In this episode of the David Watson Podcast, I’m joined by Shannon Evans, creator of Tom Bigby Tales, a history podcast and YouTube channel exploring the people, places, cemeteries, and forgotten stories of Columbus, Mississippi and the surrounding area. We start with the Tom Bigby River, a Choctaw-named river with an unexpected meaning, and quickly move into the deeper theme of the conversation: how much extraordinary history sits right on your doorstep, hidden in plain sight, until someone starts digging. Shannon explains how Tom Bigby Tales began as a response to local frustration, public money, and accountability, and how that investigative work eventually evolved into history storytelling through cemetery walks, public records, archives, and local research. The result is a growing collection of stories about inventors, war heroes, designers, community figures, and local legends that often turn out to be more complicated (or more surprising) than the versions people repeat. We also talk about Mississippi’s “tangible history” and how personal memory connects to major historical eras, including Prohibition, Civil War aftermath, local myths around stately homes, the Dixie Mafia, bootlegging networks, and the way communities create stories that sound great but don’t always stand up to evidence. Along the way, Shannon shares examples of remarkable people connected to her hometown, including: • local links to the Dixie Mafia and the bootlegging era • aviation stories and military history, including Tuskegee Airmen • women connected to major inventions and public health advances • the hidden social history inside stately homes and preserved architecture • why cemeteries can be one of the most honest records of a community If you enjoy history, local mysteries, and real stories backed by research, you’ll enjoy this episode. Find Shannon / Tom Bigby Tales YouTube: Tomigby Tales Website: tomigbytales.com Podcast: available on major podcast platforms Substack: Shannon Evans (local governance, grift, and graft) Chapters / timestamps 0:00 Intro 0:30 Tom Bigby River and the Choctaw meaning 2:29 Why Tom Bigby Tales started (public records, local frustration) 5:13 Cemetery walks, one-minute videos, and going viral 7:18 Incredible local lives hiding in plain sight 9:27 Stately homes, local myths, and what research really shows 19:15 The Dixie Mafia, bootlegging, and how it really worked 23:33 Tangible history in America vs ancient history in the UK 26:43 How the YouTube channel began and evolved 29:53 Unexpected and tragic stories from the cemetery archives 37:01 Family history, treaties, and Mississippi settlement 41:30 Post-Civil War changes, rebuilding, and new communities 43:19 Where to find Shannon 44:06 Time machine question 45:01 What to visit in Columbus, Mississippi 45:46 Closing