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 --> 00:00:39,199 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. Most people are good at one thing, maybe two. 7 00:00:39,760 --> 00:00:42,559 Speaker 1: Someone might be a talented pianist and also have a 8 00:00:42,560 --> 00:00:47,159 Speaker 1: green thumb. They understand their skills and their limitations. Then 9 00:00:47,159 --> 00:00:51,199 Speaker 1: there are folks like Richard. Richard was born in England 10 00:00:51,240 --> 00:00:53,600 Speaker 1: around eighteen hundred, but his family moved to the United 11 00:00:53,680 --> 00:00:56,800 Speaker 1: States when he was twelve, choosing Virginia as their new home. 12 00:00:57,400 --> 00:01:00,240 Speaker 1: He worked different jobs as he got older, opting for 13 00:01:00,480 --> 00:01:02,680 Speaker 1: occupations where he could put in a hard day's work. 14 00:01:02,960 --> 00:01:05,880 Speaker 1: Richard eventually got a job painting houses, which may have 15 00:01:05,959 --> 00:01:09,640 Speaker 1: contributed to his later problems. Remember, paints in those days 16 00:01:09,720 --> 00:01:13,360 Speaker 1: were packed with hazardous chemicals, and in Richard's case, they 17 00:01:13,400 --> 00:01:17,160 Speaker 1: apparently went straight to his head. His mental health got 18 00:01:17,200 --> 00:01:19,880 Speaker 1: worse as he grew older. He once told his family 19 00:01:19,920 --> 00:01:22,320 Speaker 1: that he was going back to England, disappearing for a while, 20 00:01:22,400 --> 00:01:24,479 Speaker 1: and then came back and said that he had changed 21 00:01:24,520 --> 00:01:27,320 Speaker 1: his mind. A short while later, he planned another trip 22 00:01:27,360 --> 00:01:31,040 Speaker 1: to England and instead decided to stay in Philadelphia before 23 00:01:31,160 --> 00:01:34,560 Speaker 1: going back to Virginia. His excuse for coming home well, 24 00:01:34,600 --> 00:01:37,160 Speaker 1: he claimed to have read negative articles about himself in 25 00:01:37,200 --> 00:01:41,720 Speaker 1: a Philadelphia newspaper, forcing his early return home. Not long after, 26 00:01:41,920 --> 00:01:44,600 Speaker 1: Richard gave up painting houses. He was under the belief 27 00:01:44,640 --> 00:01:47,119 Speaker 1: that he no longer needed a job because the US 28 00:01:47,200 --> 00:01:50,160 Speaker 1: government was about to dump a huge windfall in his lap, 29 00:01:50,520 --> 00:01:52,960 Speaker 1: what with him being King Richard the third of England 30 00:01:53,040 --> 00:01:57,000 Speaker 1: and all. Unfortunately, there was one man standing in his way, 31 00:01:57,440 --> 00:02:01,800 Speaker 1: President Andrew Jackson. Jackson was apparently preventing his payout because 32 00:02:01,800 --> 00:02:03,720 Speaker 1: he was an opponent of the Second Bank of the 33 00:02:03,800 --> 00:02:07,120 Speaker 1: United States in Philadelphia, which was where Richard's money was 34 00:02:07,160 --> 00:02:11,040 Speaker 1: supposedly going to come from. However, if Jackson was removed 35 00:02:11,040 --> 00:02:14,080 Speaker 1: from the picture, then a national bank could be established 36 00:02:14,120 --> 00:02:17,799 Speaker 1: under a new President, Martin van Buren. This national banquet 37 00:02:17,880 --> 00:02:20,120 Speaker 1: finally paid Richard the money he was owed for the 38 00:02:20,160 --> 00:02:23,800 Speaker 1: English estates he thought he possessed. Not the simplest of plans, 39 00:02:23,840 --> 00:02:26,680 Speaker 1: I know, but Richard wasn't the simplest of men either. 40 00:02:27,760 --> 00:02:30,840 Speaker 1: Time went on and Richard's behavior grew more erratic. He 41 00:02:30,919 --> 00:02:34,040 Speaker 1: started blowing money on fancy clothes and picking fights with 42 00:02:34,120 --> 00:02:37,240 Speaker 1: random people. Each day he grew more and more paranoid 43 00:02:37,240 --> 00:02:39,720 Speaker 1: about his neighbors. And then there was still the issue 44 00:02:39,760 --> 00:02:42,640 Speaker 1: of that pesky Andrew Jackson sitting in the White House. 