1 00:00:03,760 --> 00:00:07,840 Speaker 1: Our world is full of the unexplainable, and if history 2 00:00:08,039 --> 00:00:11,200 Speaker 1: is an open book, all of these amazing tales are 3 00:00:11,320 --> 00:00:14,680 Speaker 1: right there on display, just waiting for us to explore. 4 00:00:16,200 --> 00:00:29,200 Speaker 1: Welcome to the Cabinet of Curiosities. Charles had always been 5 00:00:29,280 --> 00:00:32,479 Speaker 1: a little different. His family looked up to him. Everyone 6 00:00:32,560 --> 00:00:35,239 Speaker 1: he met did too. They couldn't help it. He was 7 00:00:35,320 --> 00:00:39,000 Speaker 1: over seven ft tall. His parents claimed his towering height 8 00:00:39,080 --> 00:00:41,960 Speaker 1: was due to his conception atop a haystack, though the 9 00:00:42,000 --> 00:00:44,960 Speaker 1: real reason for his stature didn't matter to him. All 10 00:00:45,000 --> 00:00:47,680 Speaker 1: he knew was that in Ireland in seventeen sixty one, 11 00:00:47,960 --> 00:00:50,920 Speaker 1: he was an anomaly, a freak, as they used to 12 00:00:50,960 --> 00:00:53,400 Speaker 1: call him, and it wasn't long before he had outgrown 13 00:00:53,479 --> 00:00:57,640 Speaker 1: the tiny village where he lived. Literally as a teenager, 14 00:00:57,760 --> 00:01:00,279 Speaker 1: Charles set out for Scotland and began perform a mean 15 00:01:00,360 --> 00:01:02,920 Speaker 1: fun tricks for the people that he met. He liked 16 00:01:02,920 --> 00:01:05,200 Speaker 1: to see the reactions on their faces as he lit 17 00:01:05,280 --> 00:01:08,160 Speaker 1: his pipe using a nearby street lamp. His charm and 18 00:01:08,200 --> 00:01:11,600 Speaker 1: personality made him a sensation, so much so that a 19 00:01:11,680 --> 00:01:14,319 Speaker 1: stage show was written and performed about the larger than 20 00:01:14,400 --> 00:01:18,360 Speaker 1: life Irish transplant Charles. Fame had earned him quite a 21 00:01:18,400 --> 00:01:20,840 Speaker 1: bit of money too, which he carried on him at 22 00:01:20,880 --> 00:01:24,000 Speaker 1: all times. He didn't use banks, nor did he keep 23 00:01:24,040 --> 00:01:27,680 Speaker 1: anything in a secret hiding place at home. Unfortunately, many 24 00:01:27,760 --> 00:01:31,040 Speaker 1: locals knew about his wealth, which made him an easy target. 25 00:01:31,520 --> 00:01:34,039 Speaker 1: After a night of heavy drinking, a pickpocket managed to 26 00:01:34,080 --> 00:01:37,000 Speaker 1: lift every last bill off the seven foot tall giant, 27 00:01:37,400 --> 00:01:41,320 Speaker 1: leaving him penniless. To make matters worse, it started to 28 00:01:41,360 --> 00:01:43,559 Speaker 1: come to light that Charles height had come at a cost. 29 00:01:44,040 --> 00:01:46,319 Speaker 1: While the story about the haystack was a fun way 30 00:01:46,360 --> 00:01:49,320 Speaker 1: to play off their sun situation, the truth had actually 31 00:01:49,360 --> 00:01:52,280 Speaker 1: been much darker. Charles Burne had been born with a 32 00:01:52,360 --> 00:01:55,840 Speaker 1: tumor in his pituitary gland, which had accelerated his growth. 33 00:01:56,320 --> 00:01:59,400 Speaker 1: His health eventually took a bad turn, and, compounded with 34 00:01:59,440 --> 00:02:02,640 Speaker 1: his sudden extreme poverty, left him without any kind of 35 00:02:02,640 --> 00:02:06,240 Speaker 1: fighting chance at survival. He died at twenty two years old, 36 00:02:06,760 --> 00:02:11,480 Speaker 1: broke and homeless. But the story of the Irish Giant 37 00:02:11,520 --> 00:02:15,280 Speaker 1: doesn't end there. In fact, it gets a little stranger. See, 38 00:02:15,360 --> 00:02:17,680 Speaker 1: Charles had died at a time when the medical field 39 00:02:17,720 --> 00:02:22,079 Speaker 1: was entering an era of intense research, when patients alive 40 00:02:22,280 --> 00:02:26,680 Speaker 1: or dead were being experimented on in new sometimes inhumane ways. 41 00:02:27,280 --> 00:02:30,440 Speaker 1: The dead rarely got a chance to rest, as undertakers 42 00:02:30,440 --> 00:02:34,000 Speaker 1: sold bodies on the black market to desperate medical researchers. 