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Lone Star Lore

Podkast av Griffyn.Co Productions

engelsk

Historie & religion

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Les mer Lone Star Lore

A Podcast by Griffyn.Co Productions Hosted, produced, and edited by Matthew Thornton Written by Joleene Maddox Snider Featuring expert voices from across Texas history Lone Star Lore uncovers the myths, truths, and untold stories of Texas — not to rewrite the past, but to widen the lens. Hosted by filmmaker Matthew Thornton and written by historian Joleene Maddox Snider, the series blends cinematic storytelling, archival research, and expert voices to reveal how the stories we inherit still shape who we are today.

Alle episoder

8 Episoder

episode The Galveston Hurricane of 1900 - Part II: Aftermath, Memory, and Social Breakdown cover

The Galveston Hurricane of 1900 - Part II: Aftermath, Memory, and Social Breakdown

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

3. mai 2026 - 21 min
episode The Galveston Hurricane of 1900 - Part I: The Storm We Thought We Understood cover

The Galveston Hurricane of 1900 - Part I: The Storm We Thought We Understood

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

5. april 2026 - 22 min
episode How History Is Written — Part II: The Pease River Massacre, Interpretation, and Uncertainty cover

How History Is Written — Part II: The Pease River Massacre, Interpretation, and Uncertainty

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? How History Is Written — Part II: The Battle of Pease River, Interpretation, and Uncertainty In Part I, we explored how historical research works. In Part II, we put those principles to the test. Our case file is one of the most contested events in Texas history: the 1860 encounter long called the Battle of Pease River — and just as often, the Pease River Massacre. * A small Comanche encampment. * A Texas Ranger force led by Sullivan "Sul" Ross. * The recapture of Cynthia Ann Parker. * And a story that helped launch a political career and harden into legend. But what actually happened that winter day? Was Comanche chief Peta Nocona present — or not? Why did Ross’s account change over time? And how did public memory come to accept one version so confidently? Through close examination of primary accounts, political context, and later historical analysis, we walk the evidence — not to deliver a verdict, but to demonstrate how history is constructed, challenged, and revised. With research librarian and historian Margaret Vaverek (Texas State University), we weigh competing narratives, examine motive and timing, and explore how myth, power, and population growth shaped what Texans came to believe about Pease River. This is investigative historical journalism applied to one of Texas’ most debated stories. Written by: Joleene Maddox SniderHosted & Produced by: Matthew ThorntonFeaturing: Margaret VaverekProduced by: Griffyn.Co Productions Research Concepts from this Episode: * Competing Primary Accounts * Political Incentive and Historical Narrative * Mythmaking and Public Memory * Frontier Demography and Federal Policy * Reservation Geography and Conflict * Historical Revision and Intellectual Humility If you have research, perspective, or family history connected to this story, 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 – Welcome back: Part II and the investigative frame 00:58 – Lone Star Lore theme song01:21 – The case file: Battle or Massacre? 02:25 – What happened on December 18, 1860 04:49 – Let’s pause: why this discrepancy matters 06:02 – Sullivan Ross’s changing account and political ascent 08:03 – Evaluating sources: who said it, when, and why 09:50 – Population pressure, migration, and Texas land boom 12:45 – Federal policy, reservations, and structural conflict 15:32 – Texas hyperbole and the myth of decisive victory 17:04 – If the numbers were true… they would not have survived 18:30 – Who owns history? Competing interpretations emerge20:11 – Blame, annihilation policy, and evolving scholarship 22:05 – History as a living discipline: revision and responsibility 24:10 – Final reflection: what we can know — and what we cannot 26:13 – Closing thoughts, thanks, and invitation to join the debate

1. mars 2026 - 28 min
episode How History Is Written — Part I: Evidence, Interpretation, and Cynthia Ann Parker cover

How History Is Written — Part I: Evidence, Interpretation, and Cynthia Ann Parker

