm Museum archives Pasadena Museum of History KCET: "The Ostrich Wars of Early Los Angeles" Murders Beneath the Hollywood Sign LAPD case files (public summaries) Los Angeles Times coverage of 1940, 1976, and 2012 cases LA Weekly: "The Dark History Beneath the Hollywood Sign" Ghosts & Folklore Atlas Obscura – Griffith Park legends Haunted Los Angeles blog archives GHULA (Ghost Hunters of Urban LA) field notes ❤️ SUPPORT THE SHOW If you enjoy 1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries, please consider: Leaving a rating or review Sharing the episode with a friend Supporting the show on Patreon Subscribing for future episodes, including our upcoming California Legends and Weird Florida arcs
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539
WHO KILLED SUPERMAN? A HOLLYWOOD TRUE CRIME STORY
"Who Killed Superman?" is a gripping investigation into the tragic end of George Reeves, the actor who became a 1950s icon as the Man of Steel but found himself trapped in a real-life noir drama. The Incident: Time, Place, and Date Date: June 16, 1959. Time: Between 1:30 a.m. and 2:00 a.m.. Place: The upstairs bedroom of his home at 1579 Benedict Canyon Drive, Los Angeles. The Scene: Reeves was found naked, sprawled across his bed, dead from a single gunshot wound to his right temple from a .30 caliber Luger pistol found at his feet. Rise to Fame & Sudden Fall Reeves began with promise, appearing in Gone with the Wind (1939), but his career truly skyrocketed with the "Adventures of Superman" (1952–1958). Ironically, his greatest success became his greatest burden; he was so heavily typecast that he struggled to find serious roles once the show ended. At the time of his death, he was reportedly depressed about his career, though friends noted he had recently received promising news about the show resuming production. The Primary Suspects While the LAPD officially ruled his death a suicide, three figures are central to the murder theories: Leonore Lemmon (The Fiancée): She was hosting a small gathering downstairs at the time of the shooting. Her volatile relationship with Reeves and her strange behavior—allegedly blurting out that he was going to "shoot himself" before the shot even rang out—made her a top suspect. Toni Mannix (The Ex-Mistress): A wealthy woman who had supported Reeves for years during their long-term affair. She was reportedly devastated when Reeves ended the relationship to marry Lemmon. Eddie Mannix (The "Fixer"): Toni's husband and a high-ranking MGM executive with alleged mob ties. Many believe he ordered a hit on Reeves either to avenge his wife's heartbreak or at her direct request. New Evidence & Testimonies Recent investigations and historical retrospectives highlight glaring inconsistencies in the original suicide ruling: Physical Evidence Gaps: The Luger had no fingerprints, and there was no gunpowder residue on Reeves' hands, which is highly unusual for a self-inflicted shot. Extra Bullet Holes: Detectives found two additional bullet holes in the bedroom floor, yet guests only reported hearing one shot. Mystery Bruises: A second autopsy revealed unexplained bruises on Reeves' head and body that were never investigated. The Deathbed Confession: Years later, publicist Edward Lozzi claimed he was present when Toni Mannix confessed to a priest that she was responsible for Reeves' death. The Early Phone Call: Phyllis Coates (the original Lois Lane) alleged that Toni Mannix called her at 4:30 a.m. to tell her "the boy is dead" and had been "murdered"—before the news had been made public. This story investigate the controversial death of George Reeves, detailing the suspects, evidence, and recent testimonies surrounding his supposed suicide: Please share- and reviews are appreciated! See www.bestof1001stories.com for more stories like this one
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THE BATTLE OF THE BUNNIES: NAPOLEAN'S SECOND WATERLOO
This story was inspired by by sharing 'The Count of Monte Cristo' in its entirety recently at 1001 Stories For The Road Podcast. If you want a great cllassic romance/adventure story- this is it! THE BATTLE OF THE BUNNIES It sounds like a tall tale, but this actually happened! In July 1807, after signing the Treaties of Tilsit, Napoleon Bonaparte decided to celebrate with a grand imperial rabbit hunt. The event didn't go exactly as planned: The Setup: Napoleon's chief of staff, Alexandre Berthier, was in charge of the festivities. To ensure a "successful" hunt, he didn't trap wild hares; instead, he reportedly bought roughly 3,000 domesticated rabbits from local farmers. The Ambush: When the cages were opened, the rabbits didn't hop away in fear. Because they were farm-raised, they saw Napoleon and his men as providers of food. Instead of fleeing, the massive swarm charged toward Napoleon in a fluffy wave. The Retreat: Thousands of rabbits swarmed the Emperor's legs, climbed his silk jacket, and reportedly even hopped into his imperial carriage. The "Greatest Military Mind in History" was forced to beat a hasty retreat, using his riding crop and coat to shoo away the persistent bunnies. Join us at our new website at www.bestof1001stories.com and browse all 12 1001 podcasts for stories and old time radio.
