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 --> 00:00:38,199 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. The people that we see on TV and 7 00:00:38,240 --> 00:00:42,680 Speaker 1: movie screens today often started from humble beginnings. Kathleen and 8 00:00:42,760 --> 00:00:45,199 Speaker 1: Percy Carey, for example, lived with their sons in a 9 00:00:45,280 --> 00:00:48,440 Speaker 1: Volkswagen van for a short time while Percy was looking 10 00:00:48,479 --> 00:00:51,440 Speaker 1: for work. He finally found a job at a tire factory, 11 00:00:51,479 --> 00:00:54,280 Speaker 1: working in the accounting departments, and the boys took jobs 12 00:00:54,320 --> 00:00:57,440 Speaker 1: as janitors and security guards at the factory in exchange 13 00:00:57,480 --> 00:00:59,640 Speaker 1: for living in the house that the company moved them 14 00:00:59,680 --> 00:01:02,760 Speaker 1: into across the street. But eventually one of those boys 15 00:01:02,800 --> 00:01:05,000 Speaker 1: broke out of his uniform and went on to great 16 00:01:05,000 --> 00:01:08,360 Speaker 1: to claim because everyone knows who Jim Carey is now. 17 00:01:09,200 --> 00:01:12,080 Speaker 1: In the mid nineteen sixties, Martin Luther King Jr. And 18 00:01:12,160 --> 00:01:15,040 Speaker 1: his wife, Coretta Scott King were already well known. They 19 00:01:15,080 --> 00:01:18,240 Speaker 1: had marched on Washington in nineteen sixty three, where Martin 20 00:01:18,319 --> 00:01:20,800 Speaker 1: delivered one of the greatest and most famous speeches in 21 00:01:20,840 --> 00:01:24,440 Speaker 1: American history on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. Their 22 00:01:24,480 --> 00:01:27,480 Speaker 1: words and actions were being heard and felt across the 23 00:01:27,520 --> 00:01:30,760 Speaker 1: country as black men and women fought for their civil rights, 24 00:01:31,319 --> 00:01:34,520 Speaker 1: and yet, despite their fame and calls for unity, the 25 00:01:34,600 --> 00:01:37,800 Speaker 1: Kings were often persecuted because of their race. That would 26 00:01:37,840 --> 00:01:40,120 Speaker 1: have been hard enough for only two adults, but the 27 00:01:40,240 --> 00:01:43,720 Speaker 1: Kings also had four children, four children to guide through 28 00:01:43,720 --> 00:01:47,680 Speaker 1: a world that would simultaneously revere them and condemn them. 29 00:01:47,720 --> 00:01:50,440 Speaker 1: It was a terrible situation, and their parents did all 30 00:01:50,480 --> 00:01:53,840 Speaker 1: they could to make things as normal as possible, and 31 00:01:53,880 --> 00:01:57,000 Speaker 1: so sometime during the mid nineteen sixties, Mrs King tried 32 00:01:57,000 --> 00:02:00,560 Speaker 1: to enroll her children in acting school, and unsa prizingly, 33 00:02:00,880 --> 00:02:04,000 Speaker 1: not a single facility nearby would take them in. Despite 34 00:02:04,000 --> 00:02:08,079 Speaker 1: the Civil Rights Act explicitly outlined segregation and businesses and 35 00:02:08,160 --> 00:02:11,600 Speaker 1: public spaces, schools, and other establishments still did what they 36 00:02:11,639 --> 00:02:15,480 Speaker 1: could to prevent black people from participating. So, with nowhere 37 00:02:15,480 --> 00:02:17,919 Speaker 1: else to turn, Mrs King called up the little known 38 00:02:18,000 --> 00:02:22,000 Speaker 1: Atlanta Actors and Writers Workshop, led by couple Betty Lou 39 00:02:22,080 --> 00:02:25,800 Speaker 1: and her husband Walter. Betty Lou didn't hesitate she said 40 00:02:25,800 --> 00:02:29,360 Speaker 1: to Mrs King, sure, come on over, and just like that, 41 00:02:29,400 --> 00:02:32,200 Speaker 1: the King children were finally able to take acting lessons. 