SYMHC Classics: Hokusai

SYMHC Classics: Hokusai

We're revisiting our 2015 episode on Hokusai, who lived during a time when there was not a lot of contact between Japan and the West. But even so, he drew some influence form Western art, and Western art was greatly influenced by his own work.

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The Treaty of Waitangi

The Treaty of Waitangi

This document -- a treaty between the British the Maori -- established New Zealand as a nation. The spirit of the agreement was to see to the best interests of both the Maori and the Crown, but a hurr...

4 Kesä 201430min

Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923

Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923

Sept. 1, 1923 changed Japan forever when a devastating earthquake obliterated Yokohama and much of Tokyo, killing more than 140,000. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwo...

2 Kesä 201428min

Deaf President Now

Deaf President Now

This episode breaks our rule of thumb about covering fairly recent history. In 1988, the appointment of a hearing president at Gallaudet University sparked a protest that changed the course of both th...

28 Touko 201432min

The Red Ghost of Arizona and the U.S. Camel Corps

The Red Ghost of Arizona and the U.S. Camel Corps

In 1883, a mysterious beast was spotted in Arizona and trampled a woman. First described a a demon, the creature turned out to be a camel. But what was it doing in the American Southwest in the first ...

26 Touko 201429min

Bets and Burlesque: Joseph Oller

Bets and Burlesque: Joseph Oller

Joseph Oller was an entrepreneur with an incredible head for business. He revolutionized gambling practices as a young man, and also opened the most famous burlesque house of all time -- The Moulin Ro...

21 Touko 201424min

Orphan Trains

Orphan Trains

Between 1854 and 1929, about 250,000 children in the U.S. were taken to new families by train. Except ... they weren't called "orphan trains" at the time, the children weren't all orphans, and "family...

19 Touko 201431min

Frances Glessner Lee and Tiny Forensics

Frances Glessner Lee and Tiny Forensics

Many forensic investigation standards of today have roots in the work of a Chicago heiress who was more interested in crime scenes than high society. Her most notable contribution to the field came in...

14 Touko 201428min

The Flu Epidemic of 1918

The Flu Epidemic of 1918

The 1918 Spanish flu epidemic, which killed somewhere between 20 million and 50 million people, started just as World War I was winding down. Nobody cured it, or really successfully treated it. A fift...

12 Touko 201434min

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