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Episode 8: A Mysterious Underwater Graveyard Lies at the Bottom of Florida's Lake Okeechobee

Historium Unearthia: Unearthing History's Lost and Untold Stories

Release Date: 02/28/2018

Episode 34: The Government Program that Imprisoned Episode 34: The Government Program that Imprisoned "Promiscuous" Women

Historium Unearthia: Unearthing History's Lost and Untold Stories

In the United States, the war against women took a particularly dark and secretive turn in the early 1900s—around the start of World War I. Under a government-sponsored “social hygiene” campaign, to protect newly recruited soldiers, tens of thousands of women were arrested on “suspicion” of having a venereal disease. Have you ever heard of the American Plan?

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Episode 33: This Influential Female Author and Anthropologist Blazed a Trail for Women show art Episode 33: This Influential Female Author and Anthropologist Blazed a Trail for Women

Historium Unearthia: Unearthing History's Lost and Untold Stories

This trailblazer became the most successful and significant black woman writer of the first half of the 20th century. In the 1970s, during the second wave of feminism, Alice Walker helped revive interest in this pioneer’s writings, bringing them back to public attention. Have you ever heard of Zora Neale Hurston?

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Episode 32: This Strange Civil Disturbance Changed How Americans Study Medicine show art Episode 32: This Strange Civil Disturbance Changed How Americans Study Medicine

Historium Unearthia: Unearthing History's Lost and Untold Stories

In the US, doctors are held in high esteem. But that wasn’t always the case. There was time when the medical field was riddled with controversy and public scrutiny. Tensions between the world of medicine and society reached a boiling point in New York City during April of 1788, when resurrection, the common practice of grave robbing, came under scrutiny. Have you ever heard of the New York Doctors Riot?

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Episode 31: Before Modern Medicine, These Female Healers Cured What Ailed show art Episode 31: Before Modern Medicine, These Female Healers Cured What Ailed

Historium Unearthia: Unearthing History's Lost and Untold Stories

In the days before modern medicine, the sick, injured, and expecting often relied on community healers to perform the services of doctors and midwives. Women largely fulfilled these roles. They passed down the gifts of folk healing and soul healing through the generations. Have you ever heard of the Ozarks' Granny Women?

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Episode 30: The Mysterious Life and Supposed Murder of Vincent van Gogh show art Episode 30: The Mysterious Life and Supposed Murder of Vincent van Gogh

Historium Unearthia: Unearthing History's Lost and Untold Stories

Vincent van Gogh's expressive paintings hide an aching heart that longed for love and normalcy, the relentless bout of “fits” he suffered, and the mental anguish of a tormented soul. Although many chapters of his life have already been examined under a contemporary light, it’s the ending, with still untold secrets, that could change history. Have you ever heard of the mysteries surrounding Vincent van Gogh?

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Episode 29: All You've Needed to Know and Then Some Since 1818 show art Episode 29: All You've Needed to Know and Then Some Since 1818

Historium Unearthia: Unearthing History's Lost and Untold Stories

Throughout history there have been countless methods for forecasting the weather. In 1818, David Young, a poet and astronomer from Morristown, New Jersey, launched a publication that would help take the guesswork out of this tricky task...and more. Have you ever heard of the Farmers’ Almanac?

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Episode 28: A Doctor Claimed the Springs Could Cure in This Lost Missouri Town show art Episode 28: A Doctor Claimed the Springs Could Cure in This Lost Missouri Town

Historium Unearthia: Unearthing History's Lost and Untold Stories

Greene County, Missouri was once home to many bustling communities that slowly withered away. One town had quite an intriguing story. There it was said the springs could cure; that a bit of heaven had fallen to earth. A respected doctor even banked his future on the town’s healing waters. Have you ever heard of the lost town of Bethesda?

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Episode 27: The Flying Santas Who Airdrop Christmas Cheer to America’s Lighthouse Keepers show art Episode 27: The Flying Santas Who Airdrop Christmas Cheer to America’s Lighthouse Keepers

Historium Unearthia: Unearthing History's Lost and Untold Stories

In the 1920s, one aviation pioneer launched a thank-you project for the families that keep coastal ships safe. He propelled a goodwill tradition that’s lasted longer than he ever imagined. One that has lasted to this day… Have you ever heard of the Flying Santas? Credit: I’d like to give a huge thanks to the Friends of Flying Santa for their dedication and generosity in keeping this good-will tradition alive. If you’d like to donate to this wonderful cause, please visit their website at . This story on Narratively. Sources: ; Tague, Brian, Friends of Flying Santa; Retrieved November...

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Episode 26: This Double-Crossing General Deceived America and Walked Away show art Episode 26: This Double-Crossing General Deceived America and Walked Away

Historium Unearthia: Unearthing History's Lost and Untold Stories

After the Revolutionary War, at a pivotal moment when Washington and Spain were fighting for control of North America, one American war hero deflected from honor and signed a secret allegiance with Spain. President Theodore Roosevelt even said, "In all our history, there is no more despicable character.” Have you ever heard of James Wilkinson?

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Bonus Episode: A Thanksgiving Ghost Story show art Bonus Episode: A Thanksgiving Ghost Story

Historium Unearthia: Unearthing History's Lost and Untold Stories

For years, on Thanksgiving, one former railroad worker from Pennsylvania told his family a chilling tale. Well, they thought it was a tale—a grandiose and macabre account almost certainly rooted in fiction. Yet, as the story traveled through generations, the family would discover that some ghosts lead to the truth. This is a Thanksgiving ghost story…

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Lake Okeechobee, also known as Florida's Inland Sea, or as the locals like to call it, Lake O, is the largest freshwater lake in the state of Florida and the third largest freshwater lake wholly within the country. Resting at the northern edge of the Everglades and rimming the western edge of Palm Beach County, the lake is a remnant of the prehistoric Pamlico Sea and appropriately carries the Seminole word for “big water.” Although it’s a major tourist destination and a favorite among those who live in the area, most people have no idea what lingers below the surface of this majestic lake. Have you ever heard of the mysteries surrounding Lake Okeechobee?

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Credit: This episode would not have been complete without the brilliant insight of Chris Davenport, Palm Beach County’s Historic Preservation Officer and Archaeologist. I also spoke with Victor Thompson, a Professor of Archaeology and the Director of the Center for Archaeological Sciences at the University of Georgia, and Matt Colvin, an anthropologist and doctoral candidate at the University of Georgia. Both have worked extensively at Fort Center, an archaeological site in Glades County, Florida, just a few miles northwest of Lake Okeechobee. Sources: Lake Okeechobee; Fodors; Retrieved February 2018. Lake Okeechobee; The Editors of Encyclopedia Britannica; Encyclopedia Britannica; Retrieved February 2018. Most People Have No Idea There’s An Underwater Ghost Town Hiding In Florida; Marisa Roman; Only In Your State; January 11, 2018. Florida's Water: A Fragile Resource in a Vulnerable State; Tom Swihart; RFF Press, 2011. Archaic; Illinois State Museum; Retrieved February 2018. Seminoles and Miccosukees; Palm Beach County History Online; Retrieved February 2018. Lake Okeechobee Watery Graves; Weird U.S.; Retrieved February 2018. Florida Drought Exposes Old Debris in Lake Okeechobee; Associated Press; June 5, 2007. The Native American History of Florida’s Lake Okeechobee Basin; Dennis N. Partridge; Access Geneaology; September 21, 2016. PHOTO: Representation, not an actual depiction of Florida, Lake Okeechobee, or the human remains found at the bottom of the lake