Cemetery Mixtape artwork

Cemetery Mixtape

12 episodes - English - Latest episode: over 3 years ago - ★★★★★ - 27 ratings

A podcast with real history and musical guests... it's like unboxing videos, only with graves

Society & Culture History
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Episodes

Minnie Wallace: Murder, Money, and Mystery

December 06, 2020 22:53 - 21 minutes - 29.3 MB

Did Minnie Wallace murder her wealthy, older husbands, or was she just lucky? Continue ReadingMinnie Wallace: Murder, Money, and Mystery

The First Journalist Killed In War

February 06, 2020 18:51 - 27 minutes - 37.3 MB

Irving Carson, the first journalist killed in war. Special guests Civilwarhumor and Mayhayley's Grave. Continue ReadingThe First Journalist Killed In War

Alice Getty and the Musical Skull

January 21, 2020 01:06 - 18 minutes - 25.7 MB

Every year, thousands of people walk past the landmark Getty tomb in Chicago’s Graceland Cemetery to admire the architecture. Designed by Louis Sullivan, it’s perhaps the most perfect example of Sullivan’s style. Almost no one who sees it realizes that inside lie the remains of one of the most fascinating women in Chicago history – Alice Getty could have starred in adventure serials. The daughter of lumber baron Henry Getty, after her mother died in the 1880s, Alice, now in her early 20s, beg...

Son of a Dickens

December 29, 2019 13:49 - 22 minutes - 31.4 MB

Today we travel to Moline, IL’s Riverside Cemetery to find the unlikely burial place of Francis Jeffrey Dickens, third son of Charles Dickens – and check out some other Dickens family graves (all of which are more about Charles than the person buried there). Perhaps the most famous thing about Francis is that he once asked for 15 pounds, a horse and a rifle to set up as a gentleman farmer overseas. Charles wrote back that he’d be robbed of the money, he’d be thrown off the horse, and that he’...

The Man Who Shot Andrew Jackson

December 12, 2019 21:00 - 26 minutes - 35.7 MB

iTunes Spotify In 1806, Andrew Jackson and Charles Dickinson fought a duel near the KY-TN border. Dickinson was killed, but the story goes that Jackson took a bullet to the chest and carried it around for the rest of his life. But did he really? A look at primary sources suggests that it may have just been one of those “tough guy” stories people liked to tell about Jackson. Dickinson’s grave space was lost for nearly a century before it was located on former farmland in 2010; what remained of...

Elizabeth Keckley and Jefferson Davis’s Dress

August 14, 2018 01:15 - 22 minutes - 20.1 MB

Here’s one that, until very recently, would have had be called “Cemetery Mixtape: Unmarked.” Elizabeth Keckley (or Keckly) was born a slave, bought her freedom as an adult, and became a modiste (dressmaker) for Mary Todd Lincoln throughout her years in the White House, eventually becoming a confidante of both Mrs. Lincoln and the President. Her whole life story is wonderfully told in her 1868 autobiography, Behind the Scenes. While her time with the Lincolns and the book have made her a relat...

The Bones of Button Gwinnett

July 06, 2018 02:10 - 27 minutes - 24.8 MB

For this month’s podcast, we take a deep dive RIGHT into the grave of Button Gwinnett. Button Gwinnett was one of America’s least illustrious founding fathers. Though his very brief political career put him in the right place at the right time to sign the Declaration of Independence in 1776, he lived less than a year beyond the signing before challenging Lachran McIntosh to a duel. Lachran won. No record of Button’s burial survives, but there’s no reason to doubt he would have been interred a...

Bring me the Head of George Frederick Cooke

May 29, 2018 03:27 - 25 minutes - 23.4 MB

By some accounts, George Frederick Cooke was the greatest tragedian actor of the late 18th and early 19th century; his portrayal of Shakespeare’s Richard III was second to none. Whether he was Scottish, Irish or British was debated in his time; his epitaph reads “Three kingdoms claim his birth / both hemispheres proclaim his worth.” But all who knew him had a few things to say that weren’t quite so complimentary – his biographer, William Dunlap wrote in his diary that Cooke was “a coward, a b...

Frederick Douglass (and the Garfield Grave Robbers)

May 02, 2018 18:32 - 24 minutes - 22.6 MB

Now on Spotify! Several years back, I took a trip to Cleveland just to see the tomb of President Garfield after hearing a news story that someone had broken into the crypt and stolen several commemorative spoons. This, I had to see for myself! It’s a fantastic tomb, with a tower you can climb, and relief sculptures all around, including one of Garfield on his deathbed, surrounded by doctors getting ready to poke him in the liver! In the course of setting up the episode, I noticed that Garfiel...

Joseph Wicher, Killed By Jesse James

February 27, 2018 20:14 - 25 minutes - 23.3 MB

In the Pinkerton Detective Agency lot at Graceland, most of the graves are worn down and illegible.   Which is probably why it took me so long to find out that a victim of Jesse James is buried there!  Joseph W. Wicher, killed by the James Gang in 1874, is buried beneath the grave on the left below, in a section that looks appropriately like something from the “Wild West” . You can almost make out the name: What’s remarkable about the lot is, though it certainly served as good advertising for...

Charles McKnight, Alexander Hamilton and The Doctors Mob

February 27, 2018 19:29 - 27 minutes - 25.3 MB

Charles McKnight, buried at Trinity Church in lower Manhattan, was a revolutionary war surgeon and, at times, physician to George Washington. Was Alexander Hamilton among the founding fathers who protected him from an anti-grave robbing mob in 1788? You can read several letters to and concerning McKnight on Founders.gov, the National Archives site that makes letters of Washington, Adams, Jay, etc. available. Get ready to squint trying to make out their handwriting! The Doctor’s Mob, 1788 In A...

Kathryn Evans, Who Saw Lincoln Shot

February 27, 2018 18:39 - 25 minutes - 22.9 MB

Kathryn M. Evans had the first line in Our American Cousin at Ford’s Theater the night that President Lincoln was assassinated there. She went on to a long career, eventually retiring in Chicago, where she once had a reunion with another old cast member at a play about Lincoln at the Blackstone Theater (now the Merle Reskin). One lingering mystery is what became of her theatrical memorability; stories about her in her old age say that her apartment was full of it. Perhaps her probate record i...

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