43 00:02:35,240 --> 00:02:37,800 Speaker 1: Charles Byrne had known all about these kinds of doctors 44 00:02:37,840 --> 00:02:40,040 Speaker 1: and how they'd want to study his body after he 45 00:02:40,120 --> 00:02:43,079 Speaker 1: was gone. One in particular had been on his radar 46 00:02:43,200 --> 00:02:46,040 Speaker 1: for some time. He was a surgeon and collector of 47 00:02:46,080 --> 00:02:50,160 Speaker 1: biological specimens named John Hunter, an apt name for someone 48 00:02:50,200 --> 00:02:54,160 Speaker 1: who spent his life in pursuit of rare cadavers. Prior 49 00:02:54,200 --> 00:02:56,200 Speaker 1: to his death, Charles had asked a group of friends 50 00:02:56,280 --> 00:02:58,400 Speaker 1: to make sure his body would be buried at sea, 51 00:02:58,680 --> 00:03:01,640 Speaker 1: far from the hands of doctor Hunter. They agreed to 52 00:03:01,720 --> 00:03:04,880 Speaker 1: his wishes, and after he passed away, had his body 53 00:03:04,960 --> 00:03:07,720 Speaker 1: placed in a lead lined coffin before casting it to 54 00:03:07,720 --> 00:03:10,760 Speaker 1: the bottom of the ocean. Looking back, it's a wonder 55 00:03:10,800 --> 00:03:13,600 Speaker 1: that it sank at all, Given that the coffin had 56 00:03:13,639 --> 00:03:16,720 Speaker 1: been empty. There would have been no way for doctor 57 00:03:16,800 --> 00:03:19,919 Speaker 1: Hunter to retrieve Charles's body once it had slipped beneath 58 00:03:19,919 --> 00:03:22,480 Speaker 1: the waves. So the good doctor turned to his trust 59 00:03:22,560 --> 00:03:26,400 Speaker 1: the assistant cold hard Cash. He paid Charles, Burns and 60 00:03:26,480 --> 00:03:29,440 Speaker 1: Balmer to steal the corpse before it went into the coffin. 61 00:03:29,800 --> 00:03:32,720 Speaker 1: Charles friends had no idea, at least not for a year. 62 00:03:33,200 --> 00:03:36,520 Speaker 1: During that time, doctor Hunter performed all sorts of experiments 63 00:03:36,560 --> 00:03:39,800 Speaker 1: on the late Irish giants corpse, leaving behind nothing more 64 00:03:39,840 --> 00:03:44,880 Speaker 1: than his oversized bones. His skeleton remains the centerpiece of 65 00:03:44,880 --> 00:03:47,840 Speaker 1: the hunter Arian Museum at the Royal College of Surgeons 66 00:03:47,840 --> 00:03:52,000 Speaker 1: in London. John Hunter's contributions to medicine can't be understated. 67 00:03:52,320 --> 00:03:54,760 Speaker 1: Thanks to his research, we have a greater understanding of 68 00:03:54,800 --> 00:03:58,040 Speaker 1: how our bones develop over time, and how gunshot wounds 69 00:03:58,080 --> 00:04:03,120 Speaker 1: and venereal diseases affected By his legacy, However, we'll always 70 00:04:03,120 --> 00:04:06,000 Speaker 1: have a large blemish upon it for not letting a 71 00:04:06,080 --> 00:04:10,800 Speaker 1: poor young man rest in peace. Just how large, oh, 72 00:04:10,880 --> 00:04:26,839 Speaker 1: I'd say about seven and a half feet tall. No 73 00:04:26,920 --> 00:04:29,760 Speaker 1: one knows how it got there or its true purpose. 