42 00:02:32,600 --> 00:02:35,040 Speaker 1: Eldest daughter, Yolanda King, was lucky enough to study with 43 00:02:35,080 --> 00:02:38,800 Speaker 1: the co owner, Walter exclusively, but that wasn't all. The 44 00:02:38,840 --> 00:02:42,000 Speaker 1: Atlanta Workshop was one of, if not the only, integrated 45 00:02:42,040 --> 00:02:45,560 Speaker 1: acting school around, where white students and black students could 46 00:02:45,560 --> 00:02:49,800 Speaker 1: recite lines and perform plays on stage together. It sounds 47 00:02:49,840 --> 00:02:52,640 Speaker 1: heartwarming now, but at the time it caused an uproar 48 00:02:52,680 --> 00:02:55,960 Speaker 1: in the community. In nineteen she was cast as the 49 00:02:56,040 --> 00:02:58,440 Speaker 1: romantic lead in a new play that the Workshop was 50 00:02:58,440 --> 00:03:01,400 Speaker 1: putting on. However, her co star happened to be white, 51 00:03:01,680 --> 00:03:04,960 Speaker 1: which led to violent unrest. One person hurled objects at 52 00:03:05,000 --> 00:03:07,520 Speaker 1: the actors on stage while the show was going on. 53 00:03:07,880 --> 00:03:10,800 Speaker 1: Another man with ties to the Ku Klux Klan blew 54 00:03:10,880 --> 00:03:14,120 Speaker 1: up a car outside the theater the next day. Walter 55 00:03:14,240 --> 00:03:16,400 Speaker 1: and Betty Leu did their best to keep all of 56 00:03:16,400 --> 00:03:19,520 Speaker 1: the kids safe, especially the King children, which Mr. And 57 00:03:19,600 --> 00:03:23,359 Speaker 1: Mrs King never forgot. Eventually, as word of their integrated 58 00:03:23,360 --> 00:03:26,280 Speaker 1: school got around, business started to dry up and the 59 00:03:26,280 --> 00:03:29,560 Speaker 1: workshop lost money. Betty Lou and Walter were in dire 60 00:03:29,639 --> 00:03:32,239 Speaker 1: straits by nineteen sixty seven, which would turn out to 61 00:03:32,280 --> 00:03:34,440 Speaker 1: be an extremely bad time for them, as they had 62 00:03:34,440 --> 00:03:37,240 Speaker 1: a second child on the way. In late October, Betty 63 00:03:37,280 --> 00:03:39,160 Speaker 1: Leu went into the hospital to give birth to a 64 00:03:39,160 --> 00:03:42,200 Speaker 1: baby girl. However, this being America and all, having a 65 00:03:42,200 --> 00:03:46,240 Speaker 1: baby was a costly experience even back then. Childbirth costs 66 00:03:46,280 --> 00:03:48,720 Speaker 1: to the nineteen sixties averaged anywhere from a few hundred 67 00:03:48,760 --> 00:03:51,400 Speaker 1: dollars to over a thousand dollars, a far cry from 68 00:03:51,440 --> 00:03:54,000 Speaker 1: the tens of thousands that can cost today. Still, that 69 00:03:54,120 --> 00:03:56,840 Speaker 1: was a lot of money back then, and an impossible 70 00:03:56,840 --> 00:04:00,440 Speaker 1: amount to pay for two struggling acting school owners and 71 00:04:00,520 --> 00:04:03,200 Speaker 1: so as thanks for accepting their children when no one 72 00:04:03,240 --> 00:04:06,280 Speaker 1: else would, Martin Luther King Jr. And his wife Coretta 73 00:04:06,280 --> 00:04:09,360 