Retropod - podcast cover

Retropod

The Washington Post
Retropod is a show for history-lovers, featuring stories about the past, rediscovered. Host Mike Rosenwald introduces you to history’s most colorful characters - forgotten heroes, overlooked villains, dreamers, explorers, world changers.
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Episodes

John Brown's prophecy

Abolitionist John Brown wrote made a prophecy before he was executed.

May 14, 20184 min

The Sullivan brothers

Five brothers fought and died together on the same ship during World War II. Their final resting place was discovered earlier this year.

May 10, 20184 min

Lee Harvey Oswald's final hours before killing Kennedy

The assassination of President John F. Kennedy devastated the nation. But the day before the shooting was just a normal day. It was particularly calm and uneventful for the gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald.

May 09, 20184 min

To ban a "Mockingbird"

Harper Lee's classic novel has been causing controversy for as long as its been in print. Here's a look at the history of banning "To Kill a Mockingbird."

May 08, 20184 min

May the Fourth be with you

Mark Hamill himself shares stories from Star Wars history. You can hear the full interview with Hamill on the Cape Up podcast with Jonathan Capehart.

May 04, 20185 min

Need a job? Ask Ulysses S. Grant

Grant had an impressive resume on the battlefield, he was known to be a patsy when it came to helping job hunters. People used to walk right into the White House and ask the president to find them a job

May 01, 20183 min

Hate the IRS? Blame Abraham Lincoln.

In 1861, President Abraham Lincoln was in a financial bind. Also, he was in a war. To raise money, he pushed for and won passage of an income tax and, a year or so later, established the Internal Revenue Bureau to collect what was owed.

Apr 17, 20184 min

The mother who made George Washington miserable

George and his mother had an unusual relationship for the 1700s, more like what you might see in a sitcom from the 1970s. She was indispensable to him, but intolerable.

Apr 16, 20185 min

A letter from home

A German woman discovered that her childhood home was stolen from a Jewish family who fled Nazi Germany. Last year, she tracked down the address of one of the children, and wrote him a letter.

Apr 12, 20184 min

The invention of sarin

Weevils, a voracious beetle found in fields and orchards, were the original target of sarin gas.

Apr 09, 20184 min

The spy plane

Over the past few months, historians and national security analysts have been re-examining one particular forgotten moment in the history of U.S. and North Korea conflict.

Apr 06, 20184 min

The toughest job in politics

The most thankless job might be that of the White House press secretary. Just ask Ron Ziegler.

Apr 05, 20183 min

The day Martin Luther King Jr. died

Fifty years ago today, the civil rights leader Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was gunned down in Memphis. Riots broke out across the country, but in Indianapolis, there was peace.

Apr 04, 20187 min

The Mountaintop

On April 3, 1968, 50 years ago today, Martin Luther King, Jr. was in Memphis to support sanitation workers who were protesting for their civil rights. It was there that King delivered his last speech.

Apr 03, 20184 min
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