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? How History Is Written — Part I: Evidence, Interpretation, and Cynthia Ann Parker Before we can argue about what happened in Texas history, we first have to ask how we know what we know — and why some versions of the past endure while others fade. In this episode, we step away from events themselves and into the process of historical research. Using the life of Cynthia Ann Parker as our case study, we explore how historians work with incomplete records, conflicting accounts, and inherited myths — and how research, interpretation, and humility shape what eventually becomes “history.” With research librarian and historian Margaret Vaverek (Texas State University), we examine primary and secondary sources, the evolution of historical method, and the ways technology — from digitization to artificial intelligence — has changed how the past is accessed, questioned, and understood. This episode lays the groundwork for Part II, where these research principles will be put to the test in a close examination of Cynthia Ann Parker’s recapture by Sul Ross at the Battle of Pease River. Written by: Joleene Maddox Snider Hosted & Produced by: Matthew Thornton Featuring: Margaret Vaverek Produced by: Griffyn.Co Productions About Margaret Vaverek: Margaret Vaverek is a historian and research librarian at Texas State University, where she teaches students and scholars how to work responsibly with historical sources. Her work focuses on information literacy, archival research, and guiding searchers into becoming careful, critical researchers. Research Concepts from this Episode: Primary vs. Secondary Sources Information Literacy and Historical Method Myth, Memory, and the Written Record Historiography and Revision Archives, Digitization, and Access Technology, AI, and the Limits of the Record Timestamps / Chapter Guide: 00:00 – The thrill of the hunt: why research matters (Margaret) 00:38 – Lone Star Lore theme song 01:21 – A research story that flips the “Boston Tea Party” myth (Margaret) 02:43 – What this two-part arc is doing: story + process (Host) 03:34 – Fort Parker, 1836: Cynthia Ann’s capture (Jo) 08:53 – Cynthia Ann as a Comanche woman; Quanah Parker and the 1875 surrender (Jo) 09:54 – Pease River, 1860: recapture and return to white society (Jo) 13:50 – Recap + the core problem: what the record can’t tell us (Host) 15:09 – Primary vs. secondary sources: what “evidence” really means (Margaret) 16:17 – Myth vs. reality: “old” vs “new” histories and why they diverge (Jo + Host) 20:03 – Scholarship as conversation + the fragility of archives (Margaret) 23:34 – Digitization & AI: access, risk, and the limits of the record (Margaret + Host) 28:08 – Final takeaway + Part II setup (Host)

1. feb. 2026 - 29 min
episode Beyond Provincial: Texas Literature, Land, and Recognition cover

Beyond Provincial: Texas Literature, Land, and Recognition

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? Ep. 03 — Beyond Provincial: Texas Literature, Land, and Recognition Why do stories rooted so deeply in Texas land and place so often get dismissed as “regional,” when they’re wrestling with the same universal questions as the American canon? In this episode, we explore how Texas writers like John Graves, Katherine Anne Porter, Sandra Cisneros, Elmer Kelton, Stephen Harrigan, and Elizabeth Crooks built Texas literature from the ground up — and how the label provincial became a kind of cultural gate that kept these works from being heard beyond their place of origin. With guest Tammy Gonzales (Texas State University / Center for the Study of the Southwest), we trace how land becomes a doorway into reading — and how Larry McMurtry eventually kicks open the door of national recognition, not by inventing something new, but by making it impossible to look away. Written by: Joleene Maddox SniderHosted & Produced by: Matthew ThorntonFeaturing: Tammy GonzalesProduced by: Griffyn.Co Productions About Tammy Gonzales:Program Director for the Center for the Study of the Southwest at Texas State University, and Associate Editor for Southwestern American Literature and Texas Books in Review. Tammy works at the intersection of land, memory, and culture — helping preserve Texas stories as something lived, shared, and carried forward. Reading List from this Episode:John Graves - Goodbye to a River, Hard Scrabble Sandra Cisneros - Woman Hollering Creek, The House on Mango Street, Caramelo Katherine Anne Porter - Noon Wine, Ship of Fools, Pale Horse, Pale Rider Elmer Kelton - The Time it Never Rained, The Day the Cowboys Quit Stephen Harrigan - The Gates of the Alamo, Big Wonderful Thing: A History of Texas  Elizabeth Crook - The Which Way Tree, The Night Journal, The Raven’s Bride Larry McMurtry - The Last Picture Show, In a Narrow Grave, Lonesome Dove Timestamps / Chapter Guide: 00:00 – Finding the hook: land as memory 01:03 – Introducing Tammy Gonzales & today’s question 01:55 – John Graves and Goodbye to a River 03:40 – Land as lived experience (Tammy) 05:33 – Graves on responsibility and stewardship 07:34 – “Provincial”: the problem with the label 08:49 – Sandra Cisneros and personal connection 10:29 – Katherine Anne Porter and interior violence 11:19 – Elmer Kelton, endurance, and aging 12:21 – Breaking the myth of “small” stories 12:47 – Stephen Harrigan and challenging mythology 14:38 – Elizabeth Crook and reexamining history 16:03 – Enter Larry McMurtry 18:29 – In a Narrow Grave and rejection 19:57 – Land as common ground (Tammy) 20:45 – Lonesome Dove and national recognition 22:13 – Memory, inheritance, and return 24:28 – Final reflections & thanks

5. jan. 2026 - 25 min
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