1 00:00:04,080 --> 00:00:07,480 Speaker 1: Welcome to Aaron Benky's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of 2 00:00:07,480 --> 00:00:13,840 Speaker 1: I Heart Radio and Grim and Mild. Our world is 3 00:00:13,960 --> 00:00:17,960 Speaker 1: full of the unexplainable, and if history is an open book, 4 00:00:18,280 --> 00:00:21,640 Speaker 1: all of these amazing tales are right there on display, 5 00:00:22,000 --> 00:00:27,600 Speaker 1: just waiting for us to explore. Welcome to the Cabinet 6 00:00:27,840 --> 00:00:39,520 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. There's nothing wrong with the little competition. In fact, 7 00:00:39,560 --> 00:00:43,160 Speaker 1: experts claim it drives both sides toward better innovation and improvement. 8 00:00:43,600 --> 00:00:46,240 Speaker 1: Think about it, how would a professional athlete know how 9 00:00:46,320 --> 00:00:48,920 Speaker 1: fast they could run if they didn't have a competitor 10 00:00:49,000 --> 00:00:51,640 Speaker 1: to try and beat. Some of the great inventions of 11 00:00:51,640 --> 00:00:54,960 Speaker 1: our day are a result of competition. The mobile computers 12 00:00:55,000 --> 00:00:57,160 Speaker 1: we all have in our pockets would most likely not 13 00:00:57,240 --> 00:00:59,680 Speaker 1: have arrived so soon if it weren't for the competition 14 00:00:59,720 --> 00:01:02,080 Speaker 1: between in a number of companies, and the war of 15 00:01:02,080 --> 00:01:05,360 Speaker 1: the currents in the eighteen eighties between alternating current and 16 00:01:05,400 --> 00:01:09,520 Speaker 1: direct current gave us the home electrical systems we have today. 17 00:01:10,040 --> 00:01:12,920 Speaker 1: So we can't fault Daniel Burnham for thinking about his 18 00:01:13,000 --> 00:01:16,000 Speaker 1: own competition and wanting to do better. He was an 19 00:01:16,040 --> 00:01:19,840 Speaker 1: architect with an unusual and rare project. Take a massive 20 00:01:19,880 --> 00:01:23,039 Speaker 1: section of Chicago and turn it into an attraction that 21 00:01:23,080 --> 00:01:27,399 Speaker 1: would captivate the world. Just a year before, in eighteen 22 00:01:27,480 --> 00:01:30,039 Speaker 1: eighty nine, the city of Paris played host to the 23 00:01:30,080 --> 00:01:33,280 Speaker 1: World Exhibition, and standing tall in the center of their 24 00:01:33,319 --> 00:01:36,120 Speaker 1: wonders and entertainment was a structure that we all take 25 00:01:36,120 --> 00:01:39,840 Speaker 1: for granted today, the Eiffel Tower. So with Chicago on 26 00:01:39,880 --> 00:01:43,880 Speaker 1: the cusp of hosting their own World's Columbian Exhibition, Daniel 27 00:01:44,000 --> 00:01:47,440 Speaker 1: was in desperate need of something even bigger, more impressive 28 00:01:47,520 --> 00:01:51,080 Speaker 1: than that. Thankfully, there were a lot of options submitted, 29 00:01:51,360 --> 00:01:53,840 Speaker 1: but none seemed to sparkle with the wonder that he 30 00:01:53,880 --> 00:01:56,520 Speaker 1: was aiming for. Honestly, for a while, he sort of 31 00:01:56,560 --> 00:01:59,280 Speaker 1: just felt like he was spinning his wheels, moving from 32 00:01:59,320 --> 00:02:03,400 Speaker 1: one proposed to the next, getting interested, before ultimately realizing 33 00:02:03,440 --> 00:02:07,560 Speaker 1: the idea was impossible, or too expensive, or both. But 34 00:02:07,640 --> 00:02:10,600 Speaker 1: that's when he met George. George was a young civil 35 00:02:10,639 --> 00:02:13,440 Speaker 1: engineer with a lot of innovation in his blood. As 36 00:02:13,440 --> 00:02:15,960 Speaker 1: a child, his family moved around a bit from his 37 00:02:16,040 --> 00:02:19,200 Speaker 1: birth state of Illinois to the much drier climate of Nevada. 