History Mystery

COLUMBINE: THE MORNING EVERYTHING CHANGED

18 min · 19 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio COLUMBINE: THE MORNING EVERYTHING CHANGED

Descripción

Episode 118 | Historical Events In this History episode we focus on April 20th, 1999 — the 49 minutes at Columbine High School that killed 14 people, and what the investigation revealed: a warning website that was seen and not acted on, cafeteria bombs designed to kill hundreds that failed to detonate, a law enforcement perimeter protocol that left a teacher bleeding for three hours, and a country that responded by building an entirely new architecture of school security around the question of what to do next time. The bombs didn't work. What happened instead was still enough to change everything. #HistoryMystery #Columbine #AmericanHistory #SchoolShooting #HistoryPodcast

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de History Mystery!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

132 episodios

episode THE VALENTICH DISAPPEARANCE: THE PILOT WHO VANISHED MID-TRANSMISSION artwork

THE VALENTICH DISAPPEARANCE: THE PILOT WHO VANISHED MID-TRANSMISSION

Episode 131 | History's Mysteries — Mysterious Events In this Mystery episode we focus on Frederick Valentich — the 20-year-old Australian pilot who on October 21st, 1978 radioed Melbourne air traffic control to report an unidentified craft hovering above his Cessna over Bass Strait, described it for six minutes, said "it's hovering and it's not an aircraft," then transmitted a metallic scraping sound for seventeen seconds before the signal went dead. This episode covers what spatial disorientation is and why it doesn't fully explain what Valentich described, the ground witnesses who reported seeing unusual lights consistent with his account, the engine cowl flap found on Flinders Island five years later, and the investigation that reached no conclusion — cause of disappearance recorded as unknown. No wreckage. No body. No answer. #HistoryMystery #ValentichDisappearance #UFO #Aviation #MysteryPodcast

Ayer18 min
episode THE HINTERKAIFECK MURDERS: THE KILLER WHO STAYED artwork

THE HINTERKAIFECK MURDERS: THE KILLER WHO STAYED

Episode 130 | History's Mysteries — Mysterious Events In this Mystery episode we focus on the Hinterkaifeck murders of March 31st, 1922 — the killing of six people on an isolated Bavarian farmstead, preceded by footprints in the snow that led in but not out, a newspaper nobody bought, and noises in the attic — followed by the killer living on the property for four days after the murders before the bodies were discovered. This episode covers the specific sequence of events on the night of the killings, the detail that seven-year-old little Cäzilia was alive in the barn for some time after the others died, the investigation that interviewed over 100 people without producing a conviction, and why over 100 years later the case remains officially unsolved with the victims' skulls still missing. Footprints leading in. None leading out. More than a hundred years. No answer. #HistoryMystery #Hinterkaifeck #TrueCrime #Germany #MysteryPodcast

1 de jul de 202619 min
episode BOG BODIES: THE PRESERVED DEAD OF NORTHERN EUROPE artwork

BOG BODIES: THE PRESERVED DEAD OF NORTHERN EUROPE

Episode 129 | History's Mysteries — Mysterious Events In this Mystery episode we focus on bog bodies — the hundreds of preserved human remains found in the peat bogs of Denmark, Germany, England, Ireland, and the Netherlands, many dating to the Iron Age between 500 BC and 100 AD, most showing signs of violent death and deliberate ritual placement. This episode covers how the chemistry of sphagnum moss preserves bodies for thousands of years, the specific cases of Tollund Man hanged and placed carefully in a Danish bog in 350 BC, Grauballe Man with his throat cut, and Lindow Man killed three separate ways, and what their last meals — analyzed with modern forensic precision — suggest about the nature of their deaths. Two and a half thousand years ago someone placed them in the water. The water kept them. #HistoryMystery #BogBodies #TollundMan #AncientHistory #MysteryPodcast

30 de jun de 202619 min
episode JACOB'S WELL TEXAS: THE SWIMMING HOLE THAT KEEPS KILLING DIVERS artwork

JACOB'S WELL TEXAS: THE SWIMMING HOLE THAT KEEPS KILLING DIVERS

Episode 128 | History's Mysteries — Mysterious Events In this Mystery episode we focus on Jacob's Well near Wimberley, Texas — a natural spring that drops 30 feet to a beautiful clear pool before continuing into an underwater cave system that has killed at least nine divers, including two in 1979 whose bodies remain in the cave to this day. This episode covers what cave diving is and why it is fundamentally different from open-water diving, the false chimney in the second chamber that has killed more people than anything else in the cave, the 1979 deaths of Kent Maupin and Mark Brashier who went in without safety lines and never came out, and why the cave is closed to recreational diving while the swimming area above remains open. There is no sign at the surface telling you the bodies of at least two divers are still in the rock below your feet. #HistoryMystery #JacobsWell #CaveDiving #Texas #MysteryPodcast

29 de jun de 202622 min
episode THE AOKIGAHARA FOREST: JAPAN'S SEA OF TREES artwork

THE AOKIGAHARA FOREST: JAPAN'S SEA OF TREES

Episode 127 | History's Mysteries — Mysterious Events In this Mystery episode we focus on Aokigahara — the ancient forest at the base of Mount Fuji in Japan, known as the Sea of Trees, where the iron-rich volcanic soil disrupts GPS and compasses, the canopy blocks the light, and between 50 and 100 people take their lives every year in what has become one of Japan's most documented suicide sites. This episode covers the specific cultural, historical, and literary forces that shaped Aokigahara's association with death — from Buddhist ascetic traditions to a 1960 novel to a 1993 book that named the forest explicitly — the stigma around mental illness in Japan that contributes to the crisis, and the prevention efforts that have contributed to a declining national suicide rate. The signs at the entrance still have the phone number printed at the bottom. #HistoryMystery #Aokigahara #Japan #MentalHealth #MysteryPodcast

28 de jun de 202619 min