S7ories

PODCAST · society

S7ories

Stories is a long-form storytelling podcast exploring the people, places, and moments that shaped Maryland and the Chesapeake region.Each episode revisits history, crime, power, and culture through a modern lens — from untold local legends and defining moments to stories of conflict, resilience, and consequence that still echo today. These are not textbook histories or true-crime thrillers, but thoughtful narratives grounded in place, perspective, and lived experience.Stories is built for listeners who believe the past matters — not as nostalgia, but as context for understanding where we are now.

  1. 4

    S7ories | Tom Clancy

    There are writers who tell stories — and then there are writers who change how a country thinks.Tom Clancy never served in the military. He never held a security clearance. And yet his debut novel was so technically convincing that senior officials in Washington wondered how he knew what he knew.In this episode of Stories in the Seventh State, Shane Hall examines Tom Clancy not as a list of books or movies, but as a Maryland-made cultural force — a systems thinker who transformed complexity into narrative and taught millions of people how to think about power.From his upbringing in Baltimore and his rejection from military service, to his years as an insurance salesman quietly studying risk, strategy, and cascading failure, Clancy developed a worldview where institutions matter, competence is moral, and systems — not lone heroes — decide outcomes.This episode explores:- How The Hunt for Red October reshaped public understanding of military power- Why Clancy’s work felt “classified” without using classified information- The rise of open-source intelligence before it had a name- How Clancy’s worldview spread from novels to video games and became muscle memory- The criticisms of his moral clarity in a post-9/11 world- Why his vision of order, structure, and competence still resonates todayClancy didn’t predict the future.He taught America how to imagine power — and once you learn that language, you never stop hearing the sonar ping.This is a story about systems, belief, and the hidden architecture behind modern life — told through the lens of one of Maryland’s most influential cultural figures.S7ories is a long-form storytelling podcast exploring the people, places, and legends of the Seventh State — Maryland.Each episode revisits history, crime, power, and culture through a modern lens, telling stories rooted in the Chesapeake region that still shape how we live, think, and remember.🎙️ Part of the Housecats Podcast Network🔗 Network hub: https://www.thehousecatspod.com🔗 Listen on audio: Spotify & Apple PodcastsFollow the network for more long-form conversations across film, television, sports, business, and history.

  2. 3

    S7ories | Holland Island

    In this episode of S7ories in the Seventh State, Shane Hall tells the haunting, deeply human story of Holland Island — once a lively Dorchester County community of 360 people, with a church, a school, ballgames, watermen, and children playing on porches… now reduced to marsh, pilings, and tide.We explore the island’s rise and fall:Its soft foundation of clay and siltThe gnawing erosion of nor’eastersA coast slowly sinkingA bay slowly risingA community forced to jack up houses, dismantle them, float them away, or abandon themThe story follows:The brutal winter of 1922 when the world feared starvation on Holland — and found children ice-skating insteadThe 1918 storm that broke the churchThe homes ferried to Crisfield, Cambridge, and FairmountThe last standing Victorian house, built in 1888, defying the tide into the 1990sAnd then, the heart of the episode:The retired waterman & Methodist minister Stephen White — the man who tried, alone, for 15 years, to save the island. He stacked timbers, hauled rock by hand, sank a barge, applied for grants, fought the physics of subsidence and sea rise… and refused to quit.Ultimately, in 2010, the last house broke at the spine during a low tide. Floors collapsed. Walls folded. A bed hung from the second story as white sheets snapped in the wind. The image became national — the final ghost of Holland Island.Shane reflects on the larger lesson:Holland Island is not a ghost storyIt is a geological storyA climate storyA human story about memory, place, and lossAnd a reminder that the Chesapeake has swallowed many islands before — and will swallow moreriverside-shane-hall-raw-synced…The people didn’t disappear — they moved. Their houses live on. Their church lives on. Their names live on. The island exists now in lumber, family histories, and marsh grass.This is Maryland history at water level — fragile, fleeting, unforgettable.S7ories is a long-form storytelling podcast exploring the people, places, and legends of the Seventh State — Maryland. Each episode revisits history, crime, power, and culture through a modern lens, telling stories rooted in the Chesapeake region that still shape how we live, think, and remember. 🎙️ Part of the Housecats Podcast Network 🔗 Network hub: https://www.thehousecatspod.com 🔗 Listen on audio: Spotify & Apple Podcasts Follow the network for more long-form conversations across film, television, sports, business, and history.

