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BLACKOAK: The Ice That Would Not Let Go — What the Sailor Who Found the Franklin Note Couldn't Put Down

44 min · 21 de abr de 2026
portada del episodio BLACKOAK: The Ice That Would Not Let Go — What the Sailor Who Found the Franklin Note Couldn't Put Down

Descripción

BLACKOAK: The Ice That Would Not Let Go — What the Sailor Who Found the Franklin Note Couldn't Put Down In May of 1847, someone stood at a desk inside HMS Terror — beset in Arctic ice for eight months — and wrote an official Admiralty form reporting that all was well. The ships had been locked in pack ice since September. Three men had died over the winter on Beechey Island. But the form was filled in with military precision, properly dated, properly signed, and placed in a cairn on King William Island. In April of 1848, someone stood at the same desk and wrote around the margins of that same form. Twenty-four men dead. Sir John Franklin dead. Ships abandoned. One hundred and five survivors departing for Back River. The handwriting is still formal. The document is still properly dated and signed. The gap between those two entries — eleven months, twenty-four deaths, the transformation of empire's most celebrated expedition into a death march — is written in the white space between two sets of ink. That note was found in 1859 by a search party from the Fox. Samuel Bent, a common sailor on that expedition, was among the men who searched King William Island. He was not there when the cairn was opened. But he was there for the two weeks after. He was there for the boats. In this episode of BLACKOAK: The Adventures, the ancient sentient tankard carries an account received in a Wapping tavern in November of 1859 — from a man who had stood in a boat full of silver plate and loaded guns and books and two men who had been dead for eleven years. Who had understood, standing there, what the silver meant — and why carrying it made the only possible sense to men who were dying. Who had walked the shore and found what the shore had to say about what men do when the other options are gone. And who came back to England and could not put it down with anyone who needed it to mean something specific. Bent needed somewhere that received weight without requiring resolution. He found it. HMS Erebus was located in 2014. HMS Terror in 2016. Both ships are preserved in remarkable condition on the floor of the Arctic Ocean. Drawers closed. Glass intact. The objects 129 men brought from England in 1845 still inside. The ice eventually let go. It was too late for the men. But it let go. BLACKOAK: The Adventures is a historical mystery podcast narrated by an ancient sentient tankard forged from the wreckage of a warship off the Carolina coast. It has spent centuries in rooms where the weight of what happened couldn't be set down anywhere else. Every episode delivers history from the inside. Premium cinematic audio storytelling. Produced by Fuzzy Life Studios. * Franklin Expedition mystery * HMS Erebus Terror found * Franklin Northwest Passage * Victory Point note Franklin * Franklin Expedition cannibalism * HMS Erebus discovery 2014 * HMS Terror found 2016 * Franklin lead poisoning * Beechey Island graves Franklin * Captain Crozier Franklin * Arctic exploration history * Franklin Expedition podcast * BLACKOAK podcast * Fuzzy Life Studios * King William Island Franklin * What happened to the Franklin Expedition * Where were HMS Erebus and Terror found * What was in the Victory Point note Franklin Expedition * Why did the Franklin Expedition fail * Franklin Expedition lead poisoning tinned food * Did the Franklin Expedition survivors resort to cannibalism * What did the Inuit know about the Franklin Expedition * Franklin Expedition boats found with silver plate * Who was Captain Francis Crozier Franklin Expedition * Beechey Island graves Franklin Expedition bodies * What was found on HMS Terror when it was discovered * How many men died on the Franklin Expedition * Why did Franklin's men carry silver plate while dying * Franklin Northwest Passage 1845 history explained * Best historical mystery podcasts about Arctic exploration * Cinematic storytelling podcast about Franklin Expedition * BLACKOAK podcast Franklin episode * Inuit testimony Franklin Expedition survivors 1848 * What did Franklin's men drag on sledges across King William Island * HMS Terror