Stories-a History Of Appalachia, One Story At A Time

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 121:06:14
  • More information

Informações:

Synopsis

A History of Appalachia, One Story at a Time

Episodes

  • The "Hillbilly Girl" Murder Case: Edith Maxwell

    08/10/2022 Duration: 17min

    In 1935 a young Appalachian teacher from Pound, Virginia, was arrested for the murder of her abusive father. The trials that followed attracted the attention of the national press, which chose, as it always does, to portray Appalachia as a land of ignorant, backward and poor folks while they focused on the more lurid details of the case. Today we tell the story of Edith Maxwell.You can subscribe to the Stories podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker, Audible, Goodpods, Stitcher, Google Podcasts or on your favorite podcast app.Thanks for listening and for sharing our stories with your friends.

  • The Howard-Turner Feud

    01/10/2022 Duration: 32min

    In the 1880's and early 1890's Harlan County, Kentucky was the scene for one of the most notorious feuds aside from the one between the Hatfields and McCoys.Two prominent families, the Howards and the Turners, and their allies, fought to avenge wrongs inflicted by the other side, for control of the county and for control of the local whiskey trade. Harlan itself was the scene of gun battles, murders and even threats to burn the town itself to the ground. Today we tell the story of the Howard-Turner feud.

  • The Bombing of the Gouge Home

    24/09/2022 Duration: 07min

    On January 7, 1938, a blast rocked the little community of Hampton, Tennessee. After the smoke cleared, the home of Harmon and Pauline Gouge was in ruins, their three daughters lay dead, and Pauline Gouge was in a coma. On this episode of the Stories podcast, Steve and Rod tell the story of this bit of Appalachian history.

  • The Dunglen Hotel

    17/09/2022 Duration: 11min

    During the post-Civil War coal boom in West Virginia, many new towns were founded to serve the coal industry and the railroads that hauled that coal to market. One of these towns was Thurmond, founded by a former Confederate captain of Thurmond's Rangers which was based in the area.Along with those towns came hotels to accomodate visitors and businessmen. In Thurmond one of those hotels gained quite a saucy reputation: the Dunglen Hotel.Today we tell that story.You can subscribe to the Stories podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spreaker, Audible, Goodpods, IHeartRadio, or on your favorite podcast app.

  • Bad Talt Hall

    10/09/2022 Duration: 15min

    Talt Hall had a very interesting life. Born and raised in eastern Kentucky, he had been a Confederate soldier, a deputy sheriff, a U. S. Marshal, a feudist, a railroad employee and a traveler who lived in various places across the country.He was also alleged to have killed nearly a hundred men in his lifetime. He was tried for 6 of those killings over the years and was acquitted of 5 of them. It was that 6th one, the last one attributed to him, that sent him to the gallows...just a short time before the hanging of the man who captured him in Memphis, Tennessee.Today we tell the story of Bad Talt Hall.

  • Champ Ferguson

    03/09/2022 Duration: 14min

    During the Civil War a man from Kentucky who had moved to Tennessee joined the Confederate side as a guerrilla fighter. Due to his extreme anger issues he soon became a Confederate vigilante, killing anyone he knew who had any connections with the Union. It was an infamous incident at a Confederate hospital in Saltville, Virginia, that resulted in his capture and arrest by Confederate authorities in 1865. Today we tell the story of an outlaw from both sides in the Civil War: Champ Ferguson.You can subscribe to the Stories podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spreaker, Audible, Stitcher, RadioPublic, Goodpods, or on your favorite podcast app.Thanks for listening and for sharing our stories with your friends!

  • A Civil War Tragedy in Cade's Cove

    27/08/2022 Duration: 10min

    A man's family in the Smoky Mountains community of Cade's Cove is torn apart by the Civil War, with tragic results for him.Today we share that story.You can subscribe to the Stories podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spreaker, Spotify, Audacy, Goodpods, Audible, or on your favorite podcast app.

  • The Night Marauder of Blount County, Tennessee

    20/08/2022 Duration: 12min

    In the 1920s residents of Maryville, in Blount County, Tennessee, were living in fear of being the victim of a violent home invasion by a mysterious man known as the Night Marauder. One man was arrested and charged with being the Night Marauder, Will Sheffey, and he was put on trial for several sexual assaults and two murders.Today we tell that story.You can subscribe to the Stories podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spreaker, Audible, Goodpods, Spotify, Stitcher or on your favorite podcast app.Thanks for listening and thanks for sharing our stories with your friends...For more information, go the Night Marauder Project here: https://thenightmarauderproject.com/

  • The Farmington Coal Mine Explosion

    13/08/2022 Duration: 16min

    On November 20, 1968, there was a massive explosion at the Consol number 9 mine near Farmington, West Virginia. This explosion resulted in the death of scores of miners, including the uncle of a current U. S. senator from West Virginia. It also spurred the passage of mine safety legislation by Congress to lessen the chances of another such mine explosion.Today we tell that story.

