8 episodes

Second Story Radio is a show about place, memory, and history. We are a production of the Nebraska State Historical Society. New episodes every two weeks.

Second Story Radio Second Story Radio

    • Society & Culture

Second Story Radio is a show about place, memory, and history. We are a production of the Nebraska State Historical Society. New episodes every two weeks.

    Four Walls

    Four Walls

    The idea that you could come to the United States and practice whatever religion you wanted was kind of a big deal. It’s a thread you can find throughout American history, since the founding of the country. You can see it in the Great Awakenings in the 1800s and in the hundreds of thousands of immigrants that arrived from Europe during the Revolutions of 1848 and the Russian pogroms in 1877. But you can also see it in smaller ways - like in two synagogues in Lincoln, Nebraska.

    Buildings on the National Register are listed because they have a story to tell, whether it’s about architectural trends or social movements, they all tell us something about us.

    http://tmblr.co/ZUZXqs14uHN2m

    • 6 min
    The Way We Live

    The Way We Live

    This is a story about a cough that shaped the way we lived in the 20th century.

    http://tmblr.co/ZUZXqs13T-ZzS

    • 4 min
    Call Complete

    Call Complete

    Phones are a basic part of our everyday life. They're so basic, they're kind of boring. They aren't even just phones anymore - now they’re pocket-sized computers we can take with us everywhere. Today, phones make front page news when Apple or Google releases their newest model, otherwise, they’re stuck in the business section. But when phones were first invented in the 1870s, the phone - and phone companies - were news machines. The phone was a new frontier in communications and business in the United States, and, like the actual frontier, it was full of drama and intrigue.

    http://secondstoryradio.tumblr.com/post/69491121123/call-complete

    • 7 min
    The Perspective Of Stuff

    The Perspective Of Stuff

    (This week’s episode is the first part in a series following a sod house autopsy from start to finish.)

    Sod houses used to be a staple of the Great Plains in the 1800s, when settlers from the east started making their way west. There are a handful of sod houses still standing today, but it’s only a small percentage out of the hundreds and hundreds there used to be. Most of them, like the one in Larry Estes’ backyard, are not in the best condition. But ecologists, archaeologists, and historians can still learn a lot from it - once they get it into their labs.

    Listen in to find out how to to get a sod house from the field into the lab!

    Read more: http://tmblr.co/ZUZXqs-P2HxB

    • 7 min
    Here and Now and Naught Else

    Here and Now and Naught Else

    In Nebraska in 1919, the state had the chance to build a new symbol. The state had already built two state capitols, but neither of them had lasted very long. The state wanted to build a proper capitol - one that would tell the story of the state. But there’s no one way to look at history.
    When we create a building that’s a symbol of who we are and where we come from, how do we pick which story to tell about ourselves?

    • 6 min
    The Same And Not Quite Mine

    The Same And Not Quite Mine

    One of the first suburbs in Lincoln, NE was Park Manor. When it was built in the 1950s, the whole neighborhood sat on the edge of the city, but today it’s just one of many neighborhoods tucked into midtown. Jill Dolberg grew up in Park Manor and recently went back to see her old neighborhood, not only as an adult, but as a historian.

    http://secondstoryradio.tumblr.com/post/65334930661/the-same-and-not-quite-mine

    • 6 min

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