1 00:00:04,080 --> 00:00:07,520 Speaker 1: Welcomed Aaron Manky's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of I 2 00:00:07,640 --> 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 --> 00:00:39,839 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. Let's be honest. Homeownership can be a mixed blessing. 7 00:00:40,280 --> 00:00:43,160 Speaker 1: On the one hand, it's a huge milestone in one's life, 8 00:00:43,280 --> 00:00:46,680 Speaker 1: often feeling like a defining moment of becoming an adult. 9 00:00:47,240 --> 00:00:49,320 Speaker 1: On the other hand, owning a home means no longer 10 00:00:49,360 --> 00:00:52,479 Speaker 1: relying on a landlord to fix common issues. Are your 11 00:00:52,520 --> 00:00:55,920 Speaker 1: cabinets old and chipped? Need your hot water heat replaced? 12 00:00:56,320 --> 00:00:58,840 Speaker 1: It's all on you now, and it can get expensive. 13 00:00:59,240 --> 00:01:02,400 Speaker 1: It sounds painful, for sure, But remember the word mortgage 14 00:01:02,520 --> 00:01:06,600 Speaker 1: is old French and it literally means death pledge. But 15 00:01:06,680 --> 00:01:10,279 Speaker 1: homeownership comes with freedom too, especially the freedom to change 16 00:01:10,280 --> 00:01:12,960 Speaker 1: what you don't like about where you live. And Russ 17 00:01:13,040 --> 00:01:16,319 Speaker 1: knew that he hailed from Lexington, Massachusetts, and got his 18 00:01:16,400 --> 00:01:19,280 Speaker 1: start as a cameraman for Boston Public Television back in 19 00:01:19,280 --> 00:01:23,080 Speaker 1: the nineteen sixties. While working on Julia Child's series The 20 00:01:23,120 --> 00:01:26,919 Speaker 1: French Chef. Russ master the art of doing more with less. 21 00:01:26,959 --> 00:01:29,880 Speaker 1: He used a small studio and spare equipment to shoot 22 00:01:29,880 --> 00:01:33,040 Speaker 1: their episodes in a single take, with no room for error. 23 00:01:33,280 --> 00:01:35,920 Speaker 1: It gave the show an authentic feel, and it paved 24 00:01:35,959 --> 00:01:38,640 Speaker 1: the way for others like it to come from there, 25 00:01:38,800 --> 00:01:42,080 Speaker 1: Russ climbed the corporate letter, going from cameraman to director 26 00:01:42,360 --> 00:01:45,160 Speaker 1: and then to producer. He was always looking for the 27 00:01:45,240 --> 00:01:49,720 Speaker 1: next French Chef, some educational program with a charismatic host 28 00:01:49,920 --> 00:01:53,360 Speaker 1: showing the audience how to do everyday things, and he 29 00:01:53,400 --> 00:01:56,920 Speaker 1: found such a person in Norman. Born in Rhode Island 30 00:01:56,920 --> 00:02:00,639 Speaker 1: in ninety nine but raised in Massachusetts, Norman had gotten 31 00:02:00,640 --> 00:02:02,720 Speaker 1: a taste of a carpenter's life when he was only 32 00:02:02,800 --> 00:02:05,480 Speaker 1: nine years old. You see, his father was also a 33 00:02:05,520 --> 00:02:09,520 Speaker 1: carpenter and taught his son everything he knew. On Christmas 34 00:02:09,560 --> 00:02:12,680 Speaker 1: Eve of nineteen fifty eight, he invited Norman to join 35 00:02:12,760 --> 00:02:15,919 Speaker 1: him on a job installing hardwood floors in a client's home. 36 00:02:16,480 --> 00:02:19,040 Speaker 1: They placed a skill saw upside down on an old 37 00:02:19,080 --> 00:02:22,080 Speaker 1: milk crate to slice the boards, and used cut nails 38 00:02:22,200 --> 00:02:25,320 Speaker 1: or squared off nails with blunt heads to hold them 39 00:02:25,320 --> 00:02:28,040 Speaker 1: in place. It was a little old fashioned, but it 40 00:02:28,080 --> 00:02:30,720 Speaker 1: made for a sturdy floor that would last a lifetime. 