1 00:00:03,760 --> 00:00:08,000 Speaker 1: Our world is full of the unexplainable, and if history 2 00:00:08,039 --> 00:00:11,480 Speaker 1: is an open book, all of these amazing tales right 3 00:00:11,520 --> 00:00:16,640 Speaker 1: there on display, just waiting for us to explore. Welcome 4 00:00:17,760 --> 00:00:28,960 Speaker 1: to the Cabinet of Curiosities. It only took four months 5 00:00:29,000 --> 00:00:31,640 Speaker 1: to build, but by the time it launched from Philadelphia 6 00:00:31,800 --> 00:00:35,199 Speaker 1: in April of seventeen eighty, the U S S. Saratoga 7 00:00:35,360 --> 00:00:37,760 Speaker 1: was one of the finest sloops to ever sail during 8 00:00:37,800 --> 00:00:41,920 Speaker 1: the Revolutionary War. She was sixty eight feet long and 9 00:00:41,960 --> 00:00:46,320 Speaker 1: weighed one fifty tons. With a complement of eighty six officers, 10 00:00:46,760 --> 00:00:50,559 Speaker 1: Her armament consisted of sixteen nine pounder guns as well 11 00:00:50,600 --> 00:00:53,800 Speaker 1: as two four pounder guns, allowing her to protect herself 12 00:00:54,080 --> 00:00:56,520 Speaker 1: and the ship she escorted from the Delaware River to 13 00:00:56,560 --> 00:01:01,720 Speaker 1: England and everywhere in between. Their first mission had been 14 00:01:01,760 --> 00:01:06,160 Speaker 1: to accompany the male ship Mercury from Philadelphia to Europe. However, 15 00:01:06,200 --> 00:01:09,279 Speaker 1: the Sarasota's crew had been untrained and the ship proved 16 00:01:09,360 --> 00:01:12,319 Speaker 1: unstable on the high seas. As a result, it was 17 00:01:12,400 --> 00:01:15,479 Speaker 1: relieved of its duties so it's captain, John Young could 18 00:01:15,480 --> 00:01:18,800 Speaker 1: whip his men into shape while awaiting further orders. He 19 00:01:18,840 --> 00:01:20,639 Speaker 1: taught them how to run the ship as a team 20 00:01:20,720 --> 00:01:24,640 Speaker 1: and operate the guns, turning the Saratoga into a formidable 21 00:01:24,720 --> 00:01:29,360 Speaker 1: vessel despite her size. They spent the next year sailing 22 00:01:29,400 --> 00:01:33,280 Speaker 1: in pursuit of enemies along the Eastern Seaboard, capturing British 23 00:01:33,319 --> 00:01:35,880 Speaker 1: cargo ships and escorting them back home to have their 24 00:01:35,880 --> 00:01:39,479 Speaker 1: contents sold, bringing much needed funding to the Continental Army. 25 00:01:39,959 --> 00:01:43,840 Speaker 1: After several successful missions, including a recent recapture of a 26 00:01:43,880 --> 00:01:46,960 Speaker 1: British brig named Providence, it was time for the U. S. S. 27 00:01:46,959 --> 00:01:50,919 Speaker 1: Saratoga to return to Philadelphia for some minor repairs, and 28 00:01:50,960 --> 00:01:54,160 Speaker 1: then it would begin the biggest mission of its career. 29 00:01:55,320 --> 00:01:58,200 Speaker 1: In December of seventeen eighty, Captain Young and his crew 30 00:01:58,320 --> 00:02:02,800 Speaker 1: set out for the Caribbean, their destination the Isle of Hispaniola, 31 00:02:02,880 --> 00:02:05,640 Speaker 1: where they'd received word that a cash of French military 32 00:02:05,680 --> 00:02:09,960 Speaker 1: supplies were awaiting transportation back to America. Once the ship 33 00:02:10,040 --> 00:02:12,640 Speaker 1: reached the tropical waters off the coast of the island, 34 00:02:12,960 --> 00:02:15,640 Speaker 1: one of the merchant men aboard spotted a British sale 35 00:02:15,760 --> 00:02:19,399 Speaker 1: not far from their position. The Saratoga went to investigate, 36 00:02:19,800 --> 00:02:22,280 Speaker 1: and when they got close enough, they fired a four 37 00:02:22,280 --> 00:02:27,360 Speaker 1: pound shot across the ship's bow. Now identified as the Resolution, 38 00:02:27,560 --> 00:02:31,040 Speaker 1: the enemy ship turned to attack. The return fire didn't 39 00:02:31,080 --> 00:02:33,720 Speaker 1: do much damage to the Saratoga, but Captain Young's crew 40 00:02:33,760 --> 00:02:37,600 Speaker 1: managed to seriously injure the other vessel, forcing them to surrender. 