remarkable preservation Arctic 2016 What happened to the Franklin Expedition? The Franklin Expedition — 129 men aboard HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, dispatched from England in May 1845 to navigate the Northwest Passage — became trapped in pack ice northwest of King William Island in September 1846 and never freed. Sir John Franklin died in June 1847. The ships were abandoned in April 1848 when Captain Francis Crozier led the surviving 105 men south in an attempt to reach the Back River and eventually Hudson's Bay Company posts. None reached safety. The evidence recovered since, including Inuit testimony, skeletal remains, and the archaeological record, indicates the men died of a combination of cold, starvation, scurvy, and lead poisoning from improperly soldered tinned food. Forensic analysis of recovered bones confirmed that some survivors resorted to cannibalism in the final stages. Where were HMS Erebus and HMS Terror found? HMS Erebus was found in 2014 in shallow water in the Queen Maud Gulf, southeast of King William Island, Nunavut, Canada. HMS Terror was discovered in 2016 in Terror Bay on the south side of King William Island, also in relatively shallow water. Both ships had drifted south after being abandoned in 1848, carried by the same ice that had trapped them, before eventually sinking. HMS Terror in particular was found in an extraordinary state of preservation, with cabin doors closed, drawers shut, and glass intact, maintained by the cold of Arctic waters. Ongoing marine archaeological work has recovered thousands of artifacts and produced detailed documentation of both ships. What was the Victory Point note from the Franklin Expedition? The Victory Point note is a document written on a standard Royal Navy Admiralty form, found in a cairn on King William Island's northwest coast in 1859 by Lieutenant William Hobson of the Fox expedition. It contains two separate entries. The first, dated May 28, 1847, reports the ships' position and states that all is well, written in the formal style of routine expedition reporting. The second entry, written around the margins in April 1848, reports that Sir John Franklin died on June 11, 1847, that nine officers and fifteen men had died in total, that the ships had been abandoned, and that 105 survivors were departing on foot for Back River. It is the only official written document recovered from the expedition and the primary record of what happened aboard the ships between 1845 and 1848. Did the Franklin Expedition survivors resort to cannibalism? Yes. Forensic analysis of skeletal remains recovered from King William Island has confirmed cut marks on bones consistent with cannibalism. This was first reported by Inuit witnesses in testimony collected by Dr. John Rae in 1854, who brought back accounts of desperate white men and evidence suggesting they had consumed the dead. The testimony was widely disputed in England at the time — Charles Dickens publicly argued the Inuit were unreliable witnesses — but subsequent physical evidence has confirmed what the Inuit reported. The cut marks on bones indicate deliberate defleshing consistent with the consumption of human remains. This was not a rumor. It was a documented response to extreme starvation by men who had exhausted every other option. Franklin Expedition, HMS Erebus, HMS Terror, Victory Point note, King William Island, Northwest Passage, Francis Crozier, Beechey Island, Arctic exploration, lead poisoning, cannibalism Arctic, Inuit testimony, Franklin boats silver plate, Fox expedition 1859, Arctic shipwrecks found, BLACKOAK, Fuzzy Life Studios, historical mystery, maritime history, cinematic audio BLACKOAK: The Adventures is the only historical mystery podcast narrated by an object that was there. The ancient tankard called Blackoak has spent centuries being held by men who were present at what history could not fully receive — a sailor who stood in a boat full of silver plate and dead men and understood why the silver was still there, a common man who came back from the Arctic carrying something that had no official category and needed somewhere to set it down. Every episode delivers history from the weight of what ordinary people held and couldn't put anywhere that required resolution. Premium cinematic audio storytelling. Produced by Fuzzy Life Studios. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

