Farms and Frontlines
In 1904, a writer on the run from embezzlement charges coined a phrase that would outlast every government he was describing. This week, Max and Jess dig into Honduras, the country O. Henry was watching when he coined the term "Banana Republic". The story of how three American fruit companies turned a nation's north coast into a private empire: buying land with railroad promises, installing presidents with mercenary armies, and writing internal memos about how keeping the country unstable was good for business. We cover the formation of the United Fruit Company, the wildly improbable coup of 1911 (a Russian-born banana trader, a mercenary named Lee Christmas, and a gangster named Machine Gun Maloney), what "dollar diplomacy" actually looked like on the ground, and why Honduras had more railroad track per capita than almost any country in Central America, with none of it connecting to the capital. We also end somewhere surprising: 1954, when 100,000 banana workers shut it all down. Sign up for our newsletter! [farmsandfrontlines.substack.com] Get recaps, photos, sources, and additional fun facts relating to our latest episodes. For instance, did you know Tulane University Presidents reside in Sam the Banana Man's old mansion?
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