Accidentally Historic

Council Bluffs’ location has put the town into contact with a lot of history. Lewis and Clark and the Mormon pilgrims came through, as did the westbound pioneers on the Oregon and California Trails. Abraham Lincoln designated the town as milepost zero for the transcontinental railroad. The first coast-to-coast automobile trip passed through and later the first transcontinental highway. Council Bluffs was the birthplace of Omaha and first war-time mobile hospital. It also boasted the state’s first nursing school and FM radio station as well as the largest rotary cell jail ever built. This all created a lot of what we call history-- but at the time it wasn’t intended that way at all. It was just normal people finding innovative ways to solve problems, inventing the future one day at a time. And that has made for some really interesting tales that we intend to explore in this podcast series.

Some Council Bluffs Mysteries

This episode looks at some Council Bluffs mysteries that have lingered through the years, yet remain unexplained.  Included are the 1977 UFO Crash at Big Lake Park, the gruesome 1926 Keeline murders at the site of today's St. Paul's Lutheran Church, the 1970 Cadillac S&S Medic Mark 1 ambulance in which 495 people died, the librarians' perpetual sitings of Julia Officer at the Carnegie Building and the unsupported staircase, and the legends surrounding the Ruth Anne Dodge Memorial, better known locally as the Black Angel.For a comprehensive review of the Ruth Anne Dodge Memorial, from its planning and construction to the scandal that led to the aborted dedication ceremony we recommend the podcast "The Black Angel's Secret" https://accidentally-historic.simplecast.com/episodes/the-black-angels-secretQuestions, comments and suggestions for podcast guests or topics are always welcome!  You can contact us at information@TheHistoricalSociety.org.  The Society also has a YouTube channel you may enjoy: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2BijwKxeirRtL7QLnyfMzg

10-23
18:33

Fright for a Fee- Fifty Years of Omaha Council Bluffs Haunted Houses

Seasonal haunted houses appeared on the local scene about fifty years ago, initially fund raisers for a variety of groups and causes.  Youth For Christ, Campus Life, March of Dimes, the Jaycees, and the Historical Society were early participants.  From church basements and abandoned buildings to semi truck trailers in parking lots, haunted houses proliferated by the 1980s.  Generally staffed by youthful volunteers intent on making their particular character and their venue as scary as possible, the endeavor brought together imagination, creativity and theatrics to become something of an art form in its own right.Safety standards imposed following a 1980s tragedy in New Jersey escalated costs, forcing some small players out of the business, to be replaced by commercial operators.  The better financial position of the latter allowed for investment in more elaborate displays and equipment.  This, coupled with technology developments of the past decade, have made the modern haunted houses in many ways quite different from their predecessors, but some tried-and-true techniques can always be counted on for a scare.Haunted House historians Doug Kabourek and Brian Corey reminisce about Council Bluffs and Omaha’s early haunted houses, describe what makes a haunted house work, and discuss the allure they have had for young people and why that age demographic is expanding.  Doug Kabourek also maintains a website the chronicles the haunted houses of Council Bluffs and Omaha at www.WickedPlaza.comBrian Corey hosts a horror movie, paranormal, and spooky podcast call Necronomicast at www.necronomicast.com

10-14
26:09

Invisible Excellence- A Difficult and Dangerous Drive Toward the Front

This installment finds Unit K/Mobile One being stationed ever closer to the perilous European front, with its attendant danger and devastation.   For example, during this episode, in two different postings, Mobile One narrowly avoided being shelled.  In a third, the hospital was situated so close to a gas-shell dump that an attack would have required personnel to don their gas masks in just seconds to escape serious harm.  Along the way, this innovative group devised methods for performing operations safely during the approaching colder weather; and for doing surgeries at night, while still maintaining the cover of darkness.  They also reconfigured a set of train cars to function essentially as a rolling hospital, capable of rapidly transporting large numbers of recovering soldiers further from the front.  And on November 12, 1918, as Mobile One began arriving at the final French station covered in this installment, its personnel learned that the WWI armistice had become effective the day before.

09-24
29:48

Philosophy of the American West

Is the American West a physical place or the concept of interacting with the wilderness and taming the land?  Better represented by John Wayne winning the West and settling down living happily ever after, or the later Clint Eastwood version of the West as a place of drunkards and violence?  Or perhaps it was as captured by Blazing Saddles and City Slickers as a wildly bigoted and backwards place that is nothing to fondly be looked back upon?  And how does the Council Bluffs/Omaha Metro fit into all of this?  In this episode Ardennes Stolp provides some thought-provoking reflections on how to interpret the American West.