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THE C-47 DOUGLAS SKY-TRAIN AND THE SPHINX
Featured with Podcast (hopefully); The iconic image of a Douglas C-47 Skytrain (or "Dakota") soaring over the Giza Pyramids in 1943 is a masterpiece of the U.S. Signal Corps. This moment captured the meeting of two worlds: the pinnacle of WWII aviation technology and the oldest of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. The Story Behind the Photo • The Mission: In 1943, this C-47 was part of the U.S. Air Transport Command, a global lifeline ferrying urgent war supplies and materials across the Atlantic and through Africa to reach strategic battle zones. • The Symbolism: The photograph served as powerful wartime propaganda, showing American industrial might literally "overshadowing" the monuments of antiquity, signaling a new era of global dominance. • Historical Context: Cairo was a bustling hub for Allied leaders during this period; that same year, FDR, Churchill, and Chiang Kai-shek met there for the Cairo Conference to discuss the post-war fate of Asia. The Mysteries of the Pyramids The "story" of what lies inside is one of the world's greatest ongoing detective tales: • The Voids: Modern technology, like cosmic-ray muon radiography, has recently confirmed the existence of immense hidden voids inside the Great Pyramid, including a massive chamber above the Grand Gallery. • The Artifacts: Surprisingly, only three small items have ever been officially retrieved from the Great Pyramid's shafts: a granite ball, a copper hook, and a fragment of cedar wood. • The Legends: Theories range from the Halls of Amenti (a legendary underground library) to more controversial claims of immense underground structures stretching thousands of feet below the Giza Plateau. Verified Source List To ensure your listeners can follow the trail, here are the core sources used for this narrative: • Aviation History: The National WWII Museum and the Mid America Flight Museum for the history of the C-47 "Sky-King" and Air Transport Command. • The Aberdeen Discovery: The official University of Aberdeen News Release on the 2020 rediscovery of the Dixon Relics. • The Robot Missions: The Isida Project for a minute-by-minute log of the Upuaut (Oop-wah-wet) robot mission in 1993. • The Particle Physics: Nature Journal and Scientific American regarding the ScanPyramids Muon (MYOO-on) tomography results. • The Eight-Sided Pyramid: Documentation from the U.S. Air Force Historical Research Agency regarding aerial photography of Giza. ________________________________________
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536
CAPT. JACK TUELLER AND HIS TRUMPET
We have two stories about Capt. Jack Tueller, who was a highly decorated US Army pilot who served in three wars. The first is a legend which goes hand in hand with Valentine's Day,which, by the way,is this Saturday (2026). The second is the true story that inspired the legend. In both, Capt Jack is at D-Day + 12 in Normandy, he is very good with his trumpet, and his trumpet gets results in both stories. Check out all our stories at www.bestof1001stories.com and help all our Found In The Footnotes to go viral on social media by sharing!
