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Join me as we talk about Hannah Duston in the very first free solo Friday episode! The outdoors are a beautiful that can be filled with light and bliss and many different ways to bring yourself closer to those you love and yourself. But they can also be filled with terror and death, imminent and oppressive. Join me as we dig into these stories that inspire you to be just a little bit more careful while you're in the outdoors. Please rate and subscribe from whatever listening platform you use. Be sure to join us on Patreon and become a happy hiker to get ad-free episode and bonus content: https://patreon.com/TragedywithaView?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=join_link Be sure to follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tragedywithaview?igsh=MTN2ZDF3dWhobHI2Yw%3D%3D&utm_source=qr and Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100092478859666&mibextid=LQQJ4d to get the most up to date information on episode and merch. And don't forget to send us a Campfire Confessional to tragedywithaview@gmail.com - accepting all stories from the outdoors but especially looking for those that make us laugh to help lighten the heaviness that comes with tragedy. Source: Allthatsinteresting.com Smithsonian magazine.com New England historical society Legends of America The guardian NPR Cultura Collective Hannah Duston, by captivating history
A sudden trip replaced last week's podcast, but this week we reveal all: we have a new Scamp in our lives! We'll also talk in depth about installing our Chinese Diesel Heater, and we'll visit a complex and gruesome monument in New Hampshire. For information on the Panama Canal cruise, please follow this link! FIND US: We're on Facebook (Built to Go Group), Instagram (@collegeofcuriosity), Twitter (@colofcuriosity), and we have a Discord server (invite at top of main page at builttogo.com.) Tiny Scamp, or Big Van? Yes, I can stand in both. Scamp Info You can still buy these new! http://www.scamptrailers.com Tech Talk I installed a Chinese Diesel Heater. FINALLY. Sprinter Auxiliary fuel tap - only if your van is equipped. https://amzn.to/3EfgXRU Multi-size fuel hose adapter https://amzn.to/3fzmybg Vevor 5KW Diesel Heater https://amzn.to/3fJSuKm Resource Recommendation: Luke Bland and Van Uses Luke gave me a nice shout out so I'm returning the favor. Watch this video and consider - what is the MAIN thing you're using your van for? Maybe that should be the focus of your build. https://youtu.be/KwB4zEekSmI A Place to Visit: Hannah Duston Monument Please read up on her history before you visit. Some links are affiliate links. If you purchase anything from these links, the show will receive a small fee. This will not impact your price in any way.
https://slasrpodcast.com/ Welcome to the Sounds Like a Search and Rescue Podcast! Also known as SLASR. Join an experienced search and rescue volunteer and his friend as they discuss all things related to hiking and search and rescue in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. This week Mrs. Stomp sits in as we dive into some more history by welcoming our friend Tasha Spuches. Tasha is a prolific hiker and the Author of the new book, The Devil Had Been Everywhere. Her book tells the story of Hannah Duston who has come up in discussions a few times during the podcast recently. Tasha will give us the background on Hannah and talk about her book. We are also going to get Tasha's perspective on gender dynamics and etiquette while on trail, we will learn about some of her favorite areas in the White Mountains and get her perspective on hiking with dogs. All this and we will wrap up with some recent Search and Rescue news. Tasha's Info Tasha's Website About Tasha Buy Tasha's Book on her Website - The Devil Had Been Everywhere Buy Tasha's Book on Amazon Blog Sponsors and Partners Rek-lis Brewing Company Retail locations Spinners Pizza Parlor in Andover Massachusetts Eastern Mountain Sports Order Free Stickers Fill out the form for free SLASR Stickers Topics Guy gets eaten by a lion Mrs. Stomp wants to get eaten by a bear and Tasha is a moose magnet Santa's Village, Storyland and Whale's Tale Gas powered vehicles are going to be banned in Massachusetts Pop culture talk, House of Dragons, Paper Girls, giant TV and Mike loves the Gilmore Girls and 90210 Skyline Loop support - Larsen and Travis set the new FKT Rek Lis live Event Sponsors and Coffee Talk Beer Talk Recent Hikes - Timber Camp, Caribou Mountain in Evans Notch Segment One - Welcome Tasha, Hiking Etiquette on trail when Men and Women interact Segment Two - Hiking with Dogs Segment Three - Tasha's new book - The Devil Had Been Everywhere Show Notes Apple Podcast link for 5 star reviews Guy gets eaten by Lion at a Zoo in Ghana Santa's Village Employee hurt while operating a roller coaster Storyland Santa's Village Whale's Tale Waterpark Larsen and Travis FKT Wounded Warriors surf at Hampton Rek Lis Live Event Details Mike's GPS Route for Timber Camp and Goodrich Rock Skyline Loop Map Climber falls on Echo Crag Injured hiker Champney Falls Man dies on Mt. Washington
Massachusetts Puritan colonist Hannah Duston was the first woman to ever have a statue erected in her honor in the United States. But was what she did worthy of a monument?
