History Buffoons Podcast

I Want Some Cake: John Newton

57 min · 9. juni 2026
episode I Want Some Cake: John Newton cover

Beskrivelse

The most famous hymn in the world has one of the most uncomfortable origin stories. “Amazing Grace” was written by John Newton, a man who spent years at sea, fought authority like it was his job, and participated directly in the transatlantic slave trade before becoming a respected Anglican minister. We’re Bradley and Kate, and we walk through Newton’s full arc, not the cleaned up version. That means childhood loss in 1700s London, brutal shipboard life, heavy drinking, and the Royal Navy’s violent discipline. It also means the West Africa trading world where slavery is treated as business, including the coastal alliances and power dynamics that make the system function. Newton’s downfall gets intense when he’s punished, chained, starved, and publicly humiliated while sick, surviving only because people at the bottom of the hierarchy take a risk to help him. Then comes the storm aboard the Greyhound, the moment Newton believes he’s about to die, and the prayer that drags his mother’s long-forgotten teachings back into his mind. The change isn’t instant, and that’s part of the point. We talk about moral compartmentalization, what real remorse sounds like, and how Newton later influences abolition through William Wilberforce while also owning his past. If you like history that doesn’t flinch, hit play, then subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave us a rating and review. What part of John Newton’s journey challenged you the most? Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2344746/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/historybuffoonspodcast] This website contains affiliate links. This means that if you click on a link and purchase a product, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support the running of this website and allows me to continue providing valuable content. Please note that I only recommend products and services that I believe in and have personally used or researched.

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138 episoder

episode I Want Some Cake: John Newton cover

I Want Some Cake: John Newton

The most famous hymn in the world has one of the most uncomfortable origin stories. “Amazing Grace” was written by John Newton, a man who spent years at sea, fought authority like it was his job, and participated directly in the transatlantic slave trade before becoming a respected Anglican minister. We’re Bradley and Kate, and we walk through Newton’s full arc, not the cleaned up version. That means childhood loss in 1700s London, brutal shipboard life, heavy drinking, and the Royal Navy’s violent discipline. It also means the West Africa trading world where slavery is treated as business, including the coastal alliances and power dynamics that make the system function. Newton’s downfall gets intense when he’s punished, chained, starved, and publicly humiliated while sick, surviving only because people at the bottom of the hierarchy take a risk to help him. Then comes the storm aboard the Greyhound, the moment Newton believes he’s about to die, and the prayer that drags his mother’s long-forgotten teachings back into his mind. The change isn’t instant, and that’s part of the point. We talk about moral compartmentalization, what real remorse sounds like, and how Newton later influences abolition through William Wilberforce while also owning his past. If you like history that doesn’t flinch, hit play, then subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave us a rating and review. What part of John Newton’s journey challenged you the most? Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2344746/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/historybuffoonspodcast] This website contains affiliate links. This means that if you click on a link and purchase a product, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support the running of this website and allows me to continue providing valuable content. Please note that I only recommend products and services that I believe in and have personally used or researched.

9. juni 202657 min
episode The Origin of Weird: Mary Sears and Thermocline cover

The Origin of Weird: Mary Sears and Thermocline

A U.S. destroyer chases a German U-boat through the North Atlantic, the sonar pings start to lie, and the target seems to vanish like a ghost. The twist isn’t a secret engine or a lucky escape. It’s ocean physics. We walk through the thermocline, that sharp temperature layer that can bend sound and create an acoustic shadow, turning early World War II sonar into “useless nonsense” at exactly the wrong moment in the Battle of the Atlantic.  From there, we zoom in on Mary Sears and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, where a civilian scientist helps the Navy admit a painful truth: winning at sea requires understanding the sea. Sears joins WAVES and builds a naval oceanographic intelligence unit that hunts patterns in temperature, salinity, and density by scavenging fishing logs, weather records, academic papers, and old expedition notes. The result is predictive ocean charts commanders can use to guess where submarines hide and how deep to fight back, even when instinct says otherwise.  We also connect that lesson to the Pacific and Tarawa, where misread tides and shallow coral reefs turn an invasion into chaos before the main fighting even starts. It’s military history told through environmental reality: tides, reefs, surf, and the cost of treating nature like background scenery.  If you like WWII history, U-boats, sonar, women in science, and the strange ways data can save lives, subscribe for more, share the episode with a friend, and leave a rating and review so more curious listeners can find us. Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Sears_(oceanographer) [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Sears_(oceanographer)] Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution “The Conscience of Oceanography” https://www.whoi.edu/mary-sears/ [https://www.whoi.edu/mary-sears/] Naval History and Heritage Command https://www.history.navy.mil/browse-by-topic/people/namesakes/mary-sears.html [https://www.history.navy.mil/browse-by-topic/people/namesakes/mary-sears.html] Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2344746/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/historybuffoonspodcast] This website contains affiliate links. This means that if you click on a link and purchase a product, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support the running of this website and allows me to continue providing valuable content. Please note that I only recommend products and services that I believe in and have personally used or researched.