74 00:04:30,160 --> 00:04:33,040 Speaker 1: Its builder has left no written records. It has existed 75 00:04:33,080 --> 00:04:35,520 Speaker 1: for thousands of years in the middle of a field 76 00:04:35,520 --> 00:04:38,560 Speaker 1: in Wiltshire, England, where it draws nearly a million visitors 77 00:04:38,600 --> 00:04:42,320 Speaker 1: each year. It's thirteen foot tall stones stands straight up, 78 00:04:42,600 --> 00:04:45,279 Speaker 1: each weigh in about twenty five tons, and the method 79 00:04:45,320 --> 00:04:48,680 Speaker 1: of its construction continues to baffle historians to this day. 80 00:04:50,040 --> 00:04:52,560 Speaker 1: Stonehenge may not be one of the Seven Wonders of 81 00:04:52,560 --> 00:04:55,640 Speaker 1: the World, but it's no less on inspiring. When examined 82 00:04:55,720 --> 00:04:59,200 Speaker 1: up close. The sheer enormity of the stones does make 83 00:04:59,240 --> 00:05:01,440 Speaker 1: people wonder how they were moved and arranged in the 84 00:05:01,480 --> 00:05:05,120 Speaker 1: first place. According to twelfth century writer Jeffrey of Monmouth, 85 00:05:05,440 --> 00:05:10,359 Speaker 1: King Arthur's faithful wizard Merlin constructed it himself. But although 86 00:05:10,400 --> 00:05:13,120 Speaker 1: it sits in a wide open meadow surrounded by grass, 87 00:05:13,440 --> 00:05:17,159 Speaker 1: visiting Stonehenge today requires the purchase of a ticket. It 88 00:05:17,200 --> 00:05:21,040 Speaker 1: takes a whole team of guards, groundskeepers and restoration experts 89 00:05:21,080 --> 00:05:25,000 Speaker 1: to keep the Neolithic structure intact, and that costs money. 90 00:05:25,080 --> 00:05:27,839 Speaker 1: I've been there myself and paid the price of admission. 91 00:05:28,160 --> 00:05:30,760 Speaker 1: In fact, money is what begins our story in the 92 00:05:30,800 --> 00:05:34,839 Speaker 1: first place. During the early fifteen hundreds, King Henry the 93 00:05:34,880 --> 00:05:38,320 Speaker 1: Eighth owned Stonehenge after seizing the land upon which it sat. 94 00:05:38,720 --> 00:05:41,480 Speaker 1: It eventually passed down to the Earl of Hartford, followed 95 00:05:41,480 --> 00:05:45,599 Speaker 1: by countless other owners until eighteen twenty four. At that time, 96 00:05:45,680 --> 00:05:48,279 Speaker 1: the site was purchased by a wealthy family from Cheshire, 97 00:05:48,320 --> 00:05:52,760 Speaker 1: who maintained ownership for almost a century. Then, in nineteen fifteen, 98 00:05:53,120 --> 00:05:55,640 Speaker 1: after the last heir to the land was killed fighting 99 00:05:55,680 --> 00:05:58,320 Speaker 1: in France during World War One. The family put the 100 00:05:58,400 --> 00:06:01,919 Speaker 1: land up for auction. The auction was held at the 101 00:06:01,920 --> 00:06:05,640 Speaker 1: Palace Theater in Salisbury. Of all the people present, one 102 00:06:05,680 --> 00:06:09,279 Speaker 1: stood out Cecil Chub. He was born and Shrewden, about 103 00:06:09,279 --> 00:06:12,760 Speaker 1: four miles from Stonehenge, and being a successful lawyer, had 104 00:06:12,760 --> 00:06:16,119 Speaker 1: become quite wealthy. When the lot was announced, Cecil hadn't 105 00:06:16,120 --> 00:06:18,440 Speaker 1: expected to bid, but the more he thought about it, 106 00:06:18,520 --> 00:06:22,040 Speaker 1: the better the idea sounded to him. A Lot fifteen 107 00:06:22,120 --> 00:06:26,080 Speaker 1: contained a little over thirty acres of land, including Stonehenge itself. 108 00:06:26,480 --> 00:06:28,960 Speaker 1: When the final bid was collected, it was Cecil Chub 109 00:06:28,960 --> 00:06:31,480 Speaker 1: who came out on top, having spent six thousand, six 110 00:06:31,560 --> 00:06:34,400 Speaker 1: hundred pounds. By today's standards, that puts the total at 111 00:06:34,440 --> 00:06:37,720 Speaker 1: almost seven hundred thousand American dollars. He didn't hold on 112 00:06:37,720 --> 00:06:40,640 Speaker 1: to the property long, though, he believed that such an 113 00:06:40,800 --> 00:06:44,160 Speaker 1: iconic and wondrous site should not belong to just one person, 114 00:06:44,520 --> 00:06:47,520 Speaker 1: but to a nation as a whole. In nineteen eighteen, 115 00:06:47,760 --> 00:06:51,640 Speaker 1: three years after purchasing it, he formally rescinded his ownership 116 00:06:51,960 --> 00:06:55,240 Speaker 1: and gave Stonehenge to England, though he also included a 117 00:06:55,320 --> 00:06:59,000 Speaker 1: number of conditions. First, all local residents should have free 118 00:06:59,040 --> 00:07:03,160 Speaker 1: access to see at any time, and second, outside visitors 119 00:07:03,160 --> 00:07:05,640 Speaker 1: should be charged no more than a shilling for entry. 