38 00:02:19,560 --> 00:02:22,480 Speaker 1: His father had been a horticulturalist, and in the eighteen 39 00:02:22,520 --> 00:02:26,280 Speaker 1: seventies took on the responsibility of beautifying Carson City by 40 00:02:26,320 --> 00:02:30,160 Speaker 1: importing hundreds of trees from out east. George, though, wanted 41 00:02:30,200 --> 00:02:32,639 Speaker 1: to build things. He spent a brief amount of time 42 00:02:32,639 --> 00:02:36,600 Speaker 1: at the California Military Academy before pursuing his engineering degree, 43 00:02:36,880 --> 00:02:39,840 Speaker 1: and by eighty one he was in that weird position 44 00:02:39,919 --> 00:02:44,080 Speaker 1: so many college graduates find themselves in even today, fully trained, 45 00:02:44,280 --> 00:02:47,960 Speaker 1: hungry for opportunity, and looking for work. But instead of 46 00:02:47,960 --> 00:02:51,400 Speaker 1: getting a job somewhere else, he hired himself by starting 47 00:02:51,440 --> 00:02:54,720 Speaker 1: a company that tested the intricate steel structures of bridges. 48 00:02:55,840 --> 00:02:58,080 Speaker 1: But when George heard that the planners of the World's 49 00:02:58,120 --> 00:03:01,399 Speaker 1: Columbian Exhibition we're looking for and engineering feats, he saw 50 00:03:01,480 --> 00:03:04,480 Speaker 1: his chance to really turn some heads. He drafted up 51 00:03:04,520 --> 00:03:08,200 Speaker 1: his proposal and sent it over, and Daniel Burnham loved it. 52 00:03:09,080 --> 00:03:14,079 Speaker 1: His fellow planners, though, weren't so sure. Was it spectacular, absolutely, 53 00:03:14,400 --> 00:03:16,720 Speaker 1: but how would it work? After all, it seemed to 54 00:03:16,720 --> 00:03:19,520 Speaker 1: be far too complex to be viable. So when his 55 00:03:19,639 --> 00:03:22,799 Speaker 1: idea was rejected, George insisted that it would work by 56 00:03:22,840 --> 00:03:25,400 Speaker 1: providing studies that he paid for out of his pocket 57 00:03:25,480 --> 00:03:28,800 Speaker 1: to prove the safety and functionality of the design. He 58 00:03:28,880 --> 00:03:31,040 Speaker 1: even found his own investors to cover the cost of 59 00:03:31,080 --> 00:03:34,080 Speaker 1: building it, to make it even easier on the planning committee, 60 00:03:34,400 --> 00:03:37,960 Speaker 1: and finally they agreed, and George immediately got to work. 61 00:03:38,440 --> 00:03:42,040 Speaker 1: And what he ended up building in was both breathtaking 62 00:03:42,080 --> 00:03:44,920 Speaker 1: to the people who first saw it and familiar to 63 00:03:45,000 --> 00:03:48,240 Speaker 1: many of us today. It was a massive wheel that 64 00:03:48,320 --> 00:03:51,240 Speaker 1: stood over two hundred sixty feet high, mounted on a 65 00:03:51,320 --> 00:03:54,360 Speaker 1: central axle. Hanging off the outer edge of that wheel 66 00:03:54,400 --> 00:03:58,440 Speaker 1: at regular intervals were forty passenger cars, each capable of 67 00:03:58,480 --> 00:04:02,040 Speaker 1: seating about sixty