Forgotten History

Diccon Hyatt

Forgotten History is a podcast that tells intriguing and obscure stories from central New Jersey's past. Join us for strange and surprising tales you won't hear anywhere else.

  • 41 minutes 3 seconds
    13 The Last Plague
    When the Spanish Flu hit Philadelphia in 1918, it first overwhelmed the hospitals, then the morgues, then the gravediggers. The disaster was the fault of one man, public health director Wilmer Krusen, who allowed a Liberty Bond parade that spread the disease at a catastrophic rate. But was Krusen really at fault? We speak with James Higgins, a history professor at Rider University whose research challenges the commonly told story.
    27 March 2020, 3:11 pm
  • 51 minutes 27 seconds
    12 New Jersey's Bermuda Triangle
    In the mid-1800s, the isolation of the Sourlands region made it a refuge for some, and was a place where black people could own land and establish their own communities. (See Episode 2) But the isolation also meant that the mountains could be lawless. Historian Jim Davidson, in his talk, "The Dark Side of the Sourlands" discusses the mayhem, murder, and disappearances that made this region "New Jersey's Bermuda Triangle."
    18 March 2020, 12:00 am
  • 1 hour 16 minutes
    11 Hellfighter
    Needham Roberts, a porter from Trenton, went to fight in WW1 and returned home decorated and victorious after a bloody hand-to-hand battle against impossible odds. But he and many other black veterans would find that America in the era of Jim Crow could be almost as hostile as the trenches of the Argonne. Algernon Ward, Jr., a re-enactor, tells the story of this brave but flawed war hero.
    13 February 2020, 4:42 pm
  • 49 minutes 2 seconds
    10 The Cloudbuster Part 2
    In Part 2 of our two-part series on Wilhelm Reich, we examine the ongoing legacy of his work, a college in Princeton that carries on his research into “orgone energy,” and Diccon Hyatt interviews a man who was given Reichian therapy as a child. Please note there is potentially disturbing material in this episode.
    9 January 2020, 12:00 am
  • 1 hour 5 minutes
    9 The Cloudbuster Part 1
    In Part 1 of a two-part series, we discuss the life of Wilhelm Reich, one of the most controversial figures of 20th century science. Reich claimed to have discovered a new form of energy called “orgone” which was responsible for everything from the human libido to the movements of the planets in the Solar System. In 1940 he visited Albert Einstein at his Princeton home to prove once and for all that orgone energy was real. Many of the details of Reich's life used in this episode came from Christopher Turner's biography Adventures in the Orgasmatron.
    8 January 2020, 12:00 am
  • 37 minutes 36 seconds
    6 The Garden In The Machine
    Far beneath the roar of Route 1 in Trenton, there is another manmade highway that lies in stillness and darkness, unused and nearly forgotten for nearly 100 years. It is a section of the Delaware and Raritan Canal and in the last century it too was a great artery of commerce, dug with shovels and picks by thousands of men. Beyond this underground section, the rest of the canal is now beautiful parkland in the center of New Jersey. What started as the machine in the garden has become the garden in the machine.
    6 December 2019, 12:00 am
  • 27 minutes 38 seconds
    8 Horror At The State House
    On the afternoon of Friday, December 22, 1978, the festive mood of Trenton preparing for the holiday weekend was shattered when a shocking crime took place on the steps of the state house. This is a story about that crime, and about the aftermath for the people whose lives it affected.
    7 October 2019, 6:52 pm
  • 40 minutes 50 seconds
    7 F. Scott Fitzgerald's Gift to Football
    It's pretty common for football fans to have ideas for how the coach should run their favorite team better. What's unusual is for those ideas to be put into practice. When F. Scott Fitzgerald, who has been described as history's first football fan, called Princeton's football coach with an idea one night, the coach listened, and the game of football changed forever.
    27 August 2019, 2:07 pm
  • 37 minutes 53 seconds
    5 The Man Who Never Slept
    Albert Herpin was known throughout the world as "Trenton's Sleepless Wonder" for his claim not to have slept for decades. By the time he died in 1947, he was the subject of hundreds of newspaper articles as well as an entry in Ripley's Believe It Or Not. Could there be a grain of truth in this tall tale?
    6 June 2019, 2:02 pm
  • 50 minutes 56 seconds
    4 A Twisted Tale Of Magnetic Mind Control, Castration, And Twinkies
    A late 19th century health guru named Webster Edgerly founded a health club/cult that attracted 800,000 members. His books told his followers that by performing a series of exercises, they could use "personal magnetism" to control the minds of others and communicate telepathically. Today all that remains of this strange social movement is an equally strange house that Edgerly built in Hopewell, NJ. We interview archaeologist Dr. Janet Six, the world's foremost expert on Edgerly and the Ralston Health Club. Six lived in Edgerly's former home and studied the remains of Ralston Heights, where Edgerly attempted to establish a utopian community and "create a new race."
    30 April 2019, 12:00 am
  • 48 minutes 46 seconds
    3 The Flight of the Aereon
    In 1971, a strange aircraft took to the skies over New Jersey. The Aereon 26 was a prototype intended to be the first in a series of increasingly gargantuan hybrid airships. We explore the history of the Aereon, which goes back to the Civil War, and its links to modern day blimp-building projects. We also interview Jack Olcott, the test pilot of the Aereon and the only person ever to fly it.
    4 April 2019, 3:05 pm
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