Witchy - podcast episode cover

Witchy

Sep 21, 202311 minEp. 548
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Episode description

Stories can drive people to do some unusual things, as these two additions to the Cabinet will show you.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to Aaron Manke's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of iHeartRadio and Grimm and Mild. Our world is full of the unexplainable, and if history is an open book, all of these amazing tales right there on display, just waiting for us to explore. Welcome to the Cabinet of Curiosities.

Salem has a long and notorious past with witches. The infamous Salem Witch Trials saw hundreds of innocent people, including children as young as four, accused of cavorting with the forces of darkness, and contrary to popular belief, they were not burned at the stake. Rather, they were hanged for

their alleged crimes. Despite their novelty over the past three hundred and thirty years, the Salem Witch Trials only lasted for one year between sixteen ninety two and sixteen ninety three, or did they Some time later, a panic gripped the Salem area. According to the newspapers, this small American town had become ground zero for a new threat. The devil had come to Salem, and a warlock was responsible. A local farmer named Jacob Culp suddenly found himself mired in controversy.

Jacob had come to America from Germany, and he was described by the press as a quiet, unpretentious individual. His mother had recently passed away, and Jacob was at her funeral when he noticed his relatives were acting strange. He tried asking them what was wrong, but every person he spoke to simply turned away without a word. They could barely stand to look at him. Several days later, he spoke to a reverend at his local church about why

his family had been shutting him out. At first, the reverend refused to say anything, but eventually he let Jacob know what was going on. His relatives had accused him of being a wizard, but this farmer wasn't a to hop a train to a magic school inside a castle. Instead, he would be subjected to a battery of questions and examinations. Thanks to Sadie and Fanny Loup, his sisters in law,

their mother, Lydia, had fallen ill. The doctors couldn't make heads or tails of her condition, and none of their treatments were working, so her daughters sent for doctor Peter Burns, a local physician known as the pow Wow Doctor. He examined Lydia and told the girls that a close relative had bewitched her. He recommended that they get a second opinion from another doctor, a guy named Andrew hoff. Hoff was a seventy seven year old physician who confirmed Burne's

diagnosis Jacob had been perverted by an evil power. He advised the family not to look the man in the eyes or get too close to him. Doctor's orders, lest they wanted to find themselves under his spell. Within a year, hoff promised that he would expel the devil from the farmer's body. So why had Sadie and Fanny accused their brother in law in the first place? While the answer there is a bit of complicated family life. Jacob had been married to Sadie's aunt Hannah until her untimely death.

After she was gone, he wed her niece, Hattie, who happened to be Sadie's sister. Apparently, Sadie had given birth to a son out of wedlock several years prior, and it was believed that Jacob was the father of that child, but no one could prove it. On top of all of that, Jacob had done well for himself in business, much more so than the rest of the family, and they resented his success, so the Loop sisters and their husbands accused him of hypnotizing his neighbors in order to

steal from them and to make matters worse. They also claimed that he had performed black magic on animals. Soon after the accusation started to fly, Lydia Loop passed away, and her daughters took their claims to the church. They presented their case to Homer B. Shelton, their class leader, as well as others in the congregation, and the church did what it always did with accusations of witchcraft in the community. They put the accusers on trial instead. That's right.

Rather than put mister Culp on trial for being a wizard or a warlock, the Heart's Methodist Episcopal Church turned the tables on the Loops for their greedy and immoral attempts to discredit an honorable man. Sadie, Fanny, and the rest of the family were all expelled from the church the following January, while Jacob Culp was found innocent of all charges, a surprising turn of events given Salem's history with accusations of witchcraft, But this situation was different for

a few reasons. You see the witch trials of Salem, Massachusetts did end in sixteen ninety three, but this particular trial occurred in eighteen ninety four in Salem, Ohio. In southern New Mexico, in the Embryo Basin, there is a small mountain only about five five hundred feet high. It's called Vitorio Peak, and looking at it, you might not think it's much It's made up mostly of rocks, sagebrush,

and rattlesnakes. But Milton Ernest Noss, better known as Doc, had found a lot more than just a bunch of rocks and dirt. He'd come from Oklahoma to seek adventure in the open Southwest, marrying a woman named Ova Babe Beckworth in nineteen thirty three, before planting his feet in Hot Springs, New Mexico for good four years later. In November of nineteen thirty seven, Doc was on a hunting

