PodcastsHistoryHistory's A Disaster

History's A Disaster

Andrew
History's A Disaster
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67 episodes

  • History's A Disaster

    Green Ramp Disaster

    25/1/2026 | 23 mins.
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    A clear spring afternoon. Hundreds of paratroopers prepping for routine jumps. Then a midair collision ignites 55,000 gallons of jet fuel and turns a quiet staging area into a battlefield. We walk through the Green Ramp disaster step by step, from the moment an F-16 on a simulated flameout approach clipped a C-130 on final to the fireball that struck the 82nd Airborne and 18th Airborne Corps at Pope Air Force Base in 1994.

    We set the scene on Green Ramp—the mock doors, the Pack Shed, the tight corridors that left few escape routes—and recount how small decisions, congested airspace, and timing converged into catastrophe. You’ll hear how the fire spread, why some paratroopers survived by dropping and rolling, and how split-second choices shaped outcomes when ammunition cooked off and fuel-soaked uniforms turned rescuers into patients. The story then shifts to the response: firefighters linking hoses across agencies, medics turning doors into litters, and pilots, instructors, and bystanders moving as one to evacuate the wounded.

    Inside Womack Army Medical Center, a mass casualty plan snapped into action. Double staffing at shift change, rapid intubations for burn airways, ventilators pulled from nearby military hospitals, and operating rooms brought online within minutes—each element reveals what real readiness looks like under extreme pressure. We detail the numbers, the surgeries, and the transfers to burn centers, then examine the investigations that followed, including air traffic control failures, questions of see-and-avoid, and the discipline that reshaped procedures.

    This is a story about systems, human judgment, and the thin line between realism and risk in military training. It’s also about courage—the firefighters who held the line, the medics who worked the lawn triage, and the soldiers who carried each other through flame and smoke. If this episode moved you, share it with a friend, leave a quick review, and subscribe so you don’t miss the next story we uncover.
    Facebook: historyisadisaster
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    email: [email protected]
    Special thank you to Lunarfall Audio for producing and doing all the heavy lifting on audio editing since April 13, 2025, the Murder of Christopher Meyer episode https://lunarfallaudio.com/
  • History's A Disaster

    Running Toward Disaster: The Bhopal Gas Leak

    18/1/2026 | 23 mins.
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    The air turned against its own city. We follow the chain that made it possible: a reactive chemical never meant for storage in bulk, a series of safety systems taken offline or ignored, and a community living within walking distance of tanks that required perfection to stay safe. When water slipped into Tank 610, pressure soared, alarms were silenced by habit, and the last defenses failed. What spilled over the factory wall wasn’t just gas—it was every deferred repair, every cut training hour, and every budget decision that said “not today.”

    We break down the chemistry of methyl isocyanate in plain terms, showing how heat, pressure, and moisture turn a manageable process into a runaway reaction. Then we zoom out to the human map: slums built around steady jobs, “bad air days” normalized, and hospitals blindsided without hazard data. Through eyewitness pacing and on-the-ground detail, we track the lethal flow through narrow lanes, the surge toward overwhelmed clinics, and the dawn that revealed bodies in doorways and families separated in the crush. It’s a hard listen because it should be. This is how systems fail when profit outruns precaution.

    From the scramble for accountability—arrests, small fines, and a settlement that barely touched the scale of harm—to the toxic afterlife of abandoned waste, we connect the acute disaster to the chronic one beneath the soil. We talk about cleanup fights, contested incineration plans, and the uneasy truth that removing a few hundred tons barely dents a million-ton legacy. Most of all, we pull out the lessons: real process safety culture, functioning redundancy, community right-to-know, land-use buffers, and hospital preparedness that starts before alarms ring.

    If this story moved you, help us keep telling the ones that matter: follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review. Your support helps more people hear how disasters are made—and how they can be prevented.
    Facebook: historyisadisaster
    Instagram: historysadisaster
    email: [email protected]
    Special thank you to Lunarfall Audio for producing and doing all the heavy lifting on audio editing since April 13, 2025, the Murder of Christopher Meyer episode https://lunarfallaudio.com/
  • History's A Disaster

    The My Lai Massacre

    11/1/2026 | 24 mins.
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    A quiet hamlet at dawn. No return fire. Smoke, screams, and a ditch that won’t leave your mind. We walk through how an ordinary American unit, raised on heroic war stories and trained to chase “body count,” entered My Lai expecting a firefight and left a graveyard behind. From the briefing that erased the idea of civilians to the moment a single killing unlocked a flood, we examine how culture, orders, and fear converged into atrocity—and how a helicopter crew chose to stand between rifles and villagers to keep them alive.

    We dig into the mechanics and morality: scorched-earth tactics, platoons splitting through huts, the ditch executions under Lieutenant William Calley, and the chilling calm of false after-action reports. Then the second battle—truth versus institution—takes shape. Reports disappear, careers are protected, and those who speak up face threats or indifference. The silence finally breaks thanks to Ronald Ridenhour’s persistence, the Peers investigation’s scope, Seymour Hersh’s reporting, and Ronald Haeberle’s photographs that forced a nation to look. The fallout shifted public opinion, fueled the antiwar movement, and exposed a justice system that punished a single junior officer while sparing the chain of command.