  3. 2

    S7ories | Moll Dyer: Maryland's Witch Legend

    In this episode of S7ories in the Seventh State, Shane Hall tells the haunting legend of Moll Dyer, the Maryland woman driven into the frozen woods in the winter of 1697 and immortalized as the state’s most enduring witch story.We revisit Leonardtown as it was then — a small frontier crossroads in St. Mary’s County, battered by disease, famine, brutal winters, and fear. Witchcraft accusations were sweeping New England. Maryland was not immune.Moll Dyer, a poor woman living alone on the edge of the settlement, practiced folk remedies and herbal medicine. In a suspicious community desperate for someone to blame, that was enough. When crops failed, when cattle died, when illness swept through homes, they pointed to her.One February night, a group of men marched to her hut, torches in hand, shouting “witch.” The hut burned. Moll fled into the trees, through ice, snow, and night air so cold it tore the lungs. Days later, they found her as the legend describes: frozen to a massive stone, one hand pressed into it, the other raised as if in prayer… or curse.The stories say that from that night forward:Crops failedLivestock diedStorms rolled in without warningA shadow walked the ravineWillow-the-wisp lights flickered in the swampChildren whispered of “the place where Moll Dyer will get you”Her stone — Moll Dyer’s Rock — became an object of fear. Moved in 1972 to the courthouse lawn, visitors still report dizziness, illness, or electronics failing when they touch it.Is any of it true?There are no trial records, no formal witchcraft proceedings. Yet her name appears in land surveys and place names. The earliest newspaper account from 1892 repeats the story as fact. Historian Lynn Bonivierie believes she may have been real: Mary Dyer, an herb-gathering indentured servant born in 1634. Her life matches the legend’s outline.Today, Leonardtown doesn’t run from the tale — it honors it. Moll Dyer Day is held each February, not to worship the curse, but to promote kindness and reflect on how communities treat their outsiders.Whether Moll Dyer was a healer, a scapegoat, or a woman destroyed by fear and a cold winter, her story endures because it carries a warning:Fear can make a community dangerous. And legends last longer than the people who spark them.S7ories is a long-form storytelling podcast exploring the people, places, and legends of the Seventh State — Maryland. Each episode revisits history, crime, power, and culture through a modern lens, telling stories rooted in the Chesapeake region that still shape how we live, think, and remember. 🎙️ Part of the Housecats Podcast Network 🔗 Network hub: https://www.thehousecatspod.com 🔗 Listen on audio: Spotify & Apple Podcasts Follow the network for more long-form conversations across film, television, sports, business, and history.

  4. 1

    S7ories | The Story Behind the Maryland Flag

    In this episode of S7ories in the Seventh State, Shane Hall unpacks the wild, brilliant, and deeply emotional story behind the Maryland flag — the boldest, loudest, most recognizable state flag in America.This banner isn’t “just a flag.” It’s a historical document — a stitched-together symbol of a state torn apart during the Civil War and deliberately reunited in its aftermath.We dive into:Why the Maryland flag breaks every design rule but still worksHow George Calvert and Alicia Crossland’s heraldic arms became the foundationWhy black & gold represented the UnionWhy red & white became the Confederate colorsHow Marylanders used these colors as real political weaponsHow the federal crackdown made wearing red & white a punishable actHow Maryland soldiers on both sides used their quarter of the shield to identify themselvesWe then explore the stunning act of political genius that followed the war:The reconciliation flag — combining both halves of the divided heraldryFirst flown publicly in 1880Used at Gettysburg in 1888 as a peace gestureOfficially adopted in 1904And finally, we uncover one of the coolest legal details in any U.S. state symbol:In 1945, Maryland required that every Maryland flag must be topped with a gold cross bottony — the Confederate symbol rendered in Union gold, permanently binding both histories into one unified identity.Today, the flag is everywhere:On Under Armour uniformsRavens and Orioles brandingLacrosse helmetsEnd zonesBumper stickers, crabs, horses, labsClothing, hats, boats, local businessesIt is — and always has been — the brand of Maryland pride, forged in conflict and carried in unity.S7ories is a long-form storytelling podcast exploring the people, places, and legends of the Seventh State — Maryland. Each episode revisits history, crime, power, and culture through a modern lens, telling stories rooted in the Chesapeake region that still shape how we live, think, and remember. 🎙️ Part of the Housecats Podcast Network 🔗 Network hub: https://www.thehousecatspod.com 🔗 Listen on audio: Spotify & Apple Podcasts Follow the network for more long-form conversations across film, television, sports, business, and history.

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

Stories is a long-form storytelling podcast exploring the people, places, and moments that shaped Maryland and the Chesapeake region.Each episode revisits history, crime, power, and culture through a modern lens — from untold local legends and defining moments to stories of conflict, resilience, and consequence that still echo today. These are not textbook histories or true-crime thrillers, but thoughtful narratives grounded in place, perspective, and lived experience.Stories is built for listeners who believe the past matters — not as nostalgia, but as context for understanding where we are now.

HOSTED BY

Shane Hall

CATEGORIES

URL copied to clipboard!