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14 episodios

episode BLACKOAK: THE ADVENTURES The Stars That Shifted artwork

BLACKOAK: THE ADVENTURES The Stars That Shifted

BLACKOAK: THE ADVENTURES The Stars That Shifted The stars do not move. The sea moves. The ship moves. The wind moves. Every working part of a working sailor's life is, in some sense, a moving part — and a working sailor who does not understand this in his first season at sea does not generally have a second one. Only the sky stays. That is the small, old miracle a navigator builds his career on. In this episode of Blackoak: The Adventures, the ancient sentient tankard narrates the story of Silas Wren, a senior working navigator in his nineteenth year of careful service aboard the three-masted barque Coriolis, who came up onto his deck at midnight in the late spring of an unremarkable passage and discovered that Polaris was lower than Polaris should be — by a measurable, recordable, undeniable margin. Then a second reference star was off in a different direction. Then a third, ahead of where it should have been on its expected schedule. Then a fourth, simply gone in the way a tooth is gone from a face. The stars were not just shifted. They were searching. The episode follows Silas through the long minutes that follow. The captain stepping out of the shadow of the helm. The watch officer's quiet please-let-me-be-afraid. The sextant readings that confirmed the impossible. The small accidental triangle Silas's pen drew on his chart while his mind was busy with the problem — and the moment that triangle closed into a constellation that did not appear on any almanac, and the Coriolis, very softly, beneath every man on her deck, shifted toward a heading the helm had not been set to. It then enters the tavern between worlds, where Blackoak waits on the bar and the man behind the bar finally explains the small unwelcome truth that working navigators have spent centuries not quite letting themselves think about: the constellations are not pictures. They are markers. They are coordinates. They are the small working surface of an older system that was running long before anyone began to look up. This is a story about navigation as the wrong frame for what the stars actually do. About the difference between the working sky and the deeper map. About the moment a man whose entire identity is built on charting the universe is asked, instead, to refuse to chart it. ABOUT THE SHOW Blackoak: The Adventures is a cinematic single-narrator horror and mystery podcast produced by Fuzzy Life Entertainment. Every episode is told from the first-person perspective of Blackoak, an ancient sentient tankard built from timber pulled out of a naval wreck off the Carolina coast and bound with iron from a warship's broken ribs. Blackoak has spent centuries on tavern shelves, in gambling halls, in back rooms, and in the gripped hands of confessing men who believed objects could not listen. He was wrong, of course. They always are. The show is paced for long drives, headphone listening, and the quiet hour after the world has gone to bed. No co-hosts. No interruptions. Just the slow, weighted voice of an object that remembers everything. CREDITS Written and produced by Jeremy Hanson for Fuzzy Life Entertainment. Voiced via cinematic single-narrator audio in the Blackoak production format. Original score composed for the episode. Sound design and final master produced in-house. Distributed across all major podcast platforms. Q — What is Blackoak: The Adventures? A — Blackoak: The Adventures is a cinematic narrative horror and mystery podcast hosted by an ancient sentient tankard that has spent centuries absorbing confessions and buried truths from people who believed objects could not listen. Each episode tells a single grounded historical story in immersive, single-voice audio. No panels. No co-hosts. No sound effects. Just the slow, weighted voice of an object that remembers everything. Produced by Fuzzy Life Entertainment. Q — What is the episode "The Stars That Shifted" about? A — It is the full account of Silas Wren, a senior working navigator in his nineteenth year of service aboard the working barque Coriolis, who came up onto his deck at midnight one quiet spring night and discovered that the stars had moved. The episode follows him through the readings that confirmed the impossible, the small accidental triangle his pen drew on his chart while his mind was busy with the problem, the moment that triangle closed into a constellation that did not appear in any almanac, and the moment the Coriolis began, very softly, to follow it. It then enters the tavern between worlds, where Blackoak waits on the bar and the man behind the bar explains, at last, what the constellations actually are. Q — What are the constellations actually, in the episode? A — Markers. Coordinates. The small working surface of an older system that was running long before anyone began to look up. The episode lays the answer out in full inside the tavern scene, but the short form is this: the patterns Silas Wren had spent his career navigating by were the surface of a deeper map. On rare nights, the system aligns. A pattern surfaces that is not on any almanac. A navigator who is paying close attention will see it. And what he does next determines, in the small private way these things determine, whether his ship arrives at the receiving port on schedule. Or somewhere else. Q — Why does Silas erase the line? A — Because charting the new constellation would mean the Coriolis follows the new chart. The episode lays out the cost: the ship would not, in any working sense, sink. She would simply, on the schedule the new chart implies, stop being on the working sea. The captain, the helmsman, the watch officer, the deckhands, the cook below, the men sleeping in the forward bunks — none of them would see the receiving port the Coriolis was supposed to arrive at in nine days. Silas Wren chose his crew over his career. Q — Is "The Stars That Shifted" based on a true story? A — It is grounded in centuries of folklore — the long quiet tradition of working navigators who reported, late in their careers, having seen patterns in the night sky that did not appear in the almanacs. Most of those navigators never spoke of it openly. A few left small private notes in the backs of their working books for the navigators who came after them. Blackoak narrates one such night in full, framed inside the supernatural maritime tradition the show is known for. Q — Who narrates Blackoak: The Adventures? A — Blackoak himself. The narrator is an ancient sentient tankard, oak staves bound in iron, that has been carried across more oceans than most cartographers ever named. He is the only voice in every episode. There are no co-hosts and no guest narrators. Q — How long is each episode? A — Each Blackoak episode runs roughly 5,100 to 5,400 spoken words, paced for an immersive long-form listen. This episode runs longer at approximately 6,372 spoken words to accommodate the cosmological scope of its central scene. The show is split into clean sections in production for delivery, but listeners experience it as one continuous narrative. Q — Where can I listen to Blackoak: The Adventures? A — On Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and every major podcast platform. The show is part of the Fuzzy Life Entertainment podcast network. The episode "The Stars That Shifted" tells the full account of Silas Wren, a senior navigator in his nineteenth year of service aboard the working barque Coriolis, who saw a constellation that did not appear on any almanac and learned, in the tavern between worlds, what the constellations actually are. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

26 de may de 202653 min
episode BLACKOAK: The Footprints That Led Nowhere — A Maritime Mystery That Defies Reality artwork

BLACKOAK: The Footprints That Led Nowhere — A Maritime Mystery That Defies Reality