people. It was like a giant metal 68 00:04:02,080 --> 00:04:05,960 Speaker 1: spider web that just turned and turned, taking occupants on 69 00:04:06,040 --> 00:04:10,560 Speaker 1: a steam powered circular twenty minute ride above Chicago. And 70 00:04:10,600 --> 00:04:13,920 Speaker 1: the world fell in love with George's new invention, as 71 00:04:14,000 --> 00:04:16,880 Speaker 1: any trip to a local fair might tell you. Today, 72 00:04:16,920 --> 00:04:20,040 Speaker 1: even the great city of London has their own permanent version, 73 00:04:20,160 --> 00:04:23,679 Speaker 1: the London I. But it wasn't a happy ending for George. 74 00:04:24,000 --> 00:04:27,200 Speaker 1: The exhibition in Chicago withheld three quarters of a million 75 00:04:27,240 --> 00:04:30,840 Speaker 1: dollars in profit, worth tens of millions of dollars today, 76 00:04:31,200 --> 00:04:35,360 Speaker 1: and the loss ultimately drove him into bankruptcy. George died 77 00:04:35,400 --> 00:04:38,520 Speaker 1: from typhoid fever three years after his great Wheel took 78 00:04:38,520 --> 00:04:41,360 Speaker 1: its first spin. At the young age of just thirty seven, 79 00:04:41,720 --> 00:04:45,240 Speaker 1: and while most people have forgotten his personal story, you'd 80 00:04:45,279 --> 00:04:48,120 Speaker 1: be hard pressed to find anyone who doesn't know his name, 81 00:04:49,000 --> 00:05:06,760 Speaker 1: George Washington Ferris, the father of the Ferris Wheel. Death 82 00:05:06,800 --> 00:05:10,840 Speaker 1: affects everyone differently. Not only do mourning rituals vary from 83 00:05:10,880 --> 00:05:13,320 Speaker 1: culture it's a culture, but death itself can hit each 84 00:05:13,360 --> 00:05:16,880 Speaker 1: individual in its own way. The loss of an estranged 85 00:05:16,920 --> 00:05:20,240 Speaker 1: relative might not gardner many tears, but losing a close 86 00:05:20,240 --> 00:05:22,200 Speaker 1: friend who saw us through a bad time in our 87 00:05:22,200 --> 00:05:26,440 Speaker 1: lives might cause intense heartache. Every death is unique, as 88 00:05:26,480 --> 00:05:30,800 Speaker 1: are its effects on our mental health. One particular activity, though, 89 00:05:31,000 --> 00:05:34,880 Speaker 1: has captivated mourners for hundreds of years. What started out 90 00:05:34,920 --> 00:05:37,800 Speaker 1: as a way to literally raise the dead has now 91 00:05:37,839 --> 00:05:42,080 Speaker 1: become a rite of passage for teenage girls everywhere. It's 92 00:05:42,120 --> 00:05:45,440 Speaker 1: true origins are unknown, but historians can at least trace 93 00:05:45,520 --> 00:05:48,200 Speaker 1: the practice back to a book called The Diary of 94 00:05:48,240 --> 00:05:51,680 Speaker 1: Samuel Peeps. Samuel was a member of parliament during the 95 00:05:51,720 --> 00:05:54,560 Speaker 1: seventeenth century and began writing in his diary on New 96 00:05:54,640 --> 00:05:57,440 Speaker 1: Year's Day of sixteen sixty. Over the course of the 97 00:05:57,480 --> 00:05:59,919 Speaker 1: next ten years, he kept a daily account of his days, 98 00:06:00,040 --> 00:06:03,720 Speaker 1: including observations on things such as English politics and the 99 00:06:03,839 --> 00:06:09,280 Speaker 1: arts of the time. However, on July one six, Samuel 100 00:06:09,320 --> 00:06:11,880 Speaker 1: recorded a particular story that had been told to him 101 00:06:11,920 --> 