Daniel P. Douglas

Wait! That Actually Happened?

History EN ↓ 18 episodes

Podcast about history's most unbelievable true stories. From wars against birds to dancing plagues, discover the absurd events your teacher never mentioned. authordanielpdouglas.substack.com

Author

Daniel P. Douglas

Category

History

Latest episode

Jun 7, 2026

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Episodes

The Great Canadian Maple Syrup Heist 07.06.2026

The Barrel That Wobbled In July of 2012, a man named Michel Gauvreau climbed a stack of barrels inside a giant warehouse in Quebec, Canada. His job was simple. Count the barrels. Make sure the numbers matched the records. The warehouse held maple syrup. Thousands and thousands of barrels of it. Each full barrel weighed about 620 pounds. That is heavier than a refrigerator. Much heavier. These barr...

Podcast - The Pig War of 1859 18.04.2026

A Pig Walks into a Potato Patch… On the morning of June 15th, 1859, an American farmer named Lyman Cutlar walked out of his cabin on San Juan Island. He saw a large black pig rooting around in his potato patch. Again. This pig had been eating his potatoes for weeks. Cutlar had chased it off. He had complained about it. He had asked the pig’s owner to control it. Nothing worked. The pig kept coming...

Podcast - The Football War of 1969 17.03.2026

In June 1969, El Salvador and Honduras played three World Cup qualifying matches that spiraled into riots, a national martyr, and ultimately a real shooting war. The underlying causes were decades of tension over immigration, land reform, and poverty, but the soccer matches lit the fuse. After fans on both sides attacked visiting teams, burned flags, and killed spectators, El Salvador invaded Hond...

Podcast - The Cadaver Synod 16.01.2026

In January 897, Pope Stephen VI ordered the corpse of his predecessor Pope Formosus dug up from its tomb, dressed in papal robes, and propped up on a throne to stand trial for crimes including “coveting the papacy” and illegally switching dioceses. The decomposing body was assigned a teenage deacon as its defense attorney while Stephen screamed accusations at it, and the inevitable guilty verdict...

Podcast - The Caga Tió 20.12.2025

Since the 1600s, families in Catalonia, Spain have gathered around a small wooden log with a painted smiley face and a red hat every Christmas Eve. They’ve spent the past two weeks “feeding” it scraps of food to fatten it up. Now comes the big moment: the children grab sticks and beat the log while singing songs demanding it poop out presents. When they lift the blanket covering the log, candy and...

Podcast - The War of Jenkins’ Ear 03.12.2025

In 1731, Spanish coast guards boarded British Captain Robert Jenkins’ ship, tortured him, and sliced off his ear before telling him to “take it to your king.” Jenkins did something even better. He pickled the ear, carried it around for eight years, and eventually showed it to Parliament, where his testimony sparked public outrage that forced Britain into a nine-year war with Spain. The War of Jenk...

Podcast - The Radium Girls of the 1920s 11.11.2025

In the 1920s, hundreds of young American women were hired to paint watch dials with radium paint that made them glow in the dark. Their employers told them it was completely safe, even encouraged them to lick their brushes to create fine points, while company executives used lead shields and protective equipment when handling the same material. The women, thinking it was harmless fun, painted thei...

Podcast - The Tulip Mania of 1637 29.10.2025

In this episode of “ Wait, That Actually Happened? ” we explore Tulip Mania, the world’s first recorded financial bubble that gripped Holland from 1633 to 1637. During the Dutch Golden Age, tulip bulbs became so valuable that single bulbs sold for ten times a skilled worker’s annual salary, and people traded entire houses for just three rare bulbs. The market operated through taverns turned into f...

Podcast - The Bal des Ardents, or “Ball of the Burning Men” 16.10.2025

This Party Was Fire! On January 28, 1393, King Charles VI of France and five nobles dressed as “wild men” for a masquerade, covering themselves in pitch (tar) and flax to look hairy and savage, then chaining themselves together for a group dance. When the king’s brother arrived late with a torch and got too close to investigate the costumes, the highly flammable outfits instantly ignited, creating...