4. juni 202623 min
episode A Nostalgic Town: The History of Deadwood cover

A Nostalgic Town: The History of Deadwood

Deadwood starts with a simple, dangerous idea: there’s gold in the Black Hills, so people move in even when they’re not supposed to. We follow the real history of Deadwood, South Dakota from its first days as an unsanctioned mining camp on Lakota land protected by the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868, through the chaos of a boomtown where businesses pop up faster than any real law can keep up. From muddy streets packed into a narrow gulch to a theater that opens before a jail, the town’s priorities tell you everything. We break down the most famous moment in Deadwood lore, the murder of Wild Bill Hickok and the “dead man’s hand,” plus the bizarre reality of an improvised trial that didn’t hold up once federal authority stepped in. Then we zoom out to the forces that actually shaped the town: Seth Bullock’s push toward order, George Hearst’s role in shifting the region from placer panning to the industrial powerhouse of the Homestake Mine near Lead, and Al Swearengen’s Gem Theater empire built on booze, gambling, and exploitation. Deadwood doesn’t just survive violence. It survives fire, modernizes quickly, grows a diverse community including a major Chinatown, and later faces decline as mining changes and the frontier ends with the railroad in 1890. Finally, it reinvents itself again when tourism and legalized gambling help fund preservation, turning history into the town’s most valuable resource. Subscribe for more strange, true American history, share this with your favorite Old West nerd, and leave us a rating and review so more people can find the show. Deadwood https://www.deadwood.com/history/ [https://www.deadwood.com/history/] Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deadwood,_South_Dakota [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deadwood,_South_Dakota] City of Deadwood https://www.cityofdeadwood.com/ [https://www.cityofdeadwood.com/] Deadwood Photos https://westernmininghistory.com/7154/deadwood-the-ultimate-photo-collection/ [https://westernmininghistory.com/7154/deadwood-the-ultimate-photo-collection/] Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2344746/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/historybuffoonspodcast] This website contains affiliate links. This means that if you click on a link and purchase a product, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support the running of this website and allows me to continue providing valuable content. Please note that I only recommend products and services that I believe in and have personally used or researched.

2. juni 20261 h 18 min
episode Know Your Role: H.A. and Margaret Rey cover

Know Your Role: H.A. and Margaret Rey

Curious George didn’t just come from a cute idea. He came from a suitcase of drawings carried through a collapsing Europe while German-born Jewish refugees tried to stay one step ahead of the war. We tell the story of H A Rey (born Hans Augusto Reyersbach) and Margaret Rey, a sharp, blunt, brilliant partner who sees his artistic talent as something worth rescuing. Their path runs from post World War I Germany to Brazil, then into pre-war Paris, where they begin turning animal sketches into children’s book characters. A baby monkey named Fifi steals the spotlight, and the work starts to feel like a real future. Then history interrupts. When World War II hits France, the Rays face suspicion, searches, closed routes, and the kind of slow bureaucracy that can get you killed. They flee Paris on bicycles, sleep wherever they can, and fight for paperwork in Lisbon before finally making it to the United States. Along the way, a publisher at Houghton Mifflin makes one pivotal suggestion: Fifi needs a new name, and Curious George is born. If you love book history, WWII survival stories, publishing lore, or the hidden origins of classic children’s literature, this one lands hard. Subscribe, share the episode with a fellow history nerd, and leave a rating and review so more listeners can find us. Monkey Business: The Adventures of Curious George’s Creators https://tubitv.com/movies/100040960/monkey-business-the-adventures-of-curious-george-s-creators [https://tubitv.com/movies/100040960/monkey-business-the-adventures-of-curious-george-s-creators] Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margret_Rey [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margret_Rey] Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H._A._Rey [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H._A._Rey] Rey Cultural Center https://thereycenter.org/index.html [https://thereycenter.org/index.html] Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2344746/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/historybuffoonspodcast] This website contains affiliate links. This means that if you click on a link and purchase a product, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support the running of this website and allows me to continue providing valuable content. Please note that I only recommend products and services that I believe in and have personally used or researched.

26. maj 20261 h 14 min
episode The Origin of Weird: Avoidable Disasters cover

The Origin of Weird: Avoidable Disasters

A $125 million Mars mission disappears because two teams can’t agree on units. That’s not a sci-fi plot, it’s the kind of avoidable disaster that makes us laugh, then cringe, then double-check our own work. We start with NASA’s Mars Climate Orbiter and the brutal math of a metric vs imperial unit conversion mistake. One set of numbers in pounds of force gets read as newtons, and a “small” difference compounds until the spacecraft approaches Mars too low and is gone in moments. From there we head to Louisiana for the Lake Peigneur disaster, where drilling in the wrong spot breaches a salt mine, the lake drains into a massive whirlpool, and the shoreline itself starts disappearing. Then we hit two wildly different warning signs that still rhyme: a modern London skyscraper, 20 Fenchurch Street (the Walkie-Talkie Building), reflecting sunlight like a magnifying glass and damaging cars, and Sweden’s Vasa warship, made top-heavy by prestige and pressure until it sinks on its maiden voyage. Across engineering, architecture, and project management, we keep asking the same question: what simple check would have stopped this? If you like strange history, human error stories, and real-world lessons about safety culture and design oversight, you’ll have a lot to chew on here. Subscribe, share the show with a friend who loves a good fiasco, and leave us a review so more people can find History Buffoons. Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2344746/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/historybuffoonspodcast] This website contains affiliate links. This means that if you click on a link and purchase a product, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support the running of this website and allows me to continue providing valuable content. Please note that I only recommend products and services that I believe in and have personally used or researched.

21. maj 202621 min