Nellie Bly: life of the week

Nellie Bly: life of the week

In the late 19th century, when female reporters were largely confined to newspapers' society pages, Nellie Bly's daring investigations and headline-grabbing exploits made her a household name. From her audacious exposé from inside a New York asylum – after convincing doctors she was insane – to becoming the 'real Phileas Fogg' by racing around the globe, Bly’s adventures captivated the world. Historian Bob Nicholson tells Kev Lochun more about her audacious brand of stunt journalism. The HistoryExtra podcast is produced by the team behind BBC History Magazine. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Episoder(2558)

Uprising: the Civil Wars untangled

Uprising: the Civil Wars untangled

On 30 January 1649, Charles I was led on to a freshly erected scaffold outside Whitehall’s Banqueting House in London. Thousands of spectators watched in shock and awe as the king of England, Scotland...

24 Nov 202537min

The Nazis’ crimes laid bare

The Nazis’ crimes laid bare

When the Nazi leaders went on trial in Nuremberg from November 1945, the true horrors of their regime were exposed to the world. In the second episode of our four-part series on the trials, the lawyer...

23 Nov 202546min

What does Hitler’s DNA really tell us?

What does Hitler’s DNA really tell us?

A recent documentary drawing conclusions from new analysis of Adolf Hitler’s DNA has sparked headlines around the world. But how did the programme’s researchers get hold of the key evidence? And what ...

22 Nov 202548min

Mutilated corpses and undead mothers-in-law: vampire epidemics through history

Mutilated corpses and undead mothers-in-law: vampire epidemics through history

Fears of the undead rising from their graves to cause trouble have recurred in societies around the globe throughout the centuries. But why was your mother-in-law especially likely to become a vampire...

21 Nov 202538min

The problem with poo: a millennium of manure

The problem with poo: a millennium of manure

When did poo become a problem? Why was manure so important in the medieval economy? And why don't we have vacuum-powered sewers? All these questions – and more – are answered in this brief history of ...

19 Nov 202535min

James Garfield: life of the week

James Garfield: life of the week

US president James Garfield's life is often overshadowed by his untimely death in 1881, as the second president to be assassinated in office. However, his story is now once again in the limelight, tha...

18 Nov 202556min

A new history of multicultural Britain

A new history of multicultural Britain

As Britain's influence on the world around it grew throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, so too did the world influence Britain – and a key part of that influence was the arrival of people from othe...

17 Nov 202542min

What should we do with the Nazis? The road to the Nuremberg Trials

What should we do with the Nazis? The road to the Nuremberg Trials

At the end of the Second World War, the victorious Allies had to decide the fates of the surviving leaders of a regime that had initiated the bloodiest conflict in history, and perpetuated the Holocau...

16 Nov 202541min

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