41 00:02:31,480 --> 00:02:34,360 Speaker 1: From then on, Norman was never seen without a hammer 42 00:02:34,480 --> 00:02:37,200 Speaker 1: or a saw in his hand. He spent his weekends 43 00:02:37,200 --> 00:02:40,560 Speaker 1: and summers off from school apprenticing under his father and 44 00:02:40,639 --> 00:02:44,160 Speaker 1: learning the trade. He took shop safety very seriously and 45 00:02:44,240 --> 00:02:50,000 Speaker 1: adhered religiously to that philosophy of measured twice cut once. Eventually, 46 00:02:50,080 --> 00:02:53,760 Speaker 1: Norman struck out on his own doing jobs all around Massachusetts, 47 00:02:53,760 --> 00:02:57,640 Speaker 1: including one four television producer Russ. He had wanted a 48 00:02:57,720 --> 00:03:00,400 Speaker 1: barn built on his property, and so he reached out 49 00:03:00,440 --> 00:03:03,680 Speaker 1: to Norman to construct it. When the job was finally done, 50 00:03:03,960 --> 00:03:07,480 Speaker 1: Russ was gobsmacked by the craftsmanship. It was the finest 51 00:03:07,520 --> 00:03:09,840 Speaker 1: barn he had ever seen, so he knew that Norman 52 00:03:09,880 --> 00:03:12,120 Speaker 1: would be the perfect person for the project that he 53 00:03:12,160 --> 00:03:15,200 Speaker 1: had been planning. The station he worked for had recently 54 00:03:15,240 --> 00:03:19,800 Speaker 1: purchased a dilapidated home built in eighteen sixty in Dorchester, Massachusetts. 55 00:03:20,040 --> 00:03:23,320 Speaker 1: It only cost seventeen thousand dollars, but the planned renovations 56 00:03:23,320 --> 00:03:27,160 Speaker 1: would be extensive and expensive. His idea was to film 57 00:03:27,200 --> 00:03:30,040 Speaker 1: the restoration over the course of thirteen episodes to be 58 00:03:30,120 --> 00:03:33,639 Speaker 1: aired on w g b H in Boston. Norman, though 59 00:03:33,840 --> 00:03:37,000 Speaker 1: had no television background, but Russ had one more ace 60 00:03:37,080 --> 00:03:40,480 Speaker 1: up his sleeve. He recruited another expert named Robert to 61 00:03:40,640 --> 00:03:43,760 Speaker 1: act as host for the program. The series debuted on 62 00:03:43,920 --> 00:03:46,760 Speaker 1: w g b H in nineteen seventy nine and became 63 00:03:46,800 --> 00:03:50,240 Speaker 1: an immediate hit, with Robert and Norman showing the audience 64 00:03:50,280 --> 00:03:52,400 Speaker 1: a real behind the scenes look at what it took 65 00:03:52,440 --> 00:03:55,920 Speaker 1: to restore a one hundred year old house. Years before 66 00:03:55,960 --> 00:03:58,640 Speaker 1: homeowners would love it or list it, or travel the 67 00:03:58,680 --> 00:04:00,920 Speaker 1: world in search of the perfect time me home. They 68 00:04:00,960 --> 00:04:03,480 Speaker 1: could watch a couple of regular d I wires on 69 00:04:03,520 --> 00:04:06,440 Speaker 1: TV and learned straight from the kinds of people who 70 00:04:06,520 --> 00:04:09,440 Speaker 1: might fix up their homes one day. And Russell Morash 71 00:04:09,560 --> 00:04:13,280 Speaker 1: placed that responsibility on Roberts and Norman, otherwise known as 72 00:04:13,360 --> 00:04:16,920 Speaker 1: Bob Vila and Norm Abram, who would become synonymous with 73 00:04:16,960 --> 00:04:20,680 Speaker 1: their little program called This Old House. Over the years, 74 00:04:20,760 --> 00:04:23,680 Speaker 1: other tradesmen and women would join the cast, but the 75 00:04:23,680 --> 00:04:26,840 Speaker 1: heart and soul of the show would always be Norm Abram, 76 00:04:26,880 --> 00:04:30,640 Speaker 1: clad in his trademark plaid shirt. It was announced this 77 00:04:30,720 --> 00:04:33,640 Speaker 1: year that Norm is leaving This Old House after forty 78 00:04:33,720 --> 00:04:36,760 Speaker 1: three years and more than a thousand episodes. He taught 79 00:04:36,800 --> 00:04:40,599 Speaker 1: homeowners and television audiences how to do everything from framing 80 00:04:40,600 --> 00:04:44,960 Speaker 1: a deck to replacing a staircase. Home improvement television just 81 00:04:45,040 --> 00:04:47,400 Speaker 1: won't be the same without him, but we'll always have 82 00:04:47,480 --> 00:04:51,440 Speaker 1: reruns for decades worth. In fact, all courtesy of the 83 00:04:51,480 --> 00:05:09,160 Speaker 1: house that norm built. There's a reason people say they 84 00:05:09,200 --> 00:05:11,479 