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Sue Cook presents the series that examines listeners' historical queries, exploring avenues of research and uncovering mysteries.
Email the programme with your questions.
Listen to the latest programme after broadcast.
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PROGRAMME 13: 24 June 2003
* The Great Gale, Bridlington 1871-– when 30 ships were lost. * Count Gustave Batthyany – why he gave Bridlington a lifeboat in the 1860s. * Amy Johnson (1903–41) – pioneer aviator. * The Daily Mail Broadcasting Yacht – first would-be radio pirate ship.
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PROGRAMME 12: 17 June 2003
* The Llanelli riots of 1911 – troops killed 2 bystanders. * The Hexham Massacre – 51 deaths as militia opened fire. * The Zeebrugge Raid – VCs by ballot. * Richard Pickersgill – Captain Cook's trusted lieutenant
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PROGRAMME 11: 10 June 2003
* Prince Monolulu – the flamboyant racecourse tipster. * Captain James Weddell – 19th-century Antarctic explorer * U-boat by Westminster Bridge – what happened to surrendered U-boats. * The Victorian working week – how its cut in hours led to the British weekend
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PROGRAMME 10: 3 June 2003
* Thomas Highs – underrated 18th-century cotton industry pioneer * The Smallpox Hospital at Grays – and why it was soon abandoned * Canadian Spitfire pilot Louis Cochand and RAF Holmsley South * Dragging swords – the naval ceremonial tradition
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PROGRAMME 9: 27 May 2003
* Wellington’s Surgeon-General – Sir James McGrigor. * Sake Deen Mahomed – the Indian who made his fortune massaging Regency aristocratic muscles. * The Hartley Colliery Disaster of 1862. * The Cro-Magnons – where did this early prehistoric people come from?
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PROGRAMME 8: 20 May 2003
* The bogus curate of Talland – why couples married twice in the early 1800s * Taking the King’s shilling – enlisting in Wellington’s day * The angels of Mons – the story of the Great War legend * Boudicca’s last battle – the site of her final defeat by the Romans.
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PROGRAMME 7: 13 May 2003
* Julian of Norwich – mediaeval mystic and anchoress * The Bisley Boy – the tale of a boy said to have been substituted for Queen Elizabeth I * The Oaks Colliery disaster – the biggest mining disaster in the 19th century * SS Petriana – the oil-tanker that caused an oil spill in Australia in 1903
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PROGRAMME 6: 06 May 2003
* The Maid of Lilliard’s Grave – the story of the Battle of Ancrum, 1545 * HMS Condor – the sloop that disappeared in the Pacific off Canada * Lieutenant Stillwell at Waterloo – a Green Jackets officer who died in battle * The Blue Ribbon Army – the temperance movement imported from America
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PROGRAMME 5: 29 April 2003
* Dr Roderigo Lopez – Shakespeare’s inspiration for Shylock * Keynsham brass – brass-making in the Avon valley. * Oliver Cromwell and the Drogheda massacre. * The Countess of Huntingdon’s Connexion – founder of a branch of Methodism.
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PROGRAMME 4: 22 April 2003
* The Daily Express dragonfly air crash, 1937 - an aeronautical mystery * ‘Wild’ Humphrey Kynaston - the cave dwelling highwayman. * Robert Burns – his philandering and the moral climate in late 18th century Scotland. * Sir Loin - a joint of beef knighted by James VI and I.
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PROGRAMME 3: 15 April 2003
* The Tower Subway – the tunnel that Tower Bridge replaced. * The Colney Hatch Lunatic Asylum – the Victorians and madness. * Roman citizenship – how it was acquired and proved. * Hearth tax and window tax – two long gone ways of raising revenue.
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PROGRAMME 2: 8 April 2003
* The infected blanket scandal of 1903 * The mole of Edge Hill – Joseph Williamson, the Liverpool tunneller * King Harold – did he survive the Battle of Hastings? * HMS Montague – the battleship that went aground on Lundy Island
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PROGRAMME 1: 1 April 2003
* General Karslake and the Quetta earthquake, 1935. * The making of the Bayeux tapestry. * The temperance movement – its beginnings in Preston, Lancashire, and the work of Lady Rosalind Carlisle. * Wife-selling - in the 18th century.
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