Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
TV & Film
Sports
Health & Fitness
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts221/v4/b8/fa/a5/b8faa57f-6517-27bc-8820-1afc3426229b/mza_1805718154574402591.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
Dean Klinkenberg
70 episodes
1 week ago
Send us a text Mary Ann Sternberg has spent twenty years challenging the idea that the River Road between Baton Rouge and New Orleans is nothing more than rows of noxious chemical plants interspersed with 19th century plantation houses, so in this episode, we dig into its past and present. Mary Ann begins by orienting us to the geography of the River Road and the region’s indigenous inhabitants. She describes the arrival of European settlers, which included an influx of Germans in the early 1...
Show more...
Places & Travel
Society & Culture,
History
RSS
All content for The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast is the property of Dean Klinkenberg 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.
Send us a text Mary Ann Sternberg has spent twenty years challenging the idea that the River Road between Baton Rouge and New Orleans is nothing more than rows of noxious chemical plants interspersed with 19th century plantation houses, so in this episode, we dig into its past and present. Mary Ann begins by orienting us to the geography of the River Road and the region’s indigenous inhabitants. She describes the arrival of European settlers, which included an influx of Germans in the early 1...
Show more...
Places & Travel
Society & Culture,
History
Episodes (20/70)
The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
Beyond Plantations: Getting to Know Louisiana’s River Road
Send us a text Mary Ann Sternberg has spent twenty years challenging the idea that the River Road between Baton Rouge and New Orleans is nothing more than rows of noxious chemical plants interspersed with 19th century plantation houses, so in this episode, we dig into its past and present. Mary Ann begins by orienting us to the geography of the River Road and the region’s indigenous inhabitants. She describes the arrival of European settlers, which included an influx of Germans in the early 1...
Show more...
1 week ago
1 hour 8 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
A French Village in the American Heartland: Historian Jim Gass on Sainte Genevieve, Missouri
Send us a text In this episode, I talk with Jim Gass, Director of Research and Education at the Centre for French Colonial Life, about the long and rich history of Sainte Genevieve, Missouri. We begin with a discussion of what we know about the indigenous people who lived in the area before Europeans arrived, then talk about the French settlers who moved into the region in the 18th century. Jim describes their daily lives, the crops they grew, connections to other early settlements (including...
Show more...
3 weeks ago
1 hour 18 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
Learning the Language of the Mississippi River with John Ruskey
Send us a text In this episode, I interview long-time river guide and Sage of the Lower Mississippi, John Ruskey. John has been guiding and living on the Mississippi for nearly 30 years, so I start by letting him describe the Lower Mississippi River that he knows. We talk about some of the river’s characteristics that make it a special place, including its vastness, its extreme variations from high water to low water, and the diversity of life it supports. Still, John emphasizes that to get t...
Show more...
1 month ago
1 hour 12 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
The Mississippi’s Forgotten People: Life on Shantyboats and the Margins of American Society
Send us a text A hundred years ago, shantyboat communities could be found along many rivers in the US. Historian Gregg Andrews went in-depth to research these communities, inspired in part by the discovery of a personal connection to them, which resulted in a book called “Shantyboats and Roustabouts: The River Poor of St. Louis, 1875 to 1930.” In this episode, I talk with Gregg about those shantyboat communities. After Gregg describes how he got interested in shantyboat communities, he descri...
Show more...
2 months ago
1 hour 20 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
Beyond Mark Twain: Faye Dant on Hannibal's African American Stories
Send us a text You probably know a little bit about Hannibal, Missouri, because of the books written by a guy named Mark Twain, but I bet you don’t know much about the history of African Americans who’ve lived in Hannibal, even though Hannibal has had African American residents from its earliest days. I didn’t until I talked with Faye Dant, founder of a Hannibal museum called Jim’s Journey. In this episode, Dant fills me in on the history that’s been hard to come by. We talk about...
Show more...
