Hometown History
Сувгийн дэлгэрэнгүй
Hometown History
Discover the untold stories hidden in your own backyard with Hometown History. We bring to life the forgotten events and local legends that never made it into the textbooks. Each episode uncovers the mysteries and pivotal moments that shaped small towns across the nation. Join us as we delve deep in...
Сүүлийн дугаар
174 дугаар
Africatown: The Last Slave Ship Survivors Who Built a Town
In 1860, a burning ship sank into Alabama's Mobile River—evidence of the last known illegal slave voyage to America. But that crime was just the begin...
171: The Last New England Vampire
On March 17, 1892, five men opened a family crypt in Exeter, Rhode Island, and removed the heart of a 19-year-old girl who had died two months earlier...
170: Radium Girls of Ottawa: Shining Women, Deadly Glow
A young woman brings a paintbrush to her lips, shaping it to a fine point with her tongue. The paint glows with an otherworldly light. It's 1922 in Ot...
169: When Lightning Struck the Big Top
June 10, 1897. A massive circus tent rises under storm clouds in Wapeton, North Dakota. Twelve-year-old Edward Williams grips a soaking rope alongside...
168: The Miracle of Hickory: A Hospital in 54 Hours
In June 1944, a polio epidemic exploded across western North Carolina. Every hospital for 100 miles was full. Desperate parents had nowhere to take th...
167: How America’s Main Streets Are Fighting Back—The Wabash Playbook
In 1880, Wabash, Indiana became the first city in the world to light its streets with electricity—earning gasps of wonder and cries of "miracle!" But...
166: Nursing Through the Ages, Part 3 – The Rise of Modern Nursing
In the mud and chaos of World War I's Western Front, nurses ran clearing stations just miles from enemy trenches, performing complex triage, administe...
165: Nursing Through the Ages, Part 2 – Florence Nightingale and the War on Death
It's 2:30 in the morning, November 1854. In a makeshift army hospital above the Bosphorus, rats scurry between cots as another stretcher swings throug...
164: Nursing Through the Ages, Part 1: The Dark Origins of Nursing
In 1910, Florence Nightingale died, leaving behind a transformed profession. But there was a time when nursing wasn't noble—it was shameful work that...
163: The Mysterious Disappearance of the Sodder Children: A Christmas Eve Tragedy
On Christmas Eve 1945, five children vanished from their family home in Fayetteville, West Virginia. When fire consumed the Sodder residence that nigh...
162: The Bone Wars: Paleontology’s Greatest Rivalry
When Othniel Charles Marsh secretly arranged to steal fossils from his friend Edward Drinker Cope's excavation site in 1868, he ignited one of the mos...
161: The Curse of Rebel Without a Cause: Hollywood’s Tragic Tale
In 1955, Rebel Without a Cause became one of Hollywood's most iconic films, capturing teenage rebellion with raw honesty. Within months of the premier...
160: Psychiana: The Mail-Order Religion That Swept America
In 1929, a recovering alcoholic pharmacist in Moscow, Idaho placed a single advertisement in a psychology magazine claiming he could teach people to "...
159: The Vanishing of Judge Crater: New York’s Greatest Mystery
In August 1930, New York Supreme Court Justice Joseph Crater walked into a taxi on a Manhattan street corner and vanished completely. His disappearanc...
158: How a Telegraph Cable Launched Tiffany & Co. to Fame
In August 1858, when the first transatlantic telegraph cable failed after just three weeks, most people saw disaster. Charles Lewis Tiffany saw opport...
157: The Vanishing of Ambrose Bierce: A Literary Mystery
In December 1913, renowned American writer Ambrose Bierce sent his final letter from Chihuahua, Mexico: "I leave here tomorrow for an unknown destinat...
156: Beneath the Greenbrier: America’s Cold War Bunker Exposed
For 30 years, beneath one of America's most luxurious resorts, a secret waited. The Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, wasn't just ho...
155: The Great Diamond Hoax of 1872
In 1872, two Kentucky prospectors walked into a San Francisco banker's office carrying a leather bag filled with rough diamonds. They claimed to have...
