what you didn't know

Adam

Welcome to And That’s What You Didn’t Know, the podcast that takes the headlines of history and flips them over to reveal the truth hiding on the back. Do you know the names that changed the world? Of course you do. But do you know the secrets they kept, the failures that fueled them, or the small moments of courage that almost never happened? In every episode, we dive deep into unknown history to uncover the hidden stories behind the legends you think you already know. Inspired by the legendary craft of Paul Harvey, this is narrative storytelling at its most deliberate. Whether we are follo

  1. Apr 30

    The Man Who Wouldn't Die--------Tsutomu yamaguchi

    This is the story of a man who saw the end of the world twice in three days—and lived to tell the story for ninety-three years. In August 1945, a young engineer was preparing to leave Hiroshima after a three-month business trip. He was walking toward the docks when he realized he had forgotten his travel permit. He turned back toward the city center. At that exact moment, the sky split open. In this episode of And That’s What You Didn’t Know, we follow the unbelievable survival of Tsutomu Yamaguchi. He was less than two miles from ground zero when the first atomic bomb, "Little Boy," detonated. Badly burned and partially deafened, he spent a night in a nightmare landscape before catching a train to his hometown to seek medical help. That hometown? Nagasaki. Three days later, bandaged and limping, Yamaguchi was in his boss's office, trying to explain the devastation he had witnessed. His boss didn't believe him. He asked, "How could one bomb destroy a whole city?" As the words left his mouth, the second flash filled the room. Yamaguchi is the only person officially recognized by the Japanese government as a nijyuu hibakusha, or "twice-bombed person." Discover how he survived two nuclear blasts, lived a long and healthy life, and became one of the world’s most powerful voices for peace, proving that even the most destructive force in human history couldn't extinguish his will to live. Primary Keywords: Tsutomu Yamaguchi, Double Hibakusha, Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivor, Atomic bomb history, Twice-bombed man. Secondary Keywords: WWII Japan, Nuclear disarmament, Little Boy and Fat Man, Survival stories, Japanese engineering history. To see the official certification and hear the testimony of the man who beat the odds of the universe, explore these sources: The Guardian: The man who survived Hiroshima and Nagasaki. National Geographic: How Tsutomu Yamaguchi lived through two atomic blasts. The Japan Times: Remembering the legacy of the twice-bombed survivor. History.com: The incredible story of the luckiest/unluckiest man in the world. "Some stories are too big for one city. If Yamaguchi's endurance left you breathless, please Follow and Review us on Spotify. We’re documenting the lives that redefine what it means to be human."

    6 min
  2. Apr 28

    The Spark of Survival-------Roy Sullivan

    This is the story of a man who was essentially a human lightning rod—a man the heavens simply could not leave alone. Most people have a 1-in-15,000 chance of being struck by lightning in their lifetime. For one man in Virginia, those odds weren’t just a statistic—they were a recurring appointment. In this episode of And That’s What You Didn’t Know, we follow the electrifying life of Roy Sullivan, a U.S. Park Ranger in Shenandoah National Park. Between 1942 and 1977, Roy was struck by lightning seven different times. He survived losing his eyebrows, having his hair set on fire (twice), being knocked unconscious, and even having his truck struck while driving. Roy didn't just survive the strikes; he survived the psychological toll of being "the most unlucky lucky man" in the world. People began to avoid walking near him during storms, fearing he was cursed. He even took to carrying a bucket of water in his truck, just in case his hair caught fire for a third time. Discover the incredible endurance of the "Human Lightning Conductor," the science of how a human body can survive millions of volts multiple times, and the strange, lonely life of a man who was literally hunted by the sky. Primary Keywords: Roy Sullivan, Human Lightning Rod, Seven Lightning Strikes, Shenandoah National Park, Guinness World Record Lightning. Secondary Keywords: Lightning strike survival, Park Ranger Roy Sullivan, Probability of lightning strikes, Weird history stories, Human endurance. To see the scorched hats and the official records of the world's most struck man, explore these sources: Guinness World Records: Most lightning strikes survived by a human being. National Park Service: The legacy of Roy Sullivan in Shenandoah National Park. The Washington Post Archive: Reporting on Roy Sullivan’s seventh and final strike. National Weather Service: The physics of lightning and how people survive direct hits. "When lightning strikes once, it's a tragedy. When it strikes seven times, it's a conversation with the universe. If Roy’s story shocked you, please Follow and Review us on Spotify. We’re digging up the most unbelievable truths from the deep vaults of history."

