141 episodes

Noted story teller and former journalist Mike Allen takes you on a new, 20-minute journey each Thursday featuring interviews with fascinating guests about people, places, or events from the illustrious history of one of the country’s earliest states. You don‘t have to be from Connecticut to enjoy them -- you just need to enjoy a good story. Theme music (Musical Interlewd 1, intro; Musical Interlewd 2, outro) by Christopher Cech. Podcast logo design by Ashley Cech. Amazing Tales from Off and On Connecticut’s Beaten Path is a production of True North Associates, LLC.

Amazing Tales from Off and On Connecticut‘s Beaten Path Mike Allen

    • History

Noted story teller and former journalist Mike Allen takes you on a new, 20-minute journey each Thursday featuring interviews with fascinating guests about people, places, or events from the illustrious history of one of the country’s earliest states. You don‘t have to be from Connecticut to enjoy them -- you just need to enjoy a good story. Theme music (Musical Interlewd 1, intro; Musical Interlewd 2, outro) by Christopher Cech. Podcast logo design by Ashley Cech. Amazing Tales from Off and On Connecticut’s Beaten Path is a production of True North Associates, LLC.

    A CT Man's Top-Secret Project: "PO Box 1142"

    A CT Man's Top-Secret Project: "PO Box 1142"

    During WW II, there was a top-secret project known as “Post Office Box 1142.” A Connecticut man played a major role in the operation, which focused on prisoners of war – both Americans held overseas as well as influential German and Italian prisoners who were kept at Fort Hunt in Virginia. A number of James Bond-like gadgets were made at Fort Hunt and shipped clandestinely to the Americans overseas, with corresponding coded messages advising them what was hidden inside. It’s a tale told Peter Bedini, son of the man who led the coded correspondence effort and which just became public knowledge recently.

    • 22 min
    Who Really Killed Seymour's First Selectman?

    Who Really Killed Seymour's First Selectman?

    It was nearly 100 years ago when the shooting death of Seymour First Selectman Ray Gilliard occurred in his Town Hall office. He called the telephone operator, said he had been shot, described his assailants, and asked for police and a doctor to be dispatched. Then, the line went dead. The outcome of the investigation shocked virtually everybody in town. Telling the story is Naugatuck Valley historian Robert Novak.

    • 23 min
    CT Gave Birth to the Very First Robot

    CT Gave Birth to the Very First Robot

    Connecticut is the home of many inventions. One that's of particular interest is the first robot. The first industrial robot ever placed on a production line was built in Danbury and spearheaded by the holder of the patent (George Devol, of Wilton) and the marketing mastermind who found the markets and promoted the invention (Joseph Engelberger, of Newtown). Engelberger, known as “the father of robotics,” also spearheaded the first use of robots in hospitals. Hear the story behind the development of robots with Newtown Historical Society President Ben Cruson.

    • 21 min
    One of CT's Biggest Disasters - the L'Ambiance Building Collapse

    One of CT's Biggest Disasters - the L'Ambiance Building Collapse

    Today, we often hear of building collapses, with workers or members of the public trapped underneath debris. One of the first such incidents to capture the public’s attention was the collapse of the L’Ambiance apartment building while it was under construction in Bridgeport in 1987. Tons of concrete slab floors were being hoisted into place, while workers tended to their tasks beneath them. The concrete floors fell, pancake style, landing on top of 28 workers. None survived. It was the worst disaster in the city’s history, and one of the worst in state history. The 37-year-old incident is remembered by the man who was Mayor of Bridgeport at that time, the Honorable Thomas Bucci.

    • 21 min
    CT had its own Alamo - and it had a Gruesome Ending

    CT had its own Alamo - and it had a Gruesome Ending

    Some call it, Connecticut’s Alamo. The Battle of Groton Heights was a massacre by any measure, with 1,600 British soldiers greatly outnumbering 165 Patriot soldiers in one of the last battles of the Revolutionary War. The British were led by Benedict Arnold, who had only recently switched allegiances and who was born less than 10 miles from the battle. The decision by Colonel William Ledyard not to surrender the fort, with essentially only farmers under his command, ended with only a handful of fighters not being killed or wounded. This harrowing story is told by the President of the Friends of the Fort Griswold Battlefield State Park Foundation, Hali Keeler.

    • 20 min
    He Murdered for Love - and Hate

    He Murdered for Love - and Hate

    This 100-year-old western CT murder case was a difficult one to solve. There was no body in home where murder victim George Hultz lived that had burned to the ground. The motive was elusive. And the perpetrator who was eventually identified was quite good at deflecting suspicion. Yet, the man who would rise from Sergeant to Commissioner of the CT State Police, John Kelly, finally cracked the case. And the person who has the details of this story is the retired longtime editor of the Ridgefield Press newspaper and local historian, Jack Sanders.

    • 21 min

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