PodcastsDocumentaryHistory's A Disaster

History's A Disaster

Andrew
History's A Disaster
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76 episodes

  • History's A Disaster

    US Bangla Flight 211

    29/03/2026 | 19 mins.
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    You trust a stranger with your life every time you board a plane, but you almost never see the person in the left seat. That uneasy truth sits at the center of our deep dive into US-Bangla Flight 211, a Dhaka to Kathmandu route that should have been routine and instead ended with 51 lives lost after a chaotic, unstable approach and a post-crash fire. 

    We walk through the setup: a Bombardier Dash 8 Q400 heading into Kathmandu’s demanding airspace, where terrain, workload, and tight approach geometry punish sloppy execution. Then the human factors take over. The captain arrives sleep-deprived, emotionally unraveled, and angry, and the cockpit voice recording captures a breakdown that collides with sterile cockpit rules, checklist discipline, and basic crew coordination. With a junior first officer on her first Kathmandu approach, cockpit authority gradients and fear of pushback leave critical errors unchallenged as automation settings, headings, and crosswinds pull the flight farther and farther from a safe landing profile. 

    From runway confusion to ignored alarms to risky low-altitude maneuvering, the story becomes a blunt lesson in aviation safety culture, mental health screening, and crew resource management. We also unpack the investigation, the early attempts to shift blame, and what accountability looks like years later. If you care about air crash investigation, pilot decision-making, and how systems fail when one person can’t be stopped, this one will stick with you. 

    Subscribe for more disaster history, share the episode with a friend, and leave a rating or review so more people can find the show.
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    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

    Missing: SS Waratah

    22/03/2026 | 28 mins.
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    A passenger ship the size of a city block leaves port, gets seen one last time off the South African coast, and then seems to erase itself from the ocean. That’s the SS Waratah, a Blue Anchor Line liner marketed as virtually unsinkable and later nicknamed Australia’s Titanic, disappearing in 1909 with no confirmed wreckage, no verified bodies, and just enough sightings to keep hope alive for decades.

    We walk through how the Waratah is built for the Australia run, what “modern” safety means in the early 1900s, and why one missing piece of tech changes everything: no radio, only signal lamps and visual range. Then the story tightens as warning signs pile up, from a stubborn coal bunker fire to repeated arguments about stability and whether the ship rides too top-heavy. When the final voyage loads up with a complicated mix of cargo, including metal ore concentrate that can shift dangerously, the margins get thinner right as the weather turns violent.

    From the last confirmed sighting near the Bashee River to frantic searches by naval cruisers and passing ships, we follow the clues, the dead ends, and the long shadow of the Board of Trade inquiry. Finally, we weigh the leading theories: a rogue wave smashing hatches or rolling the vessel, a capsize driven by cargo liquefaction, an explosion that should have left debris, and the wilder ideas that pop up when evidence stays missing. Subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a rating or review so more people can find History’s A Disaster.
    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

    The 1936 Black Forest Hiking Disaster

    15/03/2026 | 28 mins.
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    A hike sounds harmless until the weather stops cooperating and the person in charge refuses to admit they’re wrong. We’re telling the true story of the 1936 Black Forest Tragedy, when English teacher Kenneth Keist leads 27 schoolboys into Germany’s mountains during a building snowstorm and turns a spring break trek into a deadly historical disaster.

    We walk step by step through the decisions that matter in any hiking safety story: ignoring local warnings, trusting a bad tourist map, pushing on past safe turnaround points, and climbing steep terrain in near blizzard conditions with no real equipment. When the group gets lost and the youngest boys begin to collapse from cold and exhaustion, it’s the sound of church bells and the courage of villagers on skis that finally brings help. Even with the rescue, five boys die, and survivors only grasp the full loss days later.

    Then the story shifts from survival to narrative control. Nazi officials and the Hitler Youth seize the moment, staging public mourning and “peace” messaging that spreads through British and German newspapers, while officials quietly downplay hard questions about accountability and negligence. A memorial rises, diplomacy overrides scrutiny, and one grieving father’s pursuit of blame becomes its own tragedy.

    Subscribe for more dark turns in history, share this with a friend who hikes, and leave a rating or review so more listeners can find the show.
    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

    1844 USS Princeton Explosion

    08/03/2026 | 21 mins.
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    A champagne cruise, a gleaming warship, and a crowd of Washington power brokers waiting for the thunder of a new supergun. Moments later, the deck of the USS Princeton lay shattered, and five leading figures were dead. We take you from the political stakes of John Tyler’s embattled presidency to the engineering choices that made the Peacemaker cannon a ticking bomb, revealing how spectacle outran science and left a lasting scar on naval innovation.

    We share how Tyler, cut off from his own party, turned to foreign policy to secure a legacy, and how Secretary Abel Upshur’s push for steam power and screw propellers birthed the ambitious Princeton. You’ll hear why John Ericsson’s methodical designs mattered—vibrating lever engines, anthracite-fired boilers, and shrink-fitted hoops on the Oregon gun—and how Captain Robert Stockton’s copycat Peacemaker skipped the hard parts, hiding slag, voids, and weak welds beneath a heavy barrel. The Mount Vernon salute becomes the episode’s hinge: a single blast that exposed the limits of 1840s metallurgy, the danger of rushed demos, and the cost of ego at the helm.

    From state funerals and public shock to Congressional backlash and a freeze on steamship funding, we map the national fallout. The Franklin Institute’s investigation cuts through the fog with hard science, explaining why process and testing—not bravado—keep people safe and technologies credible. The Princeton’s legacy isn’t just a cautionary tale for naval historians; it’s a mirror for modern tech hype cycles, where big promises can overshadow materials, methods, and math. If you care about how bold ideas become reliable systems, this story belongs on your playlist.

    If the episode resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review—your support helps more curious listeners find us.
    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

    The 1918 Dutchman’s Curve Disaster

    01/03/2026 | 21 mins.
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    A clear signal, a crowded morning, and a single stretch of track set the stage for one of America’s deadliest rail disasters. We take you inside the 1918 Dutchman’s Curve wreck in Nashville—where missed checks, wartime confusion, and the cruel logic of Jim Crow turned routine into catastrophe—then follow the people who tried to heal the damage and the reforms that followed.

    We start with the world that built the accident: hand-thrown switches, wooden passenger cars, and crews stretched thin under federal wartime control. You’ll meet the unsung railway surgeons, forerunners of modern EMS, and step into the Shops junction where double track narrowed to one. As two sister locomotives—Nos. 281 and 282—raced toward each other, a failure to verify the tower log and mistaken assumptions sent one train onto the single track. The outcome was a head-on collision at over a hundred miles per hour combined, telescoping cars, ruptured boilers, and devastation that fell heaviest on Black passengers forced into the most dangerous cars by segregation.

    From the first chaotic minutes—nuns running from St. Mary’s, bootleggers offering whiskey for pain, a Red Cross relief train packed with supplies—to the days of investigation, we lay out what went wrong and what changed. Hear how the Interstate Commerce Commission tallied casualties, why wooden coaches turned deadly, and how block systems, steel construction, and stricter safety protocols reshaped rail travel in the 1920s. We also confront the hard truth: policy and prejudice weren’t just ideas; they were risk assignments that cost lives at the front of the train.

    If this story moved you, tap follow, share it with a friend who loves history, and leave a quick review—your support helps more curious listeners find the show and keeps these lessons from being forgotten.
    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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