HUB History - Our Favorite Stories from Boston History

Where two history buffs go far beyond the Freedom Trail to share our favorite stories from the history of Boston, the hub of the universe.

http://HUBhistory.com

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 44m. Bisher sind 376 Folge(n) erschienen. Dies ist ein wöchentlich erscheinender Podcast.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 12 days 21 hours 21 minutes

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Pamphlets, Statues, and the Selling of Joseph (episode 191)


In June 1700, a brief pamphlet titled The Selling of Joseph was published in Boston. It’s considered the first abolitionist tract to be published in what’s now the United States. Authored by Salem witch trial judge Samuel Sewall, the three page pam ...


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 June 29, 2020  41m
 
 

Like a Trump of Coming Judgement (episode 190)


This week, we’re revisiting a classic episode about the radical Black abolitionist David Walker. Walker was a transplant to Boston, moving here after possibly being involved in Denmark Vesey’s planned 1822 slave insurrection in South Carolina. At a ...


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 June 22, 2020  1h1m
 
 

The Gamblers’ Riot (episode 189)


For almost 400 years now, Boston has never needed much prompting to start a riot. There have been anti-Catholic riots, anti-immigrant riots, anti-Catholic immigrant riots, anti-draft riots, pro-draft riots, anti-slavery riots, pro-slavery riots, bre ...


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 June 15, 2020  25m
 
 

Dissection Denied (episode 188)


Levi Ames was a notorious thief who plagued the Boston area in the years just before the Revolutionary War began. He stole everything from shirts to silver plate, crisscrossing New England, until he finally got caught right here in Boston. Tune in ...


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 June 8, 2020  50m
 
 

Marathon Man, with Bill Rodgers (episode 187)


HUB History loves the Boston Marathon almost as much as we love Boston history. Patriots Day is one of Nikki’s favorite days of the year, and Jake has run Boston for charity. Just days before the BAA announced that the 124th Boston Marathon would hav ...


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 June 1, 2020  1h27m
 
 

A Forgotten Battle on Boston Harbor (episode 186)


245 years ago this week, provincial militia and royal marines battled it out in what is now East Boston. The battle of Chelsea Creek was sandwiched between the battle of Lexington in April and Bunker Hill in June, and it’s often overshadowed by the ...


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 May 25, 2020  41m
 
 

Whale Watching on Washington Street (episode 185)


In the 1860s, Bostonians could pay 20 cents and watch a captive whale swim in a custom built aquarium on Washington Street in Boston’s Downtown Crossing. Today, there’s no sea world near Boston, and our New England Aquarium doesn’t hold any whales o ...


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 May 18, 2020  45m
 
 

Henry Knox’s Noble Train, with William Hazelgrove (episode 184)


Henry Knox commanded the Continental Army’s artillery, founded the academy that became West Point, and went on to become the first Secretary of War for the new United States. Before any of that, though, he was a young man in Boston. He was a Whig s ...


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 May 11, 2020  1h33m
 
 

Black Radical: The Life and Times of William Monroe Trotter, with Kerri Greenidge (episode 183)


From his Harvard graduation in 1895 to his death in 1934, William Monroe Trotter was one of the most influential and uncompromising advocates for the rights of Black Americans. He was a leader who had the vision to co-found groups like the Niagara M ...


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 May 4, 2020  1h43m
 
 

Unequal Justice in Boston (episode 182)


This week we’re revisiting two classic episodes to highlight injustice in how the death penalty has been applied in our city’s history. First, we’re going to visit early Boston, in a time when execution by hanging was a shockingly common sentence fo ...


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 April 27, 2020  1h7m