Podcast - The Tanganyika Laughter Epidemic 09.10.2025

On January 30th, 1962, three girls at a mission school in Tanganyika (now Tanzania) started giggling and couldn’t stop, triggering one of history’s strangest epidemics that would last 18 months and affect over 1,000 people. The uncontrollable laughter spread from Kashasha School to nearby villages, forcing 14 schools to close as students laughed continuously for days or even weeks, experiencing pa...

Podcast - The 1904 Olympic Marathon 02.10.2025

When the Olympics Decided Water Was Bad and Poison Was Good The 1904 Olympic Marathon in St. Louis remains the most catastrophic Olympic event ever held, when organizer James E. Sullivan deliberately withheld water from runners in 90-degree heat as a “scientific experiment” to study dehydration. Of 32 starters, only 14 finished the dusty 24.85-mile course that wound through traffic on dirt roads....

Podcast - Victorian Fern Fever 25.09.2025

When Ladies Fought in the Mud for Plants In the 1850s, Victorian Britain experienced “Pteridomania” or Fern Fever, when the entire nation became obsessed with collecting ferns to the point of ecological disaster. Wealthy women abandoned society events to crawl through mud hunting rare specimens, single ferns sold for months of working wages, and collectors hired teams to strip entire valleys bare...

Podcast - Emperor Norton I 17.09.2025

When San Francisco Crowned Its Own King In 1859, a broke businessman named Joshua Norton declared himself Emperor of the United States, and amazingly, the entire city of San Francisco just went with it. For 21 years, Norton I issued decrees (like ordering a bridge to be built exactly where the Bay Bridge stands today), printed his own money that stores actually accepted, and was treated like real...

Podcast - The Kentucky Meat Shower of 1876 11.09.2025

On March 3, 1876, chunks of fresh red meat fell from a clear Kentucky sky for several minutes, covering an area the size of a football field around Mrs. Allen Crouch's farm in Bath County. The meat appeared fresh enough that two men tasted it raw (declaring it mutton or venison), and samples were preserved and sent to scientists who couldn't agree whether it was horse lung, bear muscle, or even hu...

Podcast - The War of the Oaken Bucket 03.09.2025

Yes, you read that correctly. In 1325, medieval Italy witnessed one of history's most ridiculous wars when Modena stole a wooden bucket from Bologna's city well. What should have been a minor prank between rival city-states escalated into full-scale warfare, with Bologna sending 32,000 soldiers to reclaim their bucket while Modena defended it with just 7,000 troops. The Battle of Zappolino resulte...

Podcast - The London Beer Flood of 1814 28.08.2025

On October 17, 1814, a 22-foot-tall vat containing 135,000 gallons of beer exploded at London's Horse Shoe Brewery, triggering a catastrophic chain reaction that released 388,000 gallons of porter into the streets. The resulting beer tsunami raced through the St. Giles slum at 25 miles per hour, demolishing houses, drowning eight people including children, and creating surreal scenes of human natu...

Podcast - The Dancing Plague of 1518 28.08.2025

In July 1518, a woman named Frau Troffea began dancing in the streets of Strasbourg and couldn't stop. Within days, dozens had joined her in this compulsive, uncontrollable dancing; within a month, up to 400 people were dancing themselves to death. The city's authorities, consulting the best medical minds of the time, prescribed the worst possible solution: more dancing, complete with hired musici...

Podcast - The Great Emu War 28.08.2025

In 1932, farmers faced an invasion of 20,000 emus devastating their wheat crops in Western Australia. Their solution? Call in the military with machine guns and 10,000 rounds of ammunition. What followed was one of history's most absurd "wars"—a month-long campaign where trained soldiers with automatic weapons failed spectacularly against large, flightless birds. Despite multiple operations, strat...

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