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535
THE GHOSTS OF ROME ARE EVERYWHERE
Like it or not- ancient Rome is everywhere in our lives- in our language, our laws, our structures, our holidays, and even our calendar, in the days of the week and the months of the year. It seems strange that after 1500 years since Roman civilization dumped its many gods in favor of one that we still live with them every day. Join us for a look at just how much we depend on a long-crashed civilization in our daily lives. Visit our new website and browse over 2,000 stories at 12 1001 shows www.bestof1001stories.com Enjoy A GENERAL HISTORY OF THE PYRATES by DANIEL DEFOE AT 1001 STORIES FOR THE ROAD Enjoy THE SHADOW radio show now at 1001 Ghost, Chiller & Lovecraft Enjoy my reading of THE OREGON TRAIL now at 1001 Stories From The Old West Enjoy our new FOUND IN THE FOOTNOTES ritght here every Wednesday Pictured: The Roman two-faced god Janus (January)
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534
THE RUSSIAN FISHING EXPEDITION & OTHER URBAN LEGENDS (URBAN LEGENDS #11)
The Beast of Bodmin Moor- Something's been killing livestock in Cornwall and residents think its a panther, but one local went a little too far to instigate an investigation The Russian Fishing Expedition- Two buds purchase a new truck to take their fishing trip at a remote Siberian lake to the next level but it really wasn't their best day.... The 27 Club- It seems that more than the usual number of rock and rollers have died at age 27- and when Kurt Cobain and Amy Winehouse died that started people looking.... The Deadly Ghost of Lake Ronkonkoma- They say she's an Indian princess who fell in love with a white man who died in the lake-and ever since then she's been claiming male swimmers to avenge her loss...and some people say there's something to it.... The Bell Witch- This wise-cracking witch really gave the Bell family a serious haunting, or so they say..... The Legendary Cowboy Doan- He was a Vietnamese pilot who flew support for a covert Special Ops Group "over the fence" in Laos during the Vietnam War- and his courage became the stuff of legend... Get all of our shows at one website: WWW.BESTOF1001STORIES.COM REVIEWS NEEDED . My email works as well for comments: [email protected] SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! https://.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated). YOUR REVIEWS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS AT APPLE/ITUNES AND ALL ANDROID HOSTS ARE NEEDED AND APPRECIATED! LINKS BELOW.. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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533
ON A TRAIN PLATFORM IN JERSEY CITY
We celebrate Abrham Lincoln's birthday this Thursday FEB 12th- In late 1864, a young man was waiting for a train in Jersey City, New Jersey. The platform was crowded, with passengers standing close to the edge as trains arrived and departed. It was an ordinary scene—busy, noisy, and unremarkable. At some point, the young man lost his footing. Accounts differ on exactly how it happened, but what's consistent is the result: he slipped into the narrow space between the platform and a moving train. It was the kind of accident that, in the 19th century, often ended badly. Before the train could pull fully away, someone nearby reacted. A man reached forward, grabbed the young man by the collar of his coat, and pulled him back onto the platform. The incident was over almost as quickly as it began. There was no crowd reaction. No report in the papers. No sense at the time that anything unusual had occurred. Two strangers crossed paths for a few seconds—one falling, one helping—and then went on with their lives. The man who had nearly fallen was Robert Todd Lincoln. He was in his early twenties and traveling at the time, having recently served briefly on General Ulysses S. Grant's staff. Although his last name was recognizable, Robert generally tried to stay out of the public eye. The man who pulled him to safety was Edwin Booth. Edwin Booth was already well known. He was one of the most respected stage actors in America, particularly admired for his Shakespearean performances. He was considered serious, disciplined, and professionally dedicated. Neither man knew the other's identity at the moment it happened. Later, when Robert learned who had saved him, he wrote Edwin Booth a letter thanking him for his quick action. Edwin kept the letter and later spoke of the incident as one of the proudest moments of his life. At the time, there was no larger meaning attached to it. That came later. Several months after the incident on the platform, on April 14, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated at Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. The man who shot him was John Wilkes Booth. John Wilkes Booth was also an actor—and he was Edwin Booth's younger brother. The assassination immediately made the Booth name infamous. While John Wilkes Booth became one of the most recognizable figures in American history, the effects extended far beyond him. Edwin Booth had no involvement in the assassination. In fact, he had openly disagreed with his brother's political views and was horrified by the crime. Nonetheless, public reaction did not easily separate the two. In the weeks and months following the assassination, Edwin Booth withdrew from public life. His reputation suffered, not because of anything he had done, but because of his family connection. There are historical accounts suggesting that Edwin considered ending his acting career altogether. He felt a deep sense of shame, despite bearing no responsibility for his brother's actions. Eventually, with encouragement from colleagues and friends, Edwin returned to the stage. Over time, he rebuilt his career and remained a major figure in American theater. He later helped establish The Players Club in New York, a gathering place for artists and performers. Even so, his name was never fully separated from the assassination. Robert Todd Lincoln's life also continued in public service. He later served as Secretary of War and as the United States Minister to Great Britain. Over the years, people noted that he had been present or nearby during three presidential assassinations—his father's, James Garfield's, and William McKinley's. This led to later speculation and myth-making, which Robert himself dismissed. He disliked the attention and rejected any idea that the pattern meant something more than coincidence. The brief encounter on the train platform remained a quiet footnote in history. A moment when Edwin Booth saved the life of Robert Lincoln—months before Edwin's brother would take the life of Robert's father. The episode stands out not because it altered the course of history, but because it reveals how easily history compresses people into names and associations. Two men met as strangers. One helped the other. Neither could have known how their families would soon be linked forever. It's a small moment—but one that history didn't forget.