What happens when footprints appear in the sand… only to vanish into nothing? In this chilling episode of Blackoak: The Adventures, a shore party sets out on what should be a routine landing. But what they find instead defies logic, physics, and every rule of survival. Tracks lead inland. Clear. Human. Fresh. Then suddenly… they stop. No struggle. No return path. No explanation. This episode explores one of the most unsettling maritime mysteries ever encountered — where reality fractures, and something unseen may be watching… or taking. Blending cinematic storytelling with unexplained phenomena, this episode dives into: * Vanishing footprint cases * Maritime anomalies and unexplained disappearances * Theories of dimensional rifts, predators, and environmental illusions * Psychological effects of isolation and the unknown If you’re drawn to mystery, survival horror, and unexplained events — this is a story you won’t forget. Footprints appear on untouched sand… then vanish mid-step. No struggle. No return. No explanation. A Blackoak mystery that shouldn’t exist. blackoak podcast maritime mystery podcast disappearing footprints mystery unexplained shoreline phenomena footprints that vanish ocean mystery stories survival mystery podcast cinematic storytelling podcast unexplained disappearance cases strange tracks in sand paranormal coastal encounters mystery storytelling audio drama blackoak the adventures episode high production podcast storytelling United States mystery podcast UK unexplained phenomena podcast Canada wilderness disappearance stories Australia coastal mystery podcast Pacific Northwest unexplained events New England maritime legends Great Lakes mystery stories Alaska disappearance mysteries Scandinavian folklore shoreline myths ❓ What does it mean when footprints suddenly disappear? Footprints that vanish abruptly can suggest environmental factors like wind or tide—but in rare cases, they are linked to unexplained disappearances, disorientation, or unknown phenomena. ❓ Are there real cases of disappearing footprints? Yes. Historical and anecdotal reports describe tracks that abruptly stop with no signs of return, often in remote or coastal environments. mystery unexplained paranormal survival horror true mystery ocean mystery disappearance creepy stories storytelling podcast dark stories unknown phenomena blackoak #Blackoak #MysteryPodcast #Unexplained #Disappearance #ParanormalStories #OceanMystery #CreepyStories #StorytellingPodcast #DarkNarrative #UnsolvedMysteries unexplained phenomena documentary mystery storytelling podcast premium cinematic audio storytelling high production podcast series psychological mystery storytelling survival mystery analysis dark narrative podcast What do you think happened? See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

5 de may de 202640 min
episode BLACKOAK: Gold Beneath the Tempest — The Night the Spanish Empire Lost 11 Ships and a Thousand Men to One Hurricane artwork

BLACKOAK: Gold Beneath the Tempest — The Night the Spanish Empire Lost 11 Ships and a Thousand Men to One Hurricane

