1 00:00:04,080 --> 00:00:07,520 Speaker 1: Welcomed Aaron Manky's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of I 2 00:00:07,600 --> 00:00:14,240 Speaker 1: Heart Radio and Grim and Mild. Our world is full 3 00:00:14,320 --> 00:00:17,960 Speaker 1: of the unexplainable, and if history is an open book, 4 00:00:18,239 --> 00:00:21,640 Speaker 1: all of these amazing tales are right there on display, 5 00:00:22,000 --> 00:00:27,560 Speaker 1: just waiting for us to explore. Welcome to the Cabinet 6 00:00:27,840 --> 00:00:39,920 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. Some things are just destined for problems. The Titanic, 7 00:00:40,120 --> 00:00:43,720 Speaker 1: but the Hindenburg or a recent curiosity here of U 8 00:00:43,840 --> 00:00:46,879 Speaker 1: twelve oh six, the World War Two German sub that 9 00:00:47,000 --> 00:00:50,720 Speaker 1: was forced to surface after its captain flushed the onboard toilet. 10 00:00:51,120 --> 00:00:55,440 Speaker 1: These were all man made vessels that seemed faded to fail. However, 11 00:00:55,520 --> 00:00:58,920 Speaker 1: in eighteen twenty Kentucky, the launch of a new Fairy 12 00:00:59,040 --> 00:01:02,040 Speaker 1: meant the public be faced with one more doomed craft. 13 00:01:02,440 --> 00:01:05,600 Speaker 1: Except this one wasn't felled via a bathroom mishap or 14 00:01:05,640 --> 00:01:09,120 Speaker 1: an iceberg. What happened aboard this particular ferry was much worse, 15 00:01:09,560 --> 00:01:11,880 Speaker 1: not just for those who wrote it, but also for 16 00:01:11,920 --> 00:01:14,760 Speaker 1: the men who built it. It was the brainchild of 17 00:01:14,880 --> 00:01:19,039 Speaker 1: Kentucky merchant and entrepreneur Moses Tusci, who thought that he 18 00:01:19,040 --> 00:01:21,679 Speaker 1: could make good money by starting his own ferry service 19 00:01:21,720 --> 00:01:24,800 Speaker 1: along the Ohio River. His ferry would shuttle people and 20 00:01:24,920 --> 00:01:30,360 Speaker 1: cargo from Tuscy Town, Kentucky, named after his family, to Lawrenceburg, Indiana, 21 00:01:30,520 --> 00:01:34,399 Speaker 1: and back. But Moses needed help getting his new business 22 00:01:34,440 --> 00:01:37,200 Speaker 1: off the ground, so he hired a man named William McGregor. 23 00:01:37,520 --> 00:01:40,600 Speaker 1: McGregor and his fourteen year old daughter, Eleanor were new 24 00:01:40,640 --> 00:01:43,920 Speaker 1: in town. Eleanor got along great with almost everyone she met, 25 00:01:44,000 --> 00:01:47,240 Speaker 1: but her father rubbed everyone the wrong way. He was 26 00:01:47,280 --> 00:01:50,320 Speaker 1: a drunk and enjoyed picking fights, but he was also 27 00:01:50,400 --> 00:01:53,160 Speaker 1: a skilled builder and Moses needed all the help that 28 00:01:53,200 --> 00:01:56,240 Speaker 1: he could get. With Williams help, Moses was able to 29 00:01:56,240 --> 00:01:59,720 Speaker 1: get his ferry business running relatively quickly, and it wasn't 30 00:01:59,800 --> 00:02:03,160 Speaker 1: law before he was hauling everyone and everything up and 31 00:02:03,280 --> 00:02:07,360 Speaker 1: down the Ohio River. Meanwhile, Eleanor had hit it off 32 00:02:07,400 --> 00:02:10,519 Speaker 1: with a local schoolmaster named Randolph Chester, a man who 33 00:02:10,600 --> 00:02:12,560 Speaker 1: was quite a bit older than the teenage girl he 34 00:02:12,639 --> 00:02:15,359 Speaker 1: was courting. Her father stepped in and forbade her from 35 00:02:15,360 --> 00:02:18,040 Speaker 1: ever seeing the man again, but Eleanor just went around 36 00:02:18,080 --> 00:02:21,200 Speaker 1: his back anyway. The couple continued on in secret until 37 00:02:21,240 --> 00:02:23,680 Speaker 1: William found out, and that's when he got to work 38 00:02:23,720 --> 00:02:26,800 