Episodes

  • DH Ep:23 The Tulsa Massacre
    Jul 7 2025
    In this searing episode of Disturbing History, we uncover the devastating truth behind the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre—one of the deadliest and most systematically buried atrocities in American history.

    This isn't just a story about racial violence. It's about the rise and deliberate destruction of Black Wall Street, a thriving African American community in Tulsa’s Greenwood District, built from the ground up by formerly enslaved people and their descendants. We explore how Greenwood became an extraordinary economic powerhouse, home to hundreds of Black-owned businesses, luxury homes, and professional services. But its success drew deadly envy.

    On May 31, 1921, fueled by a false accusation and a white mob’s rage, a coordinated attack—backed by police, the National Guard, and even private aircraft—unleashed fire and terror on Greenwood. Within 24 hours, the district was reduced to ashes. This wasn’t a riot. It was a military-style assault, complete with aerial bombings and mass internment of Black residents. While official records claimed only 39 deaths, survivors and researchers estimate the toll was in the hundreds. The trauma didn’t end with the destruction. The city, media, and insurance companies orchestrated a cover-up so effective that the massacre vanished from textbooks and public memory for nearly 80 years.

    We track the slow rediscovery of this buried truth—through survivors’ voices, modern archaeological efforts to locate mass graves, and renewed calls for justice and reparations. The massacre's impact still ripples through generations, symbolizing not just what was lost but what was stolen.This episode challenges listeners to confront America’s historical amnesia and reckon with the systems that erase inconvenient truths. It's a tribute to those who built Black Wall Street and those who perished defending it—a story that demands to be remembered.
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    1 hr and 28 mins
  • DH Ep:21 The Lost Chapters of Theodore Roosevelt
    Jun 27 2025
    In this episode of Disturbing History, we dive into the staggering, stranger-than-fiction life of America's most ferocious leader—the one and only Theodore Roosevelt. He wasn’t just a president. He was a warrior, a naturalist, a writer, a boxer, a conservationist, and, quite possibly, the first U.S. president to publish a serious account of a Sasquatch encounter.Born a sickly child with severe asthma, Roosevelt seemed destined for a quiet, fragile life—until sheer willpower turned him into a force of nature.

    As a young boy, he stood along the streets of New York City watching Abraham Lincoln’s funeral procession. That same child would grow into a human dynamo with a near-photographic memory, devouring two to three books a day, authoring 35 of his own, and writing over 150,000 letters during his lifetime.But his unstoppable energy was matched by devastating personal tragedy.

    On Valentine’s Day in 1884, Roosevelt’s wife and mother died in the same house, mere hours apart. His haunting diary entry read simply: “The light has gone out of my life.” In the aftermath, he disappeared into the harsh wilderness of the Dakota Badlands—where he lived as a cowboy, hunted thieves, and captured outlaws at gunpoint. It was here, he would later say, that he truly became the man who could one day lead a nation.As president, Roosevelt became a catalog of firsts: the youngest man to ever assume the office at age 42, the first to ride in an airplane, own a car, dive in a submarine, travel overseas while in office—and the first to keep a hyena as a pet in the White House.

    He boxed regularly until a punch cost him vision in one eye. Then he took up jujitsu. He swam naked in the Potomac River, banned Christmas trees to protect the environment, and famously despised his own nickname, “Teddy,” because it reminded him of his late wife.But perhaps one of the most fascinating—and least discussed—aspects of Roosevelt’s life lies buried in his 1893 book The Wilderness Hunter. In a chapter easily dismissed as folklore, he recounts a tale told to him by a seasoned trapper named Bauman: a terrifying encounter in the Montana wilderness with a bipedal creature that walked like a man, stalked their camp, and ultimately killed Bauman’s partner by snapping his neck. Roosevelt, never one to flinch from mystery, referred to it as “a goblin story which rather impressed me.”

    Some believe it to be the first widely published Sasquatch account in American literature—and the fact that Roosevelt included it in his work speaks volumes.Roosevelt’s love of the wild wasn’t just personal—it became policy. As president, he protected over 230 million acres of American wilderness, an area larger than France. He established national parks, bird reserves, monuments, and national forests. His legendary camping trip with John Muir in Yosemite laid the groundwork for the modern conservation movement. He understood the wild was not just a resource—but a mystery worth protecting.Even after his presidency, Roosevelt couldn't resist danger. In 1912, while campaigning under the Bull Moose Party, he was shot in the chest. The bullet passed through his steel eyeglass case and a 50-page speech in his coat pocket, slowing its path.