Episode 24 of Are You a Good Bitch or a Bad Bitch? In this episode, we tell you about two North American women: one who was the unsung hero of a legendary expedition & another who's glorious return became, well... problematic.The story of Sacagawea & Hannah Duston.Music by Deanna DeBenedictis Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/GBBBPodcast)
President Biden has announced that the US will be removing its remaining combat troops from Afghanistan by September 11, 2021. Frank and David look back on nearly 20 years of war. Last Drops Frank: Fennell Lecture with Annette Gordon-Reed David: New England towns debate Hannah Duston statues
...she's going to get some blood on her hands. We're joined by Dr. Emily Romeo for a story of bad, bloody, babe, Hannah Duston. Hannah's story is one of many Dr. Romeo writes about in her book "The Virtuous and Violent Women of Seventeenth-Century Massachusetts."Dr. Romeo received her PhD from the University of Chicago, she is a current history faculty member at DePaul University.Order her book on Amazon or from a wonderful independent bookstore. Book comes out 8/28/2020, currently available for pre-order.Duston-Dustin Garrison House in Haverhill, MAHannah Dustin BobbleheadHannah Dustin Statue - Boscawen, NHHannah Dustin Statue - Boscawen, NH CloseupHannah Dustin Statue - Haverhill, MAHannah Dustin Statue - Haverhill, MA 2Hannah Duston Jim Beam decanterMERCH: Snag some Shared History merch and get stylin’!SOCIALS: Follow Shared History on Twitter & Instagram and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts!SUPPORT: DYK you can support us on Patreon? Just become a patron of Arcade Audio and let ‘em know you love us.Sources:Cotton Mather used Dustin’s narrative 3 times as part of the following larger works:Cotton Mather, Humiliations Follow’d with Deliverances: A brief discourse on the matter and method, of that humiliation which would be an hopeful symptom of our deliverance from calamity (1697)Mather, Decennium Luctuosum: An history of remarkable occurrences, in the long war, which New-England hath had with the Indian savages, from the year, 1688. To the year 1698 (1699)Mather, Magnalia Christi Americana: The Ecclesiastical History of New England from Its First Planting in 1620, until the Year of Our Lord 1698 (1702), “Dux Femina Facti”Primary sources on the Dustin/Emerson families:An Inventory of the Estate of Mrs Hannah Dusten, late of Haverhill,” March 10, 1737/8, Essex Probate, MA Archives, Vol. 325: 145-6.“The Will of Thomas Dustin,” 1724, Essex Probate, MA Archives, Vol. 319: 348-50.“An Inventory of the Estate of Mr. Thomas Dustin late of Haverhill,” Essex Probate, MA Archives, Vol. 319: 341; Vaughan, New England Frontier, 316.Dustin Family Letters,” HB2.D97.15, Records of the Dustin Family, Haverhill Public Library Special Collections, Haverhill, Massachusetts.MA Archives, Common Pleas # 877465, 84; MA Archives, Suffolk Co. Court Records, Early Files, Vol. 31, case 2636 (the case against Elizabeth Emerson, Hannah’s sister, for infanticide)“Hannah Dustin’s Letter to Elders of The Second Church of Haverhill,” 1724, Haverhill Historical Society Collection, Haverhill, Massachusetts (Record of when Hannah finally joined the church years after her captivity)Primary source on the Neff family:“William Neff, Estate Inventory,” May 14, 1689, Essex Probate, MA Archives, Vol. 304: 208Primary sources on the Petition for scalp bounty:“An Act for the encouragement of the prosecution of the Indian Enemy and Rebels,” Oct 19, 1697, MA Archives, Felt Collection 30: 435, 435a.Thomas Duston, Petition for Scalp Bounty,” June 8, 1697, MA Archives, Felt Collection 70, 350.“Petition by Joseph Neff (son) to General Court,” May 1739, MA Archives, Felt Collection 31: 261.Original Theme: Garreth SpinnOriginal Art: Sarah CruzAbout this podcast:Shared History, is a comedy podcast and history podcast in one. Hosted by Chicago comedians, each episode focuses on obscure, overlooked and underrepresented historical events and people.SPONSOR: This episode was sponsored by RAYGUN. Shop raygunsite.com, use promocode PEWPEW for free shipping.Direct sponsorship inquiries to sharedhistorypodcast@gmail.com
Nicholas Martinez narrates Guerilla Opera's audio introduction to "Emergence: A Haverhill Story" which features music from "Rumpelstiltskin" by Marti Epstein and describes "The Captivity of Hannah Duston" with music by Lansing McLoskey and libretto by Glen Nelson. To hear music from "The Captivity of Hannah Duston" you will have to come to the live show! Learn more at www.guerillaopera.org/events. Nicholas uses a Braille tablet to read the scripts we send him. Ina YouTube interview he describes how it works and talks about technology that would be a game changer! https://youtu.be/p0YVe_DqVYk Download this transcript at https://www.dropbox.com/s/0yo2kaw3ajfcuom/2019-05%20Emergence-ProgramNarration-draft.pdf?dl=0 Download the text for the musical exerpts at https://www.dropbox.com/s/bwsdxa3nh7y8m9b/2019-05%20Emergence-ProgramText.pdf?dl=0
On this week's Podcast, we talk about Hannah Duston, Lupercalia, and some more haunted dolls.