Speaker 1: preparing to handle things himself. He followed the couple around 39 00:02:26,840 --> 00:02:30,520 Speaker 1: town for several days, watching them from afar. Finally he 40 00:02:30,560 --> 00:02:32,880 Speaker 1: caught them in each other's arms in a remote area 41 00:02:32,919 --> 00:02:37,160 Speaker 1: of forest, far from prying eyes, or so they thought. William, 42 00:02:37,480 --> 00:02:40,240 Speaker 1: rifle in hand, emerged from the trees and fired at 43 00:02:40,240 --> 00:02:47,880 Speaker 1: the schoolmaster. Unfortunately he missed, hitting Eleanor instead. She died instantly. William, 44 00:02:48,080 --> 00:02:51,880 Speaker 1: blind with rage, ran towards Chester, gearing up to bludgeon 45 00:02:52,000 --> 00:02:54,519 Speaker 1: him with the butt of his gun, but the schoolmaster 46 00:02:54,639 --> 00:02:58,000 Speaker 1: had also come prepared. He withdrew a small pistol and 47 00:02:58,080 --> 00:03:00,679 Speaker 1: fired it at his assailant, killing the Gregor with a 48 00:03:00,760 --> 00:03:05,240 Speaker 1: single shot to the heart. Everyone in town mourned Eleanor's death, 49 00:03:05,480 --> 00:03:07,720 Speaker 1: but her passing marked the beginning of the end of 50 00:03:07,760 --> 00:03:10,800 Speaker 1: Tussie Town. It was as though the place was cursed, 51 00:03:11,000 --> 00:03:14,760 Speaker 1: with crops dying and numerous incidents of terrible weather hitting 52 00:03:14,840 --> 00:03:20,040 Speaker 1: the area regularly. Businesses closed as residents moved away, But 53 00:03:20,160 --> 00:03:23,800 Speaker 1: despite the hard times, Moses Tussie's ferry kept going. In 54 00:03:23,880 --> 00:03:26,480 Speaker 1: eighteen thirty nine, it was passed on to the Piot 55 00:03:26,480 --> 00:03:29,440 Speaker 1: family of Boone County, a pair of brothers who had 56 00:03:29,480 --> 00:03:33,080 Speaker 1: served in the Revolutionary War and already owned several other 57 00:03:33,160 --> 00:03:37,120 Speaker 1: Ohio ferries, and they upgraded the old ferry, adding a 58 00:03:37,200 --> 00:03:41,640 Speaker 1: steampowered version in eight One year later, it was destroyed 59 00:03:41,680 --> 00:03:43,880 Speaker 1: in an ice flow, and they replaced it with an 60 00:03:43,880 --> 00:03:46,840 Speaker 1: older treadmill style ferry for the next decade or so, 61 00:03:47,360 --> 00:03:50,000 Speaker 1: and then in eighteen sixty two, the Piots sold the 62 00:03:50,040 --> 00:03:52,960 Speaker 1: ferry to a man named John Kazek, who wasn't much 63 00:03:52,960 --> 00:03:56,600 Speaker 1: different from William McGregor. He liked to fight and drink, 64 00:03:56,800 --> 00:03:59,480 Speaker 1: which got him into trouble fairly often, like it did 65 00:03:59,520 --> 00:04:02,800 Speaker 1: with George Fulture. Vulture had been a Union soldier during 66 00:04:02,840 --> 00:04:05,440 Speaker 1: the ongoing Civil War, but he had lost his arm 67 00:04:05,480 --> 00:04:10,120 Speaker 1: in battle. Kazek, Southern sympathizer, threatened to kill Fulture as 68 00:04:10,160 --> 00:04:12,800 Speaker 1: he was boarding. The former soldier pulled out a large 69 00:04:12,880 --> 00:04:16,560 Speaker 1: knife in turn and stabbed Kazk in the chest, killing him. 70 00:04:17,240 --> 00:04:20,560 Speaker 1: Fulture was arrested and eventually released for acting in self defense, 71 00:04:20,600 --> 00:04:22,640 Speaker 1: but he spent the rest of his short life in 72 00:04:22,680 --> 00:04:25,800 Speaker 1: a mental facility. He died in an accident while he 73 00:04:25,839 --> 00:04:28,960 Speaker 1: was there, with Kasek out of the picture, though, Faery 74 00:04:28,960 --> 00:04:31,920 Speaker 1: ownership was returned to one of the pilot brothers, who 75 00:04:32,040 --> 00:04:35,479 Speaker 1: was also killed in a mysterious