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Archive Sleuth
Uncovering forgotten stories from history
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18. The Celebrity Divorce Trial of the (19th) Century
45:49||Ep. 18December, 1851: New York City. In the midst of winter, America’s press and public are gripped by the celebrity scandal of the century. Edwin Forrest, the most famous actor in the country, is pitted in a courtroom battle against his estranged wife, as they accuse each other of adultery. One of them must prevail for a divorce to be granted. As the jury and public rake over every titillating and salacious detail of the failed marriage, the conduct and reporting on the trial provide a striking foreshadowing of another celebrity couple court case that would play out over 270 years later.Archive Sleuth is available on all major podcast apps. Subscribe at https://shows.acast.com/archive-sleuth. For news on future episodes, please follow the show on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook. Please rate and review the show on your favourite podcast app, or on Podchaser. Help keep the show running by supporting me here: https://supporter.acast.com/archive-sleuthResources: Report on the Forrest Divorce Case, digitized by Harvard University Library. Various contemporary newspapers, including the New York Daily Tribune; the New York Herald Tribune; and The Sunday Dispatch, are accessible on the Library of Congress’s Chronicling America resource.Music: Waltz of Treachery by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4606-waltz-of-treachery License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license Sonatina in C Minor by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4393-sonatina-in-c-minor License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
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17. Alan Turing writes to Winston Churchill
35:03||Ep. 17October 1941. In the darkest days of the Second World War, Alan Turing and a group of code breakers at Bletchley Park write a letter to Winston Churchill – in desperation. They have achieved the supposedly impossible feat of cracking the German Enigma encryptions. But this breakthrough is in danger of being squandered. 70 years later, I came across Turing’s letter – and Churchill’s handwritten response – in the archives.This is the story of Enigma, the codebreakers, and the letter that helped ensure the success of the most important top-secret breakthrough of World War II.Archive Sleuth is available on all major podcast apps. Subscribe at https://shows.acast.com/archive-sleuth. For news on future episodes, please follow the show on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook. Please rate and review the show on your favourite podcast app, or on Podchaser. Help keep the show running by supporting me here: https://supporter.acast.com/archive-sleuthResources: The Bletchley Park codebreakers’ letter, along with the notes from Winston Churchill and Hastings Ismay, are held in file HW 1/155 at the National Archives, UK. It is digitized in Secret Files from World Wars to Cold War available from Coherent Digital.Music: Waltz of Treachery by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4606-waltz-of-treachery License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license Depth Of Focus by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.com Sonatina in C Minor by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4393-sonatina-in-c-minor License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license16. Jane Austen, Horatio Nelson and the sailor brother who links them
31:22||Ep. 16May 13th, 1799. The captain of a Royal Navy sloop writes an urgent letter to his admiral. But this isn’t any captain. This captain is the sailor brother of writer Jane Austen. And the admiral is Horatio Nelson, currently residing in Sicily with the love of his life, Emma Hamilton. This single letter from the archives opens a window onto a moment in time for four remarkable people from the Age of Revolution and Napoleon. The names of three of these people are immortal. The fourth person, Francis Austen, is the thread that links their fascinating stories.Archive Sleuth is available on all major podcast apps. Subscribe at https://shows.acast.com/archive-sleuth.For news on future episodes, please follow the show on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook.Help keep the show running by supporting me here: https://supporter.acast.com/archive-sleuthResources:Francis Austen’s 13th May 1799 letter to Admiral Horatio Nelson is from item AUS/7, Francis Austen’s Letter Book. Held at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London.https://www.rmg.co.uk/collections/archive/rmgc-object-492597 Any infringement of copyright is unintended.Jane Austen’s letters quoted in this episode were written to Cassandra Austen on the 28th December 1798 (https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/brablet2.html#letter15) and the 17th May 1799 (https://pemberley.com/janeinfo/brablet3.html#letter18). Music includes:Waltz of Treachery by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4606-waltz-of-treachery License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-licenseSonatina in C Minor by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4393-sonatina-in-c-minor License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license15. Mutiny and Murder on the Dove Brigantine Part 3
