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 --> 00:00:39,360 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. Everyone has a dream when you're young. It 7 00:00:39,479 --> 00:00:42,479 Speaker 1: might be to become an astronaut or a firefighter, or 8 00:00:42,520 --> 00:00:44,760 Speaker 1: to play in a rock band in front of thousands 9 00:00:44,760 --> 00:00:47,680 Speaker 1: of screaming fans. We live with our heads in the 10 00:00:47,720 --> 00:00:50,520 Speaker 1: clouds because we don't want to face what's waiting back 11 00:00:50,560 --> 00:00:54,960 Speaker 1: for us on Earth. Reality. Reality has a nasty way 12 00:00:54,960 --> 00:00:58,640 Speaker 1: of knocking down our dreams, sometimes for good, but not 13 00:00:58,840 --> 00:01:02,279 Speaker 1: for all. Brook Burbley, whenever his dreams were squatted out 14 00:01:02,280 --> 00:01:06,440 Speaker 1: of the sky, he simply aimed higher. Albert Burblinger, let's 15 00:01:06,480 --> 00:01:08,960 Speaker 1: call him AL for short, was born in the city 16 00:01:09,000 --> 00:01:12,000 Speaker 1: of Ulm in seventeen seventy in the Kingdom of Prussia 17 00:01:12,160 --> 00:01:15,520 Speaker 1: now part of Germany. The youngest of seven children, Al's 18 00:01:15,560 --> 00:01:18,560 Speaker 1: parents were poor. His father worked in the city's armory, 19 00:01:18,920 --> 00:01:22,360 Speaker 1: which Al would often visit when he was younger. As 20 00:01:22,360 --> 00:01:24,160 Speaker 1: a result, he got a good look at the kinds 21 00:01:24,200 --> 00:01:27,040 Speaker 1: of tools and machines that his father worked with. They 22 00:01:27,080 --> 00:01:30,120 Speaker 1: might have been the inspiration for Al's dream of becoming 23 00:01:30,160 --> 00:01:33,440 Speaker 1: a watchmaker. However, when he was thirteen years old, his 24 00:01:33,480 --> 00:01:37,240 Speaker 1: father passed away. It's unclear what had become of his mother, 25 00:01:37,520 --> 00:01:40,160 Speaker 1: although it's probably safe to say that she was also gone, 26 00:01:40,200 --> 00:01:43,120 Speaker 1: because Al was sent to an orphanage until he became 27 00:01:43,160 --> 00:01:46,240 Speaker 1: an adult. He never let go of his love of mechanics, though, 28 00:01:46,319 --> 00:01:50,120 Speaker 1: but his new guardians had other plans. He was forced 29 00:01:50,200 --> 00:01:52,880 Speaker 1: to apprentice with a local tailor, with the goal of 30 00:01:52,880 --> 00:01:55,680 Speaker 1: one day establishing him as a tailor in his own right. 31 00:01:56,120 --> 00:01:59,680 Speaker 1: But Al didn't want that. He wanted to build things, 32 00:02:00,000 --> 00:02:03,040 Speaker 1: and not just watches. In his spare time, he tinkered 33 00:02:03,080 --> 00:02:06,560 Speaker 1: with various inventions, such as they prosthetic device meant for 34 00:02:06,600 --> 00:02:09,800 Speaker 1: those who had suffered from foot amputations. In fact, in 35 00:02:09,840 --> 00:02:14,160 Speaker 1: eighteen o eight, he created the first ever jointed leg prosthesis. 36 00:02:14,400 --> 00:02:18,079 Speaker 1: But soon Al began setting his sights higher, much higher. 37 00:02:18,760 --> 00:02:21,919 Speaker 1: He grew a preoccupation with the concept of human flight. 38 00:02:22,360 --> 00:02:25,239 Speaker 1: It all happened when he started watching how owls soared 39 00:02:25,280 --> 00:02:27,920 Speaker 1: through the sky. He noted the shapes of their wings 40 00:02:28,160 --> 00:02:30,440 Speaker 1: and how they spread out when the owls took flight. 41 00:02:31,160 --> 00:02:33,760 Speaker 1: And then he got to work. He built something akin 42 00:02:33,840 --> 00:02:36,000 Speaker 1: to a hang glider, which would allow him to fly 43 00:02:36,120 --> 00:02:39,200 Speaker 1: short distances from the tops of vineyard walls and cottages. 