accident soon after. It 76 00:04:35,480 --> 00:04:38,760 Speaker 1: seems everyone connected with a ferry in some way was 77 00:04:38,839 --> 00:04:41,640 Speaker 1: doomed to die. The next person to own the ferry 78 00:04:41,720 --> 00:04:45,039 Speaker 1: was George Tarrell, a Kentucky state legislator. By now, the 79 00:04:45,080 --> 00:04:48,159 Speaker 1: business wasn't making a profit and was operating with a 80 00:04:48,240 --> 00:04:50,760 Speaker 1: large amount of debt. It got so bad one month 81 00:04:50,800 --> 00:04:54,680 Speaker 1: that Terrell found himself unable to pay his ferryman, Maurice McNeely. 82 00:04:55,200 --> 00:04:58,000 Speaker 1: Of course, McNeely was also unhappy that his boss was 83 00:04:58,080 --> 00:05:01,600 Speaker 1: dating his daughter, which had way heavily on the ferryman's mind. 84 00:05:01,800 --> 00:05:04,720 Speaker 1: With Terrell responsible for so many of the problems in 85 00:05:04,760 --> 00:05:07,920 Speaker 1: his life, McNeely challenged him to a duel on the deck, 86 00:05:08,160 --> 00:05:12,799 Speaker 1: whoever one would gain ownership of the ferry. McNeely drew first, 87 00:05:13,000 --> 00:05:16,560 Speaker 1: shooting Terrell dead, but his victory was short lived. On 88 00:05:16,600 --> 00:05:19,600 Speaker 1: a visit to Memphis shortly after, McNeely was hit by 89 00:05:19,600 --> 00:05:23,320 Speaker 1: a street car and killed. After that, the ferry business 90 00:05:23,360 --> 00:05:26,640 Speaker 1: was then purchased by Captain William Huff in eighteen eighty two, 91 00:05:26,880 --> 00:05:29,560 Speaker 1: who managed to sink the boat after a drunken fight 92 00:05:29,720 --> 00:05:33,360 Speaker 1: erupted between his crew and the passengers. Huff himself died 93 00:05:33,400 --> 00:05:35,880 Speaker 1: shortly after that, and the business went on to a 94 00:05:35,880 --> 00:05:39,839 Speaker 1: man named William Hartman. Now under Hartman's watch, a passenger 95 00:05:39,839 --> 00:05:42,400 Speaker 1: by the name of Louis Tarrell board of the ferry, 96 00:05:42,640 --> 00:05:44,839 Speaker 1: and if that last name sounds familiar, that's because he 97 00:05:44,920 --> 00:05:47,480 Speaker 1: was the brother of the late George Tarrell, the former 98 00:05:47,520 --> 00:05:51,200 Speaker 1: owner of the ferry. Louis sadly did not reach his destination. 99 00:05:51,600 --> 00:05:54,440 Speaker 1: He too was killed after suffering a number of injuries 100 00:05:54,440 --> 00:05:57,640 Speaker 1: while on board, and the strangest part, he died in 101 00:05:57,640 --> 00:06:01,719 Speaker 1: the exact same spot on deck as his brother. After that, 102 00:06:02,000 --> 00:06:05,680 Speaker 1: Hartman's mental health deteriorated, and just like Fulture, he spent 103 00:06:05,760 --> 00:06:08,520 Speaker 1: the rest of his life in a sanatorium. The fairy 104 00:06:08,600 --> 00:06:11,359 Speaker 1: continued to run for a number of years, allegedly until 105 00:06:11,400 --> 00:06:14,479 Speaker 1: nineteen forty seven, when it was finally closed down, but 106 00:06:14,520 --> 00:06:17,640 Speaker 1: the rumors and legends surrounding it continue to this day. 107 00:06:18,120 --> 00:06:21,480 Speaker 1: No other fairy operating at that time had the same problems. 