    Bleeding, he refused to seek treatment until he finished delivering his speech. “Friends,” he said, “I don’t know whether you fully understand that I have just been shot.”Later, he embarked on an African safari where he and his team collected over 11,000 specimens for the Smithsonian. Then, nearly a decade after leaving office, he pushed further—into the deadly heart of the Amazon on an expedition to map the River of Doubt, which would later bear his name. He contracted malaria, nearly died, and was forced to make a partial confession: that the limits of his body were finally catching up to the boundlessness of his will.This episode explores the Roosevelt most people never learn about—a man who lived so far outside the bounds of normal life that encountering a mysterious creature in the woods seemed... almost expected.

    He was the last president to embody the mythic energy of the American frontier, and his writings reflect a man willing to treat the unexplained not with ridicule, but with curiosity and respect.We also reflect on how Roosevelt’s legacy of conservation is entangled with mystery: the very forests and wilderness areas he fought to protect remain the same places where cryptid encounters continue to be reported today. Whether it was political power, personal loss, wild adventure, or brushes with the unknown, Theodore Roosevelt always chose to meet the world head-on—whether it made sense or not.
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    59 mins
  • DH Ep:20 The Vietnam Deception
    Jun 23 2025
    In this episode of Disturbing History, we take you deep into the shadows of one of America’s most controversial and misunderstood conflicts: the Vietnam War. But this isn't just a retelling of battles and timelines—this is the story behind the war. The one laced with deception, hidden agendas, political manipulation, and secret operations that spanned decades and cost millions of lives.

    We trace the war's dark roots all the way back to the Eisenhower administration, revealing how every U.S. president who followed—Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon—made decisions that pushed the conflict deeper into chaos. Some of those decisions were strategic; others were rooted in fear, ego, or political survival. Along the way, we explore the real story behind the Gulf of Tonkin incident, and how that single manipulated event opened the floodgates to full-scale war.But the battlefields of Vietnam weren’t the only ones soaked in blood.

    We also uncover the CIA-backed coups that overthrew South Vietnamese leaders in the shadows, and the devastating secret bombings in Laos and Cambodia—operations kept hidden not only from the public but often from Congress itself. These covert campaigns, driven by Cold War paranoia and the desire to contain communism at all costs, operated in the dark for years, until the truth began leaking out piece by piece.

    This episode dives into the political machinery behind the war effort—how the military-industrial complex gained momentum, how public support was manipulated through controlled narratives, and how media coverage was both weaponized and suppressed. The American people were fed patriotism and half-truths, while the full scale of the horror was buried in classified files and military jargon.

    We also confront the brutal legacy of programs like Operation Phoenix, a CIA initiative that blurred the line between intelligence gathering and assassination. And we ask the hardest question of all: when did our leaders stop fighting to win—and start fighting to save face? If you think you know the Vietnam War, this episode will change your perspective. Because this isn’t just history—it’s a reminder of what happens when truth becomes expendable in the name of power.

    Listener discretion is advised, as we cover sensitive topics including wartime violence, political corruption, and state-sponsored deception. If this episode makes you uncomfortable, good.

    History should make us uncomfortable. That’s how we learn from it.

    Subscribe to Disturbing History on your favorite podcast platform, and if you find value in these stories, take a moment to leave a review.
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    2 hrs and 39 mins
  • DH Ep:19 NASA’s Dirty Secret
    Jun 18 2025
    In this hard-hitting episode, we unravel the hidden history behind one of humanity’s proudest achievements: landing on the moon. Beneath the surface of scientific triumph lies a story of moral compromise, wartime secrets, and human suffering. We trace the incredible arc from the Wright brothers’ first flight in 1903 to Neil Armstrong’s giant leap in 1969—a leap made possible not just by innovation, but by deals with former Nazi scientists through Operation Paperclip.

    The American space program’s celebrated heroes include men directly tied to slave labor and war crimes, whose pasts were buried in the rush to beat the Soviets.Amid Cold War paranoia, the space race became a propaganda war. The U.S. and USSR both pushed technological limits while hiding the human toll: cosmonauts lost in space, astronauts killed in preventable accidents, and workers exposed to toxic materials.

    Communities around launch sites still live with the environmental fallout.We also explore how the military-industrial complex exploited the space program for profit, inflating costs and sidestepping accountability. Defense contractors enriched by Nazi labor reemerged as key players in America’s aerospace boom, while taxpayers footed the bill.