44 00:02:39,280 --> 00:02:42,160 Speaker 1: There and Ulm. Others in town didn't think that he 45 00:02:42,200 --> 00:02:45,000 Speaker 1: could do it, though. The Guild of Tailor's even tried 46 00:02:45,040 --> 00:02:47,639 Speaker 1: to expel him for his lack of focus on his trade. 47 00:02:48,000 --> 00:02:51,400 Speaker 1: He was fined for wasting his time on his inventions, 48 00:02:51,440 --> 00:02:54,400 Speaker 1: but Al refused to give up. King Frederick, the first 49 00:02:54,480 --> 00:02:57,640 Speaker 1: of Rtemburg even promised him funding if he could prove 50 00:02:57,720 --> 00:03:00,920 Speaker 1: that his idea worked now. That original plan was to 51 00:03:01,000 --> 00:03:04,560 Speaker 1: leap from the all ministers one meter high roof, but 52 00:03:04,760 --> 00:03:07,800 Speaker 1: few people believed that he would be successful. Instead, he 53 00:03:07,880 --> 00:03:10,800 Speaker 1: was instructed to jump from a seven meter tall scaffold 54 00:03:11,000 --> 00:03:13,480 Speaker 1: that had been constructed on top of a thirteen meter 55 00:03:13,639 --> 00:03:16,880 Speaker 1: high wall overlooking the Danube River. His goal was to 56 00:03:16,960 --> 00:03:19,160 Speaker 1: land on the other side of the river, a distance 57 00:03:19,160 --> 00:03:24,040 Speaker 1: of about forty and so on May eighteen eleven, Al 58 00:03:24,120 --> 00:03:27,160 Speaker 1: strapped into his glider as the King, his sons, and 59 00:03:27,200 --> 00:03:30,840 Speaker 1: the Crown Prince of Bavaria looked on Al. However, I 60 00:03:30,919 --> 00:03:33,800 Speaker 1: couldn't do it. He told everyone his glider had broken 61 00:03:33,840 --> 00:03:35,680 Speaker 1: and that the flights would have to wait until the 62 00:03:35,760 --> 00:03:38,560 Speaker 1: next day. But the King was leaving then to attend 63 00:03:38,640 --> 00:03:42,120 Speaker 1: some royal business. His brother, Duke Heinrich, stayed to watch 64 00:03:42,160 --> 00:03:46,200 Speaker 1: that event the following afternoon. So finally, on May thirty one, 65 00:03:46,480 --> 00:03:49,480 Speaker 1: the time had come. Hours went by as Al waited 66 00:03:49,520 --> 00:03:51,520 Speaker 1: for the winds to die down enough for him to 67 00:03:51,560 --> 00:03:54,960 Speaker 1: safely launch himself. He had planned to jump at four pm, 68 00:03:55,160 --> 00:03:58,200 Speaker 1: but one hour later, everyone, including the Duke, felt that 69 00:03:58,240 --> 00:04:01,760 Speaker 1: they had waited long enough. A police officer, also sick 70 00:04:01,800 --> 00:04:04,840 Speaker 1: of the delay, shoved Al off the wall, and the 71 00:04:04,880 --> 00:04:07,760 Speaker 1: rest was history, but not in a way that aspiring 72 00:04:07,840 --> 00:04:10,800 Speaker 1: aviator had hoped for. He dropped like a stone into 73 00:04:10,840 --> 00:04:13,160 Speaker 1: the river below and had to be fished out by 74 00:04:13,200 --> 00:04:18,080 Speaker 1: actual fisherman, and he was booed and jeered. His reputation 75 00:04:18,160 --> 00:04:21,760 Speaker 1: was irreparably tarnished, and he not only lost the public's goodwill, 76 00:04:21,800 --> 00:04:24,799 Speaker 1: but he also lost their business. He was no longer 77 00:04:24,800 --> 00:04:28,800 Speaker 1: a tailor nor an inventor. Albrook Berblinger died without a 78 00:04:28,800 --> 00:04:31,200 Speaker 1: single sent to his name at the young age of 79 00:04:31,279 --> 00:04:35,080 Speaker 1: fifty eight. Hundreds of years later, however, his work was 80 00:04:35,160 --> 00:04:39,000 Speaker 1: eventually vindicated. For one, experts realized that there was little 81 00:04:39,040 --> 00:04:40,839 Speaker 1: to no chance that he would have ever gotten the 82 00:04:40,839 --> 00:04:43,280 Speaker 1: glider in the air so close to the Danube, as 83 00:04:43,320 --> 00:04:45,880 Speaker 1: the river created a down draft that would have kept 84 00:04:45,920 --> 00:04:50,520 Speaker 1: his wings grounded. And second, researchers inspected his design and 85 00:04:50,560 --> 00:04:53,280 Speaker 1: found no flaws. In fact, had he taken off from 86 00:04:53,320 --> 00:04:56,560 Speaker 1: a more appropriate location, he most likely would have succeeded. 