BLACKOAK: Gold Beneath the Tempest — The Night the Spanish Empire Lost 11 Ships and a Thousand Men to One Hurricane On the night of July 30, 1715, eleven Spanish ships carrying the wealth of an empire were swallowed by a hurricane off the coast of Florida. Over a thousand sailors drowned. Gold coins, silver bars, emeralds, and pearls settled into the sand of what would one day be called the Treasure Coast — where they are still being found today. But this is not a story about a storm. It is a story about what happened the morning after. In this episode of BLACKOAK: The Adventures, the ancient sentient tankard carries an account it received in Havana in the summer of 1716 — one year after the disaster — from Marco Alejandro Reyes, the purser's clerk who survived both the wreck of the Nuestra Señora de la Regla and the English raid that stripped the survivors of everything they had salvaged from the shallows. Reyes tells Blackoak what the official manifests recorded. And then he tells it what the official manifests never contained — the undocumented cargo of a senior colonial official who paid to stay off the books, now resting somewhere on the ocean floor that no organized search will ever be directed toward. Three hundred years of storms have been moving that treasure ever since. Some of it surfaces after hurricanes. Locals still walk the beach at dawn with metal detectors. Modern salvage operations have recovered millions. Estimates of what remains run into millions more. And somewhere in the scatter, there may be chests that no manifest will ever lead anyone to find. BLACKOAK: The Adventures is a historical mystery podcast narrated by an ancient sentient tankard forged from the wreckage of a warship off the Carolina coast. It has spent centuries in the rooms where history's most dangerous secrets were spoken — by people who believed objects couldn't listen. They were wrong. Produced by Fuzzy Life Studios. Premium cinematic audio storytelling. * Spanish treasure fleet 1715 * 1715 fleet Florida * Treasure Coast Florida gold * Spanish galleon treasure * Florida treasure hunting * sunken treasure Florida * hurricane 1715 shipwreck * Spanish gold coins found * treasure fleet wreck * Florida shipwreck treasure * historical mystery podcast * BLACKOAK podcast * Fuzzy Life Studios * Spanish empire treasure * lost treasure Atlantic * What happened to the Spanish treasure fleet in 1715 * How much gold was on the 1715 Spanish fleet * Where is the 1715 Spanish treasure fleet located * How much treasure from the 1715 fleet has been found * Spanish treasure fleet 1715 Florida Treasure Coast * Can you still find gold coins from the 1715 fleet * Henry Jennings raid Spanish treasure 1715 * Urca de Lima shipwreck treasure * Nuestra Señora de la Regla 1715 wreck * How did the hurricane of 1715 destroy the Spanish fleet * Florida treasure hunting Spanish gold coins * How much of the 1715 Spanish treasure is still missing * Captain General de Ubilla 1715 fleet commander * Treasure Coast Florida history shipwrecks * Best historical podcasts about sunken treasure * Cinematic storytelling podcasts about real treasure mysteries * Historical podcast told from witness perspective * Spanish colonial treasure manifest secrets * What did English pirates steal from 1715 survivors * Sebastian Inlet treasure 1715 Florida What happened to the Spanish treasure fleet in 1715? The Spanish Treasure Fleet of 1715 — eleven ships carrying gold coins, silver bars, jewelry, and colonial wealth bound for Spain — was destroyed by a hurricane on the night of July 30, 1715, off the eastern coast of Florida. The storm drove the ships onto shoals and reefs along a stretch of coast between present-day Sebastian Inlet and Fort Pierce. Over a thousand sailors perished. Survivors established salvage camps on shore, but English privateers led by Captain Henry Jennings raided those camps in early 1716, seizing much of what had been recovered from the shallows. The Florida coastline where the ships wrecked became known as the Treasure Coast — and gold coins from the fleet are still found there today after major storms. How much treasure from the 1715 fleet is still missing? The Spanish conducted salvage operations immediately after the disaster, recovering significant quantities of gold and silver from accessible depths. Modern salvage companies have continued that work for decades, recovering millions of dollars in artifacts including gold coins bearing the image of King Philip V. However, the fleet's official cargo was substantial — and historians believe it also carried undocumented contraband that never appeared on any manifest. Estimates of the treasure still beneath Florida's Treasure Coast run into tens of millions of dollars in current value, spread across wreck sites and debris fields along miles of coastline. Can you still find gold coins from the 1715 Spanish fleet? Yes. Gold and silver coins from the 1715 fleet regularly surface along Florida's Treasure Coast after major storms shift the sand that has covered them for centuries. Local treasure hunters walk the beaches of Sebastian, Vero Beach, and Fort Pierce with metal detectors following hurricanes and strong weather events. Licensed salvage operations work the recognized wreck sites offshore. Coins from the fleet have been found as recently as the 2010s in significant quantities. The Urca de Lima, one of the 1715 fleet's surviving vessels, is a designated underwater archaeological preserve off Fort Pierce. Who raided the survivors of the 1715 fleet? English privateer Captain Henry Jennings, operating out of British-held Caribbean territories, led raids on Spanish salvage camps established along the Florida coast following the disaster. News of the fleet's destruction spread quickly through the Caribbean, and Jennings organized an armed expedition to intercept the recovered treasure before Spain could transport it back to Havana. His raids on the makeshift camps in early 1716 successfully seized a large quantity of silver and gold that Spanish divers had already recovered from the wreckage — treasure that had survived the hurricane only to be taken at gunpoint from the exhausted survivors who had salvaged it. Spanish treasure fleet 1715, Florida treasure, Treasure Coast, sunken gold, hurricane 1715, Nuestra Señora de la Regla, Urca de Lima, Henry Jennings, Captain de Ubilla, Spanish galleon, lost treasure, Florida shipwreck, silver reales, gold escudos, BLACKOAK, Fuzzy Life Studios, historical mystery, maritime history, colonial Spain, cinematic audio BLACKOAK: The Adventures is the only historical mystery podcast narrated by an object that was there. The ancient tankard called Blackoak has been stolen, sold, burned in taverns, and hauled across oceans. It has been held by survivors of disasters that killed thousands and clerks who knew what the official records didn't say. Every episode delivers history from the inside — not from the archive that survived, but from the weight of what settled into something old enough to have been present when it happened. Premium cinematic audio storytelling. Produced by Fuzzy Life Studios. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

28 de abr de 202643 min
episode BLACKOAK: The Ice That Would Not Let Go — What the Sailor Who Found the Franklin Note Couldn't Put Down artwork

BLACKOAK: The Ice That Would Not Let Go — What the Sailor Who Found the Franklin Note Couldn't Put Down

