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AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
David Rookhuyzen
243 episodes
1 day ago
Starting in 1943, thousands of German and Italian POWs were shipped to Arizona. They would leave a mostly honorable legacy while the Sonoran Desert and the mountains of Flagstaff would leave a lasting impression on them.
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History
Education
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All content for AZ: The History of Arizona podcast is the property of David Rookhuyzen 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.
Starting in 1943, thousands of German and Italian POWs were shipped to Arizona. They would leave a mostly honorable legacy while the Sonoran Desert and the mountains of Flagstaff would leave a lasting impression on them.
Show more...
History
Education
Episodes (20/243)
AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 237: Prisoners of War
Starting in 1943, thousands of German and Italian POWs were shipped to Arizona. They would leave a mostly honorable legacy while the Sonoran Desert and the mountains of Flagstaff would leave a lasting impression on them.
Show more...
1 day ago
31 minutes 56 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 236: The Thanksgiving Day Riot
World War II had the effect of making Fort Huachuca into a a central gathering place for Black men and women serving in the U.S. Army. Their experience ran parallel with their white counterparts, except for a notable undercurrent of segregation, prejudice, and racism. And those same undercurrents would result in a minor war breaking out on the streets of Phoenix on Thanksgiving Day 1942.
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2 weeks ago
29 minutes 59 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 235: Like Dandelions on a Green Lawn
After Pearl Harbor, the military turned Arizona into one giant training ground. And many of the soldiers who funnel through the state chose to stay in the desert, chaining the course of Arizona history for decades to come.
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3 weeks ago
31 minutes 10 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 234: I Held History in My Hand
Most people connect Pearl Harbor to the USS Arizona that sunk beneath the waves on December 7, 1941. But in the months following the surprise attack, Arizona would have a surprising connection to those who had help plan that most infamous of dates.
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4 weeks ago
31 minutes 30 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 233: The Machita Incident
Though it was probably not on his mind at all, Adolph Hitler changed the course of Arizona’s history when he invaded Poland on September 1, 1939. One ramification that would unfold a year and a half later was one of the last great instances of Amerindian resistance to the U.S. government.
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1 month ago
36 minutes 1 second

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 232: Admiral of the Arizona Navy
In 1934, Arizona’s hostility toward California and its water demands reached it zenith, culminating in the governor sending troops and a “navy,” to stop that most heinous of things - a dam across the Colorado River.
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1 month ago
31 minutes 8 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 231: Everyone and Their Dog
The Hoover Dam would be finished two years early, but that feat took a lot of planning, coordination, and sacrifice - and a heavy toll on the men building the project.
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1 month ago
30 minutes 25 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 230: Ragtown
It’s time to talk about water once again. In this case, we discuss all the preparation that went into one of the biggest public works projects of the 1930s that just so happens to sit between Arizona and Nevada.
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1 month ago
31 minutes 49 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 229: To You We Will Our Fighting Hearts
The U.S. Army started to reorganize and consolidate in the 1920s. At Fort Huachuca this meant an end to its time hosting not only the 10th Cavalry and 25th Infantry Buffalo Soldiers, but the last remaining Apache scouts as well.
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2 months ago
32 minutes 27 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 228: This Uniform Means the Same Thing a White Man’s Does
When they weren’t patrolling the border or invading Mexico, the Buffalo Soldiers had lives filled with Army drills, band concerts, baseball games, dances with eligible women and, oh yeah, all kinds of discrimination.
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2 months ago
32 minutes 39 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 227: The Tenth Is In Mexico
We continue our deep look into the service of the Buffalo Soldiers with one of the main highlights of their time in Arizona - protesting the border and invading Mexico.
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2 months ago
31 minutes 57 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 226: Camp Naco
The Buffalo Soldiers left quite a legacy, both in general and in Arizona. Along the border town of Naco, part of that legacy is still standing - and some folks want to keep it that way.
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3 months ago
29 minutes 21 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 225: The Cantonese Paymaster
This is the story of how one Chinese man became a legend at Fort Huachuca.
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3 months ago
30 minutes 55 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 224: Camp Huachuca
Before it became the very model of a modern Army installation, Fort Huachuca started out as the temporary Camp Huachuca, a remote, frontier outpost that was simply struggling to hold on.
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3 months ago
32 minutes 17 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 223: Pluto
In 1930, a young man from Kansas working in Flagstaff noted an object move 3.5 millimeters between two photographic plates. And our understanding of the Solar System has never been the same.
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4 months ago
38 minutes 55 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 222: Planet X
While you can’t talk about Percival Lowell without mentioning his views on Mars, you also have to discuss his other great obsession - finding the hypothetical ninth planet hiding on the fringes of the solar system.
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4 months ago
31 minutes 4 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 221: Science and Speculation
During the first two decades of its existence, Lowell Observatory furthered both one of the great astronomical misconceptions and breakthroughs of the 20th century.
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4 months ago
31 minutes 37 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 220: Mars Hill
In May 1894, a rich, globetrotting, and brilliant mathematician from Boston came to Flagstaff for a special purpose - finding evidence of life on Mars.
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5 months ago
31 minutes 29 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 219: Odds and Ends
The Great Depression is a historical period best told through on-the-ground stories. Here is just a smattering of what it looked like in Arizona.
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5 months ago
32 minutes 2 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Episode 218: A New Deal for Arizona
In 1932, FDR pledged to bring his “New Deal” to the American people. You can debate its effectiveness, but in Arizona in general and Phoenix in particular you can see remnants and effects of the New Deal programs to this very day.
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5 months ago
31 minutes 2 seconds

AZ: The History of Arizona podcast
Starting in 1943, thousands of German and Italian POWs were shipped to Arizona. They would leave a mostly honorable legacy while the Sonoran Desert and the mountains of Flagstaff would leave a lasting impression on them.