45 00:02:43,120 --> 00:02:47,680 Speaker 1: Something had to be done. Richard spent weeks tailing Jackson 46 00:02:47,680 --> 00:02:51,120 Speaker 1: through Washington, monitoring his comings and goings. It was at 47 00:02:51,120 --> 00:02:54,880 Speaker 1: a rainy, dreary January eighteen thirty five when he finally 48 00:02:54,919 --> 00:02:57,760 Speaker 1: decided to carry out his plan. He followed Jackson to 49 00:02:57,800 --> 00:03:00,280 Speaker 1: the U. S Capital, where a funeral was being for 50 00:03:00,360 --> 00:03:04,919 Speaker 1: the late Warren R. Davis of South Carolina. Richard waited 51 00:03:04,919 --> 00:03:07,160 Speaker 1: behind a pillar for the service to end while everyone 52 00:03:07,200 --> 00:03:10,960 Speaker 1: sat inside. After it was over, Jackson emerged, kane in hand. 53 00:03:11,320 --> 00:03:14,400 Speaker 1: As his target passed the pillar, Richard jumped out, drew 54 00:03:14,440 --> 00:03:17,359 Speaker 1: his pistol from his coat, and aimed it at Jackson's back, 55 00:03:17,960 --> 00:03:21,920 Speaker 1: and then he pulled the trigger. Allowed bang sounded outside 56 00:03:21,919 --> 00:03:25,760 Speaker 1: the Capitol, startling the crowd and Jackson, well, he was 57 00:03:25,840 --> 00:03:29,960 Speaker 1: just fine. The gun had misfired. Rather than run away, though, 58 00:03:30,040 --> 00:03:33,240 Speaker 1: the President lunged towards his attacker his cane held high 59 00:03:33,280 --> 00:03:36,880 Speaker 1: above his head. Richard pulled out a backup pistol and 60 00:03:36,960 --> 00:03:41,160 Speaker 1: aimed again, this time at Jackson's chest. Another bang and 61 00:03:41,240 --> 00:03:45,040 Speaker 1: another dud. Twice Richard Lawrence had tried to assassinate the 62 00:03:45,040 --> 00:03:48,160 Speaker 1: President of the United States, and twice he had failed. 63 00:03:49,160 --> 00:03:51,720 Speaker 1: He tossed his guns and bolted into the crowd, but 64 00:03:51,840 --> 00:03:55,400 Speaker 1: was unable to get away in time. He was promptly arrested, 65 00:03:55,520 --> 00:03:58,480 Speaker 1: and later that day his guns were examined. One theory 66 00:03:58,560 --> 00:04:01,760 Speaker 1: suggested that they were both highly susceptible to moisture. The 67 00:04:01,920 --> 00:04:04,840 Speaker 1: humidity in the air might have contributed to their misfiring. 68 00:04:05,240 --> 00:04:08,800 Speaker 1: Another possibility was that Richard had been sold bad gunpowder 69 00:04:08,840 --> 00:04:12,800 Speaker 1: that simply failed to ignite. It turns out that Richard 70 00:04:12,920 --> 00:04:16,719 Speaker 1: wasn't the only paranoid person in Washington. Though Jackson himself 71 00:04:16,720 --> 00:04:19,320 Speaker 1: believed that Richard had been put up to the assassination 72 00:04:19,400 --> 00:04:22,479 Speaker 1: by his own political opponents, such as Senator John C. 73 00:04:22,640 --> 00:04:27,760 Speaker 1: Calhoun of South Carolina or Georgia Senator George Poindexter. Even 74 00:04:27,760 --> 00:04:30,680 Speaker 1: though all the evidence pointed to Richard acting alone, there 75 00:04:30,720 --> 00:04:35,479 Speaker 1: actually was one connection between himself and point Dexter. Apparently 76 00:04:35,560 --> 00:04:38,200 Speaker 1: that senator had hired Richard to paint his house in 77 00:04:38,240 --> 00:04:41,520 Speaker 1: the months leading up to the assassination attempt. When his 78 00:04:41,600 --> 00:04:45,680 Speaker 1: constituents found out, point Dexter lost his re election and 79 00:04:45,720 --> 00:04:49,080 Speaker 1: the only thing Richard Lawrence was guilty of killing was 80 00:04:49,200 --> 00:05:06,599 Speaker 