    6 min
  3. Apr 23

    Battle At Castle Itter

    This is the story of the strangest battle of World War II—a moment when the rules of war were thrown out the window, and enemies became brothers-in-arms to defend a medieval fortress. In May 1945, Hitler was dead, and the war in Europe was only days from ending. But at Castle Itter, a 13th-century fortress perched high in the Austrian Alps, the fighting was just beginning. The castle was a high-profile prison holding former French prime ministers, generals, and even a tennis star. As the Nazi regime collapsed, a fanatical unit of the Waffen-SS was sent to execute the prisoners. In this episode of And That’s What You Didn’t Know, we recount the incredible events of the Battle for Castle Itter. Desperate and surrounded, the French prisoners did something unthinkable: they called for help. The rescue didn't come from a massive Allied division. Instead, it was a ragtag group led by a battle-hardened American tank commander, Captain Jack Lee, and—in one of history's most bizarre twists—a decorated German Wehrmacht officer named Major Josef Gangl, who had defected to protect the prisoners. For one day, American GIs and German soldiers stood shoulder-to-shoulder on the castle ramparts, firing at the same enemy to save the lives of French dignitaries. It is the only time in the entire war where Americans and Germans fought as allies. Discover the "miracle" at the castle, the heroic sacrifice of Major Gangl, and how a game of tennis played into one of the most cinematic and unbelievable rescues in military history. Primary Keywords: Battle for Castle Itter, World War II, Jack Lee, Josef Gangl, Strangest Battle of WWII, Austrian Alps. Secondary Keywords: French prisoners of war, Waffen-SS, Allied-German alliance, Medieval castle battles, May 1945 history, The Last Battle. To see the photos of the men who fought together and the tank that held the gate, explore these sources: BBC News: The Austrian castle where Nazis lost to Allied-German alliance. American Rifleman: The technical details of the defense of Castle Itter. Military History Matters: A breakdown of the tactical "Last Battle" of the war. The National WWII Museum: Profiles of the French VIP prisoners held at Itter. "History loves a twist, and sometimes the enemy of your enemy truly is your friend. If this 'unlikely alliance' surprised you, please Follow and Review us on Spotify. We’re digging up the moments where the front lines blurred and heroes emerged from the most unexpected places."

    6 min
  4. Apr 21

    The Enchantress of Numbers-----------Ada Lovelace

    This is the story of a woman who saw a machine made of gears and steam and realized it could actually "weave" music, art, and the very future of human thought. In the mid-1800s, the world was obsessed with the industrial power of steam. But while men were building faster trains and bigger factories, one woman was looking at a massive, unfinished brass machine and seeing something no one else could: the birth of the software age. In this episode of And That’s What You Didn’t Know, we meet Ada Lovelace. The daughter of the "mad, bad, and dangerous to know" poet Lord Byron, Ada was steered away from poetry and toward the cold, hard logic of mathematics by her mother. It was a move designed to save her from her father’s "insanity," but it ended up sparking a different kind of fire. When Ada met inventor Charles Babbage and his "Analytical Engine," she didn't just see a calculator. She saw a tool that could manipulate symbols, not just numbers. In her 1843 notes, she wrote an algorithm for the machine to calculate Bernoulli numbers—creating what is widely considered the first computer program in history. Discover the woman who predicted "digital" music a century before the synthesizer and who understood that a machine is only as "smart" as the person telling it what to do. Primary Keywords: Ada Lovelace, First Computer Programmer, Analytical Engine, Charles Babbage, History of Computing, Women in Math. Secondary Keywords: Bernoulli Numbers algorithm, Victorian science, Lord Byron’s daughter, Mathematical poetry, Origins of Software. To see the actual handwritten notes that laid the groundwork for every app on your phone today, explore these sources: The Bodleian Libraries: The original archives and letters of Ada Lovelace. Computer History Museum: Ada Lovelace and the first computer program. The Babbage Engine: A technical look at the Analytical Engine Ada was "programming" for. Britannica: The biography of the "Enchantress of Numbers." "Long before the first chip was forged, a poet’s daughter saw the code in the gears. If Ada’s vision inspired you, please Follow and Review us on Spotify. We’re decoding the legends that history almost forgot to calculate."

