Lone Star Lore
Welcome to Lone Star Lore — hosted by filmmaker Matthew Thornton, and written by historian Joleene Maddox Snider, the series pairs immersive narration and cinematic sound with expert guests who help us ask better questions: What happens when a place this vast and mythologized tries to agree on one story? Who owns Texas history? And how do the stories we inherit still shape who we are today? The Galveston Hurricane of 1900 — Part I: The Storm We Thought We Understood In Part I of this two-part series, we begin not with the aftermath, but with the confidence that came before it. On the eve of the storm, Galveston was one of the great rising cities of the Gulf Coast — prosperous, ambitious, and convinced of its future. Then came the deadliest natural disaster in American history. But this episode is not only about wind and water. It is about warning. It is about certainty. It is about the institutions, assumptions, and failures that made catastrophe harder to recognize until it was too late. How did a thriving city misread the danger bearing down on it? Why were Cuban weather warnings dismissed? How did science, bureaucracy, and public confidence combine to create a false sense of security? And what happens when expertise becomes too certain of itself? Through immersive narrative and historical analysis, we trace Galveston at its height, the storm’s path toward Texas, the warnings that were ignored, and the growing realization that the city was facing something far beyond what it believed possible. With historian Shannon Duffy of Texas State University, we widen the lens beyond Galveston itself — exploring the deeper patterns of expertise, politics, public trust, and historical memory that shaped the storm before it ever made landfall. This is not yet the story of the aftermath. It is the story of how the disaster became possible in the first place. Written by: Joleene Maddox Snider Hosted & Produced by: Matthew Thornton Featuring: Shannon Duffy Produced by: Griffyn.Co Productions Research Concepts from this Episode: Disaster Forecasting and Historical KnowledgeCuban Meteorology and American ArroganceScience vs. CertaintyBureaucracy and Public JudgmentIsaac Cline, Joseph Cline, and Institutional FailureHistorical Memory and the Myth of “No Warning” If you have research, family history, or perspective connected to Galveston, Texas storms, or this period of Gulf Coast history, we invite you to join the conversation. History is rarely finished — it is examined, reexamined, and sometimes corrected. This is Lone Star Lore — Texas history told through multiple perspectives, where even the most familiar stories deserve another look. Timestamps / Chapter Guide: 00:00 – Shannon Duffy cold open: Katrina and historical parallels 00:25 – Host introduction: why this story still matters 00:49 – Episode question: how did they fail to understand what was coming? 01:29 – The story we think we know — and the darker one beneath it 03:18 – Galveston at its peak: Queen of the Gulf 04:02 – Confidence, prosperity, and the city’s rising identity 04:18 – Shannon Duffy on progressive hubris and certainty 05:00 – The storm’s path toward Texas 06:06 – American scale, Texas loss: the deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history 06:37 – The storm surge and the breaking point 07:36 – Human belief, risk, and the cost of misjudgment 09:26 – The warning that was ignored 11:11 – Shannon Duffy on plague, politics, and dismissed expertise 14:22 – Modern echo: Cuba, Kerrville, and the persistence of old mistakes 15:31 – Joseph and Isaac Cline: warning, doubt, and delay 17:34 – Private tragedy and public reckoning 18:05 – The battering ram: how the city began to come apart 19:46 – What history teaches — and what it cannot prevent 20:13 – Forecasting, humility, and the limits of certainty 21:04 – Closing reflection and preview of Part II
9 episodios
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