Quiet Files

Meschelle

The Quiet Files is a calm, careful retelling of the world's most stubborn historical mysteries — disappearances, codes, ghost ships, locked-room cases. One episode, one story, ten to fifteen minutes. No theatrics, no graphic content, no manufactured cliffhangers. Just what's documented, what isn't, and the question you're left with. Episodes focus on cases from the 1850s through the 1960s — an era rich with real reporting, archive records, and the kind of mysteries that lived in newspapers before they lived in podcasts. Some have been picked clean by other shows. Most have not.

Episodes

  1. The Bobby Dunbar Case

    14h ago

    The Bobby Dunbar Case

    On the twenty-third of August, 1912, a four-year-old boy vanished during a family fishing trip at a remote cypress lake in southern Louisiana. His name was Bobby Dunbar. After eight months of searching, a boy matching his description was found in Mississippi with a traveling handyman. The Dunbar family identified him as their son.A poor young mother from North Carolina arrived and insisted the boy was hers — that her name was Julia Anderson, that the boy's real name was Charles Bruce, and that the handyman had been a family friend in temporary custody.A Louisiana court awarded the boy to the Dunbars. Julia Anderson went home empty-handed. The boy lived as Bobby Dunbar for fifty-four years.In 2004, his granddaughter — a journalist named Margaret Dunbar Cutright — asked her family to take a DNA test.The boy raised as Bobby Dunbar was not biologically related to the Dunbars. He was almost certainly Charles Bruce Anderson. Julia Anderson had been telling the truth for nine decades.This is the story of two boys — the one who came home, and the one who never did. The real Bobby Dunbar is presumed to have drowned in Swayze Lake on the day he disappeared. His body has never been found.Episode Eleven of The Quiet Files.Sources: State of Louisiana v. William C. Walters, trial transcript, 1913; A Case for Solomon: Bobby Dunbar and the Kidnapping That Haunted a Nation (Tal McThenia and Margaret Dunbar Cutright, 2012); 2004 paternity DNA analysis (commissioned by Margaret Dunbar Cutright).

    9 min
  2. The Voynich Manuscript

    May 31

    The Voynich Manuscript

    In 1912, a Polish book dealer named Wilfrid Voynich bought a 240-page illustrated manuscript from a Jesuit college outside Rome. He could not read a word of it. No one has ever been able to. The manuscript is written in an alphabet of about thirty characters that match no known language, alive or dead. Its pages are filled with illustrations of plants that do not exist, naked women bathing in tubs of green fluid, intricate astrological diagrams, and a recipe section that names nothing identifiable. Carbon dating in 2009 placed the vellum's creation between 1404 and 1438. For more than a century, professional cryptographers, AI language models, the National Security Agency, and amateur enthusiasts by the thousands have tried to decode it. None have succeeded. The longest "solutions" each contradict each other. This is the story of the Voynich Manuscript. Where it was found. Who owned it through five centuries. The two World War cryptographers who broke Japanese naval codes and failed to crack a single line of this book. And the central question that has divided scholars for a hundred years: is this an undeciphered language, an unbreakable cipher, or the most elaborate hoax in the history of writing? A real book. A real script. A six-hundred-year-old language no living person can read. Episode Eight of The Quiet Files. Sources: Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University (current holding); Friedman & Friedman published correspondence, 1948–1959; The Voynich Manuscript (Clemens, Sherman, et al., 2016); carbon-dating analysis, University of Arizona, 2009.

    8 min
  3. The Lost Colony of Roanoke

    May 31

    The Lost Colony of Roanoke

    On the eighteenth of August, 1590, an English ship reached the coast of what is now North Carolina. Aboard was John White — the governor of the first English colony in the Americas, returning from a three-year supply trip delayed by the Spanish War.He had left one hundred and seventeen colonists on Roanoke Island. Men, women, and children. Including his own granddaughter, Virginia Dare — the first English child ever born on American soil.When he reached the colony, it was empty. The houses had been carefully dismantled. The cannons removed. The fortifications intact. No bodies. No graves. No signs of struggle.A single word was carved into a post by the entrance: Croatoan. The name of a friendly tribe on a nearby island.This is the story of what happened on Roanoke Island in the years John White was gone. The pre-arranged distress signal that was not carved. The storm that prevented him from sailing to Hatteras. The 1998 dig that found European artifacts buried with Croatoan materials. The 2012 X-ray of White's own map that revealed a hidden inland site. And the four-century-old question of what Croatoan actually meant.A real colony. A documented disappearance. A mystery archaeology still cannot settle.Episode Seven of The Quiet Files.Sources: John White's journals, 1587–1590; James Horn, A Kingdom Strange: The Brief and Tragic History of the Lost Colony of Roanoke (2010); First Colony Foundation excavations, 1998 and 2015; British Museum X-ray analysis of John White's La Virginea Pars map, 2012.

    9 min
  4. The Somerton Man

    May 24

    The Somerton Man

    On the first of December, 1948, the body of a well-dressed man was found propped against a seawall on a beach in Adelaide, Australia. He was clean-shaven, manicured, dressed in a brown suit. He had no wallet. No identification. No hat. And every single label had been cut from his clothing.In a hidden pocket sewn into his trouser waistband, investigators found a small rolled piece of paper torn from the last page of a book — two Persian words: Tamám Shud. Ended.The book was later found in a stranger's car. In the back was a phone number, leading to a young nurse who lived four hundred metres from where the body was discovered. She fainted when the police came to her door. She insisted she did not know him. She held to that story for the rest of her life.In 2022 — seventy-four years after the discovery — DNA exhumation finally identified the dead man as Carl Webb, an electrical engineer from Melbourne. But knowing his name doesn't explain why every label was removed, why a poetry book carried a stranger's number, why a nurse fainted at the police, or why the five-line cipher written in the book has never been solved.A real case. A documented investigation. An identification seventy-four years late — and almost nothing else explained.Episode Four of The Quiet Files.Sources: South Australia Police case file 12/1948; Inquest into the Death of an Unknown Man (Coroner T.E. Cleland, June 1949); Professor Derek Abbott's DNA identification, July 2022; contemporary Adelaide Advertiser coverage.

    8 min

About

The Quiet Files is a calm, careful retelling of the world's most stubborn historical mysteries — disappearances, codes, ghost ships, locked-room cases. One episode, one story, ten to fifteen minutes. No theatrics, no graphic content, no manufactured cliffhangers. Just what's documented, what isn't, and the question you're left with. Episodes focus on cases from the 1850s through the 1960s — an era rich with real reporting, archive records, and the kind of mysteries that lived in newspapers before they lived in podcasts. Some have been picked clean by other shows. Most have not.