BLACKOAK: The Ice That Would Not Let Go — What the Sailor Who Found the Franklin Note Couldn't Put Down In May of 1847, someone stood at a desk inside HMS Terror — beset in Arctic ice for eight months — and wrote an official Admiralty form reporting that all was well. The ships had been locked in pack ice since September. Three men had died over the winter on Beechey Island. But the form was filled in with military precision, properly dated, properly signed, and placed in a cairn on King William Island. In April of 1848, someone stood at the same desk and wrote around the margins of that same form. Twenty-four men dead. Sir John Franklin dead. Ships abandoned. One hundred and five survivors departing for Back River. The handwriting is still formal. The document is still properly dated and signed. The gap between those two entries — eleven months, twenty-four deaths, the transformation of empire's most celebrated expedition into a death march — is written in the white space between two sets of ink. That note was found in 1859 by a search party from the Fox. Samuel Bent, a common sailor on that expedition, was among the men who searched King William Island. He was not there when the cairn was opened. But he was there for the two weeks after. He was there for the boats. In this episode of BLACKOAK: The Adventures, the ancient sentient tankard carries an account received in a Wapping tavern in November of 1859 — from a man who had stood in a boat full of silver plate and loaded guns and books and two men who had been dead for eleven years. Who had understood, standing there, what the silver meant — and why carrying it made the only possible sense to men who were dying. Who had walked the shore and found what the shore had to say about what men do when the other options are gone. And who came back to England and could not put it down with anyone who needed it to mean something specific. Bent needed somewhere that received weight without requiring resolution. He found it. HMS Erebus was located in 2014. HMS Terror in 2016. Both ships are preserved in remarkable condition on the floor of the Arctic Ocean. Drawers closed. Glass intact. The objects 129 men brought from England in 1845 still inside. The ice eventually let go. It was too late for the men. But it let go. BLACKOAK: The Adventures is a historical mystery podcast narrated by an ancient sentient tankard forged from the wreckage of a warship off the Carolina coast. It has spent centuries in rooms where the weight of what happened couldn't be set down anywhere else. Every episode delivers history from the inside. Premium cinematic audio storytelling. Produced by Fuzzy Life Studios. * Franklin Expedition mystery * HMS Erebus Terror found * Franklin Northwest Passage * Victory Point note Franklin * Franklin Expedition cannibalism * HMS Erebus discovery 2014 * HMS Terror found 2016 * Franklin lead poisoning * Beechey Island graves Franklin * Captain Crozier Franklin * Arctic exploration history * Franklin Expedition podcast * BLACKOAK podcast * Fuzzy Life Studios * King William Island Franklin * What happened to the Franklin Expedition * Where were HMS Erebus and Terror found * What was in the Victory Point note Franklin Expedition * Why did the Franklin Expedition fail * Franklin Expedition lead poisoning tinned food * Did the Franklin Expedition survivors resort to cannibalism * What did the Inuit know about the Franklin Expedition * Franklin Expedition boats found with silver plate * Who was Captain Francis Crozier Franklin Expedition * Beechey Island graves Franklin Expedition bodies * What was found on HMS Terror when it was discovered * How many men died on the Franklin Expedition * Why did Franklin's men carry silver plate while dying * Franklin Northwest Passage 1845 history explained * Best historical mystery podcasts about Arctic exploration * Cinematic storytelling podcast about Franklin Expedition * BLACKOAK podcast Franklin episode * Inuit testimony Franklin Expedition survivors 1848 * What did Franklin's men drag on sledges across King William Island * HMS Terror remarkable preservation Arctic 2016 What happened to the Franklin Expedition? The Franklin Expedition — 129 men aboard HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, dispatched