08-10
29:46

Invisible Excellence-Heightened Intensity: More Postings, More Patients

This is episode Four of the Invisible Excellence podcast series.  It takes the listener right into the operating tents of the Army’s first ever battlefield hospital that actually moved long the front lines with the action– Council Bluffs’ Unit K/Mobile #1. The group’s leader, surgeon and former Council Bluffs mayor Donald Macrae, Jr., set the tone in his notes: “The shelling was begun about midnight, and the whine and explosion of the projectiles continued until after daylight.”  This episode focusses on the unit’s first camps in France, the challenges they  aced, and the dogged persistence and courage they employed that redefined battlefield medicine.  Guest is writer/researcher Brian Mainwaring.

07-14
30:36

Invisible Excellence- Mobile 1 Logistics, staffing and 1st Wartime Experience

The tale of the Army’s first functional MASH unit, Council Bluffs’ Mobile 1 (aka Unit K) continues in this episode as writer/researcher Brian Mainwaring delves into the details of how the camps were set up, how they moved from battle to battle near the front lines, and some of the day-to-day challenges they endured including shortages of equipment, manpower, fuel, and safe drinking water.If you have any questions or comments please email information@TheHistoricalSociety.org

03-04
28:08

Amelia Bloomer- Crusading for Rights and Temperance from Council Bluffs

Amelia Bloomer was born in New York but spent most of her adult life in Council Bluffs.  Her name is associated with a garment worn by women and women’s rights, but there’s a lot more to the story than that.  Amelia Bloomer dedicated her life to righting social wrongs, and when she arrived in Council Bluffs in 1855 she found a town that could very definitely benefit from her services.  In this episode Dr. Warner talks with writer and researcher Sara Catterall about Amelia Bloomer’s very significant impact on social issues that included temperance, abolition, equal rights, and the 19th Amendment.For more information about Sara Catterall’s book, “Amelia Bloomer: Amelia Bloomer: Journalist, Suffragist, Anti-Fashion Icon” go to https://beltpublishing.com/products/amelia-bloomer-journalist-suffragist-anti-fashion-iconOur podcast guest, Sara, Catterall, is a writer with a Drama degree from NYU and an MLIS from Syracuse University. She was born in Ankara and grew up in South Minneapolis. She has worked as a librarian at Cornell University, as a reviewer and interviewer for Shelf Awareness, and as a professional book indexer. Her work has been published in the NEH’s Humanities magazine and The Sun magazine, and she co-authored Ottoman Dress and Design in the West: A Visual History of Cultural Exchange. She lives with her family near Ithaca, New York.  The podcast was recorded via Zoom. 

02-12
27:43

Invisible Excellence- Unit K/Mobile 1 WWI Operations in France

This episode continues the story of Mobile Hospital No, 1, also known as Unit K or the Council Bluffs Unit in World War I. In this episode writer/researcher Brian Mainwaring recounts events such as an early attempt to break up Unit K, its training and observation period with the British military, the full integration of Unit K’s roster into Mobile No. 1, preparation of the hospital’s personnel and inventory for its first full set-up and deployment there in mid-1918, and an incident in which a quartet of the officers discovered the rest of the group had been transferred ahead without them.

01-04
26:15

Invisible Excellence- Creation of Mobile Hospital #1

It was one of the deadliest conflicts of all time-- new weaponry resulted in a scale and severity of injuries that was unprecedented.  And the trauma of transporting these severely wounded to base hospitals became the weak link in the treatment chain.  Relief came in the form of a medical unit from over 4,500 miles away; Mobile Hospital #1, aka Unit K, the Council Bluffs Unit, commanded by a former Council Bluffs mayor.  Almost as astonishing as the novel concept of bringing care to the wounded on the battlefield was, the fact this milestone of military medicine pioneered by local doctors, nurses and support staff is today virtually unknown to Council Bluffs residents is even more surprising.This podcast is first in a series called “Invisible Excellence,” which will explore the history of this remarkable unit.  Our guest is local writer and researcher, Brian Mainwaring.  Comments, questions, or information about WWI medicine from your family lore are all encouraged.  You can contact us at information@TheHistoricalSociety.org.We would like to acknowledge the contributions of the following:Historical Society of Pottawattamie CountyJim McMullen and Kandis Kole-Skank of the Pottawattamie County Genealogical SocietyDr. David Holcomb Dr. James KnottThe reference department at the Council Bluffs Public Library References for more information:"Hospital No. 1 Won War Cross," Council Bluffs Daily Nonpareil, July 26, 1936"Glimpsing Modernity: Military Medicine in WWI," Chapter Five, by WIlliam Montgomery, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2016"Unit K the First MASH Unit," Council Bluffs Daily Nonpareil, May 20, 2016"Iowa Hospital Corps Moved with WWI," Omaha World Herald, July 2, 2017"Brief Hospital of Mobile Hospital No. 1," Journal of the Iowa State Medical Association, April 1920"One Hundred Years of Iowa Medicine," Iowa State Medical Association, 1950"The Great War: One Medic's Diary," Bob Reilly, Creighton University Magazine, Summer, 2001"Joseph Marshall Flint," Samuel Clark Harvey, Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine , March, 1945

09-16
26:15

Black Squirrels of the Bluffs

In this episode podcast host Richard Warner looks at the distribution of Council Bluffs' squirrel population, why they are black, how rare they are, some of the local traditions and laws regarding them, and how the Pottawattamie County jail ended up with that name.  Comments and questions are welcome!  You can reach us via email at Information@TheHistoricalSociety.org.