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532
BETRAYAL ON THE THAMES: THE FINAL DAYS OF POCAHONTAS
Todays story explains the controversy which still surrounds the untimely death of 21 year-old Pocahonts, the daughter of a Powhatan chief who, thanks to her trust in Capt. John Smith and willingness to accept English presence in the New World, became a pawn of English colonialism and, according to her tribe's oral tradition, was likely killed for her kindness when she was poisoned while on board a ship leaving Engaland ihn March of 1617- the same ship and Captain which had kidnapped her just a few years earlier to "christianize" her. Our storyline today: 1616 Pocahontas, with husband JohnRolfe and son Thomas, reach England on a mission to promote the English/Native Indian alliance in the New World and hopefully raise money for a new church and school for native peoples. Pocahontas and 12 of her tribe attached to the delegation tour London! Pocahontas ,now Lady Rebecca, is invited to attend a Chrisatmasplay and meets the King and Queen~Later she meets Capt.John Smith, who comes to see her, and she is initially overwhelmed due to her being told in Virgina thast Smith was dead- later she rebukes him for not contacting her~Likely treachery done by Smith's detractors the reason for his severe injury~Pocahontas works closely with Church ofn England officials to ask them to finance a vchurch and sachool for Indian children, idea which is acted upon~the funds raised during her visit went intio the construction of the Colle of Henrico (Richmond area) which was detroyed in 1622 by a Powhatan uprising- but later renewed at a diffent location- resulting in the beginnings of the College of William &n Mary in Williamsburg. Then the sudden sickness and death with hours after boarding the ship which was wo take them home- she dies suddenly- some say smallpox?- not believed by historians- Mattaponi Oral tradition states that she told her sister that she has been poisoned~ suspects are Capt Argyll and even her husband- who may have been using her and her notoriety for his own gainThe primary research revealing Mattaponi oral traditions of treachery, poisoning, and sexual violence was conducted by Dr. Linwood "Little Bear" Custalow and Angela L. Daniel (also known as Silver Star). Their collaborative work resulted in the 2007 book, The True Story of Pocahontas: The Other Side of History, which published these sacred oral traditions for the first time. Key Researchers & Contributors Dr. Linwood "Little Bear" Custalow: A Mattaponi tribal historian and the eldest son of Chief Daniel Webster "Little Eagle" Custalow. He was designated from a young age to learn and preserve the tribe's sacred oral history. Angela L. Daniel ("Silver Star"): A doctoral student in anthropology at the College of William and Mary at the time of publication. She worked closely with Dr. Custalow and his father, Chief Webster Custalow, who encouraged her to document their history to ensure its preservation. Chief Webster "Little Eagle" Custalow: The late Mattaponi chief who served as a primary source for the researchers. He was instrumental in authorizing the public release of these historically guarded accounts. Significant Findings of Their Research Through their interviews and compilation of oral tradition, these researchers documented several accounts of English treachery: Death by Poisoning: Their research indicates that Pocahontas was murdered by poisoning at a final dinner with John Rolfe and Captain Samuel Argall to prevent her from exposing English deceptions to her father. Systemic Sexual Violence: They recorded clear tribal traditions stating Pocahontas was repeatedly abused during her captivity in Jamestown, specifically by Governor Thomas Dale. Paternity of Thomas Rolfe: The oral history they documented asserts that her son Thomas was not John Rolfe's child but was the result of physical abuse by Thomas Dale. Exploitation of Tribal Members: They noted the tradition that Powhatan women accompanying Pocahontas were exploited, with some sold into servitude or slavery in Bermuda to remove witnesses to these events. While these findings have been debated by conventional historians who rely on written colonial records, the work of Custalow and Daniel remains the authoritative source for the Mattaponi sacred oral history.
