32 episodes

Behind every feel-good Canadian story is another that is dark, twisted and mysterious. Come listen and learn about the stories that shook the nation -- or maybe didn't -- in our new podcast series, Unsolved Canadian Mysteries, with co-hosts Kenton de Jong and Dylan Fairman.

Unsolved Canadian Mysteries Unsolved Canadian Mysteries

    • True Crime

Behind every feel-good Canadian story is another that is dark, twisted and mysterious. Come listen and learn about the stories that shook the nation -- or maybe didn't -- in our new podcast series, Unsolved Canadian Mysteries, with co-hosts Kenton de Jong and Dylan Fairman.

    Patreon Exclusive - T. G. Hamilton's Ectoplasmic Photography

    Patreon Exclusive - T. G. Hamilton's Ectoplasmic Photography

    In our eighth Patreon exclusive episode of Unsolved Canadian Mysteries, Kenton and Dylan discuss the authenticity of T. G. Hamilton's famous ectoplasmic photography.

    Thomas Glendenning and Lillian May Hamilton were faced with the sudden loss of their son due to the Spanish Influenza of 1918. Like many people at the time, they were struggling to cope with the meaning of life and death.

    However, T. G. recounted a conversation with a colleague at the University of Manitoba a few years prior. His colleague told him about a psychic he had met stateside, and how amazed he was by her abilities to contact the dead.

    The desire to communicate with their son drove T. G. and Lillian to begin experimenting as well. What started with Ouiji boards quickly evolved into full-blown ectoplasmic photography. By including witnesses and an entire wall of cameras, their documentation, and recordings about what they summoned brought them into the international spotlight. Everybody from former prime ministers to famous authors came to witness their seances.

    But a hundred years later, ectoplasmic photography is no longer popular, and many who participated were found to be frauds. T. G. Hamilton and his wife were an exception, and their photography remains unexplained.

    For our attempt to explain T. G. Hamiton's ectoplasmic photography, check out our new episode!

    • 13 min
    #24 - Langenburg's UFO Encounter

    #24 - Langenburg's UFO Encounter

    In our twenty-fourth episode of Unsolved Canadian Mysteries, Kenton de Jong and Dylan Fairman discuss Edwin Fuhr's close encounter of the second kind, which occurred on Septemeber 1st, 1974.

    Edwin Fuhr was a farmer near Langenburg, Saskatchewan and was out one morning harvesting his canola, when he rode his swather up a small hill on his property. From this vantage point, he saw five strange metallic objects in a semi-circle-like shape, all hovering silently near a slough. He approached the objects on foot, noticing their dimensions, the speed in which they were rotating, and any feelings of uneasiness he felt near them.

    He then returned to his swather and waited until eventually the objects flew up and away from him, blasting him with steam.

    He would return home to tell his family what he saw, only to discover time had passed. After lunch, we went out to the spot with his father to show him where the objects were hovering. It was around this time that Edwin's wife told his sister, and his sister told her husband and her husband called the RCMP.

    It was after this moment that Edwin's life changed, a mass of humanity descended upon his farm.

    What did Edwin see that day in 1974? Was it alien in origin? Was it a secret military aircraft? And did he really get a call from Neil Armstrong? Listen to the podcast and find out!

    • 28 min
    Patreon Exclusive - The Mystery of the Calgary Mummy

    Patreon Exclusive - The Mystery of the Calgary Mummy

    In our seventh Patreon exclusive episode of Unsolved Canadian Mysteries, we explore the story of the Calgary mummy.

    In 1948, the Pearce family moved into 1805 20th Avenue NW in Calgary, Alberta. From the moment they arrived, Mrs. Pearce began complaining that something felt off about the place. She used the term "creepy presence". Their daughters also said the same thing and said they felt like they were being watched.

    That night, while doing dishes, one of the daughters screamed. She claimed a disembodied, ghostly hand touched her.

    After calming the girls down and settling them into bed, Alfred Pearce noticed some of the floorboards in the bedroom were sagging. He took a look at the crawl space and noticed some of the support beams had been removed. He then began to pry up the old floorboards... and what he found caused him to wake his children, get his wife, and run out of the house as fast as they could.

    As the police began investigating, more and more questions emerged, and very few answers. What did the find under the floorboards? Who put it there? And when exactly did it happen? For all those answers and more, find out in our new episode!