    6 min
  5. Apr 16

    The First Flight... According to Connecticut----------- Gustave Whitehead

    This is the story that keeps the Wright Brothers’ estate up at night—a tale of a "Condor" in the night and a secret agreement that might be holding history hostage. Two years, four months, and three days. That is how much time allegedly separates a quiet field in Fairfield, Connecticut, from the famous dunes of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. In this episode of And That’s What You Didn’t Know, we investigate the "phantom" flight of Gustave Whitehead. While the world celebrates December 1903, the residents of Bridgeport point to August 14, 1901. On that night, witnesses say a German immigrant rolled a bat-winged machine called the "Condor" (No. 21) out into the darkness. The Condor was a marvel of strange engineering. It had two engines—one for the wheels so it could drive down the road like a car, and another for the propellers. According to an eyewitness reporter from the Bridgeport Sunday Herald, Whitehead soared 50 feet into the air and traveled half a mile before gently setting down. So why isn't his name in the history books? We dive into the "Smithsonian Conspiracy"—a legal contract that states the museum will lose the Wright Flyer if they ever acknowledge any other man as the first to fly. Discover the man who may have conquered the sky while the Wrights were still fixing bicycles, and why the "first" in flight depends entirely on who you ask. Primary Keywords: Gustave Whitehead, No. 21 Condor, First Flight Controversy, Bridgeport Sunday Herald 1901, Wright Brothers vs Whitehead. Secondary Keywords: Aviation history mysteries, Jane’s All the World’s Aircraft Whitehead, Smithsonian Wright Flyer agreement, Early flight pioneers, Connecticut aviation. To see the lithographs and the debate that still rages in state legislatures, explore these sources: Smithsonian Institution: The official (and controversial) stance on the Whitehead claims. Jane’s All the World’s Aircraft: The 2013 editorial that shocked the world by siding with Whitehead. History.com: A breakdown of the evidence for and against the 1901 flight. Connecticut Air & Space Center: The 1986 replica of the No. 21 that actually took to the air. "In the history of flight, the truth is often as thin as a wing's fabric. If you think the sky has room for more than two brothers, please Follow and Review us on Spotify. We’re digging up the 'lost' pioneers of the modern world." Whitehead: The First to Fly? This video explores the 125-year-old dispute and the evidence supporters use to claim Whitehead beat the Wright brothers to the sky.

    6 min
  6. Apr 13

    The Secret Frequency------------HEDY LAMARR

    This is the story of a woman whose face was known by millions as the "most beautiful in the world," but whose mind was so far ahead of its time that her most brilliant invention was dismissed as a toy. In the 1940s, she was the crown jewel of MGM, starring alongside legends like Clark Gable and Jimmy Stewart. But while the cameras were off, she wasn't at the legendary Hollywood parties. She was sitting in her trailer or at her home workbench, tinkering with chemistry sets and drafting tables. In this episode of And That’s What You Didn’t Know, we go behind the silver screen to meet the real Hedy Lamarr. Frustrated by the news of Allied ships being sunk by Nazi torpedoes, Hedy realized the problem was that radio-controlled torpedoes were too easy to jam. Drawing inspiration from the synchronized rolls of a player piano, she and composer George Antheil invented a "Secret Communication System." It was called Frequency Hopping. It allowed a radio signal to jump between 88 different frequencies, making it impossible for the enemy to track or block. When she presented her invention to the U.S. Navy to help win World War II, they told her she’d be more useful selling war bonds than playing with inventions. They shelved her patent for decades. Today, that "shelved" technology is the literal foundation of Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and GPS. Discover how a Hollywood starlet who was told to "just stand there and look pretty" ended up inventing the invisible world we live in today. Primary Keywords: Hedy Lamarr, Frequency Hopping, Inventor of Wi-Fi, Hollywood History, Women in STEM, Bluetooth Technology Origins. Secondary Keywords: Secret Communication System, World War II Inventions, George Antheil, Spread Spectrum Technology, MGM Golden Age, Female Inventors. To see the actual patent and the blueprints Hedy drew herself, explore these sources: The National Inventors Hall of Fame: Hedy Lamarr’s official induction and patent details. Scientific American: The incredible mind of Hedy Lamarr and her scientific legacy. The Smithsonian: How Hedy Lamarr's frequency hopping changed the world. U.S. Patent and Trademark Office: View Patent No. 2,292,387 – Secret Communication System. "Beauty may catch the eye, but brilliance changes the world. If Hedy’s double life blew your mind, please Follow and Review us on Spotify. We’re telling the stories of the geniuses who were hidden in plain sight."

