The Sleeping Archive
Step into New York City, October 29, 1929. The marble is still cool. The chandeliers are lit. The doors will open at nine. Edward Whittaker, twenty-two years old, is a junior teller at First National Bank. Thirteen minutes remain before the crowd returns — before the mathematics of panic begin to unfold across the counter in stacks of bills and shaking signatures. On Black Tuesday, the day the stock market collapse became undeniable, bank runs spread through the financial district. Depositors lined the streets. Confidence — that fragile agreement holding the system together — began to fracture. This is one day inside that fracture. From the early count in the vault to the moment the bronze doors swing inward, stand behind Station One and witness what happens when belief falters. Told as a third-person narrative, this episode follows the lived experience of a bank teller during the 1929 crash — not from the trading floor, but from the marble counter where ordinary people demanded their savings back. The lights remain warm. The ledger is balanced. The doors will open again tomorrow. For now. –––––––––––––– What to Expect: • Immersive narrative history • First-person storytelling • Historically grounded depiction of Black Tuesday (1929) • Calm, measured pacing suitable for sleep • Ideal for Charlotte Mason and classical learners –––––––––––––– This is not a documentary. It’s history, as if you were there.
31 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Sleeping Archive!