Speaker 1: Scott King stepped in to pay the hospital bill, allowing 74 00:04:09,440 --> 00:04:12,280 Speaker 1: Walter and his wife Betty Lou to welcome their daughter 75 00:04:12,360 --> 00:04:15,920 Speaker 1: Julia into the world without worry. It's a delightful tale 76 00:04:16,120 --> 00:04:19,960 Speaker 1: of one couple helping another, demonstrating what true community is 77 00:04:20,000 --> 00:04:22,960 Speaker 1: all about. We lift each other up, help out when 78 00:04:22,960 --> 00:04:26,200 Speaker 1: we can, and make sacrifices for those in need. We 79 00:04:26,279 --> 00:04:28,839 Speaker 1: could all use a bit of inspiration in that department 80 00:04:28,880 --> 00:04:31,120 Speaker 1: from time to time, I think, I know I can, 81 00:04:31,839 --> 00:04:34,520 Speaker 1: And that gift of their's of paying the hospital bill 82 00:04:34,600 --> 00:04:37,680 Speaker 1: for a couple of friends had one other silver lining 83 00:04:38,160 --> 00:04:41,839 Speaker 1: silver as in the silver screen, because Betty Lou and 84 00:04:41,880 --> 00:04:45,320 Speaker 1: Walter Roberts would get to see their daughter, Julia become 85 00:04:45,360 --> 00:04:47,960 Speaker 1: one of the biggest movie stars of our era and 86 00:04:48,040 --> 00:05:07,920 Speaker 1: quite a pretty woman, Hollywood actress Julia Roberts. While many 87 00:05:07,920 --> 00:05:10,559 Speaker 1: countries have declared war on the United States over the years, 88 00:05:10,720 --> 00:05:13,640 Speaker 1: few have ever acted upon those threats, and for good reason, 89 00:05:13,880 --> 00:05:16,520 Speaker 1: because they know that they would lose. The British, of course, 90 00:05:16,560 --> 00:05:20,159 Speaker 1: took on the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War and lost. 91 00:05:20,640 --> 00:05:23,280 Speaker 1: Man who can forget December seven of nineteen forty one 92 00:05:23,400 --> 00:05:27,200 Speaker 1: when Japanese forces bomb Pearl Harbor in Hawaii, officially dragging 93 00:05:27,240 --> 00:05:30,279 Speaker 1: the United States into World War Two. The conflict lasted 94 00:05:30,279 --> 00:05:33,160 Speaker 1: another four years, but in the end the access Powers 95 00:05:33,200 --> 00:05:37,360 Speaker 1: were defeated and the Allies celebrated victory. But during World 96 00:05:37,400 --> 00:05:40,600 Speaker 1: War One, one year after America had entered the Fray, 97 00:05:40,680 --> 00:05:43,560 Speaker 1: Germany did more than threatened to attack the United States. 98 00:05:44,000 --> 00:05:46,280 Speaker 1: They actually did it, and in one of the most 99 00:05:46,400 --> 00:05:51,400 Speaker 1: unexpected places too, jutting off of Massachusetts like a vestigial 100 00:05:51,400 --> 00:05:54,400 Speaker 1: tail or the flexing arm of a bodybuilder. Is the 101 00:05:54,400 --> 00:05:57,600 Speaker 1: Peninsula of Cape Cod. Since the late eighteen hundreds, it's 102 00:05:57,600 --> 00:06:00,120 Speaker 1: been a summer getaway for the East Coast elite, a 103 00:06:00,160 --> 00:06:02,240 Speaker 1: place to get away from the hustle and bustle of 104 00:06:02,240 --> 00:06:04,800 Speaker 1: the big city, and of course, in nineteen seventy five 105 00:06:04,800 --> 00:06:07,720 Speaker 1: it stood in for the cozy, shark infested hamlet in 106 00:06:07,839 --> 00:06:13,080 Speaker 1: Steven Spielberg's blockbuster hit Jaws. However, nearly sixty years earlier, 107 00:06:13,200 --> 00:06:16,359 Speaker 1: the Germans arrived to turn the Cape into a war zone. 108 00:06:16,800 --> 00:06:19,880 Speaker 1: It happened on the morning of July one, eighteen nineteen. 