108 00:06:21,839 --> 00:06:25,200 Speaker 1: None saw death on a regular basis as Moses Tuci's 109 00:06:25,200 --> 00:06:29,599 Speaker 1: ferry did. Was it cursed or just coincidence, It's hard 110 00:06:29,640 --> 00:06:33,000 Speaker 1: to say, but one thing is certain. All of it 111 00:06:33,160 --> 00:06:52,479 Speaker 1: started after Eleanor McGregor was killed by her father Albanian 112 00:06:52,560 --> 00:06:56,200 Speaker 1: Ottoman governor Mohammed Ali was dealing with a lot back 113 00:06:56,240 --> 00:06:59,839 Speaker 1: in the early eighteen hundreds. He was in charge of Egypt, Sudan, 114 00:07:00,200 --> 00:07:02,719 Speaker 1: and a few other regions while also fending off a 115 00:07:02,760 --> 00:07:07,040 Speaker 1: potential French invasion by Napoleon. Luckily, he had helped from 116 00:07:07,040 --> 00:07:10,440 Speaker 1: the British. To thank them for their assistance, Ali gifted 117 00:07:10,440 --> 00:07:12,840 Speaker 1: Great Britain with a sixty eight and a half foot 118 00:07:12,880 --> 00:07:16,200 Speaker 1: tall monolith wayne more than two d and twenty four tons. 119 00:07:16,640 --> 00:07:19,560 Speaker 1: It was known as Cleopatra's Needle, although it had nothing 120 00:07:19,600 --> 00:07:22,480 Speaker 1: to do with the Egyptian ruler herself. It was actually 121 00:07:22,520 --> 00:07:25,440 Speaker 1: carved out of red granite over a thousand years before 122 00:07:25,480 --> 00:07:28,320 Speaker 1: her reign. The reason for its name, it turns out, 123 00:07:28,440 --> 00:07:30,400 Speaker 1: was that it had been moved from its original home 124 00:07:30,480 --> 00:07:35,240 Speaker 1: in Heliopolis, Egypt, to Alexandria, Cleopatra's royal city, back in 125 00:07:35,480 --> 00:07:39,240 Speaker 1: twelve VC. Although the British were grateful for the gesture, 126 00:07:39,240 --> 00:07:42,400 Speaker 1: they had no way of transporting the massive stone column home. 127 00:07:42,840 --> 00:07:46,040 Speaker 1: It was too big and the cost was too great. Instead, 128 00:07:46,160 --> 00:07:49,040 Speaker 1: they tabled the idea for decades until a man named 129 00:07:49,080 --> 00:07:53,480 Speaker 1: Lieutenant General Sir James Alexander found a way. Sir James 130 00:07:53,520 --> 00:07:57,040 Speaker 1: traveled to Alexandria in eighteen seventy five to see the 131 00:07:57,080 --> 00:08:00,600 Speaker 1: obelisk for himself. He consulted with a civil engineer there 132 00:08:00,680 --> 00:08:03,680 Speaker 1: named John Dixon, who had been studying it on his own. 133 00:08:04,080 --> 00:08:06,640 Speaker 1: The following year, the two men spoke to English surgeon 134 00:08:06,760 --> 00:08:10,400 Speaker 1: Sir Erasmus Wilson, who donated ten thousand pounds to getting 135 00:08:10,400 --> 00:08:14,040 Speaker 1: the Obelisk out of Egypt and back to England. Dixon 136 00:08:14,120 --> 00:08:17,720 Speaker 1: chipped in as well and coordinated everything, including designing the 137 00:08:17,760 --> 00:08:20,560 Speaker 1: ship that would carry Cleopatra's needle to its new home. 138 00:08:21,120 --> 00:08:25,240 Speaker 1: What he outlined was a barge with ten watertight compartments below. 139 00:08:25,640 --> 00:08:28,280 Speaker 1: The needle would then be placed on its side on deck, 140 00:08:28,600 --> 00:08:32,120 Speaker 1: at which point the two ft long by sixteen foot 141 00:08:32,120 --> 00:08:35,360 Speaker 1: wide cylinder would be constructed around it to protect it 142 00:08:35,440 --> 00:08:38,600 Speaker 1: during the journey. Dixon had a cabin built to keep 143 00:08:38,600 --> 00:08:40,800 Speaker 1: the crew safe, and once all of that was done, 144 00:08:41,040 --> 00:08:44,080 Speaker 1: the vessel was shuttled in pieces to Alexandria, where it 145 00:08:44,160 --> 00:08:47,480 Speaker 1: was reassembled and outfitted with everything else that needed. This 146 00:08:47,640 --> 00:08:51,080 Speaker 1: included bilge keels, a rudder, astern and a few more 147 00:08:51,160 --> 00:08:54,840 Speaker 1: finishing touches. When the vessel was finished, she was dubbed 148 00:08:54,840 --> 00:08:58,040 Speaker 1: the Cleopatra. She was manned by a crew of eight 149 00:08:58,160 --> 00:09:01,160 Speaker 1: and commanded by one captain Carr, who kept an eye 150 00:09:01,240 --> 00:09:03,320 Speaker 1: on her as she was towed to