from England in May 1845 to navigate the Northwest Passage — became trapped in pack ice northwest of King William Island in September 1846 and never freed. Sir John Franklin died in June 1847. The ships were abandoned in April 1848 when Captain Francis Crozier led the surviving 105 men south in an attempt to reach the Back River and eventually Hudson's Bay Company posts. None reached safety. The evidence recovered since, including Inuit testimony, skeletal remains, and the archaeological record, indicates the men died of a combination of cold, starvation, scurvy, and lead poisoning from improperly soldered tinned food. Forensic analysis of recovered bones confirmed that some survivors resorted to cannibalism in the final stages. Where were HMS Erebus and HMS Terror found? HMS Erebus was found in 2014 in shallow water in the Queen Maud Gulf, southeast of King William Island, Nunavut, Canada. HMS Terror was discovered in 2016 in Terror Bay on the south side of King William Island, also in relatively shallow water. Both ships had drifted south after being abandoned in 1848, carried by the same ice that had trapped them, before eventually sinking. HMS Terror in particular was found in an extraordinary state of preservation, with cabin doors closed, drawers shut, and glass intact, maintained by the cold of Arctic waters. Ongoing marine archaeological work has recovered thousands of artifacts and produced detailed documentation of both ships. What was the Victory Point note from the Franklin Expedition? The Victory Point note is a document written on a standard Royal Navy Admiralty form, found in a cairn on King William Island's northwest coast in 1859 by Lieutenant William Hobson of the Fox expedition. It contains two separate entries. The first, dated May 28, 1847, reports the ships' position and states that all is well, written in the formal style of routine expedition reporting. The second entry, written around the margins in April 1848, reports that Sir John Franklin died on June 11, 1847, that nine officers and fifteen men had died in total, that the ships had been abandoned, and that 105 survivors were departing on foot for Back River. It is the only official written document recovered from the expedition and the primary record of what happened aboard the ships between 1845 and 1848. Did the Franklin Expedition survivors resort to cannibalism? Yes. Forensic analysis of skeletal remains recovered from King William Island has confirmed cut marks on bones consistent with cannibalism. This was first reported by Inuit witnesses in testimony collected by Dr. John Rae in 1854, who brought back accounts of desperate white men and evidence suggesting they had consumed the dead. The testimony was widely disputed in England at the time — Charles Dickens publicly argued the Inuit were unreliable witnesses — but subsequent physical evidence has confirmed what the Inuit reported. The cut marks on bones indicate deliberate defleshing consistent with the consumption of human remains. This was not a rumor. It was a documented response to extreme starvation by men who had exhausted every other option. Franklin Expedition, HMS Erebus, HMS Terror, Victory Point note, King William Island, Northwest Passage, Francis Crozier, Beechey Island, Arctic exploration, lead poisoning, cannibalism Arctic, Inuit testimony, Franklin boats silver plate, Fox expedition 1859, Arctic shipwrecks found, BLACKOAK, Fuzzy Life Studios, historical mystery, maritime history, cinematic audio BLACKOAK: The Adventures is the only historical mystery podcast narrated by an object that was there. The ancient tankard called Blackoak has spent centuries being held by men who were present at what history could not fully receive — a sailor who stood in a boat full of silver plate and dead men and understood why the silver was still there, a common man who came back from the Arctic carrying something that had no official category and needed somewhere to set it down. Every episode delivers history from the weight of what ordinary people held and couldn't put anywhere that required resolution. Premium cinematic audio storytelling. Produced by Fuzzy Life Studios. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

