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Shaking America
Zach Knight
55 episodes
3 weeks ago
In 1932 over 43,000 protestors marched on Washington DC, demanding better treatment and pay for veterans of World War I. President Hoover and the US government responded with violence, tear gassing and shooting the veterans.
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History
Education,
Society & Culture
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All content for Shaking America is the property of Zach Knight and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
In 1932 over 43,000 protestors marched on Washington DC, demanding better treatment and pay for veterans of World War I. President Hoover and the US government responded with violence, tear gassing and shooting the veterans.
Show more...
History
Education,
Society & Culture
Episodes (20/55)
Shaking America
The Bonus Army
In 1932 over 43,000 protestors marched on Washington DC, demanding better treatment and pay for veterans of World War I. President Hoover and the US government responded with violence, tear gassing and shooting the veterans.
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1 month ago
7 minutes

Shaking America
Baseball in the Japanese American Concentration Camps
When over 120,000 Japanese Americans were unjustly imprisoned in concentration camps during WWII they brought the American sport of baseball with them. Sources America's Concentration Camps by Allan R. Bosworth Through a Diamond: 100 Years of Japanese American Baseball by Kerry Yo Nakagawa Kenichi Zenimura: Japanese American Baseball Pioneer by Bill Staples Jr
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2 months ago
8 minutes

Shaking America
The Battle of Lake Erie
In the War of 1812 the US Navy would engage the British Royal Navy in the cold waters of Lake Erie. The battle would decide the future of the Great Lakes. Sources Ships of Oak, Guns of Iron by Ronald Utt The Lake Erie Campaign by Walter Rybka https://www.nps.gov/articles/brock-meets-tecumseh.htm https://www.nps.gov/articles/surrender-of-detroit.htm https://www.nps.gov/articles/a-mere-matter-of-marching.htm from the National Parks Service database https://detroithistorical.org/...
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3 months ago
12 minutes

Shaking America
The Surrender of Detroit
In the War of 1812 the United States would attempt to invade the British Canadian colonies, using Fort Detroit as a base of operations. What started as an invasion ended as a humiliating defeat when American General William Hull surrendered Detroit without a fight. Sources: Ships of Oak, Guns of Iron by Ronald Utt https://www.nps.gov/articles/brock-meets-tecumseh.htm https://www.nps.gov/articles/surrender-of-detroit.htm https://www.nps.gov/articles/a-mere-matter-of-marching.htm from t...
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3 months ago
17 minutes

Shaking America
The Unstoppable Dan Gable
Dan Gable endured a rough upbringing, personal tragedy and athletic defeat at the highest level. But he never stopped, becoming the greatest American wrestler to ever compete. Sources A Wrestling Life by Dan Gable with Scott Schulte The Champion Dan Gable from The US Olympic Museum website Dan Gable Dominated as Wrestler and Coach by Douglass Looney, ESPN website The Losses of Dan Gable by Wright Thompson, ESPN website
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8 months ago
17 minutes

Shaking America
The Rochester Mafia Bombings
In 1970 the Rochester crime family boss Frank Valenti ordered a series of false flag bombings, hoping to draw the federal authorities’ attention away from his criminal organization and onto anti-war activists. Sources Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful Mafia Empires by Selwyn Raab American Mafia: The History of its Rise to Power by Thomas Repetto The New York City Historical Society exhibit on the Italian-American Mafia
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9 months ago
9 minutes

Shaking America
Poundmaker: Peacekeeping Warrior of the Cree
Poundmaker was a Chief of the Plains Cree, a peacekeeping warrior who fought and defeated the Canadian government at the Battle of Cut Horse Creek. He shouldered the impossible task of preventing bloodshed, of calming the young warriors of the tribes and negotiating with an expansionist government that despised him. His story is one of the great tragedies of Canadian history. Visit the website at https://www.shakingamerica.com/ Sources Sweet Promises: A Reader on Indian/W...
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11 months ago
14 minutes

Shaking America
How Honda and Toyota Won the Trade Wars
Honda and Toyota survived trade wars, import quotas and xenophobia in the 1960s through the 1980s to become an economic juggernaut that reshaped the American auto industry. Sources The Keiretsu Advantage by Jasper Boers from the Yale Economic History Journal The New, Improved Keiretsu by Katsuki Aoki and Thomas Taro Lennerfors Lessons from the US-Japan Trade War of the 1980s from NPR's All Things Considered The Import Quota that Rebuild the Auto Industry by Wells King and Dan Vaug...
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1 year ago
13 minutes

Shaking America
The US Army Officer Who Ordered an Artillery Strike on Himself in WWII
Outnumbered and surrounded by Nazi forces, Lieutenant John R Fox made a last stand in the hills of northern Italy. In a desperate final act of bravery, Fox ordered an artillery strike on his own location just as the Nazis overran his position, killing hundreds of the enemy and sacrificing himself.
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1 year ago
14 minutes

