The Shell Lake Massacre
On Aug. 15, 1967, James and Evelyn Peterson and seven of their children were murdered in their home near Shell Lake, Sask. in a shocking crime that still stands as one of the worst random mass murders in Canadian history. More than 50 years later, a new podcast from Rawlco Radio explores the untold story of the Peterson family and the events surrounding their deaths. Over six episodes, you'll get to know the Petersons with the help of Kathy Hill, the only remaining family member, as she shares the most intimate details of their story in this exclusive series. Listeners will meet the neighbours who arrived at the Peterson farm to discover the horrific mass murder and learn about the circumstances that led to this unimaginable crime. The podcast covers the RCMP search for the killer and the eventual confession of Victor Hoffman. Brittany Caffet, host of The Shell Lake Massacre, grew up near Shell Lake and has a personal connection to the tragedy: Kathy Hill is the great aunt of her spouse.
Season 1
- 7 Episodes
Hosts & Guests
Very thoughtful and put together
Oct 9
Such a sad, tragic story. The host did such a good job of telling the story in a respectful way, and did amazing research and interviewing.
Masterful Telling about the Peterson Family
Aug 20
I first heard this story when Brittany was interviewed on Wicked Words. I’d never heard the story before and Brittany does a masterful job of sharing the story of the Peterson family and who they were as people and a family.
Worth the listen
Aug 19
Excellent. Love a podcast that has interviews with people involved.
Pretty good! Voice is fine..
Aug 7
Great story. I like that those who experienced the actual crime were featured via live interviews. Also, many formal historical articles, court docs, and police documents are read & discussed in their original script. Re the complaints about the voice: I wish the critics would try to acknowledge that preference plays a large role in this assessment. I have gave up many podcasts because of the narrator. If so, my complaint is usually that the voice is either monotonous or insincere/disingenuous. I was happy with the narrator on this podcast. One of my personal preferences is that the narrator sound like a ‘real person’ i. e., speaks as if we were having a personal conversation. That was the impression I got here, so it worked for me. I did not find it monotone - and I can be picky. The one tip I offer to the narrator: beta blockers. Her voice did reminded me of myself. Public speaking can cause anxiety (obviously). But for a small percentage of folks, this anxiety causes shakey voice; this then, might be mistaken for emotion. The narrator seemed to have this issue so I’d just say beta blockers solved the problem for me!
About
Information
- CreatorRawlco Radio Ltd.
- Episodes7
- Seasons1
- RatingClean
- Copyright© Rawlco Radio Ltd.
- Show Website
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