1: a senator's political career. Home, as has so often been said, 81 00:05:07,040 --> 00:05:09,520 Speaker 1: is where the heart is. It doesn't matter where you live. 82 00:05:09,600 --> 00:05:11,400 Speaker 1: As long as you're with the people you love in 83 00:05:11,440 --> 00:05:14,120 Speaker 1: a place that you love, you can make anywhere feel 84 00:05:14,160 --> 00:05:16,800 Speaker 1: like home. Sometimes though, it's hard to make a home 85 00:05:16,880 --> 00:05:20,400 Speaker 1: someplace new, different sites and a different atmosphere can make 86 00:05:20,440 --> 00:05:23,360 Speaker 1: settling down in a new place more difficult. But if 87 00:05:23,400 --> 00:05:26,000 Speaker 1: you remember what made your last home special, you can 88 00:05:26,080 --> 00:05:29,720 Speaker 1: usually find a way to enjoy the new one. Lord 89 00:05:29,839 --> 00:05:33,320 Speaker 1: Davis remembered what made his home of Red Oak, Missouri special. 90 00:05:33,680 --> 00:05:36,560 Speaker 1: He'd grown up there during the nineteen thirties. He remembered 91 00:05:36,560 --> 00:05:39,200 Speaker 1: how neighbors waved to each other each day and helped 92 00:05:39,200 --> 00:05:42,440 Speaker 1: each other out, how people in town supported themselves by 93 00:05:42,520 --> 00:05:46,200 Speaker 1: making their own clothes and cannying their own food. It 94 00:05:46,279 --> 00:05:49,599 Speaker 1: was a simpler time until World War Two arrived. That is, 95 00:05:50,360 --> 00:05:52,680 Speaker 1: after the war, Red Oak looked less like a quaint, 96 00:05:52,720 --> 00:05:55,440 Speaker 1: friendly place to live and more like a ghost town 97 00:05:55,880 --> 00:05:58,880 Speaker 1: compared to the big city. It was quiet, too quiet. 98 00:05:59,240 --> 00:06:01,359 Speaker 1: People who had in what the larger world had to 99 00:06:01,400 --> 00:06:05,120 Speaker 1: offer while fighting overseas, suddenly wanted more from their life. 100 00:06:05,839 --> 00:06:09,360 Speaker 1: No more sewing patches on old dresses and jarring their 101 00:06:09,360 --> 00:06:13,240 Speaker 1: own preserves. They wanted fancy clothing shops and find cuisine. 102 00:06:13,720 --> 00:06:16,240 Speaker 1: Even Davis left town for a while. He found a 103 00:06:16,320 --> 00:06:18,880 Speaker 1: job in the Dallas Fort Worth area of Texas, where 104 00:06:18,880 --> 00:06:22,760 Speaker 1: he lived for almost thirty years. When it finally came 105 00:06:22,800 --> 00:06:24,599 Speaker 1: time for him to retire, though, he could think of 106 00:06:24,640 --> 00:06:27,640 Speaker 1: no better place than his old hometown of Red Oak, Missouri, 107 00:06:27,880 --> 00:06:30,240 Speaker 1: except it was a lot more run down by then 108 00:06:30,279 --> 00:06:32,760 Speaker 1: than it used to be. The shops and homes he 109 00:06:32,800 --> 00:06:35,680 Speaker 1: remembered growing up were still there, but in serious need 110 00:06:35,760 --> 00:06:39,800 Speaker 1: of repair. There was the blacksmith shop where Davis's great 111 00:06:39,839 --> 00:06:42,960 Speaker 1: grandfather had worked, and a general store his father ran 112 00:06:43,160 --> 00:06:45,559 Speaker 1: and where Davis would spend his time lending a hand. 113 00:06:45,960 --> 00:06:48,120 Speaker 1: It was also the place where he loved honing his 114 00:06:48,279 --> 00:06:53,560 Speaker 1: artistic skills. You see, it didn't matter what materials were available, paints, clay, 115 00:06:53,600 --> 00:06:57,400 Speaker 1: pastel's Lowell Davis was an artist. Now back in Red 116 00:06:57,400 --> 00:06:59,400 Speaker 1: Oak for good, he saw a way to put his 117 00:06:59,480 --> 00:07:02,400 Speaker 1: talents to use by sprucing up the old buildings from 118 00:07:02,440 --> 00:07:04,880 Speaker 1: his youth. He gave them fresh coats of paint and 119 00:07:04,960 --> 00:07:08,200 Speaker 