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531
THE FINEST HOURS (PT 2) THE COAST GUARD RESCUE THAT INSPIRED THE BOOK AND MOVIE
In part two we cover the finding of the Pendleton bow section with all hands lost, and the rescue of the Ft. Mercer bow and stern sections in high seas off Cape Cod. At the end- parts of a Cape Cod Times interview with Andrew Fitzgerald; portions of the Coast Guard memorial flag ceremony for Berne Webber with words from USCG Master Chief Petty Officer Jack Downey; also included a Disneyworld tribute for Andrew Fitzgerald. Credits given in this episode to ,The Finest Hour' authors Michael J. Tougias and Casey Sherman. There were dozens of heroes involved in the 1952 rescues and they didn't all make this story but their courage and sacrifices are appreciated, as is the U.S. Coast Guard Service and the men and women who served and who serve today. The Finest Hours is a 2016 American action thriller film directed by Craig Gillespie and produced by Walt Disney Pictures. The screenplay, written by Eric Johnson, Scott Silver, and Paul Tamasy, is based on The Finest Hours: The True Story of the U.S. Coast Guard's Most Daring Sea Rescue by Michael J. Tougias and Casey Sherman.[9] The film stars Chris Pine, Casey Affleck, Ben Foster, Holliday Grainger, John Ortiz, and Eric Bana, and chronicles the historic 1952 United States Coast Guard rescue of the crew of SS Pendleton, after the ship split apart during a nor'easter off the New England coast Get all of our shows at one website: www.BESTOF1001STORIES.COM CALLING ALL FANS.. REVIEWS NEEDED SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! www.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated). YOUR REVIEWS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS AT APPLE/ITUNES AND ALL ANDROID HOSTS ARE NEEDED AND APPRECIATED! LINKS BELOW... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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530
THE FINEST HOURS (PT 1): THE COAST GUARD RESCUE THAT INSPIRED THE BOOK & MOVIE
Part One- Saving the crew of the Pendleton- On February 17th, 1952, a wicked nor'easter tore through New England, leaving 42 deaths n its wake. The cyclone winds, driving snow and sleet, and 70 foot waves caused havoc off Cape Cod, causing two huge T-2 oil tankers to break in half- leaving over 80 crewmen and officers in all 4 ship sections at the mercy of the ocean. The US Coast Guard was alerted first to one of the ships, the Fort Mercer, and sent their cutters and lifeboats out in extremely dangerous waves to try to save any survivors. When the shocking news came that a second tanker had been broken in two- there was only one small lifeboat left to go after it- but first it had to survive what was known as the Chatham Bar- a shoal so dangerous that no one believed this boat would make it. But the unofficial motto of the Coast Guard was and is- "You have to go out there...you don't have to come back". And they went. The Finest Hours is a 2016 American action thriller film[ directed by Craig Gillespie and produced by Walt Disney Pictures. The screenplay, written by Eric Johnson, Scott Silver, and Paul Tamasy, is based on The Finest Hours: The True Story of the U.S. Coast Guard's Most Daring Sea Rescue by Michael J. Tougias and Casey Sherman.[9] The film stars Chris Pine, Casey Affleck, Ben Foster, Holliday Grainger, John Ortiz, and Eric Bana, and chronicles the historic 1952 United States Coast Guard rescue of the crew of SS Pendleton, after the ship split apart during a nor'easter off the New England coast Get all of our shows at one website: WWW.BESTOF1001STORIES.COM CALLING ALL FANS.. REVIEWS NEEDED SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! www.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated). YOUR REVIEWS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS AT APPLE/ITUNES AND ALL ANDROID HOSTS ARE NEEDED AND APPRECIATED! LINKS BELOW... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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529
CHARLES DICKENS AND THE STAPLEHURST RAIL CRASH: FOUND IN THE FOOTNOTES
Make Sure to catch Dickens GREAT short story 'The Wreck of The Golden Mary' NOW at 1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales! FOUND IN THE FOOTNOTES CHARLES DICKENS AND THE STAPLEHURST RAIL CRASH Podcast Script – Charles Dickens and the Staplehurst Rail Crash As many of you know,I'm a huge fan of classic literature and four of our 1001 podcasts are packed with My renderings of short stories and novels from the greats like Robert Louis Stevenson, O. Henry, and Charles Dickens- just search 1001 Classic Short Stories and you'll see what I mean. Charles Dickens gave usGreat Expectations, A Tale of Two Cities, A Christmas Carol, And many more … This is a mostly unknown story about Charles Dickens which I had never known-- until I found it in the footnotes. Picture this. It's a warm June evening in 1865. The countryside of Kent is slipping past the windows of a train bound for London. Inside one of the first- class carriages sits one of the most famous writers in the English- speaking world — Charles Dickens. He's tired, he's thinking about deadlines, and beside him is something priceless: the handwritten manuscript for a new novel, Our Mutual Friend, not yet finished, not yet safely delivered to the public. Then — without warning — the world breaks apart. The bridge ahead has collapsed. The train plunges into open space. Carriages snap loose and tumble into the river below. Iron screams, wood splinters, steam hisses into chaos. In moments, what was a quiet journey becomes one of the worst railway disasters of the Victorian age. And somehow — impossibly — Charles Dickens survives. He climbs out of a shattered carriage suspended over the river. He tends to the wounded. He witnesses death at arm's length. And before he leaves the wreckage, before he allows himself to process the shock, he does something extraordinary: He climbs back into the ruins to retrieve his manuscript. Tonight's episode is about that moment — the Staplehurst rail crash, the night Charles Dickens cheated death, and how a single train accident quietly reshaped the final years of one of literature's greatest voices.