trip with his wife and a few friends. Now accounts differed depending on who was telling the story, but one version claims that as the group set up camp at the base of Victoria Peak, Doc set out on his own to continue the hunt. He hiked up the mountain in search of deer until the skies suddenly opened and it started to rain, so he sought out refuge beneath a large ledge near the top of the peak, and as he waited for the weather to change, he looked down at his feet. There was a large rock, one

that appeared to have been touched by human hands. So he crouched down and he tried to move it, but it was too heavy, so instead he duck around it until he was able to get his fingers underneath. Then he heaved it out of the way. It had been blocking a hole in the ground, one that seemed to go on forever. Doc looked inside and saw what he felt was a mine shaft, so when the rain stopped, he ran back to his wife to tell her what he had found. They didn't share their news with the

rest of the group, though. Instead he and Babe came back a few days later alone to explore the shaft. Armed with ropes and flashlights, they repelled down roughly sixty feet until they found themselves in a small ante chamber. The walls of the room were covered in drawings, perhaps painted by a local Native American tribe long ago, and there was another narrow shaft that kept going down into the mountain. By the time they'd reached the end. They

had descended another one hundred and eighty six feet. The pair entered a massive cave about two thy seven hundred feet long, where Doc immediately noticed a human skeleton. Considering the tunnel was man made, perhaps one of the workers had died during the dig, Except the skeleton was on its knees and had been tied to a stake in the ground, and its hands were tied behind its back.

And it wasn't the only one. In total, there were twenty seven human skeletons in the Victorio Peak, well, twenty seven the Doc Noss had found at least He and his wife, though, pressed on deeper into the cavern, and those skeletons gave way to treasure, gold, coins, jewelry, statues, and historical objects, including a solid gold statue of the Virgin Mary. There was also a pile of letters dated

as recently as eighteen eighty. But Victorio Peak still had more to offer, because beyond that treasure room there were stacks of iron bars, thousands of them. Well that's what Doc thought at first. Each bar weighed as much as forty pounds, and after careful inspection, it was Babe who realized that they weren't iron at all. They were gold. Thousands of bars of gold, just sitting in the middle of a mountain in New Mexico. Who had put them there? And why was going to wait around to find out?

He started filling his pockets with whatever he could carry and climb back out to the surface with Ova. Together they set up camp near the entrance to the cave and spent the next few years hauling out bars of gold, jewelry, and anything else they could get their hands on. But the story doesn't end there. In nineteen thirty nine, Doc tried to make a wider opening to get the treasure out more easily. Instead, he accidentally caused a cave in

and blocked off all access for good. He worked for nine long years to sell those two hundred gold bars that he and Babe had managed to smuggle out, but had no luck, not until he met a man named Charlie Ryan in nineteen forty eight. Ryan agreed to buy fifty one of those bars. But there was something about this Ryan guy that rubbed Doc the wrong way. So rather than sell the gold, Noss and a buddy buried

it in a new hiding spot instead. Well, Ryan didn't like being given the run around, so he confronted Doc the next day with a gun. Noss tried to get away, but he couldn't outrun a bullet. Ryan shot and killed him where he stood. Babe and her children worked for the next three years to try and clear out the rocks blocking the entrance to the cave, but they were only twelve yards from the main cavern when their efforts

were halted. The US Army had commandeered the land around Victorio Peak for missile testing and kicked Babe and the nos family out for good. Of course, rumors of the treasure started floating around among the troops and they decided to finish what the Nosses had started. Pretty soon, the soldiers struck gold, literally, but rather than let them keep it for themselves, the army set off dynamite to block

access to the treasure permanently. Since then, others, including Babe Noss, have tried to find their way back into the cave to claim the rest of the treasure, but to no avail. As far as the rumors and legends will tell us, that treasure is still there today waiting to be found. Maybe Nicholas Cage is available to take on the job.

Hop If you've enjoyed today's guided tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities, subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, or learn more about the show by visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. The show was created by me Aaron Mankey in partnership with how Stuff Works. I make another award winning show called Lore, which is a podcast, book series, and television show, and you can learn all about it over at the Worldoflore dot com. And until next time, stay curious.

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