Shaking America
The Locust Plagues of the Great Plains
In the 1870s locust swarms of biblical proportions descended onto the Great Plains, devouring everything in their path. Billions of locust blocked out the sun and devastated America’s agriculture, creating a national emergency unlike any other. Sources include: The book Locust: The Devastating Rise and Mysterious Disappearance of the Insect that Shaped the American Frontier by Jeffrey Lockwood The Biogeosciences article “A probe into the different fates of locust swarms in the plains ...
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1 year ago
11 minutes

Shaking America
The Irish Hearts of Steel Rebellion
The poor Irish farmers of Northern Ireland rose in armed rebellion in 1770 after their British landlords evicted thousands of them from their homes. Sources: A History of Ireland by Jonathan Barden Lord Donegall and the Hearts of Steel by W.A. Maguire from Cambridge's Irish Historical Studies The Battle of Gilford by D E McElroy from the Craigavon Historical Society
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1 year ago
12 minutes

Shaking America
The Bomb Brothers and the Invention of Land Mines
In 1862, during the American Civil War, Confederate rebels Gabriel Rains and his brother George Washington Rains changed warfare forever. They ordered their men to place specially made explosive torpedoes into the ground as they retreated from the Battle of Yorktown, creating the world’s first land mines. Their invention would go on to become one of the most destructive and pervasive weapons ever created.
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1 year ago
14 minutes

Shaking America
The Kensington Runestone Hoax
In rural Minnesota a farmer named Olaf Ohman found a mysterious runestone. Engraved into the stone was an epic tale of adventure and bloodshed, apparently written by Norse explorers. The discovery of the Kensington Runestone sparked a worldwide discussion about what we know about pre-Columbus European exploration. Sources: The Kensington Stone: Anatomy of a Hoax by Harold Edwards from the Minnesota Archaeological Society The Non-Enigmatic Origins of the Kensington Stone by Helme...
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1 year ago
9 minutes

Shaking America
Brooklyn's White Hand Gang
The White Hand Gang was a coalition of Irish street gangs in Brooklyn known for terrorizing Italian immigrants. Even among New York criminals they were notorious for liberal use of violence, lynching dozens of Italians along the waterfront. The White Hand Gang’s reign of terror ended in 1924 after a violent confrontation with a young Al Capone at a waterfront bar. Sources: Capone: The Man and the Era by Laurence Bergreen Five Families: The Rise, Decline and Resurgence of Amer...
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2 years ago
10 minutes

Shaking America
American Rivers Catching Fire
In 1969 it was not uncommon for American rivers to burst into flames. Filled with sewage, oil, and agricultural waste, several major rivers were so polluted that they caught fire multiple times. Here's the story of how the US almost destroyed its rivers, and how it eventually brought them back from the brink. Sources: Silent Spring by Rachel Carson https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/cuyahoga-river-caught-fire-least-dozen-times-no-one-cared-until-1969-180972444/] https://www.pbs...
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2 years ago
7 minutes

Shaking America
Ghosts in the Jungle: Operation Wandering Soul
During the Vietnam War the United States military attempted a strange form of psychological warfare. Hoping to demoralize and terrify the Viet Cong, American forces used helicopter-mounted speakers to project ghostly screams, distorted Buddhist chants and fabricated sounds of dead Vietnamese soldiers begging for a proper burial.
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2 years ago
8 minutes

Shaking America
The Ancient Ruins Under Mexico City
For hundreds of years an ancient Aztec temple laid buried beneath the busy streets of Mexico City, hidden and forgotten. Sources: The book Broken Spears: the Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico The Book The Conquest of Mexico by Hugh Thomas The article Mexico City’s Secret Underground World from the BBC The article Under Mexico City from the US Archaeology Journal
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2 years ago
10 minutes

Shaking America
Could George Washington Fight?
How tough was George Washington in a fist fight? Evidence suggests he was tougher than you. Sources: Washington: A Life by Ron Chernow https://nwhof.org/hall_of_fame/bio/131
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2 years ago
8 minutes

Shaking America
The Legendary Power of Max Baer
Max Baer is known in boxing circles as one of the hardest hitting men in combat sports history. Widely feared in the early 1920s and into the 1930s, Baer is credited with killing two different fighters with the destructive power in his right hand. As thoughtful and empathetic outside the ring as he was a savage within it, Baer became an icon of the sport through his wild life and reckless fighting style. He gained worldwide recognition when he defeated Hitler’s favorite boxe...
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2 years ago
17 minutes

Shaking America
The Great Soviet Grain Robbery
How the Soviet Union conned the United States out of $600 million worth of grain subsidies. Sources The book The Great American Grain Robbery and Other Stories by Martha Hamilton https://www.nasa.gov/feature/how-satellite-maps-help-prevent-another-great-grain-robbery https://www.usda.gov/sites/default/files/documents/podcast-wasde-transcript.pdf
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2 years ago
6 minutes

Shaking America
In 1932 over 43,000 protestors marched on Washington DC, demanding better treatment and pay for veterans of World War I. President Hoover and the US government responded with violence, tear gassing and shooting the veterans.