41 00:02:38,080 --> 00:02:40,840 Speaker 1: He sent a small prize crew to take the Resolution 42 00:02:40,919 --> 00:02:45,040 Speaker 1: up to Delaware for processing, an auction escorted by the Saratoga. 43 00:02:45,240 --> 00:02:48,320 Speaker 1: They reached their destination on New Year's Day of seventy one, 44 00:02:48,720 --> 00:02:51,880 Speaker 1: dropped off the Resolution and set sail once again for 45 00:02:52,000 --> 00:02:56,680 Speaker 1: the Caribbean. Hours later, as they reached Florida, the Saratoga 46 00:02:56,760 --> 00:03:00,440 Speaker 1: caught another enemy ship, the Tonian. After an intense struggle, 47 00:03:00,919 --> 00:03:03,600 Speaker 1: towards the end of January, the Saratoga arrived on the 48 00:03:03,639 --> 00:03:06,480 Speaker 1: coast of Haiti with a Tonian in tow. The prize 49 00:03:06,520 --> 00:03:09,160 Speaker 1: ship was handed over to the French Admiralty Court, while 50 00:03:09,240 --> 00:03:12,639 Speaker 1: the Saratoga awaited the French military supplies that it had 51 00:03:12,639 --> 00:03:17,000 Speaker 1: originally come for. The governor of a local French colony 52 00:03:17,040 --> 00:03:20,359 Speaker 1: asked the Saratoga to accompany the other Continental frigates in 53 00:03:20,400 --> 00:03:23,440 Speaker 1: the harbor on their way to Jamaica, which Captain Young 54 00:03:23,520 --> 00:03:26,640 Speaker 1: was only too happy to oblige. After all, his job 55 00:03:26,760 --> 00:03:30,040 Speaker 1: wasn't just to capture enemy ships, but to escort allies 56 00:03:30,080 --> 00:03:34,080 Speaker 1: to safety as well. A full month passed before the 57 00:03:34,080 --> 00:03:36,800 Speaker 1: convoy of frigates and merchant ships left the coast of 58 00:03:36,840 --> 00:03:40,240 Speaker 1: Haiti one last time, bound for the Cabbean. Three days 59 00:03:40,240 --> 00:03:43,200 Speaker 1: into their journey, however, they spotted two sails off to 60 00:03:43,240 --> 00:03:46,920 Speaker 1: the west. The Saratoga took off in pursuit of the 61 00:03:47,000 --> 00:03:50,360 Speaker 1: rogue ships, one of which surrendered right away. Captain Young 62 00:03:50,480 --> 00:03:53,240 Speaker 1: tasked a crew headed by his midships men, a man 63 00:03:53,320 --> 00:03:57,160 Speaker 1: named Pinfield, with commandering the latest prize. Young and the 64 00:03:57,200 --> 00:04:02,240 Speaker 1: Saratoga planned on going after the other ship. Penfield watched 65 00:04:02,280 --> 00:04:05,920 Speaker 1: as the Saratoga pursued the second ship when high winds 66 00:04:06,040 --> 00:04:10,440 Speaker 1: nearly capsized his newly acquired vessel. Correcting the ship only 67 00:04:10,520 --> 00:04:12,440 Speaker 1: took a few minutes, but by the time he had 68 00:04:12,480 --> 00:04:15,400 Speaker 1: studied it and glanced back up at the ocean, the 69 00:04:15,440 --> 00:04:19,640 Speaker 1: Saratoga was gone. It hadn't faded off into the horizon 70 00:04:20,120 --> 00:04:23,600 Speaker 1: or sailed out of view behind something larger. It had 71 00:04:23,640 --> 00:04:30,760 Speaker 1: simply disappeared utterly and completely, and the Saratoga, along with 72 00:04:30,760 --> 00:04:36,640 Speaker 1: its crew and Captain Young, we're never seen again. Curious. 