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528
THE THEATER OF THE MIND- WHEN RADIO RULED THE AIRWAYS
Join us 3X weekly (M-FW-F ) AT 4-5PM for our hosted episodes of what was America's top radio show for nearly 30 years- The Shadow, at 1001 Ghost, Ciller & Lovecraft Stories at Spotify, Apple, and all the rest- Gizelle( whose voice reminds me of Margot Lane in 'The Shadow' will give you the play by playon every episode, and it won't be long before you discover why audiences were glued to the big bx in their living room every Sunday night. 1001 Ghost Chiller & Lovecraft at Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-ghost-chiller-lovecraft-stories/id1516332327 In the 1930s, a miracle happened in the American living room. It wasn't a piece of furniture, though it looked like one—a polished wooden box with a glowing dial. For the first time in history, the world was coming inside. Before the 1930s, if you wanted news or stories, you bought a newspaper. But print was cold; it required literacy and effort. Radio was different. It was the first medium to reach a truly mass audience simultaneously. It didn't matter if you were a banker in New York or a sharecropper in Georgia; when you tuned in, you heard the same voice. Radio became a "friend" to a nation battered by the Great Depression. Families would huddle together, staring not at a screen, but at each other, or into the glowing vacuum tubes, as they listened to stories that reinforced old-fashioned family values. From the moral lessons of daytime soap operas to the grit of detective hours, radio promised that despite the chaos of the world, someone was looking out for the "American Way." Sun 12ET, Wed 5PM ET, Fri after 5PM ET-Catch Dragnet, Yours Truly Johnny Dollar, Philip Marlowe, Father Knows Best, Dangerous Assignment & 676 more at 1001 Radio Days Catch Sam Spade, Philip Marlowe, Dragnet, Father Brown, Jeff Regan Investigator, Barrie Craig, Nero Wolfe & Others at 1001 Radio Crime Solvers Sn, Wed, FRi at 1001 Radio Crime Solvers Catch Gunsmoke, Fort Laramie, The Oregon Trail and Tales of the Texas Rangers at1001 Stories From The Old West Sun, Wed
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527
ORIGINS OF SPIRITUALISM, THE FOX SISTERS SCAM, AND THE OUIJA BOARD
In this episode we discuss the spiritualism movement that lit up the country (but especially northwest and central New York) between 1840 and the 1920's, including the Fox sisters, who were fraudulent mediums who made lots of money cheating bereaved war widows and moms. Spiritualism and Ouija boards rely upon communing with spirits of the dead for advice and counsel. We also cover the history and legacy of the Ouija Board, which sprang from the spiritualism movement and is still purchased by many as a child's game today. Get all of our shows at one website: www.BESTOF1001STORIES.COM CALLING ALL FANS.. REVIEWS NEEDED SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! www.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated). YOUR REVIEWS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS AT APPLE/ITUNES AND ALL ANDROID HOSTS ARE NEEDED AND APPRECIATED! LINKS BELOW... Open these links to enjoy our shows! APPLE USERS Catch 1001 RADIO DAYS now at Apple iTunes! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-days/id1405045413?mt=2 Catch 1001 Heroes on any Apple Device here (Free): https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-heroes-legends-histories-mysteries-podcast/id956154836?mt=2 Catch 1001 CLASSIC SHORT STORIES at iTunes/apple Podcast App Now: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-classic-short-stories-tales/id1078098622 Catch 1001 Stories for the Road at iTunes/Apple Podcast now: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-for-the-road/id1227478901 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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526
'THE SHADOW' VINTAGE RADIO MYSTERY NOW PLAYIING M-W-F AT 1001 GHOST, CHILLER & LOVECRAFT
Join host Gizelle Erickson every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 4pm ET at 1001 Ghost, Chiller & Lovecraft Podcast as she introduces the nuances of every episode of America's favorite vigilante radio serial 'The Shadow' as Lamont Cranston and his sexy sidekick Margot Lane bring all the lowlifes and sleazeballs who never thought they would be punished to justice. Take the Shadow challenge and listen to the first five episodes like I did to really get an understanding of the show and you'll be a fan! Apple Link: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-ghost-chiller-lovecraft-stories/id1516332327 Spotify Link: https://open.spotify.com/show/5P4hV28LgpG89dRNMfSDKJ
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525
WHEN THE OLYMPICS GAVE OUT GOLD MEDALS FOR ART
The Winter Olympics are coming FEB 6th- and here's a littleknown story (found in the footnotes) about how they used to give medals for art- you know, painting, writing..creative stuff...provided the art reflected something to do with the Olympics. Its an interewsting story that not many people are aware of so enjoy and share with friends- Thanks! Our websitefor browsing over 2,000 stories of all different types is www.bestof1001stories.com