    Through it all, we center the courage of Warrant Officer Hugh Thompson and his crew, Lawrence Colburn and Glenn Andreotta, who landed between U.S. troops and terrified villagers, evacuated survivors, and later found a lone child alive in the ditch. Their story offers a counterpoint to despair: leadership is a choice, and accountability starts with one person refusing to look away. Press play to hear a stark, human account of My Lai—what led to it, who tried to stop it, who hid it, and why remembering matters now. If this resonates, subscribe, share, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show.
    Facebook: historyisadisaster
    Instagram: historysadisaster
    email: [email protected]
    Special thank you to Lunarfall Audio for producing and doing all the heavy lifting on audio editing since April 13, 2025, the Murder of Christopher Meyer episode https://lunarfallaudio.com/
  • History's A Disaster

    Harrison Okene: Survival Beneath The Waves

    04/1/2026 | 15 mins.
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    The ocean doesn’t announce its plans. One wave hit, a tugboat rolled, and a ship’s cook found himself sealed in a bathroom-sized air pocket on the seafloor for 62 hours, listening to distant engines and his own breath. What happened next is a sharp study in fear, ingenuity, and the thin margin between life and loss.

    We trace the Jascon 4’s final minutes off the coast of Nigeria, the chaos of inverted corridors, and the brutal math of survival: conserve oxygen, fight hypothermia, and outthink rising carbon dioxide. Harrison O’Keene turns a vent shard into a pry bar, coveralls into a lifeline, and broken wood into a raft just high enough to lift his chest from icy water. While early responders mark the wreck and withdraw, saturation divers mobilize from miles away, ready for body recovery—until a hand taps a helmet in the dark. From that shock comes a surgical rescue: a diving bell transfer, three days in decompression, and a medical close call with hypercapnia and the bends.

    The story doesn’t end at the surface. We follow the aftershocks—media frenzy, nightmares, and a car crash that flips him into water again—into a decision most would fear: learn to dive for real. Training rewires trauma into craft. Harrison builds a career in subsea construction at depths up to 150 feet, finds new love, and chooses a home by the water he refuses to fear. Along the way, we unpack the gear, physics, and protocols that make deep rescue possible, from umbilicals and helmets to decompression schedules, while exploring the mental habits that keep a survivor steady when the lights go out.

    If you’re drawn to true survival, maritime disasters, and the mindset that turns panic into a plan, this one will stay with you. Follow the show, share it with a friend who loves high-stakes stories, and leave a rating or review to help others find it.
    Facebook: historyisadisaster
    Instagram: historysadisaster
    email: [email protected]
    Special thank you to Lunarfall Audio for producing and doing all the heavy lifting on audio editing since April 13, 2025, the Murder of Christopher Meyer episode https://lunarfallaudio.com/
  • History's A Disaster

    Tangiwai Christmas Eve Rail Disaster

    28/12/2025 | 20 mins.
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    A night train full of families, gifts, and holiday plans sped toward a bridge that wasn’t there anymore. We follow that chilling arc—from a crater lake’s quiet failure on Mount Ruapehu to a lahar roaring down the Whangaehu River, shredding concrete piers and erasing the Tangiwai bridge in darkness—then step into the locomotive cab as the crew sees a frantic flashlight beam and fights physics with brakes and sand, seconds too late.

    We unpack how New Zealand’s landscape shapes its risks and why a non-eruptive volcanic flood can be deadlier than fire. You’ll hear the human side first: the postal worker who ran toward danger, the guard and passengers who smashed windows to pull people free, the young constable who took command until reinforcements arrived, and the Waiouru camp soldiers and local farmers who turned a chaotic riverbank into an improvised rescue line. At dawn, the destruction told a national story—twisted carriages, oil-slick mud, presents strewn along the banks—while a country grappled with identification in summer heat, coroner’s courts under pressure, and grief spread from private funerals to a state ceremony for the unknown.

    We also confront a hard truth about design and class: second-class cars sat closest to the locomotive and bore almost all the fatalities. From those numbers emerged lessons that took decades to implement. We detail the lahar warning systems installed upstream—radar level sensors, RF links, fail-safe signaling, and radio alerts—and how the 2007 lahar validated the approach by stopping trains and traffic before impact. Along the way, we share moments of chance that saved lives, the awards honoring civilian courage, and the memorials that keep names alive.

    If this story moved you, follow our show, share this episode with a friend, and leave a quick rating or review. Got questions or a topic you want us to tackle? Email [email protected] and connect with us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube.
    Facebook: historyisadisaster
    Instagram: historysadisaster
    email: [email protected]
    Special thank you to Lunarfall Audio for producing and doing all the heavy lifting on audio editing since April 13, 2025, the Murder of Christopher Meyer episode https://lunarfallaudio.com/

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About History's A Disaster

Bloody history and bloodier crimes. Andrew takes a weekly look at all things bloody. From natural disasters to man made atrocities
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