109 00:06:20,240 --> 00:06:23,920 Speaker 1: The German submarine YOU one fifty six had surfaced off 110 00:06:23,960 --> 00:06:26,640 Speaker 1: the coast of Orleans, a small town on the eastern 111 00:06:26,720 --> 00:06:29,559 Speaker 1: edge of Cape Cod. It was believed that the sub 112 00:06:29,839 --> 00:06:32,760 Speaker 1: under the command of Captain Lieutenant Richard Feld, had been 113 00:06:32,839 --> 00:06:37,440 Speaker 1: hunting for the Transatlantic Submarine communications cable connecting Orleans to France. 114 00:06:37,960 --> 00:06:40,839 Speaker 1: This cable linked stations on land and allowed them to 115 00:06:40,880 --> 00:06:45,719 Speaker 1: communicate across vast distances, and Richard wanted to sever it. However, 116 00:06:46,040 --> 00:06:49,120 Speaker 1: another vessel had entered the area, a steam powered tug 117 00:06:49,120 --> 00:06:52,880 Speaker 1: boat named perth Amboy, along with four barges in tow. 118 00:06:53,440 --> 00:06:55,520 Speaker 1: The U boat sat there in the waters as the 119 00:06:55,560 --> 00:06:58,680 Speaker 1: tug boat puttered by, and Richard, for some unknown reason, 120 00:06:59,080 --> 00:07:02,200 Speaker 1: ordered his men to helm the guns on deck. They 121 00:07:02,240 --> 00:07:05,000 Speaker 1: fired at the tug boats, heading all around the water 122 00:07:05,120 --> 00:07:07,960 Speaker 1: and the beach, and sinking one of its barges. The 123 00:07:08,040 --> 00:07:11,080 Speaker 1: perth Amboy took damage to its funnel and pilot house, 124 00:07:11,440 --> 00:07:14,080 Speaker 1: but little did its captain know that help was on 125 00:07:14,120 --> 00:07:17,840 Speaker 1: the way. A Curtis H S I L Flying boats 126 00:07:17,920 --> 00:07:20,880 Speaker 1: armed with one Mark four bomb was en route. It 127 00:07:20,960 --> 00:07:23,720 Speaker 1: had spotted the German sub and flew overhead, soaring it 128 00:07:23,800 --> 00:07:27,200 Speaker 1: around eight hundred feet. Navy Ensign Eric Lingard, who was 129 00:07:27,240 --> 00:07:30,360 Speaker 1: piloting the aircraft, called out to his chief Special Mechanic, 130 00:07:30,480 --> 00:07:33,560 Speaker 1: Edward Howard. They were right overhead and the time had 131 00:07:33,560 --> 00:07:36,080 Speaker 1: come to release the explosive. Even though the plane was 132 00:07:36,120 --> 00:07:39,400 Speaker 1: two d feet shy of the recommended safe bombing altitude, 133 00:07:39,720 --> 00:07:42,280 Speaker 1: there just wasn't time for safety with a German U 134 00:07:42,320 --> 00:07:47,040 Speaker 1: boat tearing up the Massachusetts shore. Unfortunately, the bomb refused 135 00:07:47,040 --> 00:07:49,640 Speaker 1: to break free, so Lingard and his men were forced 136 00:07:49,680 --> 00:07:52,600 Speaker 1: to circle back around, taking fire from the U boats 137 00:07:52,640 --> 00:07:55,560 Speaker 1: guns and Howard, seeing no other way to get the 138 00:07:55,640 --> 00:07:58,520 Speaker 1: job done, crawled out along the top of the plane, 139 00:07:58,640 --> 00:08:03,120 Speaker 1: inching towards the bombs annual release mechanism. The plane soon 140 00:08:03,200 --> 00:08:06,080 Speaker 1: realigned itself with the sub and Howard