    6 min
  7. Apr 9

    The 208-Second Professional---------Chesley sullenberger

    This is the story of a man who spent forty years learning how to fly, only to be defined by the 208 seconds where he didn't. On a freezing January afternoon in 2009, US Airways Flight 1549 took off from LaGuardia Airport. Less than two minutes later, at an altitude of 2,800 feet, the world went quiet. A massive flock of Canada geese had struck both engines, turning a state-of-the-art jetliner into a 150,000-pound glider over the most densely populated real estate on Earth. In this episode of And That’s What You Didn’t Know, we go into the cockpit with Captain Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger. With no power and no time, Sully was faced with a series of impossible choices. The computers said he could make it back to the runway; his gut told him they were wrong. He had seconds to calculate the glide slope, manage his terrified crew, and find a landing strip in a city of skyscrapers. He chose the only "runway" left: the icy gray waters of the Hudson River. Discover the "Miracle on the Hudson," and the grueling investigation that followed. While the public hailed him as a hero, the insurance companies and safety boards spent months trying to prove he had made a mistake. But as the world eventually learned, Sully’s "miracle" wasn’t luck—it was the result of a lifetime of disciplined preparation for a moment he hoped would never come. Primary Keywords: Chesley Sullenberger, Sully, Miracle on the Hudson, US Airways Flight 1549, Hudson River landing. Secondary Keywords: Bird strike aviation, Forced water landing, NTSB investigation Sully, Aviation safety heroes, Dual engine failure. To hear the actual ATC transcripts and see the radar data from that day, check out these sources: NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board): The official accident report for Flight 1549. Smithsonian Air & Space Museum: The "Miracle on the Hudson" aircraft and its permanent home. The Guardian: Sully Sullenberger on the '208 seconds' that changed his life. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA): Aviation safety lessons learned from the 1549 ditching. "Preparation is the only thing that stands between a tragedy and a miracle. If Sully’s steady hand inspired you, please Follow and Review us on Spotify. We’re telling the stories of the people who kept their cool when the world got cold."

    5 min
  8. Apr 7

    The Alchemist Of Air And Ash--------- Fritz haber

    This is the story of a man who held the keys to both life and death—a scientist who is responsible for the existence of half the people on Earth today, and the horrific end of millions of others. In 1909, a German chemist achieved the impossible: he pulled bread out of thin air. For centuries, humanity had been sprinting toward a global famine, running out of natural fertilizer to feed a booming population. But this man found a way to "fix" nitrogen from the atmosphere, creating a synthetic fertilizer that sparked the Green Revolution. In this episode of And That’s What You Didn’t Know, we grapple with the dark duality of Fritz Haber. Haber is a man of staggering contradictions. He is the Nobel Prize winner whose invention currently feeds nearly 4 billion people—meaning roughly half the protein in your body right now is there because of him. Yet, he is also the "Father of Chemical Warfare." A fierce patriot during World War I, he personally supervised the first large-scale gas attack in history, arguing that "death is death," no matter how it comes. His obsession with science as a weapon of war was so cold that his own wife, a brilliant chemist herself, took her own life in protest. But the final irony of Haber’s life is the most tragic: a Jewish man who converted to Christianity to serve a country that would eventually exile him, he helped develop a pesticide called Zyklon A. Years after his death, that formula was refined into Zyklon B—the very gas the Nazi regime used to murder millions, including members of Haber's own extended family. Discover the story of the man who "saved billions and killed millions," and the terrifying legacy of what happens when genius is stripped of its conscience. Primary Keywords: Fritz Haber, Haber-Bosch Process, Father of Chemical Warfare, History of Fertilizer, Synthetic Ammonia, WWI Gas Attacks. Secondary Keywords: Clara Immerwahr, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1918, Zyklon B origins, Science and Ethics, The man who fed the world, Nitrogen fixation. To understand the scientific triumph and the moral catastrophe of Haber's work, check out these sources: Nobel Prize Outreach: The official biography of Fritz Haber and the 1918 award. The Guardian: From Fertilizer to Zyklon B: 100 years of a discovery that brought life and death. Science History Institute: The tragedy of Clara Immerwahr and the ethics of the Haber process. BBC News: How Fritz Haber's nitrogen process changed the world's population. "History isn't written in black and white; it's written in the gray areas where genius and tragedy meet. If Haber's story left you questioning the cost of progress, please Follow and Review us on Spotify. We're uncovering the complicated truths behind the world's greatest discoveries." That is one of the heaviest stories in the Vault. Would you like to move to something a bit more inspiring for Episode 21, perhaps the story of the 'Radioactive Boy Scout'? Episode Description: The Alchemist of Air and AshSEO Keywords & MetadataFact-Check & Deep Dive LinksPodcast Call to Action

    5 min

About

Welcome to And That’s What You Didn’t Know, the podcast that takes the headlines of history and flips them over to reveal the truth hiding on the back. Do you know the names that changed the world? Of course you do. But do you know the secrets they kept, the failures that fueled them, or the small moments of courage that almost never happened? In every episode, we dive deep into unknown history to uncover the hidden stories behind the legends you think you already know. Inspired by the legendary craft of Paul Harvey, this is narrative storytelling at its most deliberate. Whether we are follo