120 00:07:06,760 --> 00:07:10,120 Speaker 1: Since then, Stonehenge's value has gone up a bit. Locals 121 00:07:10,120 --> 00:07:11,960 Speaker 1: are still allowed to see it at no cost, but 122 00:07:12,080 --> 00:07:14,840 Speaker 1: visitors must pay five pounds to gaze upon the stones. 123 00:07:15,280 --> 00:07:18,120 Speaker 1: If it were being sold at auction today, it's estimated 124 00:07:18,160 --> 00:07:20,520 Speaker 1: that the ancient site could fetch as high as sixty 125 00:07:20,560 --> 00:07:24,240 Speaker 1: five million American dollars. Quite a smart investment in hindsight, 126 00:07:24,720 --> 00:07:26,760 Speaker 1: but at the time there really wasn't any reason to 127 00:07:26,800 --> 00:07:29,480 Speaker 1: own the land other than to build upon it. Chub 128 00:07:29,520 --> 00:07:32,240 Speaker 1: had no interest in using the area for new construction, 129 00:07:32,400 --> 00:07:35,200 Speaker 1: so why buy it at all? Well, he did it 130 00:07:35,240 --> 00:07:38,600 Speaker 1: for the best reason of all, love, of course, love 131 00:07:38,640 --> 00:07:42,360 Speaker 1: for his hometown, and love for his wife. He believed 132 00:07:42,360 --> 00:07:44,440 Speaker 1: that if anyone was going to own that ring of stones, 133 00:07:44,600 --> 00:07:47,160 Speaker 1: it should be a local man, not some company or 134 00:07:47,240 --> 00:07:50,920 Speaker 1: investor from overseas. And more importantly, he wanted to give 135 00:07:50,960 --> 00:07:53,800 Speaker 1: his wife a special gift, something she could look at 136 00:07:53,880 --> 00:07:57,320 Speaker 1: and remember just how much he loved her. As it 137 00:07:57,360 --> 00:07:59,960 Speaker 1: turns out, she wasn't thrilled with his last minute per 138 00:08:00,080 --> 00:08:02,480 Speaker 1: just which may have fueled his desire to give it 139 00:08:02,520 --> 00:08:06,480 Speaker 1: back to England. However, his philanthropic gesture was recognized in 140 00:08:06,560 --> 00:08:10,040 Speaker 1: n when he was made a baronet by Prime Minister 141 00:08:10,200 --> 00:08:14,240 Speaker 1: Lloyd George, so perhaps the investment paid off after all. 142 00:08:15,200 --> 00:08:17,000 Speaker 1: If there is a lesson to be learned here, though, 143 00:08:17,560 --> 00:08:20,400 Speaker 1: I think it's this. While it's a good idea to 144 00:08:20,520 --> 00:08:24,480 Speaker 1: buy your true love a ring, buying them Stonehenge might 145 00:08:24,520 --> 00:08:30,880 Speaker 1: be a bit too much. I hope you've enjoyed today's 146 00:08:30,920 --> 00:08:34,560 Speaker 1: guided tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free 147 00:08:34,600 --> 00:08:37,280 Speaker 1: on Apple Podcasts, or learn more about the show by 148 00:08:37,360 --> 00:08:42,360 Speaker 1: visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. The show was created by 149 00:08:42,400 --> 00:08:46,000 Speaker 1: me Aaron Manky in partnership with how Stuff Works. I 150 00:08:46,120 --> 00:08:49,920 Speaker 1: make another award winning show called Lore, which is a podcast, 151 00:08:50,000 --> 00:08:52,960 Speaker 1: book series, and television show, and you can learn all 152 00:08:53,000 --> 00:08:56,520 Speaker 1: about it over at the World of Lore dot com. 153 00:08:56,559 --> 00:09:00,400 Speaker 1: And until next time, stay curious. Two