freed the bomb, 141 00:08:06,160 --> 00:08:08,680 Speaker 1: which fell into the water beside the submarine, but it 142 00:08:08,720 --> 00:08:12,200 Speaker 1: didn't detonate. Verying the worst, the tugboat crew abandoned ship 143 00:08:12,240 --> 00:08:14,000 Speaker 1: as the coast Guard arrived to pull them out of 144 00:08:14,000 --> 00:08:17,760 Speaker 1: the water. Another plane, this one piloted by Coastguard Captain 145 00:08:17,760 --> 00:08:20,920 Speaker 1: Philip Eaton, showed up next, also armed with a Mark 146 00:08:20,960 --> 00:08:23,520 Speaker 1: four bomb, and the German U boat tried to shoot 147 00:08:23,520 --> 00:08:26,360 Speaker 1: it out of the sky but failed, while Eaton released 148 00:08:26,360 --> 00:08:29,480 Speaker 1: his bomb from an altitude of five feet and once 149 00:08:29,520 --> 00:08:33,760 Speaker 1: again the explosive refused to go off. Without any options, 150 00:08:33,840 --> 00:08:36,160 Speaker 1: Eaton flew off and came back only to chuck his 151 00:08:36,280 --> 00:08:39,760 Speaker 1: toolbox and a wrench from the cockpit to the sub below, 152 00:08:40,040 --> 00:08:42,559 Speaker 1: hoping to leave some kind of damage on the vessel's hull. 153 00:08:43,360 --> 00:08:47,760 Speaker 1: The U one slipped below the waves once more and disappeared, 154 00:08:48,080 --> 00:08:50,280 Speaker 1: just as residents along the beach came to see what 155 00:08:50,320 --> 00:08:53,840 Speaker 1: all the commotion was about. News crews arrived shortly afterwards 156 00:08:53,880 --> 00:08:56,640 Speaker 1: to interview people, including the crew of the tug boat 157 00:08:57,400 --> 00:09:00,400 Speaker 1: it's captain, James Tapley, told the press about what he 158 00:09:00,440 --> 00:09:03,839 Speaker 1: had witnessed, saying of the German sub I never saw 159 00:09:03,880 --> 00:09:07,959 Speaker 1: a more glaring example of rotten marksmanship. And it was true. 160 00:09:08,400 --> 00:09:11,360 Speaker 1: There were no casualties, and other than a sunken barge, 161 00:09:11,480 --> 00:09:14,920 Speaker 1: damage from the U boats guns was relatively minor, which 162 00:09:15,000 --> 00:09:17,280 Speaker 1: might be why so few people have heard about the 163 00:09:17,280 --> 00:09:20,240 Speaker 1: moment when the Germans failed to attack the United States. 164 00:09:20,880 --> 00:09:23,280 Speaker 1: But it was more than just a failure. One might 165 00:09:23,320 --> 00:09:30,760 Speaker 1: go as far as to call it subpar. I hope 166 00:09:30,760 --> 00:09:34,080 Speaker 1: you've enjoyed today's guided tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. 167 00:09:34,400 --> 00:09:37,520 Speaker 1: Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, or learn more about 168 00:09:37,520 --> 00:09:42,079 Speaker 1: the show by visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. The show 169 00:09:42,280 --> 00:09:45,600 Speaker 1: was created by me Aaron Manky in partnership with how 170 00:09:45,640 --> 00:09:49,240 Speaker 1: Stuff Works. I make another award winning show called Lore, 171 00:09:49,480 --> 00:09:53,120 Speaker 1: which is a podcast, book series, and television show, and 172 00:09:53,120 --> 00:09:55,319 Speaker 1: you can learn all about it over at the World 173 00:09:55,400 --> 00:09:59,839 Speaker 1: of Lore dot com. And until next time, stay curious. 174 00:10:00,559 --> 00:10:00,839 Speaker 1: One