87 00:04:56,720 --> 00:04:59,640 Speaker 1: All he needed was a better launching spot and some 88 00:04:59,720 --> 00:05:04,040 Speaker 1: in urgement from his neighbors a little wind beneath his wings. 89 00:05:18,520 --> 00:05:20,640 Speaker 1: At the top of the world resides the North Pole, 90 00:05:20,800 --> 00:05:23,760 Speaker 1: comprised of the Arctic Ocean and numerous land masses, many 91 00:05:23,800 --> 00:05:27,200 Speaker 1: of which are covered in ice. In June seventy one, 92 00:05:27,320 --> 00:05:30,080 Speaker 1: the USS Polarists left New York to become the first 93 00:05:30,160 --> 00:05:33,159 Speaker 1: vessel to reach the North Pole. The expedition was led 94 00:05:33,160 --> 00:05:36,599 Speaker 1: by Arctic explorer Charles Francis Hall, with backing from the 95 00:05:36,680 --> 00:05:40,200 Speaker 1: United States government. The ship's crew included the sailing master, 96 00:05:40,440 --> 00:05:44,680 Speaker 1: engineers cook and astronomer, as well as chief scientist Amial 97 00:05:44,720 --> 00:05:49,400 Speaker 1: Vessels and Frederick Meyer, the ship's meteorologist. The two German 98 00:05:49,400 --> 00:05:52,360 Speaker 1: Men were highly educated and skilled, which made them valuable 99 00:05:52,360 --> 00:05:55,839 Speaker 1: assets on the voyage, but it also rendered them insufferable 100 00:05:55,880 --> 00:05:59,520 Speaker 1: to everyone else. Bessels and Meyer didn't think too highly 101 00:05:59,560 --> 00:06:02,800 Speaker 1: of most of their fellow crew, especially Commander Hall, who 102 00:06:02,839 --> 00:06:05,279 Speaker 1: they felt was not smart enough to lead them. With 103 00:06:05,360 --> 00:06:07,719 Speaker 1: half the crew being German and the other half being 104 00:06:07,720 --> 00:06:10,640 Speaker 1: made up of Americans, Swedes, and Danes, the ship was 105 00:06:10,640 --> 00:06:13,400 Speaker 1: a veritable melting pot, one that seemed to be getting 106 00:06:13,440 --> 00:06:17,479 Speaker 1: more heated by the day. Things started off okay, with 107 00:06:17,520 --> 00:06:20,800 Speaker 1: the ship chugging along on its way north. However, by October, 108 00:06:20,839 --> 00:06:23,800 Speaker 1: Commander Hall began to feel sick. He'd gotten a stomach 109 00:06:23,880 --> 00:06:26,480 Speaker 1: ache after drinking a cup of coffee, which grew into 110 00:06:26,520 --> 00:06:31,040 Speaker 1: delirium and partial paralysis. Dr Bessels tried to treat him, 111 00:06:31,040 --> 00:06:33,920 Speaker 1: but Hall wouldn't let him. He didn't trust him at all. 112 00:06:34,000 --> 00:06:36,200 Speaker 1: In fact, he believed that Vessels and the German side 113 00:06:36,200 --> 00:06:39,960 Speaker 1: of the crew were plotting against him. Specifically, he felt 114 00:06:40,000 --> 00:06:42,960 Speaker 1: that they had poisoned him, but there was no proof. 115 00:06:43,360 --> 00:06:45,960 Speaker 1: His condition had gotten so bad by early November that 116 00:06:45,960 --> 00:06:48,880 Speaker 1: he had no choice but to allow vessels to administer treatments, 117 00:06:49,440 --> 00:06:52,440 Speaker 1: but sadly it was too late. Hall succumbed to whatever 118 00:06:52,480 --> 00:06:55,200 Speaker 1: had been plaguing him on November eight. He was buried 119 00:06:55,240 --> 00:06:58,120 Speaker 1: in a small basin off the northwestern coast of Greenland 120 00:06:58,360 --> 00:07:02,520 Speaker 1: called Thank God Harbor. The crew still attempted to reach 121 00:07:02,560 --> 00:07:05,400 Speaker 1: the pole that June. Three of the Polaris's whale boats 122 00:07:05,400 --> 00:07:08,679 Speaker 1: were dispatched to navigate the icy waters, and one after 123 00:07:08,720 --> 00:07:11,680 Speaker 1: the other, each boat was destroyed by the ice. Even 124 00:07:11,720 --> 00:07:14,480 Speaker 1: the Polaris itself couldn't find a safe route to the pole, 125 00:07:14,720 --> 00:07:17,720 Speaker 1: and the main objective of the whole voyage was abandoned. 