73 00:04:50,680 --> 00:04:55,240 Speaker 1: When the first commercial electrical telegraph debuted in eighteen thirty seven, 74 00:04:55,520 --> 00:04:59,440 Speaker 1: it heralded a new era of long range communication. Everyone 75 00:04:59,480 --> 00:05:02,800 Speaker 1: knows about Samuel Morse and his system of dots and dashes, 76 00:05:02,800 --> 00:05:05,320 Speaker 1: but it was the device created by William Cook and 77 00:05:05,400 --> 00:05:08,600 Speaker 1: Charles Wheatstone that really put the telegraph on the map. 78 00:05:09,960 --> 00:05:12,840 Speaker 1: Their telegraph consisted of a series of needles that pointed 79 00:05:12,880 --> 00:05:16,080 Speaker 1: to letters on a board with the help of electromagnetic coils. 80 00:05:16,560 --> 00:05:19,479 Speaker 1: For early operators who didn't want to bother learning a 81 00:05:19,520 --> 00:05:23,040 Speaker 1: whole new language, the Cook and wheat Stone telegraph proved 82 00:05:23,040 --> 00:05:27,760 Speaker 1: easy to use, and thus it was widely adopted. In fact, 83 00:05:27,800 --> 00:05:30,719 Speaker 1: it's use in catching the murderer John tay well In 84 00:05:32,120 --> 00:05:36,440 Speaker 1: probably helped the public and other organizations accept the telegraph 85 00:05:36,520 --> 00:05:40,479 Speaker 1: in their daily lives. But no invention, no matter how useful, 86 00:05:40,880 --> 00:05:44,800 Speaker 1: stays the same forever it is iterated upon. To increase 87 00:05:44,880 --> 00:05:48,680 Speaker 1: efficiency and reduce cost, The Cook and Wheatstone system was 88 00:05:48,720 --> 00:05:52,039 Speaker 1: easy to use, but it was expensive to maintain. It 89 00:05:52,080 --> 00:05:55,960 Speaker 1: also took longer to send simple messages. The Morse code system, 90 00:05:56,080 --> 00:05:59,320 Speaker 1: while appearing more difficult to learn at first, was eventually 91 00:05:59,360 --> 00:06:03,160 Speaker 1: adopted and understood by skilled technicians who could distinguish letters 92 00:06:03,200 --> 00:06:06,280 Speaker 1: by the length of intervals between clicks. Then they would 93 00:06:06,279 --> 00:06:08,760 Speaker 1: write out the messages longhand on a piece of paper. 94 00:06:10,640 --> 00:06:13,000 Speaker 1: Of course, the technology still had a room to grow, 95 00:06:13,440 --> 00:06:16,000 Speaker 1: and in eighteen fifty one one man had a theory 96 00:06:16,040 --> 00:06:19,360 Speaker 1: about how to transmit messages all over the world even faster. 97 00:06:19,880 --> 00:06:24,640 Speaker 1: It required no special code or training. His idea let 98 00:06:24,760 --> 00:06:29,719 Speaker 1: mother nature do the work. Jacques Toussain Benois was a 99 00:06:29,760 --> 00:06:34,640 Speaker 1: French occultist with a fascination for how animals communicated. For example, 100 00:06:34,960 --> 00:06:38,200 Speaker 1: he suggested that when snails made it, they secreted a 101 00:06:38,279 --> 00:06:41,640 Speaker 1: special fluid that allowed them to talk to one another telepathically. 102 00:06:42,200 --> 00:06:45,960 Speaker 1: He called it sympathetic communication, and he believed the connection 103 00:06:46,040 --> 00:06:49,520 Speaker 1: worked immediately anywhere in the world, no matter how far 104 00:06:49,560 --> 00:06:54,039 Speaker 1: apart the snails were. Benois, however, had no money to 105 00:06:54,120 --> 00:06:58,240 Speaker 1: construct his snail telegraph, so he convinced a Paris gym 106 00:06:58,279 --> 00:07:01,640 Speaker 1: owner named Monsieur Tree to provide him a place to 107 00:07:01,680 --> 00:07:04,960 Speaker 1: stay and a small allowance. After having convinced him how 108 00:07:05,000 --> 00:07:08,080 Speaker 1: important it was that he brought his work to fruition. 