London behind the 151 00:09:03,360 --> 00:09:06,760 Speaker 1: steamship the Olga. The two vessels were traveling through the 152 00:09:06,760 --> 00:09:10,520 Speaker 1: Bay of Biscay between France and Spain on October fourteenth, 153 00:09:10,720 --> 00:09:14,839 Speaker 1: eighteen seventy when a storm hit. The Cleopatra tossed and 154 00:09:14,960 --> 00:09:18,040 Speaker 1: turned on the water. Her iron rails broke away, and 155 00:09:18,200 --> 00:09:20,520 Speaker 1: her crew alerted the crew of the Olga that they 156 00:09:20,600 --> 00:09:23,839 Speaker 1: needed help. The Olga's captain, a man named Booth, sent 157 00:09:23,960 --> 00:09:26,840 Speaker 1: a small rowboat with six volunteers to lend a hand. 158 00:09:27,360 --> 00:09:30,040 Speaker 1: They approached the Cleopatra and tossed a few ropes to 159 00:09:30,080 --> 00:09:32,240 Speaker 1: the hopeful crew so that they could safely tether to 160 00:09:32,320 --> 00:09:35,760 Speaker 1: the side of the smaller ship. Unfortunately, something happened with 161 00:09:35,840 --> 00:09:38,080 Speaker 1: the ropes and the rowboat as well as the men 162 00:09:38,160 --> 00:09:41,560 Speaker 1: inside it, and they were swallowed by the sea. Seeing 163 00:09:41,600 --> 00:09:44,840 Speaker 1: the conditions were getting worse, the Olga collected the Cleopatra's 164 00:09:44,880 --> 00:09:47,600 Speaker 1: crew and then cut her loose, hopeful that she would 165 00:09:47,640 --> 00:09:50,040 Speaker 1: remain afloat and they could find her once the storm 166 00:09:50,120 --> 00:09:54,040 Speaker 1: had passed. Miraculously, she was seen bobbing in the water. 167 00:09:54,160 --> 00:09:57,200 Speaker 1: Less than a week later, the obelisk still firmly held 168 00:09:57,280 --> 00:10:01,520 Speaker 1: in place, unharmed. The Cleopatra was collected by another steamship 169 00:10:01,760 --> 00:10:04,560 Speaker 1: and then transferred to one final vessel, which carried at 170 00:10:04,600 --> 00:10:07,120 Speaker 1: the final leg of the journey back to England. It 171 00:10:07,200 --> 00:10:10,560 Speaker 1: took some work, but Cleopatra's needle was finally re erected 172 00:10:10,640 --> 00:10:14,000 Speaker 1: on the Victoria embankments in Westminster, London, to a cheering 173 00:10:14,080 --> 00:10:17,760 Speaker 1: crowd of spectators, and ever since then it's been the 174 00:10:17,840 --> 00:10:21,160 Speaker 1: source of some really spooky tales. Some say it's cursed, 175 00:10:21,360 --> 00:10:25,480 Speaker 1: like other important artifacts removed from their native lands. For example, 176 00:10:25,760 --> 00:10:27,920 Speaker 1: some who have gotten close to the needle at night 177 00:10:28,200 --> 00:10:32,120 Speaker 1: have heard creepy laughter emanating from inside it. Witnesses have 178 00:10:32,200 --> 00:10:35,640 Speaker 1: claimed to see a spectral naked man charging toward the 179 00:10:35,679 --> 00:10:38,800 Speaker 1: water from behind the obelisk. Just when he jumps in, 180 00:10:39,240 --> 00:10:43,120 Speaker 1: he doesn't make a sound, not even a trickle. Another 181 00:10:43,240 --> 00:10:45,600 Speaker 1: story describes the plight of a twenty seven year old 182 00:10:45,600 --> 00:10:49,360 Speaker 1: woman named miss Davies, who in eighteen eighty felt herself 183 00:10:49,480 --> 00:10:52,800 Speaker 1: being drawn to the obelesque. The closer she got to it, however, 184 00:10:53,120 --> 00:10:55,959 Speaker 1: the more she heard the laughter. She threw herself into 185 00:10:56,000 --> 00:10:58,480 Speaker 1: the water and nearly drowned, but she was saved by 186 00:10:58,600 --> 00:11:02,079 Speaker 1: a homeless person who happened to be nearby. While in 187 00:11:02,160 --> 00:11:05,640 Speaker 1: the hospital, Miss Davies started to have awful nightmares