05-17
11:19

Ruffles to Reubens- Foods From the Metro

Questions and comments are always welcome.  Here’s link: https://www.thehistoricalsociety.org/contact-us.html 

06-27
19:30

A Legacy of Regret

Things out of history aren’t always what they appear. Historic figures that seem good or bad were actually every bit as complicated as we are. Even statues and monuments may have been designed to send messages other than what seems apparent. Historic General Dodge House director Tom Emmett tackles these complicated issues head on by using an incident from the Civil War that seemingly plagued General Dodge the rest of his life.

03-29
20:41

Loess Hills- A Grape Grower's Dream

This episode was recorded March 5, 2023 at Prairie Crossing Winery https://www.prairiecrossingwine.com.  The winery is located near Treynor, Iowa, just south of state highway 92.In the episode Mr. Gray makes reference to the Grape Growers Association and its role in making southwest Iowa a strong force in in the grape industry.  You can find some photos of Prairie Crossing Winery and a brief history of the Association at https://sites.google.com/thehistoricalsociety.org/grape-growers/home.

03-20
22:57

The Mobster and the Metro

Comments and questions are always welcome.  Contact the Historical Society at information@TheHistoricalSociety.org.  If you are interested in Council Bluffs history be sure to check our our local history videos.  Search for Council Bluffs Revealed in the YouTube search bar.  The Society also hosts a Facebook page called Council Bluffs Revealed.

11-22
10:13

It’s History that Makes us Human

Kat Slaughter is Museums Director for the Historical Society of Pottawattamie County.  She studied at the University of Wyoming, graduating in 2016 with a Bachelor's degree of History and Anthropology with an emphasis in museum studies.   Troy Stolp holds a BA from Iowa State University in Anthropology and Religious Studies, a BA from Buena Vista University in History, and an MA from UNO in History.  Troy is a teacher at Lewis Central.

10-24
23:21

Lost Restaurants of Omaha

The book "Lost Restaurants of Omaha" is available at The Bookworm at 2501 S. 90th in Omaha as well as Barnes & Noble at Oak View.Stay up-to-date on restaurants and things to do in the area by following Kim Reiner:Founder and owner of Oh My! Omaha - Exploring Omaha & Beyond and Let's Go IowaFollow me on Facebook, Twitter and see the pretty pictures on InstagramLet's pin stuff we'll never do! Follow me on Pinterest

10-01
17:13

Kanesville Kollectibles

Kanesville Kollectibles is located at 530 South 4th Street in Council Bluffs, Iowa.Website: kanesvillekollectibles.com

08-27
21:03

The Fastest Men in the World

If getting there is good, getting there faster is even better, right? That seems to be the conventional wisdom, as machines are pushed to and nudged beyond their limits. It takes some brave people to test those machines, and at least on a couple of occasions Council Bluffs men were ready to accept the challenge. This podcast tells the tale of O.J. Mitchell and James Bernard Verdin, two locals that set world speed records, one on land, the other in the air.

08-11
07:42

Handle Code Three

Patrick Toscano grew up in Council Bluffs and made law enforcement his career.  In this podcast he explains how things have changed during his decades of police work and shares some of the interesting incidents he encountered.  The podcast title is taken from the open of the old "Adam 12" television show in which the dispatcher informs the officers there is a 2-11 in progress, "handle code 3."  The officers switch on the lights and siren, and race to the scene.

04-18
18:44

Movie Media from the Metro

In this episode Kelli Bello, production manager of Council Bluffs' Firehouse Letterpress, explains how Omaha became the center of movie marketing and distribution, how film advertising and the technology used to create it changed over time, and how a good amount of the printing and cinematic archival material found its way to Council Bluffs.  Firehouse Letterpress owner Larry Richling describes the collection and how he got interested in putting it together.To view some examples of the items mentioned in the podcast and the 1950 documentary about the printing process: https://www.thehistoricalsociety.org/movies.htmlQuestions, comments and suggestions for podcast guests or topics are always welcome!  You can contact us at information@TheHistoricalSociety.org.  The Society also has a YouTube channel you may enjoy: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2BijwKxeirRtL7QLnyfMzg 

04-07
23:51

LB

really interesting podcasts! hope you continue.. I am from the siouxland area and love history, especially in our region. we live in a very unique and very historical area. from unique landscapes, Lewis and Clark, Oregon trail (western panhandle), train history, and so much more. good luck and thank you for the podcasts!

06-12 Reply

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