109 00:07:09,440 --> 00:07:12,400 Speaker 1: A year went by and Tria demanded to see what 110 00:07:12,600 --> 00:07:15,800 Speaker 1: his hospitality had earned him. Ben Wat showed him what 111 00:07:15,880 --> 00:07:18,520 Speaker 1: he had been working on. He'd built a scaffold using 112 00:07:18,520 --> 00:07:21,600 Speaker 1: wooden beams about ten ft long. Atop the beams were 113 00:07:21,600 --> 00:07:24,640 Speaker 1: twenty four bulls made of zinc which had been lined 114 00:07:24,680 --> 00:07:28,480 Speaker 1: with cloth drenched in copper sulfate. Glued to the bottom 115 00:07:28,480 --> 00:07:31,440 Speaker 1: of each bowl was a snail linked to a different 116 00:07:31,520 --> 00:07:35,960 Speaker 1: letter of the alphabet. It also constructed an identical machine, 117 00:07:36,200 --> 00:07:38,480 Speaker 1: except in each of its bowls were the mates of 118 00:07:38,480 --> 00:07:41,600 Speaker 1: the snails in the first machine. Whenever he tapped a 119 00:07:41,640 --> 00:07:44,960 Speaker 1: snail on one device, the corresponding snail on the other 120 00:07:45,000 --> 00:07:49,560 Speaker 1: device would react. At least that was the idea. Benois 121 00:07:49,720 --> 00:07:53,360 Speaker 1: demonstrated his contraption to Tria as well as to a 122 00:07:53,440 --> 00:07:57,200 Speaker 1: journalist from a popular conservative publication at the time. He 123 00:07:57,320 --> 00:07:59,480 Speaker 1: instructed each of the men to stand behind one of 124 00:07:59,480 --> 00:08:02,400 Speaker 1: the device is and tap out a word, one snail 125 00:08:02,440 --> 00:08:04,760 Speaker 1: at a time, while ben Wah would await the message 126 00:08:04,800 --> 00:08:07,520 Speaker 1: at the other device and repeat it back to them 127 00:08:07,520 --> 00:08:11,560 Speaker 1: when they finished. The journalist was floored by what he witnessed. 128 00:08:11,760 --> 00:08:16,240 Speaker 1: He called it a revelation. Tria, however, wasn't convinced to 129 00:08:16,360 --> 00:08:19,520 Speaker 1: him it didn't work as advertised. Tria had spelled out 130 00:08:19,520 --> 00:08:23,480 Speaker 1: the word jim nas, which ben Wat transcribed as jim 131 00:08:23,480 --> 00:08:26,520 Speaker 1: No eight. The inventor also had a habit of strolling 132 00:08:26,600 --> 00:08:29,400 Speaker 1: up and down the aisle formed between the two devices 133 00:08:29,480 --> 00:08:32,560 Speaker 1: to monitor how the men were operating it, which didn't 134 00:08:32,559 --> 00:08:37,120 Speaker 1: sit well with his skeptical investor. Tria figured the whole 135 00:08:37,120 --> 00:08:40,839 Speaker 1: operation to be a sham. He ordered a second demonstration 136 00:08:40,920 --> 00:08:43,400 Speaker 1: to be conducted in the coming days, which Ben Wah 137 00:08:43,559 --> 00:08:48,200 Speaker 1: happily agreed to. Except the demonstration never happened. You see, 138 00:08:48,200 --> 00:08:51,120 Speaker 1: when the big day finally arrived, Ben Wat was nowhere 139 00:08:51,160 --> 00:08:54,319 Speaker 1: to be found. He'd slipped away, leaving Tria and the 140 00:08:54,400 --> 00:08:57,120 Speaker 1: journalist high and dry with a bunch of snails to 141 00:08:57,160 --> 00:09:00,559 Speaker 1: clean up. In hindsight, the whole idea it turned out 142 00:09:00,600 --> 00:09:03,800 Speaker 1: to be too good to be true, if only a 143 00:09:03,800 --> 00:09:10,920 Speaker 1: Tria had gotten the message. I hope you've enjoyed today's 144 00:09:10,920 --> 00:09:14,600 Speaker 1: guided tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free 145 00:09:14,640 --> 00:09:17,319 Speaker 1: on Apple Podcasts, or learn more about the show by 146 00:09:17,400 --> 00:09:22,360 Speaker 1: visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. The show was created by 147 00:09:22,400 --> 00:09:26,040 Speaker 1: me Aaron Manky in partnership with how Stuff Works. I 148 00:09:26,120 --> 00:09:29,920 Speaker 1: make another award winning show called Lore, which is a podcast, 149 00:09:30,040 --> 00:09:32,960 Speaker 1: book series, and television show, and you can learn all 150 00:09:33,000 --> 00:09:36,559 Speaker 1: about it over at the World of Lore dot com. 151 00:09:36,559 --> 00:09:38,960 Speaker 1: And until next time, stay curious,