26:06||Ep. 15September 7th, 1736: night time. After weeks of plotting, the crew of a British merchant ship anchored in an Italian harbour have murdered their captain and seized his ship for themselves. But the mutineers failed to kill the captain’s cabin boy, who jumped overboard and swam to a nearby ship to raise the alarm. Will the Dove mutineers make it out to the open sea and fulfil their ambitions of becoming pirates? Or have their mistakes insured their downfall? This is the third and final episode of the grisly true story of mutiny and murder aboard the Dove Brigantine.Archive Sleuth is available on all major podcast apps. Subscribe at https://shows.acast.com/archive-sleuth.For news on future episodes, please follow the show on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook.Help keep the show running by supporting me here: https://supporter.acast.com/archive-sleuthResources:A transcript of the proceedings of the Old Bailey, 24th February 1737, is available to read on the Old Bailey Online. Trial reference: t17370224-2.Articles on the Dove mutiny from 1736 and 1737 from the Newcastle Courant, Caledonian Mercury, Stamford Mercury and Derby Mercury accessed on the British Newspaper Archive.Music includes:Waltz of Treachery by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4606-waltz-of-treachery License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-licenseSonatina in C Minor by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4393-sonatina-in-c-minor License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license14. Mutiny and Murder on the Dove Brigantine Part 2
22:39||Ep. 14September, 1736. After six weeks sitting idle in the harbour of Livorno, the British merchant ship the Dove Brigantine is finally loaded with her cargo of tobacco and sugar. The crew, led by the ambitious first mate Nicholas Williams, spent those long weeks mutinously plotting how to overthrow the captain and steal the ship and its valuable cargo for themselves. With the ship now ready to set sail, the mutineers put their bloodthirsty plans into action. This is episode two of the grisly true story of mutiny and murder aboard the Dove Brigantine.Archive Sleuth is available on all major podcast apps. Subscribe at https://shows.acast.com/archive-sleuth.For news on future episodes, please follow the show on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook.Help keep the show running by supporting me here: https://supporter.acast.com/archive-sleuthResources:A transcript of the proceedings of the Old Bailey, 24th February 1737, is available to read on the Old Bailey Online. Trial reference: t17370224-2.Articles on the Dove mutiny from 1736 and 1737 from the Newcastle Courant, Caledonian Mercury, Stamford Mercury and Derby Mercury accessed on the British Newspaper Archive.Music includes:Waltz of Treachery by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4606-waltz-of-treachery License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-licenseSonatina in C Minor by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4393-sonatina-in-c-minor License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license13. Mutiny and Murder on the Dove Brigantine
21:24||Ep. 13September, 1736. The crew of an Italian ship anchored one dark quiet night in Livorno Harbour are startled awake by the frantic cries for help from a man swimming towards them in the water. The man, a cabin boy from a nearby British merchant ship, is being pursued through the darkness by his own, bloodthirsty shipmates. The pursuing men have already killed the cabin boy’s captain, and now they are hell-bent on killing him. This is the grisly true story of mutiny and murder aboard the Dove Brigantine.Archive Sleuth is available on all major podcast apps. Subscribe at https://shows.acast.com/archive-sleuth.For news on future episodes, please follow the show on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook.Help keep the show running by supporting me here: https://supporter.acast.com/archive-sleuth. Thank you!Resources:A transcript of the proceedings of the Old Bailey, 24th February 1737, is available to read on the Old Bailey Online. Trial reference: t17370224-2.Articles on the Dove mutiny from 1736 and 1737 from the Newcastle Courant, Caledonian Mercury, Stamford Mercury and Derby Mercury availble on the British Newspaper Archive.Music includes:Waltz of Treachery by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4606-waltz-of-treachery License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-licensePassage Of Arms by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.comSonatina in C Minor by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4393-sonatina-in-c-minor License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license12. A Midwife's Tale
31:17||Ep. 12This is the story of an early maternity hospital, and the ground-breaking woman who founded it. By the dawn of the 20th century, fatality rates in childbirth in Britain were as high as they had been for hundreds of years. Many women, particularly poorer women, were giving birth without the support of a doctor or trained midwife. Alice Gregory was a midwife who was determined to do something about this. So in 1905, she founded a small but ambitious hospital in a working class area of London, to provide local midwife services and, crucially, to train new midwives for the future. Alice’s and the hospital’s story is preserved in a diary Alice kept during that hospital’s busy first year.Archive Sleuth is available on all major podcast apps. Subscribe at https://shows.acast.com/archive-sleuth.For news on future episodes, please follow the show on Twitter, Instagram, or Facebook.Help keep the show running by supporting me here: https://supporter.acast.com/archive-sleuthResources:Alice Gregory’s personal diary, giving account of opening and early days of Home for Mothers and Babies, 11 May 1905 - 22 June 1906, is held at the London Metropolitan Archives. Reference: H14/BMB/A/06/001Music includes:Waltz of Treachery by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4606-waltz-of-treachery License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-licenseSonatina in C Minor by Kevin MacLeodLink: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4393-sonatina-in-c-minor License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license