Speaker 1: don't make them like they used to, and our culture 85 00:05:11,520 --> 00:05:14,520 Speaker 1: of mass produced and disposable goods, it can be difficult 86 00:05:14,520 --> 00:05:16,880 Speaker 1: to find something made today that's as strong and long 87 00:05:16,960 --> 00:05:20,440 Speaker 1: lasting as its equivalent made decades ago. From clothing and 88 00:05:20,480 --> 00:05:23,960 Speaker 1: appliances to cookware and tools, the things from the past 89 00:05:24,000 --> 00:05:26,679 Speaker 1: are still used today because they were made to last, 90 00:05:27,080 --> 00:05:31,279 Speaker 1: and the sentiment extends beyond what we consume. Certain architecture 91 00:05:31,360 --> 00:05:33,720 Speaker 1: has withstood the test of time as well, such as 92 00:05:33,720 --> 00:05:37,039 Speaker 1: the Colisseum in Rome and Notre Dame in France, and 93 00:05:37,080 --> 00:05:40,240 Speaker 1: if you tour Great Britain you'll find numerous medieval castles 94 00:05:40,279 --> 00:05:43,320 Speaker 1: dotted throughout. Many of these structures were built during the 95 00:05:43,360 --> 00:05:47,040 Speaker 1: eleventh and twelfth centuries, such as Kilkenny Castle in Ireland. 96 00:05:47,320 --> 00:05:49,760 Speaker 1: The techniques used by the Irish there were adopted from 97 00:05:49,760 --> 00:05:53,240 Speaker 1: the Normans who built these castles in Ireland using smooth 98 00:05:53,320 --> 00:05:56,599 Speaker 1: cut stones rather than the more commonly used wood. This, 99 00:05:56,760 --> 00:06:00,279 Speaker 1: of course made them more impervious to enemy attacks. The 100 00:06:00,360 --> 00:06:03,239 Speaker 1: stones were all chiseled by hand into the shapes needed 101 00:06:03,240 --> 00:06:06,919 Speaker 1: for construction, with wooden scaffolding erected to allow workers to 102 00:06:06,960 --> 00:06:10,840 Speaker 1: build upward, much like they used today. Some castles were 103 00:06:10,839 --> 00:06:13,559 Speaker 1: built using a dry stone method, meaning that the rocks 104 00:06:13,560 --> 00:06:15,760 Speaker 1: were simply stacked on top of one another in an 105 00:06:15,760 --> 00:06:20,520 Speaker 1: interlocking pattern until the different walls and sections were complete. Unfortunately, 106 00:06:20,560 --> 00:06:23,160 Speaker 1: that also meant that they were more susceptible to attacks 107 00:06:23,200 --> 00:06:26,240 Speaker 1: as well as damage from the elements. Castles built with 108 00:06:26,360 --> 00:06:29,279 Speaker 1: mortar between the bricks, however, allowed for a better seal 109 00:06:29,360 --> 00:06:33,320 Speaker 1: and stronger walls regardless of the techniques used. Though, these 110 00:06:33,360 --> 00:06:36,440 Speaker 1: castles were constructed by teams of mason's working together for 111 00:06:36,560 --> 00:06:39,760 Speaker 1: years at a time, but one castle eschewed all of that. 112 00:06:40,200 --> 00:06:43,080 Speaker 1: It was built by just two men, standing today as 113 00:06:43,080 --> 00:06:47,320 Speaker 1: a testament to their passion and maybe their obsession. They 114 00:06:47,320 --> 00:06:50,480 Speaker 1: had originally tried building the castle in secret, away from 115 00:06:50,480 --> 00:06:54,520 Speaker 1: the prying eyes of village elders. Unfortunately, the higher it grew, 116 00:06:54,560 --> 00:06:57,159 Speaker 1: the more attention it received. The village wanted to know 117 00:06:57,240 --> 00:06:59,680 Speaker 1: more about the structure and how tall the men planned 118 00:06:59,680 --> 00:07:02,440 Speaker 1: to build it. For one, this castle was developed with 119 00:07:02,480 --> 00:07:05,920 Speaker 1: more cutting edge techniques than others had been. They utilized 120 00:07:06,000 --> 00:07:10,040 Speaker 1: steel rods embedded inside concrete blocks to reinforce the structure. 