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524
THE LIFE AND TRIAL OF AIMEE SEMPLE MCPHERSON, (THE VANISHING EVANGELIST)
Aimee Semple McPherson's "trial" was a highly publicized investigation in 1926 following her mysterious disappearance and reappearance, where she faced charges of conspiracy and obstructing justice for allegedly faking a kidnapping to cover up a romantic tryst in Mexico. Although evidence mounted against her, including testimony from her secretary and her mother's inconsistent statements, the case ultimately collapsed due to a lack of definitive proof, and the charges were dismissed in early 1927, allowing her to continue her influential evangelistic ministry, however it was never proved that she had made up the kidnapping story, and Aimee never revealed that she did. It has remained an armchair mystery ever since! From www.resources.foursquare.org SEE BELOW Aimee Semple McPherson's daughter recalls her mother's courage Roberta Semple Salter, the late daughter of Foursquare Founder Aimee Semple McPherson, shares about her mother's strength and courage to share the gospel and help others, no matter what the cost. Roberta Semple Salter May 15, 2018 foursquare legacy It is both a surprise and a privilege when people recognize me as the daughter of a storied evangelist. Complete strangers feel as though they know me because they knew about Mother. However, my stories about her might be just a bit different than others you have seen and read. When she answered the call of God to preach the gospel, she knew that it would be a difficult, yet joyous, task. Her first challenge came when she and my father were doing missionary work in China. Father, whom I never had the privilege of knowing, contracted both malaria and dysentery, and died before I was born, leaving his wife behind as a soon-to-be single mother in a foreign land. Not only did she deliver a healthy baby, but she also recovered from the same illness that had taken Father's life. When we were both well enough to travel, she made the arduous journey back to the U.S. and a very different life than she had imagined with Robert on the mission field. The call of God was strong, and she preached, supported by a growing daughter and my grandmother, Minnie Kennedy. Grandmother was the business mind and was savvier in the ways of the world than was my mother. They locked horns at times, which has gotten more press than it deserves considering that most families have their disagreements. Grandmother held to her convictions and stood by mother's side through most decisions. However, if Grandmother just could not agree with a decision she thought was wrong, she said so, in no uncertain terms. But she also was a reasonable person. From the beginning of her ministry, Mother filled meeting halls and revival tents to capacity, and thousands upon thousands of people came to hear her preach. Opposition came most often from preachers whose churches were consistently half-filled. When critics warned people not to attend her meetings, they came all the more. Perhaps one of Mother's biggest accomplishments was the way she shared the love of Christ with people in need. In the early years, the Angelus Temple switchboard rang directly to a phone by her bed at night. She never wanted to miss a call for help. Mother believed that the best part of rabbit stew was the rabbit, and said you have to know how to get the rabbit's attention if you ever hope to have the stew. I think she applied this concept to her sermons. She found the way to attract people to hear the gospel, and when they came, she made sure to tell them. Hollywood legends Sid Grauman and Charlie Chaplin were just two icons of the movie industry who compared notes with Mother about drawing crowds. I don't believe either of them ever professed Christ as Savior, but who knows, maybe somewhere, somehow, the message she preached reached even them. The truth is, during that time, no theater in town drew the crowds that Mother did at Angelus Temple. One of the things that most distressed Mother was racial segregation, especially in the Deep South. When she held tent meetings in the South, she was aggravated that the tent was filled to capacity with white people, but black people were kept on the outside. Her heart was touched when she saw clusters of black worshipers singing along outside the tent, and she vowed to do something about it. Before the next night's service, she met with the sponsors of the meeting and told them to make room inside the tent for black people. They resisted, and she wore them down. When she learned that their plan included putting them on the sides or in the back, she put her foot down. "They will sit in the center section," she demanded. "The white people can sit on the side or in the back, if they want to