154: Secrets in Stone: The Mystery of Coral Castle
In the 1920s, a 5-foot-tall, 100-pound man suffering from tuberculosis began quarrying massive coral blocks—some weighing 30 tons each. Working alone...
153: Crafting a Revolution: The Legacy of Paul Revere
Paul Revere's midnight ride is legendary, but his real weapon wasn't a horse—it was his silversmith's tools. Through powerful engravings and propagand...
152: The Mad Butcher of Kingsbury Run
Between 1934 and 1938, a methodical killer terrorized Cleveland's Kingsbury Run, leaving behind 13 dismembered, decapitated bodies—many drained of blo...
151: Beyond the Myths: The Real Secret Societies of America
In 1864, Washington D.C. witnessed the birth of America's first congressionally-chartered fraternal organization—the Knights of Pythias. Based on an a...
150: Shadow of Pearl Harbor: The Internment of Japanese Americans
In February 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, giving the military unprecedented power to forcibly remove anyone deemed a...
149: America’s Youngest Serial Killer: The Crimes of Jesse Pomeroy
In 1874, a 14-year-old boy named Jesse Pomeroy was sentenced to death for the brutal torture and murder of at least two children in Massachusetts. His...
148: The Dark Side of Paradise: Inside the Rat Utopia Experiment
In 1968, behavioral researcher John Calhoun created what he called "paradise" for mice—a perfectly controlled environment called Universe 25. Every ne...
147: A Century-Old Naval Mystery: The U.S.S. Cyclops
In March 1918, the USS Cyclops departed Barbados for Baltimore carrying 309 crew members and 10,000 tons of manganese ore. The massive Navy cargo ship...
146: Haunted Beginnings: The Rise of the Fox Sisters
In 1847, two young sisters moved into a supposedly haunted farmhouse in Hydesville, New York. What began as Kate and Maggie Fox playing pranks on thei...
145: Forgotten Wholesome Stories from America’s Past
Most of us sing "Happy Birthday" without knowing the two sisters who created it in a Louisville classroom. We've heard of Johnny Appleseed, but the re...
144: The Night Doctors
In the late 1800s, a terrifying legend spread through African American communities across the South: mysterious figures called the Night Doctors roame...
143: The Hollywood Blacklist
In 1947, paranoia swept through Hollywood like wildfire. The House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) launched investigations into suspected Comm...
142: Lewis Howard Latimer
When Thomas Edison finally perfected the light bulb in 1879, there was one massive problem: his carbon filament burned out after just a few hours. The...
141: The Truth about Movie Censorships
In 1921, Hollywood's biggest comedy star walked into a San Francisco hotel room—and walked out a pariah. Fatty Arbuckle, earning the modern equivalent...
140: The First Light: Charles Brush’s Lighting System
In this episode of Hometown History, we explore the legacy of Charles Brush, a pioneering inventor whose contributions predate even Edison's lightbulb...
139: The Truth About May Day
In today's Hometown History episode, we explore the true essence of May Day, an emblem of workers' rights and social justice, born from the strife of...
138: America’s Greatest Conspiracy Theory: The Disappearing Ship
In this episode of Hometown History, we unravel the enigma of The Philadelphia Experiment, a story shrouded in mystery and conspiracy against the back...
137: Battle of Alcatraz
In today's episode of Hometown History, we dive deep into the turbulent waters surrounding Alcatraz Island, unearthing the harrowing saga of the Battl...
136: The Female Pirates of the Caribbean
Welcome to another episode of Hometown History, where we dive deep into the lesser-known corridors of our past, bringing to light the stories that sha...
135: The Whiskey Ring of 1875
In the shadowy corridors of post-Civil War America, the Whiskey Ring scandal of 1875 emerges as a riveting saga of corruption, intrigue, and the battl...
134: The Real Stories of Project Blue Book
In today's episode of Hometown History, we pull back the curtain on the secretive Project Blue Book, an effort by the United States Air Force to explo...
133: The Winchester Mystery House
In this episode we delve into the enigmatic world of the Winchester Mystery House, a sprawling Victorian mansion in San Jose, California, shrouded in...