3 months ago
1 hour 8 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
Tips for Traveling the Great River Road, Part 2
Send us a text Our summer road trip down the Great River Road continues in this episode. We start just after Lake Pepin and make our way to the Mississippi’s confluence with the Ohio River at Cairo, Illinois. Along the way, I’ll comment on the following places: the Upper Mississippi River National Fish & Wildlife Refuge; Winona, Minnesota; in Wisconsin: Alma, Fountain City, La Crosse, and Prairie du Chien; Dubuque, Iowa, and Galena, Illinois; the Quad Cities of Illinois and Iowa; in south...
Show more...
4 months ago
1 hour 4 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
Tips for Traveling the Great River Road, Part 1
Send us a text It’s summer and many of y’all will be hitting the road to travel and see something new (or revisit places you enjoy). I haven’t done a travel-themed podcast in a while, so in the next couple of episodes, I’m going to go over the highlights of driving the Great River Road. In this episode, I start with an overview of what to expect from the drive plus some overall highlights. Then, I start a north to south trek down the Great River Road from Itasca State Park and ending at Lake ...
Show more...
4 months ago
1 hour 4 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
The Missouri River, Part 2: Channelization, Community, and Recreation
Send us a text In this episode, we continue our detour along the Missouri River with part 2 of my conversation with Steve Schnarr from Missouri River Relief. In part two, Steve describes the process the Corps of Engineers used to channelize the river, how it changed the river, what we lost, and how some folks gained new land. He talks about a Missouri River bridge that was built over land, and about the hopes for commercial navigation on the Missouri River that just never seem to realize. &nb...
Show more...
5 months ago
48 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
The Missouri River, Part 1: Geography, Ecology, and Human Impacts
Send us a text In this episode, we detour off the main channel of the Mississippi River to get to know its longest tributary: the Missouri River. Our guide for this exploration is Steve Schnarr, Race Director for Missouri River Relief. We covered a lot of territory (like the Missouri River), so our conversation is split between two episodes. In this one, part one, we cover some of the basics of the river’s geography, including where it begins and how long it is. Steve describes what we know o...
Show more...
5 months ago
58 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
The First National Mississippi River Day: Building Community Around the Big River
Send us a text February 1 is National Baked Alaska Day. April 14 is National Ex-Spouse Day, but April 22 marks Earth Day. We’ve had these (and more!) national days celebrating things silly and crucial, but we’ve never had a National Mississippi River Day. Until this year. It’s long overdue. On June 2, we’ll celebrate the first National Mississippi River Day. In this episode, I talk with Michael Anderson, the Director of Outreach and Education for One Mississippi, about it. Michael begi...
Show more...
5 months ago
47 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
River to Table: Josh Galliano on Campfire Cooking
Send us a text In this episode, I have the pleasure of talking with accomplished chef and St. Louis area resident Josh Galliano. We talk about his path to becoming a chef and the family and cultural influences. He grew up in southern Louisiana near the Mississippi River, where he had regular access to fresh, seasonal products. Mostly, though, we talk about campfire cooking. Galliano prepares memorable meals on sandbars for a local outfitter, Big Muddy Adventures, and just generally loves the ...
Show more...
6 months ago
1 hour 2 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
Murder on the Mississippi: Frank Dodge Explores Identity and Deception on the River
Send us a text In 1964, four members of the Ku Klux Klan killed two African American men in Mississippi. The story of their murder and the following decades of stops and starts in the prosecution of their killers inspired my latest Frank Dodge mystery: Murder on the Mississippi. In this episode, I give some background on the murder of Dee and Moore and how their murder influenced my latest book. Murder on the Mississippi takes place on a Mississippi River cruise from New Orleans to Memphis. T...
Show more...
7 months ago
26 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
From Roots to Routes: Making the Leap to Full-Time RV Life
Send us a text Living out of an RV or van seems more possible than ever before, and, based on what’s out there on social media, a lot of people have already taken the plunge. If you’re someone who is curious about what it takes to make the switch to full-time RV life, this episode is for you. I talk with Patti Hunt, host of the RV Life podcast, and someone with plenty of first-hand experience. We focus mostly on her personal story as she and her husband made the switch from living in a house ...
Show more...