  • Robert Porterfield and the Barter Theater

    06/08/2022 Duration: 17min

    From its beginnings in a former church, the Barter Theater has become the premiere theatrical destination in Appalachia, starting the careers of many a Broadway and Hollywood actor.Today we tell the story of the Barter and the man whose vision made it possible. Thanks for listening and thanks for sharing our podcast with your friends.

  • The Appalachian Rip Van Winkle

    30/07/2022 Duration: 11min

    In the Washington Irving story, Rip Van Winkle partakes in some boozy fun in the Catskill Mountains in New York, then falls asleep for 20 years, waking to find the world completely changed. That story was a fantasy tale.Today we have the true story of a woman who, like old Rip, fell asleep one night in 1936 and didn't wake up until 1948 to a world turned upside down.Thanks for listening to our stories!

  • How Gatlinburg Got Its Name

    23/07/2022 Duration: 15min

    Every place has a name, and every name has its story...including the tourist destination of the Smokey Mountains, Gatlinburg, Tennessee.Listen as we tell you the very interesting story of how White Oak Flats became Gatlinburg!Thanks for listening and thanks for sharing our stories with your friends...

  • The Trial of Wilson Howard

    16/07/2022 Duration: 18min

    In the 1880's there was a feud between the Turner and Howard families in Harlan County, Kentucky, almost as notorious as the one going on between the Hatfields and the McCoys a couple of counties to the east at the same time. One of the feudists, Wilson, or Wils, Howard was alleged to have killed seven men in that feud and he left Harlan for Missouri, then on to California, as a result.Mr. Howard ended up on trial for another murder that happened in Missouri and the story of his trial for that killing is our story today.You can subscribe to the Stories podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spreaker, Stitcher, Goodpods, Spotify, Audible or on your favorite podcast app.Thanks for listening...

  • That Time Roy Acuff Ran For Governor

    09/07/2022 Duration: 17min

    Back in the 1940s Roy Acuff was at the top of his game. He was a country music star with such hits as "The Great Speckled Bird" and "The Wabash Cannonball" under his belt; he was appearing in the movies, and he was one of the biggest stars on the Grand Ol' Opry. In 1948, Mr. Acuff tried to attain one more goal: the office of Governor of the State of Tennessee. Today we tell you that story.If you haven't already, be sure to subscribe to the Stories podcast, at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker, Audible, Goodpods, or on your favorite podcast app.

  • Belle Boyd, The Siren of the Shenandoah

    02/07/2022 Duration: 10min

    Isabella Marie Boyd, better known to history as Belle Boyd, was a notorious rebel spy during the Civil War who used her wiles to obtain Union secrets which she then passed on to the Confederate government. Today we tell the story of this woman, who was born in what's now West Virginia.You can subscribe to the Stories podcast on Spreaker, Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Audible, Goodpods, Audacy, Spotify, or on your favorite podcast app.Thanks for listening and for sharing our stories with your friends.

  • General John D. Imboden

    25/06/2022 Duration: 10min

    Lawyer, politician, Confederate general, land developer, promoter of coal and the founder of the town of Damascus, Virginia. All these jobs were held by one man for whom a mine and a coal camp were also named: General John D. Imboden.Today we tell his story.Be sure to subscribe to the Stories podcast on your favorite podcast app.Thanks for listening!

  • The Legend of Swift's Silver Mine

    18/06/2022 Duration: 18min

    It's been said that there is a mine somewhere in Appalachia, in which a vein of the highest quality silver can be found. And it's located...well, that's the problem. Nobody knows where this supposed silver mine can be found. Today we tell the story of the legendary Swift's Silver Mine.

  • The Murder of the Richards Sisters

    11/06/2022 Duration: 14min

    Early in 1940 two middle-aged sisters and a teen-aged boy who did odd jobs for them were brutally murdered in their home in Oliver Springs, Tennessee. These killings were unsolved for over 60 years.Today we tell that story.

  • The Showgirl and the Tobacco Heir

    04/06/2022 Duration: 16min

    On November 23, 1931, 20-year-old Zachary Smith Reynolds of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, was divorced from his first wife. Six days later he married his second wife, Broadway showgirl Libby Holman, and six months later he was dead from a gunshot wound that may or may not have been self-inflicted. This was a tragedy, magnified in the media by the fact that Smith was the youngest son of tobacco magnate R. J. Reynolds.Today we tell that story.

  • Good Trouble

    28/05/2022 Duration: 12min

    In 1965 a Kentucky widow managed to drive the coal company from her land with what was called a "sit-in," an early use of peaceful civil disobedience in Appalachia. Today we tell the story of Ollie Combs of Knott County, Kentucky, and her fight to save her farm from strip-mining.Thanks for listening!

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