    • 6 min
    Patreon Exclusive - The Legend of the Ogopogo

    Patreon Exclusive - The Legend of the Ogopogo

    In our sixth Patreon exclusive episode of Unsolved Canadian Mysteries, we explore the legend of the Okanagan lake monster, Ogopogo.

    Ogopogo, originally called "na-it-aka", or "spirit of the water" by the Syilx people, is a legendary lake spirit that controlled passage across Lake Okanagan. Legends even claim a story where a visiting chief came to the lake and did not provide an offering for a safe passage across the lake, and the monster responded by drowning their canoes. A similar even would occur with European settlers many centuries later where their horses would be attacked in the water by something with sharp claws and teeth.

    Centuries later, the monster would be renamed Ogopogo by the most unlikely source and would take on a life of its own. Many theories have emerged of what it might be -- from lake otters, methane bubbles, large eels or sturgeon fishes, and even the possibility of an ancient dinosaur.

    With sightings almost every year, various agencies have tried to find the elusive creature -- so much so that two lucrative rewards have been created to find or debunk it -- prompting the provincial government to enact legislation to preserve it.

    What is this "spirit of the water"? Is it just a myth, or something more? Find out in our new episode!

    • 7 min
    #23 - The Serial Killer Capital of Canada

    #23 - The Serial Killer Capital of Canada

    In our twenty-third episode of Unsolved Canadian Mysteries, Kenton de Jong and Dylan Fairman discuss a crime spree that took place in London Ontario during the 1960s-1980s that left dozens dead and many more with unanswered questions.

    On October 4, 1969, Jackie English needed a ride home from work. She had just gotten a second job working at The Metropolitan and her mother usually picked her up when her shift was over, as they both worked on Highway 401, on the edge of London, Ontario. However, this day, Jackie's mother was home recovering from surgery, and Jackie needed a ride. Thankfully she had made some new friends and they were going to pick her up.

    She got into their car after work, and the driver closed the door behind her. Then, instead of driving back to London, the car started down the 401, away from the city, and towards Jackie's death.

    Jackie's body would be found five days later, beaten, raped and naked. But the police didn't have the means to investigate her crime, and to this day the case is unsolved. Why didn't they have the time to investigate it? They were already investigating seven other women who were abducted and killed within the past two years. From 1968 - 1984, or 1959 - 1984 depending on who you ask, London Ontario had a string of serial killings, and only a handful of people were brought to justice. It is believed that there were between 6-9 serial killers in operation during this period, killing over 30 people.

    But why did this happen? What was the reason? In this episode we talk about the killers, not the victims, the Chambermaid Slayer, the Mad Slasher, and the Bedroom Stranger. Lock your doors -- especially your balconies. You never know who or what might be crawling in.

    • 27 min
    Patreon Exclusive - The Jack Family Disappearance

    Patreon Exclusive - The Jack Family Disappearance

    In our fifth Patreon exclusive episode of Unsolved Canadian Mysteries, we explore the August 1, 1989 disappearance of Doreen Jack (26) Ronald “Ronnie” Jack, (26), Russel Jack (9), and Ryan Jack (4).

    The story begins at First Litre Pub near Prince George, British Columbia, where Ronnie is approached by an unknown man at the bar. Ronnie is looking for work, and the man mentions a job opportunity not too far from a local lumber mill. Ronnie could work at the mill, Doreen could work in the kitchen, and they have a daycare program for the kids. There is only one catch, the man says -- we have to leave now.

    Ronnie gets home and Doreen the offer. They pack up the kids, get a few belongings, and pile into the truck. The work program should only be for a few weeks as the kids need to return to school in September.

    They never returned.

    That itself is strange enough, but the botched police investigation, the missed evidence, and the many times the family fell through the cracks in the police system make you wonder what exactly happened that night in 1989.

    • 7 min

Top Podcasts In True Crime

سوالف طريق - ابو طلال الحمراني
ابو طلال الحمراني
بودكاست قصص من المحاكم
Courtsstories
Rotten Mango
Stephanie Soo & Ramble
جريمة
Dr. khalif - خليف
Crime Junkie
audiochuck
Forensic Files II
HLN

You Might Also Like

Canadian True Crime
Kristi Lee | Canadian True Crime
True North True Crime
truenorthtruecrime
Dark Poutine - True Crime and Dark History
Dark Poutine / Curiouscast
Crime Beat
Curiouscast
Island Crime
Laura Palmer / Frequency Podcast Network
Going West: True Crime
Dark West Productions