1: repaired their roofs. He cleaned them inside and out, and 120 00:07:08,279 --> 00:07:11,760 Speaker 1: restored them to their former glory. And he was able 121 00:07:11,800 --> 00:07:14,200 Speaker 1: to do all of this because he was the only 122 00:07:14,320 --> 00:07:17,480 Speaker 1: person living there. The town had all but been abandoned 123 00:07:17,520 --> 00:07:20,440 Speaker 1: after the war, but thanks to his fancy city job, 124 00:07:20,600 --> 00:07:22,760 Speaker 1: Davis had the means to bring the town he loved 125 00:07:22,840 --> 00:07:25,040 Speaker 1: back to how he remembered it in the good old days. 126 00:07:26,440 --> 00:07:29,520 Speaker 1: For people driving through Red Oak today, well they won't 127 00:07:29,520 --> 00:07:32,440 Speaker 1: find much. There's quite a lot of farmland and several 128 00:07:32,480 --> 00:07:35,680 Speaker 1: houses along the main roads, but the blacksmith shop, the diner, 129 00:07:35,840 --> 00:07:38,920 Speaker 1: and many of the houses belonging to Davis's former neighbors 130 00:07:39,240 --> 00:07:43,200 Speaker 1: are all gone. Everything now lives about twenty miles northwest 131 00:07:43,400 --> 00:07:46,240 Speaker 1: near the town of Carthage. Davis dubbed his new home 132 00:07:46,520 --> 00:07:48,840 Speaker 1: Red Oak Too, and brought up as many of the 133 00:07:48,880 --> 00:07:52,040 Speaker 1: original properties as he could, moving them to a larger 134 00:07:52,080 --> 00:07:54,920 Speaker 1: plot of farmland that he owned. He even brought in 135 00:07:54,960 --> 00:07:58,120 Speaker 1: buildings from other areas around the original Red Oak, including 136 00:07:58,160 --> 00:08:00,920 Speaker 1: a Philip sixty six gas station that had lived along 137 00:08:00,960 --> 00:08:04,160 Speaker 1: the Old Root. Sixty six, Davis himself moved into a 138 00:08:04,200 --> 00:08:07,960 Speaker 1: house that once belonged to notorious nineteenth century outlaw Bell Star. 139 00:08:09,080 --> 00:08:11,240 Speaker 1: He saw his project as a way to rebuild the 140 00:08:11,280 --> 00:08:13,680 Speaker 1: town he'd lost, although he knew he'd never get his 141 00:08:13,680 --> 00:08:16,600 Speaker 1: old neighbors back. No one would be canning foods or 142 00:08:16,640 --> 00:08:19,400 Speaker 1: attending their gardens, and he never had anyone to wave 143 00:08:19,400 --> 00:08:21,600 Speaker 1: hello to each morning because there was no one to 144 00:08:21,640 --> 00:08:25,600 Speaker 1: come out and collect their milk deliveries. Red Oak two 145 00:08:25,800 --> 00:08:28,760 Speaker 1: was an art installation, a way for Davis to use 146 00:08:28,840 --> 00:08:33,000 Speaker 1: unconventional materials like houses and storefronts to make the ultimate 147 00:08:33,080 --> 00:08:37,040 Speaker 1: form of American art. His was an expression of nostalgia 148 00:08:37,200 --> 00:08:41,160 Speaker 1: for a time gone by, and like all worthwhile efforts, 149 00:08:41,400 --> 00:08:47,600 Speaker 1: it literally took a village. I hope you've enjoyed today's 150 00:08:47,600 --> 00:08:51,240 Speaker 1: guided tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free 151 00:08:51,280 --> 00:08:53,960 Speaker 1: on Apple Podcasts, or learn more about the show by 152 00:08:54,040 --> 00:08:59,040 Speaker 1: visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. The show was created by 153 00:08:59,080 --> 00:09:02,680 Speaker 1: me Aaron Mankey in partnership with how Stuff Works. I 154 00:09:02,800 --> 00:09:06,600 Speaker 1: make another award winning show called Lore, which is a podcast, 155 00:09:06,720 --> 00:09:09,640 Speaker 1: book series, and television show, and you can learn all 156 00:09:09,679 --> 00:09:13,240 Speaker 1: about it over at the World of Lore dot com 157 00:09:13,240 --> 00:09:16,720 Speaker 1: and until next time, stay curious, Yeah,