podcastrecommendations · podcasts · podcasts with southern accents

Episode 144 The Disappearance of the Nelms Sisters

The Nelms Sisters Mystery is one of the most sensational mysteries of the early 20th century, that most people have never heard of. In the summer of 1914, Eloise Nelms was in love with an attorney she planned to marry. Her sister Beatrice questioned the attorney’s motives and wanted proof that he had her sister's best interest at heart. The sisters took a train from Atlanta, headed to Texas to meet the attorney. They were never seen alive again. 

podcastrecommendations · podcasts · podcasts with southern accents

Episode 143 Battle of Blair Mountain

The Battle of Blair Mountain, in the summer of 1921, was one of the largest civil uprisings in American History. Violent attacks on Appalachian miners and their families, dangerous working conditions and a forced debt system in company towns contributed to the largest and bloodiest armed uprising since the Civil War.

podcastrecommendations · podcasts · podcasts with southern accents

Episode 142 The Mysterious Disappearance of Ruth Dorsey

The disappearance of 67 year old Ruth Dorsey has perplexed her family, friends and Lee County, Alabama law enforcement for half a century. In the summer of 1974 investigators launched what would become one of the most extensive searches to date in the east central part of the state. Ruth’s disappearance remains one of Alabama’s most baffling mysteries.

podcastrecommendations · podcasts · podcasts with southern accents · southern podcasts

Episode 141 The New Orleans Trunk Murders

The New Orleans Trunk Murders are a long forgotten dark chapter in the city's history. The gruesome discovery of two dismembered bodies in the French Quarter in October 1927 was one of the most violent crimes reported in the city in the 1920s.

podcastrecommendations · podcasts · podcasts with southern accents · southern podcasts

Episode 140 William and Ellen Craft: A Desperate Leap to Liberty

William and Ellen Craft escaped slavery in Macon, Georgia by traveling to Philadelphia in 1848. Ellen, the light skinned daughter of her mixed race mother and their enslaver, posed as a young white male planter and William posed as her slave.Their daring escape made international headlines and the Crafts became two of the most famous emancipated people in American history.