21 de abr de 202644 min
episode BLACKOAK: The Word in the Wood — What the Sailor Who Read CROATOAN Never Told the Record artwork

BLACKOAK: The Word in the Wood — What the Sailor Who Read CROATOAN Never Told the Record

BLACKOAK: The Word in the Wood — What the Sailor Who Read CROATOAN Never Told the Record The houses were still standing. The settlement had not been destroyed. It had been dismantled — carefully, deliberately — by people who had somewhere to go and planned to use the materials when they got there. And on a post, carved by a steady hand, one word: CROATOAN. In August of 1590, John White returned to Roanoke Island after three years of war, delay, and broken promises — only to find a colony that had not been attacked or killed but had simply ceased to be there. One hundred and seventeen English men, women, and children. Gone. The first English child born in the Americas, Virginia Dare — White's own granddaughter — among them. No bodies. No sign of violence. No cross, the agreed distress signal. Only a word pointing south. White wanted to follow it sixty miles to Croatoan Island. A storm prevented him. He never returned. In this episode of BLACKOAK: The Adventures, the ancient sentient tankard carries an account it received in a Plymouth tavern in the autumn of 1590 — from Robert Annis, a common sailor aboard the Hopewell who had stepped onto that sand, read those carved letters, and searched the dismantled settlement with his own hands. He told no official record what he told Blackoak: the quality of the cuts in the bark, which told him the marker was planned rather than desperate. The child's carved toy he found in the earth near a house foundation — and why he put it back. The face John White made when he read the word. And the sailor in the shallop crew who spoke a few words of Algonquian across the water as they pulled away. Words addressed to people who might have been watching from somewhere on that island. Who might have heard. Who could not answer, or whose answer the wind took. This is the most examined disappearance in American history. It is still unresolved. This is why. BLACKOAK: The Adventures is a historical mystery podcast narrated by an ancient sentient tankard forged from the wreckage of a warship off the Carolina coast. It has spent centuries in the rooms where history was made by people who believed objects couldn't listen. They were wrong. * Lost Colony of Roanoke * Roanoke colony mystery * CROATOAN meaning * Virginia Dare Roanoke * John White Roanoke 1590 * Roanoke Island disappearance * Lost Colony North Carolina * Croatoan tribe English colony * Roanoke mystery explained * American historical mystery podcast * BLACKOAK podcast * Fuzzy Life Studios * Roanoke settlement evidence * first English colony America * Manteo Roanoke Croatoan * What happened to the Lost Colony of Roanoke * What does CROATOAN mean on the post at Roanoke * Did the Roanoke colonists survive with the Croatoan people * Where did the Roanoke colonists go * Who was Virginia Dare and what happened to her * Why did John White take three years to return to Roanoke * Was the Roanoke colony destroyed or did they move * Dare Stones Roanoke hoax or real * Archaeological evidence of Roanoke colonists found * John White map annotation inland relocation site * Did the Roanoke colonists integrate with Native Americans * English artifacts found on Hatteras Island Roanoke connection * What was the agreed distress signal at Roanoke colony * Why is there no cross carved at Roanoke * Best historical mystery podcasts about colonial America * Cinematic storytelling podcast about American history mysteries * BLACKOAK podcast Roanoke episode * Who were the Croatoan people of Hatteras Island * Roanoke colony 1587 settlement history * What is the most detailed account of finding Roanoke abandoned What happened to the Lost Colony of Roanoke? The fate of the Roanoke colonists — 117 men, women, and children who had settled on Roanoke Island in present-day North Carolina in 1587 — remains unconfirmed. When governor John White returned from England in 1590 after a three-year delay, he found the settlement carefully dismantled rather than destroyed, with no bodies, no sign of violence, and no cross — the agreed distress signal. On a post, the word CROATOAN was carved cleanly. The Croatoan people of Hatteras Island, led by the Englishand Manteo, were known allies of the colonists. The leading theory holds that the colonists relocated to Croatoan Island or nearby Native settlements, possibly integrating over time. English artifacts have been found at Hatteras Island and in inland Native sites in circumstances suggesting pre-contact with the colony, though no definitive documentation of their fate has been found. What does CROATOAN mean? CROATOAN was the name of both the Native people who inhabited Hatteras Island, approximately 60 miles south of Roanoke, and the island they lived on. The colonists had agreed before White's departure that if they moved, they would carve their destination into a tree or post — and if under distress, they would add a cross. The carved word CROATOAN at Roanoke, without any cross, has been interpreted by most historians as indicating the colonists moved south to Croatoan Island. The tribe's leader, Manteo, had been to England, was baptized, and maintained a friendly alliance with the English. Whether the colonists successfully integrated with the Croatoan community, perished there, or moved further inland remains unconfirmed. Why did John White take three years to return to Roanoke? White returned to England in late 1587 to obtain urgently needed supplies for the struggling colony, intending to come back quickly. However, his return was blocked by the crisis of the Spanish Armada in 1588, which led Queen Elizabeth to commandeer all available ships for England's defense. White attempted repeatedly to secure passage back but was unsuccessful until 1590. By the time he returned, the colony had been gone long enough that their trail — already faint — had largely disappeared. The storm that then prevented White from sailing to Croatoan Island, where the carved word pointed, meant that whatever window for finding them remained was closed. He never returned after 1590. Is there archaeological evidence about what happened to the Roanoke colonists? Archaeological investigations have found English artifacts — tools, metal objects, ceramics — at Hatteras Island (Croatoan territory) and at inland Native American sites in North Carolina, in contexts suggesting presence before later colonial contact. A map annotated by John White in his later years contains a mark at an inland location that some researchers interpret as indicating a possible relocation site. The Dare Stones — a series of inscribed rocks found between 1937 and 1940 purporting to document the colony's fate — are largely considered fabrications by the scholarly consensus. Ongoing excavations at multiple sites continue to refine the picture. The evidence currently suggests integration with Native populations rather than violent destruction, but no definitive confirmation has been established. Lost Colony of Roanoke, CROATOAN, Virginia Dare, John White, Roanoke Island, Croatoan tribe, Hatteras Island, 1587 colony, Lost Colony mystery, Manteo, colonial America, North Carolina history, first English settlement, Dare Stones, BLACKOAK, Fuzzy Life Studios, historical mystery, American history, colonial history, cinematic audio BLACKOAK: The Adventures is the only historical mystery podcast narrated by an object that was there. The ancient tankard called Blackoak has spent centuries being held by people who were present at the moments history couldn't fully record — a sailor who read CROATOAN with his own eyes, a first mate who boarded a ghost ship, a clerk who counted gold that sank that night. Every episode delivers history from the inside: not from the official record, but from the weight of what common men and women set down with something old enough to receive it without requiring a verdict. Premium cinematic audio storytelling. Produced by Fuzzy Life Studios. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

14 de abr de 202647 min