attend." One of the things that most distressed Mother was racial segregation, especially in the Deep South. When she held tent meetings in the South, she was aggravated that the tent was filled to capacity with white people, but black people were kept on the outside. Like my grandmother, Mother held to her convictions like flint. She had a distinctive way about her that some called flamboyance. She dared not go to a restaurant for a hot dog or ham sandwich because just one word out of her mouth gave away who she was. One Sunday following a water baptismal service, Mother was leaving Angelus Temple through the side door that led to her parsonage. A hullabaloo was stirring outside, and someone explained that a particular woman who had been baptized was missing. She left behind her clothing and other belongings, but her baptismal gown and the woman in it were gone. The press ate it up, and Grandmother was furious. Some claimed the woman had been translated to heaven after being baptized by Mother. Others just claimed that the Temple was pulling a publicity stunt. A woman named Tulie knocked on the parsonage door the following day to apologize and explain what really happened. Her cousin dared her to do it, but afterward she couldn't stand the conviction, so she owned up to what she had done. We became friends with Tulie, and ever after she would drop by the parsonage with sandwiches for Mother or a quart of ice cream that she liked. People tried to take advantage of Mother's good nature by trying to sell her everything from a koala bear to a yacht; because in their pitch, she deserved it or needed it for comfortable living. Grandmother especially disliked such characters because she knew their true motives, while often my mother did not. She trusted everyone to a fault. One detractor tried to discredit her right to vote in U.S. elections because she had been born in Canada. What they did not realize was that she became a U.S. citizen when she married her second husband, Harold McPherson, my brother Rolf's father. Mother could not locate her marriage certificate to prove her citizenship and called Grandmother, who was always there to help. Grandmother called me because I was living in New York at the time. She knew I could get a copy of the certificate at City Hall, which I did, and that quelled the challenge once and for all. Perhaps one of Mother's biggest accomplishments was the way she shared the love of Christ with people in need. In the early years, the Angelus Temple switchboard rang directly to a phone by her bed at night. She never wanted to miss a call for help. About 3 a.m. one Sunday morning, a police officer called. While patrolling his beat outside the city among orange groves and gardens, he heard a woman screaming. He investigated and found a woman with three young children in severe distress. The woman's husband was off looking for work, and she had gone into premature labor with their fourth child. Mother called friends from the Temple who lived in the woman's area, and they responded immediately to provide food for the children, medical aid for the woman and her newborn baby, and a place for them to live until the husband returned home to help. That morning during Sunday service, Mother made an appeal to the congregation. "We need City Sisters in each quadrant of the city that will be ready on a moment's notice to reach out and bless people in need," she challenged. From that experience, the "City Sisters" organization was formed, a ministry that later became the Angelus Temple Commissary and would serve the needs of millions during the Great Depression. Yes, it is indeed a privilege to recount stories from Mother's life and ministry, and to know the amazing things God did through her. Most of all, I am thankful for her being my mother, the one who gave me life, and a lifetime of love and nurture. Roberta Semple Salter (1910-2007) was the daughter of Foursquare's founder, Aimee Semple McPherson. This article is adapted from a video interview. Author interview. Author
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Where History Comes Alive! A fast-paced, well-researched weekly podcast covering a wide range of historical events, persons, places, legends, and mysteries, Hosted by Jon Hagadorn, the selection of stories and interviews includes 'Found In The Footnotes" 5-10 minutes history shorts, lost treasure, unsolved mysteries, unexplained phenomenon, WWII stories, biographies, disasters, legends of the Old West, American Revolutionary history, urban legends, movie backstories, author interviews and much more. Available wherever podcasts are found, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Comcast, & others. Episodes air Sundays at 12pm ET and Thursdays at 6am ET.Follow us at www.Facebook.com/1001Heroes and Twitter @1001podcast. All archives available and categorized at www.bestof1001stories.com
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Jon Hagadorn Podcast Host
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