00:06:14,400 Speaker 1: by a friend of his name, Mr. Brisbane, who had 102 00:06:14,400 --> 00:06:18,320 Speaker 1: witnessed something akin to witchcraft while in France. He'd watched 103 00:06:18,360 --> 00:06:21,760 Speaker 1: as four young girls each knelt on one knee around 104 00:06:21,760 --> 00:06:24,320 Speaker 1: a boy lying on the ground. He was on his back, 105 00:06:24,480 --> 00:06:27,119 Speaker 1: giving the appearance that he had died, and each girl 106 00:06:27,200 --> 00:06:31,360 Speaker 1: placed one finger underneath him. Then they recited a short poem, 107 00:06:31,600 --> 00:06:34,239 Speaker 1: each girl whispering a line of it into the ear 108 00:06:34,320 --> 00:06:37,600 Speaker 1: of the one next to her. Here lies a dead body, 109 00:06:37,960 --> 00:06:42,719 Speaker 1: stiff as a stick, cold as marble, light as a spirit, 110 00:06:43,360 --> 00:06:47,000 Speaker 1: rise in the name of Jesus Christ. The lines were 111 00:06:47,040 --> 00:06:50,359 Speaker 1: uttered in round robin style as the girls proceeded to 112 00:06:50,440 --> 00:06:53,800 Speaker 1: lift the boy off the ground with only their outstretched fingers. 113 00:06:54,200 --> 00:06:57,920 Speaker 1: Brisbane couldn't believe his eyes. Surely it had been an illusion, 114 00:06:58,279 --> 00:06:59,760 Speaker 1: so when it was over, he told the boy to 115 00:06:59,800 --> 00:07:01,760 Speaker 1: get up and move out of the way, and then 116 00:07:01,760 --> 00:07:04,320 Speaker 1: brought in a much larger man to take his place. 117 00:07:04,920 --> 00:07:08,520 Speaker 1: Sure Enough, the girls chanted the same incantation again, each 118 00:07:08,520 --> 00:07:12,080 Speaker 1: one reciting a single line, and lifted the hefty newcomer 119 00:07:12,280 --> 00:07:15,600 Speaker 1: over their heads, each one using only a single finger. 120 00:07:16,520 --> 00:07:19,920 Speaker 1: Where had the girls learned such a game. It's possible 121 00:07:19,960 --> 00:07:22,080 Speaker 1: it had been passed down from people who had never 122 00:07:22,120 --> 00:07:25,440 Speaker 1: actually seen it as a game, people who really wanted 123 00:07:25,480 --> 00:07:30,560 Speaker 1: to raise those they've lost. Decades earlier, from sixty to 124 00:07:30,640 --> 00:07:34,280 Speaker 1: sixteen thirty two, France had seen a monumental loss of 125 00:07:34,360 --> 00:07:38,080 Speaker 1: a million people to a plague epidemic. The constant reminder 126 00:07:38,120 --> 00:07:41,000 Speaker 1: of death, watching family and friends succumb to it every 127 00:07:41,080 --> 00:07:44,800 Speaker 1: day had most likely affected the surviving children, and one 128 00:07:44,800 --> 00:07:47,440 Speaker 1: way to make something like death less scary was to 129 00:07:47,480 --> 00:07:50,239 Speaker 1: turn it into a game, a game where someone could 130 00:07:50,280 --> 00:07:54,640 Speaker 1: literally be raised from the dead. Throughout history, other attempts 131 00:07:54,680 --> 00:07:57,280 Speaker 1: to lift people with the lightest of touches has also 132 00:07:57,360 --> 00:08:00,960 Speaker 1: been recorded, as in an eighteen five The Seven volume 133 00:08:01,000 --> 00:08:04,680 Speaker 1: by one Robert Conger Pell. In the book, Pell described 134 00:08:04,720 --> 00:08:06,679 Speaker 1: how a man lying on a bench with his legs 135 00:08:06,680 --> 00:08:09,800 Speaker 1: fully