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 II: Aftermath, Memory, and Social Breakdown In Part I, we followed the warning signs, the confidence, and the failures of judgment that made catastrophe harder to recognize until it was too late. In Part II, we turn to the aftermath. What happens when thousands of bodies are left in the heat? How do people respond when ordinary burial becomes impossible? What do rumor, fear, and racialized blame do to public judgment in a moment of crisis? And how does a city begin to rebuild when the moral and civic damage extends far beyond the storm itself? We trace the human wreckage left behind in Galveston, the impossible task of disposing of the dead, the turn to cremation, the spread of rumor and extrajudicial violence, the rise of spectacle and early film, and the larger question of how catastrophe reshapes memory, public life, and a city’s future. With historian Dr. Shannon Duffy of Texas State University, we widen the lens beyond Galveston itself — exploring disease, dignity, public fear, historical parallels to Katrina and yellow fever, and the uneasy territory where exaggeration, panic, and real violence meet. Written by: Joleene Maddox Snider Hosted & Produced by: Matthew Thornton Featuring: Dr. Shannon Duffy Produced by: Griffyn.Co Productions Research Concepts from this Episode: Mass Death and Public Health Body Disposal, Cremation, and Dignity Rumor, Fear, and Historical Memory Racialized Blame and Extrajudicial Violence Dark Tourism and Catastrophe as Spectacle Scale, Recovery, and Civic Transformation 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, created in partnership with the Texas State University Department of History and the Center for the Study of the Southwest, where even the most familiar stories deserve another look. If you’d like to support Lone Star Lore and the broader public-history work behind it, you can find more information through our non-profit fiscal sponsor and production partner: BODHI HOUSE MEDIA [https://www.bodhihousemedia.org/] - bodhihousemedia.org Timestamps / Chapter Guide: 00:00 – Part II opening: aftermath, recovery, and public judgment 01:15 – The human wreckage left behind 01:56 – All twelve perished: the lost children of the flood 03:22 – Bodies in the heat: decay, animals, and impossible conditions 04:33 – Burial at sea and the bodies that returned 06:18 – Public health, coercion, and the absence of epidemic 07:37 – A city of fire: cremation as expedient 08:14 – Shannon Duffy on dignity, taboo, and necessity 09:40 – Host reflection: how suspicion turned toward the living 10:11 – Blame, labor, and execution 10:50 – Shannon Duffy on yellow fever, Katrina, and racialized rumor 12:53 – Working through the uneasy ground between exaggeration and fact 14:30 – Fear, authority, and the moral complexity of the record 14:53 – Dark tourism and the aftermath as spectacle 15:33 – Edison-associated cameramen and some of the earliest surviving film shot in Texas 16:23 – Fayling, federal aid, and the problem of scale 17:04 – What happens to a city’s future after disaster? 17:34 – Why Houston rose as Galveston declined 19:02 – Final reflection: judgment, memory, and what recovery really means 19:52 – Thanks, invitation to support the show, and closing
8 episodios
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