126 00:07:18,720 --> 00:07:22,240 Speaker 1: The ship eventually turned around and headed south back towards home, 127 00:07:22,800 --> 00:07:25,280 Speaker 1: but months had passed since their attempt at the pole, 128 00:07:25,560 --> 00:07:27,880 Speaker 1: and more ice had now moved into the waters they 129 00:07:27,880 --> 00:07:31,040 Speaker 1: were traveling through. The Polaris collided with a berg on 130 00:07:31,080 --> 00:07:34,280 Speaker 1: the evening of October fifteenth and began taking on water. 131 00:07:35,160 --> 00:07:39,160 Speaker 1: The new commander, sailing Master Sydney Buddington, told everyone to 132 00:07:39,160 --> 00:07:42,200 Speaker 1: toss cargo onto the nearby ice to reduce weight on 133 00:07:42,240 --> 00:07:45,920 Speaker 1: the ship. Nineteen crew members, including Inuit hunters who had 134 00:07:45,960 --> 00:07:48,720 Speaker 1: been on board, abandon the ship as well, and spent 135 00:07:48,760 --> 00:07:52,000 Speaker 1: the night huddled together on the ice, expecting the Polarist 136 00:07:52,080 --> 00:07:55,440 Speaker 1: to sink to the bottom of the ocean. The following morning, though, 137 00:07:55,720 --> 00:07:57,640 Speaker 1: they woke up to find that the Polarists was about 138 00:07:57,680 --> 00:08:01,280 Speaker 1: ten miles away and still a boat. It turned out 139 00:08:01,280 --> 00:08:05,200 Speaker 1: that the leak wasn't as bad as they had originally thought. Unfortunately, 140 00:08:05,240 --> 00:08:08,520 Speaker 1: this group was stranded and the Polarists wasn't coming back 141 00:08:08,560 --> 00:08:12,160 Speaker 1: for them. They had some food and a few small boats, 142 00:08:12,520 --> 00:08:16,040 Speaker 1: but little else to survive. Luckily, the Inuit hunters knew 143 00:08:16,040 --> 00:08:19,080 Speaker 1: how to keep everyone alive. They built igloos from the 144 00:08:19,120 --> 00:08:21,880 Speaker 1: ice and caught seals that kept everyone well fed for 145 00:08:22,000 --> 00:08:25,960 Speaker 1: some time. For months, they endured a harsh Arctic winter 146 00:08:26,080 --> 00:08:28,760 Speaker 1: as the ice drift itself. One of the boats was 147 00:08:28,800 --> 00:08:31,920 Speaker 1: broken down to create a fire. A crew member fashioned 148 00:08:31,920 --> 00:08:34,480 Speaker 1: a deck of cards from some paper so that people 149 00:08:34,520 --> 00:08:38,079 Speaker 1: could play games, and as time went on, animosity between 150 00:08:38,120 --> 00:08:40,800 Speaker 1: the Germans and the others increased, so much so that 151 00:08:40,840 --> 00:08:43,440 Speaker 1: it was believed that the armed Germans might kill one 152 00:08:43,440 --> 00:08:46,280 Speaker 1: of the hunters. The group also had to contend with 153 00:08:46,320 --> 00:08:49,920 Speaker 1: their ice flow breaking up beneath them. Sometime or on April, 154 00:08:49,960 --> 00:08:53,400 Speaker 1: all nineteen survivors piled into the one remaining lifeboat and 155 00:08:53,440 --> 00:08:57,920 Speaker 1: floated onward, hoping for a miracle, and on April eighteen 156 00:08:58,000 --> 00:09:00,720 Speaker 1: seventy three, it finally came when they caught sight of 157 00:09:00,720 --> 00:09:03,720 Speaker 1: a ceiling ship out in the distance. They were soon 158 00:09:03,760 --> 00:09:06,400 Speaker 1: picked up. After having drifted a total of eighteen hundred 159 00:09:06,440 --> 00:09:10,199 Speaker 1: miles over the course of six months, everyone had survived, 160 00:09:10,360 --> 00:09:13,000 Speaker 1: along with those who had remained on the Polarists. They 161 00:09:13,000 --> 00:09:17,080 Speaker 1: were eventually rescued by a whaling ship that July. Once 162 00:09:17,080 --> 00:09:19,719 Speaker 1: all parties were back on dry land and inquiry was 163 00:09:19,760 --> 00:09:22,839 Speaker 1: held to determine the truth behind Captain Hall's death, there 164 00:09:22,880 --> 00:09:25,560 Speaker 1: wasn't enough evidence to pinned on vessels, so it was 165 00:09:25,600 --> 00:09:28,400 Speaker 1: declared that Hall had died of a stroke instead, although 166 00:09:28,520 --> 00:09:31,079 Speaker 1: the accusations followed vessels around for the rest of his 167 00:09:31,240 --> 00:09:36,720 Speaker 1: life and probably for good reason. In nineteen sixty, almost 168 00:09:36,800 --> 00:09:39,960 Speaker 1: one years after the expedition, an author who had been 169 00:09:39,960 --> 00:09:43,640 Speaker 1: writing Hall's biography requested to travel to Thank God Harbor 170 00:09:43,679 --> 00:09:46,400 Speaker 1: and exhume the body. He wanted to see for himself 171 00:09:46,400 --> 00:09:49,440 Speaker 1: what had caused the captain's death. The corpse was in 172 00:09:49,600 --> 00:09:52,720 Speaker 1: very good condition due to the perma frost around the coffin, 173 00:09:53,000 --> 00:09:56,000 Speaker 1: and the writer was able to take samples of Hall's bone, hair, 174 00:09:56,400 --> 00:10:00,120 Speaker 1: and finger nails back for testing. The results revealed the 175 00:10:00,120 --> 00:10:04,960 Speaker 1: shocking truth behind the Captain's untimely demise arsenic and lots 176 00:10:05,000 --> 00:10:08,920 Speaker 1: of it too. Vessels suddenly became a prime suspect once again, 177 00:10:09,280 --> 00:10:11,280 Speaker 1: especially when it came out that both men had been 178 00:10:11,280 --> 00:10:14,400 Speaker 1: pursuing the same woman back in New York, a sculptor 179 00:10:14,679 --> 00:10:18,480 Speaker 1: named Vivey Reem. Vessels had most likely been jealous of 180 00:10:18,520 --> 00:10:21,040 Speaker 1: Captain Hall when it became clear that Realm had preferred 181 00:10:21,080 --> 00:10:24,400 Speaker 1: the latter's company to the not so good Doctors. But 182 00:10:24,559 --> 00:10:27,560 Speaker 1: Vessels was gone. He had died in eight when he 183 00:10:27,600 --> 00:10:31,240 Speaker 1: was only forty years old, ironically from a stroke, the 184 00:10:31,320 --> 00:10:34,479 Speaker 1: same cause that was declared by the inquiry committee investigating 185 00:10:34,520 --> 00:10:38,880 Speaker 1: Captain Hall's death. Some might call that karma, me I 186 00:10:38,960 --> 00:10:46,400 Speaker 1: just see it as a stroke of bad luck. I 187 00:10:46,440 --> 00:10:49,960 Speaker 1: hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. 188 00:10:50,280 --> 00:10:53,400 Speaker 1: Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, or learn more about 189 00:10:53,400 --> 00:10:57,959 Speaker 1: the show by visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. The show 190 00:10:58,160 --> 00:11:01,480 Speaker 1: was created by me Aaron Mankey in partnership with how 191 00:11:01,520 --> 00:11:05,120 Speaker 1: Stuff Works. I make another award winning show called Lore, 192 00:11:05,360 --> 00:11:09,000 Speaker 1: which is a podcast, book series, and television show, and 193 00:11:09,040 --> 00:11:11,200 Speaker 1: you can learn all about it over at the World 194 00:11:11,280 --> 00:11:15,679 Speaker 1: of Lore dot com and until next time, stay curious, 195 00:11:16,440 --> 00:11:16,560 Speaker 1: ye