extended could be lifted by two people standing on 136 00:08:09,840 --> 00:08:12,080 Speaker 1: each side of him. In order for the lift to 137 00:08:12,120 --> 00:08:15,200 Speaker 1: be successful, though the two men both needed to inhale 138 00:08:15,280 --> 00:08:19,880 Speaker 1: at the same time just before the lift. At eighty three, 139 00:08:19,920 --> 00:08:23,760 Speaker 1: inventor and scientist David Brewster wrote about a similar experiment 140 00:08:23,840 --> 00:08:27,760 Speaker 1: as Pells. In Brewster's version, however, the subject being raised 141 00:08:27,760 --> 00:08:30,240 Speaker 1: had to adhere to a set of rules. For one, 142 00:08:30,400 --> 00:08:32,920 Speaker 1: they needed to be heavier than anyone else in the group, 143 00:08:33,360 --> 00:08:36,480 Speaker 1: and second, the person was asked to lay across two chairs, 144 00:08:36,760 --> 00:08:39,240 Speaker 1: with one to support his back and one to hold 145 00:08:39,320 --> 00:08:42,640 Speaker 1: up his legs. Four people then stood around him to 146 00:08:42,800 --> 00:08:45,760 Speaker 1: buy his legs and two near his shoulders. Their first 147 00:08:45,800 --> 00:08:48,200 Speaker 1: lift often went poorly, with no one able to get 148 00:08:48,280 --> 00:08:50,840 Speaker 1: him in the air. It wasn't until everyone took a 149 00:08:50,920 --> 00:08:54,160 Speaker 1: deep breath, including the person being lifted, that he was 150 00:08:54,200 --> 00:08:57,240 Speaker 1: finally able to be hoisted with ease. It was as 151 00:08:57,320 --> 00:08:59,720 Speaker 1: if the air in his lungs had turned him into 152 00:08:59,760 --> 00:09:04,120 Speaker 1: a loon. The exercise is still performed today, though it's 153 00:09:04,120 --> 00:09:07,440 Speaker 1: not done by science minded adults anymore. It's played as 154 00:09:07,480 --> 00:09:10,520 Speaker 1: a game at places like slumber parties, and it goes 155 00:09:10,559 --> 00:09:13,079 Speaker 1: by the catchy name of light as a feather stiff 156 00:09:13,120 --> 00:09:17,679 Speaker 1: as a board. Physics does the um heavy lifting, with 157 00:09:17,720 --> 00:09:20,640 Speaker 1: each person taking on an equal amount of the subject's 158 00:09:20,640 --> 00:09:24,240 Speaker 1: body weight at the same time. Their coordinated efforts allow 159 00:09:24,280 --> 00:09:26,880 Speaker 1: them to lift a person off the ground as though 160 00:09:26,880 --> 00:09:31,360 Speaker 1: they weigh almost nothing at all, and thankfully there's no 161 00:09:31,480 --> 00:09:37,560 Speaker 1: witchcraft required. I hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour of 162 00:09:37,559 --> 00:09:41,559 Speaker 1: the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, 163 00:09:41,640 --> 00:09:45,160 Speaker 1: or learn more about the show by visiting Curiosities podcast 164 00:09:45,400 --> 00:09:49,440 Speaker 1: dot com. The show was created by me Aaron Manky 165 00:09:49,480 --> 00:09:52,960 Speaker 1: in partnership with how Stuff Works. I make another award 166 00:09:52,960 --> 00:09:56,520 Speaker 1: winning show called Lore, which is a podcast, book series, 167 00:09:56,600 --> 00:09:59,200 Speaker 1: and television show, and you can learn all about it 168 00:09:59,280 --> 00:10:02,840 Speaker 1: over at the World of Lore dot Come and until 169 00:10:02,880 --> 00:10:05,839 Speaker 1: next time, stay curious. Yeah,