The Daily History Chronicle

Drowned By The Rich - May 31, 1889

18 min · 31. maj 2026
episode Drowned By The Rich - May 31, 1889 cover

Description

On May 31, 1889, the South Fork Dam collapsed above Johnstown, Pennsylvania, killing 2,209 people in one of the deadliest disasters in American history. The dam was privately owned by Andrew Carnegie, Henry Clay Frick, and other Gilded Age industrialists who had modified it for a private fishing retreat and ignored a written engineering warning filed nine years before it failed. When the lawsuits came, the courts called it an act of God. Not one dollar of compensation was ever awarded. This episode asks what it means when the law is built to protect property, and the people who paid with their lives had no property to protect.

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episode The Traitor Who Saved France - June 18, 1940 artwork

The Traitor Who Saved France - June 18, 1940

On June 18, 1940, General Charles de Gaulle stepped in front of a BBC microphone in London and committed treason. The French government sentenced him to death for it. And the broadcast that supposedly launched the French Resistance was barely heard and was never recorded. In this episode of The Daily History Chronicle, we go inside one of World War II’s most mythologized moments and find a story far more complicated than the legend. De Gaulle was legally a traitor. Marshal Pétain was trying to save French lives. The famous ‘June 18 recording’ was made four days later. And the myth that emerged may have mattered more than the act itself. What do you do when the institutions meant to protect your nation have surrendered? Who gets to claim legitimacy when the legal government has collapsed? And how do nations survive their darkest hours through the act, or through the story they build around it?

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