121 00:07:10,400 --> 00:07:13,440 Speaker 1: They also carved out eighty eight windows around its perimeter, 122 00:07:13,720 --> 00:07:16,280 Speaker 1: all of which were left open to the environment. The 123 00:07:16,320 --> 00:07:19,520 Speaker 1: goal was to increase air circulation and let various weather 124 00:07:19,520 --> 00:07:22,920 Speaker 1: phenomena blow in and out. By the time the castle 125 00:07:23,000 --> 00:07:25,880 Speaker 1: shell was complete, the two men had poured about seven 126 00:07:25,920 --> 00:07:29,200 Speaker 1: million pounds of concrete and built a castle roughly fifty 127 00:07:29,240 --> 00:07:32,360 Speaker 1: feet tall. As for the inside, they hired a carpenter 128 00:07:32,480 --> 00:07:35,680 Speaker 1: to outfit the interior with all sorts of intricate woodwork, 129 00:07:35,960 --> 00:07:39,160 Speaker 1: such as staircases and pews. It took him three years 130 00:07:39,160 --> 00:07:42,480 Speaker 1: to complete, and those who walked its halls afterward said 131 00:07:42,520 --> 00:07:44,880 Speaker 1: it didn't feel like they were inside a castle at all. 132 00:07:45,760 --> 00:07:48,400 Speaker 1: The castle is still around two by the way, but 133 00:07:48,600 --> 00:07:51,400 Speaker 1: visiting this strange hybrid building doesn't require a trip to 134 00:07:51,440 --> 00:07:55,480 Speaker 1: Ireland to see it. The builders, Rusty Ikes and Otis Sadler, 135 00:07:55,840 --> 00:07:59,160 Speaker 1: broke ground back in ninety four in a little town 136 00:07:59,200 --> 00:08:04,080 Speaker 1: called St. Augustine, Florida. Castle Otis, and that's with three 137 00:08:04,120 --> 00:08:07,920 Speaker 1: tas mind you, was created as a landscape sculpture, not 138 00:08:08,200 --> 00:08:11,000 Speaker 1: as a dwelling place. They had no intention of living 139 00:08:11,080 --> 00:08:15,440 Speaker 1: inside the castle, which the town designated as a garage anyway. 140 00:08:15,480 --> 00:08:18,640 Speaker 1: They simply wanted to construct an homage to Christianity, going 141 00:08:18,680 --> 00:08:21,200 Speaker 1: so far as to consult with historians at the Catholic 142 00:08:21,240 --> 00:08:25,320 Speaker 1: Diocese of Northeast Florida for the interior would work. Today, 143 00:08:25,480 --> 00:08:29,200 Speaker 1: Castle Otis stands tall, overlooking the floor to landscape. It 144 00:08:29,320 --> 00:08:31,760 Speaker 1: was even granted an award by the American Institute of 145 00:08:31,840 --> 00:08:37,040 Speaker 1: Architects in which called it a new landmark. Visitors hoping 146 00:08:37,040 --> 00:08:39,080 Speaker 1: to catch a glimpse of the interior can come to 147 00:08:39,280 --> 00:08:42,040 Speaker 1: Castle Otis on the last Sunday of each month for 148 00:08:42,200 --> 00:08:45,839 Speaker 1: a special service. All are welcome, regardless of their faith, 149 00:08:46,080 --> 00:08:48,360 Speaker 1: and those lucky enough to get inside can see the 150 00:08:48,400 --> 00:08:51,640 Speaker 1: handiwork done by the carpenter that Ikes and Sadler had hired. 151 00:08:52,200 --> 00:08:55,240 Speaker 1: Oh and about that carpenter, his name was, in fact 152 00:08:55,880 --> 00:09:00,240 Speaker 1: carpenter Lee Carpenter. To be precise and to be onst 153 00:09:00,720 --> 00:09:07,240 Speaker 1: I feel like they really nailed that choice. I hope 154 00:09:07,280 --> 00:09:10,559 Speaker 1: you've enjoyed today's guided tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. 155 00:09:10,920 --> 00:09:14,040 Speaker 1: Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, or learn more about 156 00:09:14,040 --> 00:09:18,600 Speaker 1: the show by visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. The show 157 00:09:18,800 --> 00:09:22,120 Speaker 1: was created by me Aaron Manky in partnership with how 158 00:09:22,160 --> 00:09:25,760 Speaker 1: Stuff Works. I make another award winning show called Lore, 159 00:09:26,000 --> 00:09:29,600 Speaker 1: which is a podcast, book series, and television show, and 160 00:09:29,640 --> 00:09:31,880 Speaker 1: you can learn all about it over at the World 161 00:09:31,920 --> 00:09:37,320 Speaker 1: of Lore dot com. And until next time, stay curious. Yeah,