    The Apollo missions themselves were razor-thin gambles. The spacecraft were riddled with design flaws and untested systems. Yet despite the danger—and the darker history behind the hardware—two men walked on the moon in 1969. That moment of triumph was real, but so were the costs hidden behind it.We also examine the roots of moon landing conspiracy theories—not because the landings were fake, but because the government’s track record of secrecy and deception made such doubts inevitable.

    As we follow the legacy of these compromises into today’s era of privatized space exploration, one truth becomes clear: the stars didn’t cleanse us of our history. They reflect it.

    This episode challenges the mythology of space progress and asks: Can we pursue the heavens without repeating the same moral failures? And if not—what does that say about us?
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    2 hrs and 25 mins
  • DH Ep:18 The Kelly-Hopkinsville Incident
    Jun 15 2025
    On a hot August night in 1955, in the quiet rural stretch between Kelly and Hopkinsville, Kentucky, something strange lit up the sky. What happened next would become one of the most bizarre and chilling close encounter cases in American history. That evening, a family arrived at the local police station in a panic, claiming their farmhouse had been under siege—not by people, but by creatures. Small, glowing-eyed beings with long arms, talon-like claws, and ears that pointed straight back like bat wings.

    They said the creatures emerged from the woods, peeked through windows, clawed at doors, and seemed to float or glide just out of reach—impervious to gunfire, and relentless in their silent pursuit.The story sounded insane. But when law enforcement returned to the farmhouse, they found evidence that something had happened—spent shells, damaged property, and a group of witnesses who had nothing to gain and everything to lose by coming forward.

    Over the years, skeptics would blame barn owls, hysteria, or simple misidentification. But the details didn’t fade, and the consistency of the family’s account has continued to keep the case alive nearly 70 years later.

    In this episode of Disturbing History, Brian revisits that long Kentucky night and explores how the Kelly-Hopkinsville Incident helped shape the very image of alien encounters in America—from the glowing eyes to the pointy ears to the fear of what might be lurking just beyond the treeline. Whether you believe it was a mass hallucination, an alien landing, or something even stranger, one thing is certain: that night changed everything for the people who lived through it.

    Because sometimes, history doesn’t just haunt the past…
    It knocks at your door in the middle of the night.
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    2 hrs and 13 mins
  • DH Ep:17 The Riders Who Saved a Revolution
    Jun 11 2025
    One if by land, two if by sea.
    We all know the legend of Paul Revere’s midnight ride — but what if I told you he wasn’t the only one?In this episode of Disturbing History, Brian King-Sharp shines a light on the forgotten riders of America’s revolution — the men and women who risked everything in the dead of night to spread word of British troop movements.At the center of this lost chapter is Sybil Ludington, a 16-year-old girl who rode twice as far as Revere — alone, through stormy woods, warning militia forces in New York. And she wasn’t alone. Names like Israel Bissell, William Dawes, and Samuel Prescott played critical roles, only to be buried under the weight of one man’s legend.We explore:
    • The real network of riders that fanned out across the colonies
    • How and why Paul Revere became the face of the story
    • The forgotten bravery of Sybil Ludington’s 40-mile ride
    • And how history often favors the simplest version — even when it leaves heroes behind
    Because sometimes, the most disturbing part of history isn’t what we remember…
    It’s what we choose to forget.
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    2 hrs
  • DH Ep:16 Mel's Mystery Hole
    Jun 6 2025
    It started with a phone call....

    In 1997, a man named Mel Waters called into Coast to Coast AM, the legendary late-night radio show dedicated to the unexplained. What he shared was bizarre, chilling, and completely unforgettable—a tale of a bottomless hole on his property in rural Washington State that defied the laws of physics… and maybe reality itself.

    In this episode of Disturbing History, Brian unpacks the legend of Mel’s Hole—a seemingly endless pit that swallowed fishing lines by the mile, resurrected dead animals, and attracted the interest of mysterious government agents who may have erased it from existence.

    We explore:
    • Mel’s original call and the surreal claims he made on air
    • The strange behavior of the hole—and what happened to objects tossed inside
    • Alleged government intervention, land seizure, and Mel’s mysterious disappearance
    • Theories ranging from military experiments to interdimensional gateways
    • The cultural aftershock that made Mel’s Hole a modern American myth
    Was it a hoax, a hallucination, or a glimpse into something bigger and stranger than we can imagine?Because sometimes the most disturbing stories aren’t written in the history books…

    They’re whispered over the airwaves—
    and they’re never heard the same way twice.

    Subscribe, follow, and turn on auto-downloads for more chilling tales from the edge of forgotten history.
    And get ready… to disturb history.
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    3 hrs and 46 mins