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That Doesn't Happen Every Day

Author: Dean Petersen

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Stories from everyday people about things that don't happen everyday.

53 Episodes
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From the skeleton of a teenaged girl, to a castle, to a railway shooting, I take you to all the odd little places in my own town where rumors have abounded and try to get to the bottom of them. Enjoy!100 Things To Do In Cheyenne Before You Die - Andi JaspersenHaunted Cheyenne - Jill PopeThe Slaying of CC BernardThe Execution of Paul "Perry" CarrollTom Horn's Execution & The Julian GallowsKeith Bellair's ShootingKeith Bellair's EscapeKnights of Pythias and Skeletons?Skeletons Found at Odd ...
How did someone who grew up in a Wyoming town better known for railroad workers and the world's largest outdoor rodeo become an Oscar-winning filmmaker? We find out about Dan Junge's journey from The Magic City of the Plains to the podium at the academy awards.Please check out Dan's films:ChiefsSaving FaceBeing EvelFight ChurchA Lego BrickumentaryTo learn more about Dan and his many other films please visit his website.Support the show
In 1862, a man was caught robbing so many graves in Salt Lake City, Utah that he was banished to a small island in The Great Salt Lake before disappearing entirely. Jennifer Jones of The Dead History Blog shares this story involving grave robbing, reassurances to families of the victims by Brigham Young, and a possible tattoo or branding the culprit was supposedly given.Please visit Jennifer's blog The Dead History.You can download John Devitry-Smith's extensive paper on the subject here.The ...
What happens when a biker, ultralight enthusiast, and scuba diver overcomes his wild past and opens a drive through known as "The Home of The Roadkill Burger" in Pinedale, Wyoming? AKA "The King Cone"Learn how Tommy Harkness kept his lights on for years despite joking about how his burgers were made from animals scraped off of Wyoming's endless highways as well as hear his thoughts on life, Desert Storm, and even God. Visit Dave's Last Stand that is now in the same building where T...
Samaritan On A Sled