that 188 00:11:05,800 --> 00:11:09,360 Speaker 1: featured a tall woman whose stark white face and midnight 189 00:11:09,480 --> 00:11:13,200 Speaker 1: dark eyes terrified her. The ghostly visage would open her 190 00:11:13,280 --> 00:11:17,360 Speaker 1: mouth and brandish sharp dagger like teeth before ripping her 191 00:11:17,400 --> 00:11:21,240 Speaker 1: face off. Someone else with an Obelisk story to tell 192 00:11:21,520 --> 00:11:25,120 Speaker 1: was a cultist and writer Alistair Crawley. Crawley loved to 193 00:11:25,160 --> 00:11:27,680 Speaker 1: spin a good yarn and claimed to have conducted dark 194 00:11:27,760 --> 00:11:31,280 Speaker 1: sorcery around the obelisk one night in order to release 195 00:11:31,360 --> 00:11:34,400 Speaker 1: the spirit of Ramsey's, who he believed was trapped inside. 196 00:11:34,840 --> 00:11:37,880 Speaker 1: Crowley performed a ritual in which he fed animal blood 197 00:11:38,160 --> 00:11:41,320 Speaker 1: to a human skeleton in order to break the spirit free. 198 00:11:42,000 --> 00:11:45,559 Speaker 1: Except it didn't work. Ramsey's just laughed at him for 199 00:11:45,679 --> 00:11:49,160 Speaker 1: blowing the ritual altogether. And if all of that weren't enough, 200 00:11:49,320 --> 00:11:52,200 Speaker 1: Cleopatra's needle was also hit by a bomb during World 201 00:11:52,280 --> 00:11:55,280 Speaker 1: War One. Its pedestal was marred and it has stayed 202 00:11:55,360 --> 00:11:58,240 Speaker 1: that way ever since. Some believe that the curse drew 203 00:11:58,280 --> 00:12:01,640 Speaker 1: the bomb toward it. Today, The obelisk is flanked by 204 00:12:01,679 --> 00:12:05,040 Speaker 1: two sphinxes, but don't worry, they weren't stolen from Egypt 205 00:12:05,080 --> 00:12:08,440 Speaker 1: as well. They were sculpted by George John Fuliami, an 206 00:12:08,520 --> 00:12:11,599 Speaker 1: English architect who also crafted the pedestal on which the 207 00:12:11,679 --> 00:12:15,240 Speaker 1: obelisk stands. However, when he made them, he didn't position 208 00:12:15,320 --> 00:12:19,080 Speaker 1: them facing outward, like the protectors they were designed to be. Rather, 209 00:12:19,160 --> 00:12:21,160 Speaker 1: he turned them around so that they were facing the 210 00:12:21,240 --> 00:12:25,360 Speaker 1: obelisk itself. Did Vulliamy know something that we didn't? Maybe 211 00:12:25,520 --> 00:12:28,840 Speaker 1: Alistair Crawley was onto something. Perhaps there really is an 212 00:12:28,880 --> 00:12:32,720 Speaker 1: evil spirit locked away inside Cleopatra's needle, and the only 213 00:12:32,800 --> 00:12:36,040 Speaker 1: thing keeping it there are the two sphinxes watching over it. 214 00:12:36,840 --> 00:12:39,360 Speaker 1: Feel free to check it out for yourself, just don't 215 00:12:39,480 --> 00:12:42,960 Speaker 1: go at night, and maybe watch your step two, because, 216 00:12:43,040 --> 00:12:51,280 Speaker 1: as we've heard, curious things are known to happen. I 217 00:12:51,360 --> 00:12:54,840 Speaker 1: hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. 218 00:12:55,240 --> 00:12:58,320 Speaker 1: Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, or learn more about 219 00:12:58,360 --> 00:13:02,520 Speaker 1: the show by visiting Curiosity Cities podcast dot com. The 220 00:13:02,640 --> 00:13:06,160 Speaker 1: show was created by me Aaron Manky in partnership with 221 00:13:06,240 --> 00:13:09,720 Speaker 1: How Stuff Works. I make another award winning show called 222 00:13:09,840 --> 00:13:13,520 Speaker 1: Lore which is a podcast, book series, and television show 223 00:13:13,840 --> 00:13:15,679 Speaker 1: and you can learn all about it over at the 224 00:13:15,880 --> 00:13:21,640 Speaker 1: world of Lore dot com. And until next time, stay curious. Yeah,