Episode 173 The Forgotten Eleven of New Orleans
In 1891, New Orleans became the scene of a tragedy born from fear and prejudice. The Forgotten Eleven uncovers how one unsolved murder set the stage for mob violence that left the city forever changed.
In 1891, New Orleans became the scene of a tragedy born from fear and prejudice. The Forgotten Eleven uncovers how one unsolved murder set the stage for mob violence that left the city forever changed.
In 1942, the state of Louisiana executed a woman in the electric chair for the first and only time in its history. She was young, beautiful, and utterly devoted to the man she loved, a Texas outlaw. Toni Jo Henry was willing to do anything to free him from prison which led her down a dark path…the cold-blooded killing of an innocent man. Toni Jo claimed her accomplice pulled the trigger. He said she did. Was Toni Jo Henry a ruthless killer, or a woman trapped by her tragic past and her devotion to the wrong man?
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.
The Natchez Rhythm Club changed the city of Natchez on April 23rd 1940. 209 people died and more than 200 were injured including civic and cultural leaders. All of the victims of one of the deadliest fires in US history were Black.