Samaritan On A Sled

2024-08-0507:48

In 2021, Cheyenne, Wyoming honored a local teenager who helped his community in a very, very Wyoming Way.Support the show
In the late 1980's, Carmen Singleton tried out for her tiny high school's football team in Hulett, Wyoming -just 10 miles away from Devils Tower. She describes what it was like going to her first day of practice including how some people made bets about how soon she would quit the team after being tackled and teased by the team. She describes what four years of football did for her and how attitudes started to change as people saw the fourteen year old girl continue to suit up and represent T...
In 1987, a town known more for refinery workers and antelope herds saw a Hollywood production company arrive to make a horror movie in it old penitentiary. After finding out that the 300 real inmates the filmmakers were planning on using were not going to be available, railroad workers, accountants, and roughnecks showed up to be in Renny Harlin's film Prison about the ghost of a wrongfully executed prisoner seeking revenge. To learn how you can go on a tour of Wyoming's Frontier Prison...
In 1988, Anne Arden McDonald took her portrait in Wyoming's Gas Chamber in the old Penitentiary in Rawlins, WY (see episode's icon). We ask her about the picture, why she took it, how she took it and how the scary old prison inspired the other photos she took there.Click Here to See More of Anne's Photos from The PrisonClick Here to See Anne's Website and More of Her WorkClick Here to Visit Wyoming's Frontier Prison's WebsiteSupport the show
From the early 1900's until the early 1980's Wyoming's only maximum security prison was just half a dozen blocks away from downtown. The site of murders, arson, many executions, and even a lynching, Mark Setright walks us through the creepy old building on Walnut Street and describes the brutal and surreal events that happened within its walls. From an escape of almost 30 inmates that lead to locals shooting at prisoners trying to steal clothing from their clothes lines, a prison riot t...
In tiny Wheatland, Wyoming, Herschel "Tricky" Riggle had a successful rodeo act involving a three legged horse and knife throwing. However, Wheatland's idyllic main street was rocked by violence in 1953 when Riggle shot two people to death in the town's small café. We hear what happened and how some people still believe Governor Milward Simpson's reaction to the event had an impact on his 1958 attempt at re-election.Drawn to the Archives - And A Crime by Robin Everett (Story about Riggl...
In 1958, Charles Starkweather was captured near Douglas, Wyoming after killing eleven people. We learn about the police chase through Douglas that lead to his capture as well as give a new look at the involvement or possible abduction of his former girlfriend, Carol Ann Fugate.The Killing Spree that Transfixed a Nation by Lesley Wischmann Starkweather by Harry N MacleanMy Story by Elizabeth SmartCaril Fugate on A Current AffairWatch the trailer for BadlandsListen to Nebraska by Bruce Spr...
Douglas, Wyoming was home to a massive Prisoner of War Camp during World War Two. When the war ended the camp was closed leaving behind only a hospital and an old officers' club where it's rumored some people never left. How Can I Visit The Old Officers' Club?Haunted CheyenneStumbling on SkeletonsA Trail of Human SkeletonsOdd Fellows Have Skeletons In Their ClosetsSupport the show
In 1943 several thousand Prisoners of War from Germany and Italy were taken across the US to the tiny farming and ranching town of Douglas, Wyoming. This episode shares oral histories from people who remembered the camp and what they learned about the people held inside.Click here to see how you can arrange a visit to the remaining Officers' Club.#WorldWarTwo #POWs #Wyoming #CampDouglasSupport the show
In 2017, Dallin Cooper left Riverton, Wyoming to live in China. While there, he ate strange things, slept on hard beds, and upon returning home, had an explanation about why so many toilets in Yellowstone get broken.35 Chinese Translation FailsWhen East Meets West, Toilet Seats Take a Beating - Mike KoshmrlAs Asian Tourism Soars, the Mystery of Broken Toilet Seats Has Been Solved - Tom HowardWhat Diseases Can You Get From Sitting on a Toilet? - Dan Brennan MDWhy Do Chinese People Love Taking ...
In June of 1942, Japanese forces invaded two small Islands that are part of Alaska's Aleutian Islands. We listen to two men who were there when the invasion started and one who fought to take it back. Please check out:The Battle of AttuEven More About The BattleAleut Evacuation & Internment during World war IIJoseph Sasser's Full InterviewCharles House's Full InterviewNurses' CampsAttu Boy (Nick Golodoff's Story)Last Letters From Attu (Etta Jones' Story)Blue Grit Podcast: The Voice ...
In 1980, George C Scott (Patton) stared in a horror movie about a haunted house called The Changeling. Even though the film was set in Seattle, it was based on a story written by Russel Hunter who claimed to have paranormal experiences in his home near Cheesman Park in Denver, CO in 1969. (See Photo)We talk with Katie Rudolph at the Denver Public Library about her research into Hunter's story and compare it with the movie while trying to see if there is any truth to his strange and frei...
Bill Betenson is Butch Cassidy's great nephew and says that his great grandmother insisted that Cassidy came back to visit his family in Utah in 1925, seventeen years after his supposed death in a Bolivian shootout. While myths of outlaws surviving their supposed deaths are common, Bill and his great grandmother share a very convincing story and DNA evidence also makes the time and place of Cassidy's death highly questionable. If you enjoy this episode, you might like this one about Butch Cas...
Lois Christiansen & Wendy Peterson still live within walking distance of the Ghost Town of Piedmont, Wyoming where Butch Cassidy met with his lawyer to help a friend facing a murder trial. In 1869, angry railroad workers forced dignitaries headed to the Golden Spike Ceremony in Utah off the tracks and held them there until they were paid. We ask our interviewees what it's like living and growing up in this remote spot so close to a ghost town that played a big part in Western Histor...
In the early 1980's, my older brother, Mark Petersen, started volunteering at a radio station in a log cabin with grass growing on it's roof near North Pole, Alaska. Known as King Jesus North Pole (KJNP), it broadcast religious messages to native people in Alaska's interior and even into the Soviet Union. Mark tells us what it was like working at a station where he butchered his own meat and sent on-air messages to trappers and gold miners in Alaska's remote regions.Photo of KJNP Courte...
In 1993, Lisa Nicolle Hamilton's family moved into an old LDS church building built just after the American Civil War. She talks about what it was like growing up in the old building and how her family adapted the building into a home and the community's reaction to the church's new use. Lisa's YouTube ChannelThe Old Grantsville ChurchTwinpectol (Lisa's brothers' band with the song about living in the Church)Hey Kim and Katie (Lisa's relatives' podcast)Support the show
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