8 months ago
1 hour

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
Holding Back the Waters: The Upper Mississippi Flood of 1965
Send us a text In April 1965, the Upper Mississippi River surged to heights never before recorded, threatening to swallow entire towns whole. This episode plunges you into the chaos as the perfect storm—deep snowpack, torrential rain, and frozen ground—transformed America's greatest river into an unstoppable force. Journey from the imperiled bridges of Minneapolis to the desperate fight for survival in Winona, where 1.3 million sandbags stood between 15,000 homes and the raging river. Experie...
Show more...
8 months ago
36 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
Before MLK: Iowa's 19th-Century Civil Rights Pioneers
Send us a text In this week's episode, we uncover the surprising story of Iowa's pivotal role in African American civil rights. From the groundbreaking 1839 court case that made Iowa a free territory to the remarkable story of Charlotta Pyles—a formerly enslaved woman who raised $3,000 through East Coast speaking tours to free her family members—we explore how this Midwestern state led the nation in civil rights advances. Learn about Alexander Clark, a self-made businessman who successfully f...
Show more...
9 months ago
25 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
Uncharted Currents: Jon Kukuk on Growing Up in a Small Town Next to the Mississippi River
Send us a text You may never have heard of Dallas City, Illinois, but to the folks who grew up there, Dallas City was idyllic. The town had a small but diverse business community. Crime was rare and mostly petty stuff. The local streams, creeks, and woods fed a child’s curiosity. And the biggest playground, the Mississippi, challenged and calmed young and old. Jon Kukuk is one of those folks whose childhood was shaped by the rhythms of life in this small town next to the Mississippi. K...
Show more...
9 months ago
1 hour 14 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
Trash Talk: Inside America's Largest River Cleanup Organization, Living Lands & Waters
Send us a text What started out as one guy with a jon boat picking up trash along the Mississippi in his hometown has since evolved into one of the largest, best known, most inspirational organizations in the country. In this episode, Educational Facilitator Mike Coyne-Logan describes how Living Lands & Waters (LLW) grew from the hands and mind of Chad Pregracke to the purpose-driven organization it is today. We talk about LLW’s core mission and how it has evolved over time from clean ups...
Show more...
10 months ago
1 hour 3 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
River Songs & Gratitude: Wrapping up 2024
Send us a text A busy year is coming to an end, so we’re going to ease our way out of 2024 with a short episode that features a note of thanks and bonus interview content. This year, I asked eight interviewees to pick a song that represents something about their experiences with the Mississippi River. I’ve spliced together their picks for this episode, and they cover a lot of territory, from classic river songs to a couple of unexpected choices. While I can’t include the songs in this podcast...
Show more...
11 months ago
17 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
What Can the Mississippi’s Past Tell Us About Its Future? A Conversation with Historian John Anfinson
Send us a text Historian John Anfinson has spent much of his adult life working in jobs that keep him close to the Mississippi River, first with the US Army Corps of Engineers, then later with the Mississippi National River and Recreation Area, a part of the National Park Service. In this episode, we have a wide-ranging discussion about his career as a river historian. During his tenure with the Corps of Engineers, for example, he learned of the work of Henry Bosse, whose photographs and maps...
Show more...
1 year ago
1 hour 11 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
Traveling the Mississippi One Week at a Time: Anne Sherve-Ose's 13-Year Journey Down the River
Send us a text Every year, dozens of people load up their canoes or kayaks and set out to travel the length of the Mississippi River. Anne Sherve-Ose and two friends took a different approach. Over the course of 13 years, they paddled the Mississippi River one week at a time. In this episode, I talk with Anne Sherve-Ose about those trips. She describes how the trips evolved and changed over time, shares an episode where they got stranded, and talks about the joys she experienced being on the ...
Show more...
1 year ago
50 minutes

The Mississippi Valley Traveler Podcast
Send us a text Mary Ann Sternberg has spent twenty years challenging the idea that the River Road between Baton Rouge and New Orleans is nothing more than rows of noxious chemical plants interspersed with 19th century plantation houses, so in this episode, we dig into its past and present. Mary Ann begins by orienting us to the geography of the River Road and the region’s indigenous inhabitants. She describes the arrival of European settlers, which included an influx of Germans in the early 1...