When you think of a thug, chances are good you imagine an Indian man wearing a yellow scarf, but that's exactly what the term originally described! The Thugs were bands of roving bandits/murders who may have been practicing ritual sacrifice to appease a bloodthirsty goddess in a way of life they called thuggee...or they may never have existed at all. We'll try to separate fact from fiction and you'll get an update on Hannah Duston and Salad Fingers on this week's Spooky A S! spookyas.com facebook.com/spookyas Music by Occultic Overtones
Tonight, Eric is joined by special guest Charles Gustine, host of the podcast Iconogrophy. When these two let met, Eric was a guest on Charles' podcast to discuss witchfinding and modern Salem. Tonight Charles returns the favor as the two discuss Hannah Duston: A Mother's Revenge! Hannah Duston was a puritan woman living in Haverhill, Massachusetts in 1697 when she, her servant and her infant daughter were taken captive by Native Americans. The Natives were involved in a war against the English at the time, and they told Hannah their plan was to torture the captives and then ransom them back to their families. Hannah didn't like the sound of this, but when one of the natives killed her infant daughter, Hannah began plotting not only an escape, but very possibly a shocking act of revenge. Eric and Charles will discuss the complicated legacy of Hannah Duston's story, what to do with monuments erected to celebrate people/events we're not so sure we should be celebrating anymore, the over simplification of Native American history, the Matter Family, and Tarantino films on tonight's episode! Check out Charles' podcast at www.iconography.com spookyas.com facebook.com/spookyas Music By Occultic Overtones
My guest, Jay Atkinson, author of "Massacre on the Merrimack", tells the notorious and controversial story of Hannah Duston. After members of the Abenaki tribe captured her and her newborn infant in March of 1697, they killed her baby on a forced march north. Duston got her revenge by killing and scalping ten of her captors, including six children, and fleeing by canoe back to her home in Haverhill, Massachusetts. Go to www.mostnotorious.com and click the Amazon link for all of your online shopping needs! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
March 28, 2016 - Step through the Guardian of Forever and back in time to colonial North America, in the heat of King William's War. Our guide on this journey is Jay Atkinson, called "the bard of New England toughness" by Men’s Health magazine for his approach to writing and his topics. He shares the story of another tough New Englander in his new book, Massacre on the Merrimack: Hannah Duston's Captivity and Revenge in Colonial America. Early on March 15, 1697, a band of Abenaki warriors in service to the Catholic French, raided the Puritan English frontier village of Haverhill, Massachusetts, killing twenty-seven men, women and children, and taking thirteen survivors captive. Hannah Duston and her one-week-old daughter, Martha, were among these survivors -- and it is there that our story begins. Jay Atkinson teaches journalism at Boston University, as well as a critic, essayist, investigative journalist, and itinerant amateur athlete up in Methuen, Massachusetts. He is also the author of the author of two novels, a collection of short fiction, and five nonfiction narrative books including Ice Time and Legends of Winter Hill. You can visit his website, JayAtkinson.com, follow him @Atkinson_Jay on Twitter, or drop him a like at Facebook.com/WriterJayAtkinson.
Jay Atkinson, author of Massacre on the Merrimack, talks to Daniel Ford about his mentor Harry Crews, his research and writing process (yellow legal pads play a starring role), and what inspired his narrative featuring Hannah Duston’s thrilling, and bloody, escape from her Native American captors.
They say one person's hero is another's villain, and the tale of Hannah Duston embodies this adage with chilling precision. At the dawn of American lore, her story emerges from the shadows of 1697—a frontier mother's ordeal that swerves into a harrowing saga of survival and vengeance. But as we peel back the layers of this historic enigma, we are forced to question: Was Hannah Duston a valiant pioneer survivor or a cold-blooded murderer?This episode of Hometown History takes you through the thorny paths of Duston's life, from her capture by Abenaki warriors to her dramatic escape which led to the slaying of her captors. Described by some as a brutal retaliation, and by others as an act of undaunted bravery, Duston's story has echoed through centuries, morphing into legend, propaganda, and a heated debate of morality. Her legacy, etched into the complex fabric of early colonial history, stands at the intersection of gender, violence, and the clash of cultures in a rapidly evolving American landscape. As we sift through historical accounts, folklore, and the moral quandaries her actions pose, we invite listeners to contemplate the multifaceted nature of her legend.Time travel with us on Hometown History. Join Shane's Facebook group for deep dives into history's most captivating moments, and follow our Instagram for snapshots of the past. Like our Facebook page to stay updated, and chirp along with us on X (Twitter) for all things historic!Craving more? Shane's gripping narratives continue on Foul Play: Crime Series and Mystery Inc, where crime and mystery come alive. Join us there and become part of our story-loving community!Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy