1 00:00:04,080 --> 00:00:07,360 Speaker 1: Welcome to Aaron Benky's Cabinet of Curiosity is a production 2 00:00:07,400 --> 00:00:13,560 Speaker 1: of I Heart Radio and Grim and Mild. Our world 3 00:00:13,760 --> 00:00:17,360 Speaker 1: is full of the unexplainable, and if history is an 4 00:00:17,360 --> 00:00:20,880 Speaker 1: open book, all of these amazing tales are right there 5 00:00:20,920 --> 00:00:26,920 Speaker 1: on display, just waiting for us to explore. Welcome to 6 00:00:27,000 --> 00:00:38,960 Speaker 1: the Cabinet of Curiosities. Everyone deserves a second chance, although 7 00:00:39,040 --> 00:00:41,960 Speaker 1: few truly ever get one, and war there are no 8 00:00:42,040 --> 00:00:45,920 Speaker 1: second chances. As the philosopher Plato allegedly put it, only 9 00:00:45,960 --> 00:00:49,880 Speaker 1: the dead have seen the end of war. Don Carcos, however, 10 00:00:50,040 --> 00:00:52,440 Speaker 1: didn't die, and yet he saw the end of war, 11 00:00:53,080 --> 00:00:56,560 Speaker 1: well sort of. The day after the Japanese bomb Pearl Harbor, 12 00:00:56,680 --> 00:00:59,080 Speaker 1: sixteen year old Don went with his older brother to 13 00:00:59,160 --> 00:01:02,440 Speaker 1: the local Navy recruitment center in their hometown of Lewiston, Maine. 14 00:01:02,840 --> 00:01:05,480 Speaker 1: While waiting for his brother to finish his application, a 15 00:01:05,520 --> 00:01:07,880 Speaker 1: recruiter popped his head into the waiting room and asked 16 00:01:07,880 --> 00:01:10,800 Speaker 1: the younger Don why he wasn't joining his brother. He 17 00:01:10,880 --> 00:01:12,960 Speaker 1: told the man that he wasn't old enough just yet, 18 00:01:13,120 --> 00:01:16,440 Speaker 1: but his birthday was a few days away. Good enough, 19 00:01:16,520 --> 00:01:19,560 Speaker 1: the recruiter said, and just like that, Don was enlisted 20 00:01:19,560 --> 00:01:23,560 Speaker 1: in the United States Navy alongside his older brother. He 21 00:01:23,680 --> 00:01:26,200 Speaker 1: was placed on the USS rapid In out of Boston. 22 00:01:26,440 --> 00:01:29,160 Speaker 1: The rapid In wasn't a ship meant to see action, though, 23 00:01:29,400 --> 00:01:32,200 Speaker 1: it was a tanker that would sail around waters infested 24 00:01:32,200 --> 00:01:35,880 Speaker 1: with German submarines in order to refuel Allied ships and cruisers. 25 00:01:36,920 --> 00:01:39,240 Speaker 1: One summer morning, while Don was up on the deck, 26 00:01:39,440 --> 00:01:43,520 Speaker 1: an explosion rocked the ship. Shrapnel flew everywhere, and something 27 00:01:43,560 --> 00:01:46,080 Speaker 1: whacked the young sailor in the forehead, just above his 28 00:01:46,200 --> 00:01:48,760 Speaker 1: right eye. He blacked out and woke up in a 29 00:01:48,840 --> 00:01:53,080 Speaker 1: hospital in Iceland. Though he hadn't suffered direct damage to 30 00:01:53,120 --> 00:01:55,440 Speaker 1: his eye, doctors told him that he would never be 31 00:01:55,520 --> 00:01:58,200 Speaker 1: able to see out of it again. They encouraged him 32 00:01:58,200 --> 00:02:01,640 Speaker 1: to let them remove it. On refused. If it wasn't 33 00:02:01,640 --> 00:02:03,880 Speaker 1: going to bother him, he just as well would keep 34 00:02:03,960 --> 00:02:09,560 Speaker 1: everything intact. His military career was over before it even started. 35 00:02:10,120 --> 00:02:12,520 Speaker 1: After he'd healed enough, Don went home and got a 36 00:02:12,600 --> 00:02:14,840 Speaker 1: job at a local mill. He had to learn how 37 00:02:14,840 --> 00:02:18,320 Speaker 1: to function with only one I. His depth perception was 38 00:02:18,360 --> 00:02:21,959 Speaker 1: almost gone, and he barely had any peripheral vision. Daily 39 00:02:22,040 --> 00:02:25,320 Speaker 1: life was a constant struggle, especially since he lived in 40 00:02:25,400 --> 00:02:28,359 Speaker 1: fear of something bad happening to his one good remaining 41 00:02:28,440 --> 00:02:32,120 Speaker 1: I But he got by working at the mill for 42 00:02:32,200 --> 00:02:34,600 Speaker 1: three years until he earned enough money to pay off 43 00:02:34,600 --> 00:02:37,680 Speaker 1: his father's house. After some time, he got married and 44 00:02:37,720 --> 00:02:41,000 Speaker 1: had children of his own, eventually settling down on a 45 00:02:40,440 --> 00:02:45,000 Speaker 1: two acre horse farm. Now, as Don got older and 46 00:02:45,080 --> 00:02:47,160 Speaker 1: his children grew up and built lives of their own, 47 00:02:47,560 --> 00:02:50,760 Speaker 1: he moved away. He saw countless doctors over the years, 48 00:02:50,960 --> 00:02:53,400 Speaker 1: all of whom told him the same thing. He would 49 00:02:53,400 --> 00:02:56,720 Speaker 1: never regain sight in his right eye. No technology in 50 00:02:56,760 --> 00:03:00,000 Speaker 1: the world existed that would restore it for him. However, 51 00:03:00,080 --> 00:03:02,960 Speaker 1: or despite the prognosis, he never lost hope nor his 52 00:03:03,160 --> 00:03:05,800 Speaker 1: love of horses. He got a job at the Manticello 53 00:03:05,919 --> 00:03:08,360 Speaker 1: Raceway in New York when he was in his mid sixties. 54 00:03:08,680 --> 00:03:11,120 Speaker 1: He was a jack of all trades they're, working as 55 00:03:11,160 --> 00:03:13,920 Speaker 1: a security guard who would check in horses before races. 56 00:03:14,200 --> 00:03:17,680 Speaker 1: He also did odd jobs around the barn. One night 57 00:03:17,800 --> 00:03:20,639 Speaker 1: in two thousand and six, after a particularly tough day 58 00:03:20,680 --> 00:03:24,080 Speaker 1: at the track, he arrived home dizzy, barely able to stand. 59 00:03:24,560 --> 00:03:27,040 Speaker 1: Something had happened. As he rubbed his good eye, he 60 00:03:27,120 --> 00:03:29,560 Speaker 1: noticed something happening with the other one, the eye. His 61 00:03:29,720 --> 00:03:33,040 Speaker 1: doctors had told him would never work again. He could 62 00:03:33,040 --> 00:03:35,800 Speaker 1: see with it. He covered his good eye to make 63 00:03:35,840 --> 00:03:37,960 Speaker 1: sure it wasn't a fluke. The image and the right 64 00:03:38,000 --> 00:03:42,080 Speaker 1: one didn't disappear. His sights had been restored, and he 65 00:03:42,160 --> 00:03:45,880 Speaker 1: had my buddy Chemo to think for it. My buddy 66 00:03:45,960 --> 00:03:49,080 Speaker 1: Chemo was a horse at Manta Sello. Don was putting 67 00:03:49,120 --> 00:03:51,720 Speaker 1: a collar around its neck when the horse headbutted him 68 00:03:51,760 --> 00:03:54,240 Speaker 1: in the same spot where the explosion had hit him 69 00:03:54,280 --> 00:03:57,680 Speaker 1: sixty four years earlier. The impact had been so powerful 70 00:03:57,760 --> 00:03:59,800 Speaker 1: that it had thrown the eighty two year old back 71 00:04:00,000 --> 00:04:03,520 Speaker 1: into the paddock wall. He was shaken and ended up 72 00:04:03,520 --> 00:04:05,520 Speaker 1: with a pretty bad lump on his head, but was 73 00:04:05,600 --> 00:04:09,960 Speaker 1: otherwise unaffected, or so he thought. It wasn't until hours 74 00:04:10,040 --> 00:04:12,920 Speaker 1: later when he got home and realized something inside him 75 00:04:12,960 --> 00:04:16,400 Speaker 1: had been changed. Don tried to keep it a secret afterward, 76 00:04:16,640 --> 00:04:19,760 Speaker 1: telling only a few close friends about the incident, but 77 00:04:19,880 --> 00:04:22,480 Speaker 1: it didn't take long for the story to spread all 78 00:04:22,520 --> 00:04:26,760 Speaker 1: over the world. The montes Cello Miracle. They called him 79 00:04:26,839 --> 00:04:29,560 Speaker 1: Don Carcos. The man who had been blind in one 80 00:04:29,560 --> 00:04:33,680 Speaker 1: eye for almost his entire life had been cured by 81 00:04:33,680 --> 00:04:51,520 Speaker 1: a horse. Now that's what I'd call curious explorers. From 82 00:04:51,560 --> 00:04:54,200 Speaker 1: all over Europe spent hundreds of years looking for it. 83 00:04:54,680 --> 00:04:57,120 Speaker 1: A sea route to the Pacific Ocean by way of 84 00:04:57,160 --> 00:05:00,520 Speaker 1: the Arctic. They called it the Northwest Passage, and between 85 00:05:00,520 --> 00:05:03,840 Speaker 1: the fifteenth and twenty centuries, hundreds of sailors set out 86 00:05:03,880 --> 00:05:06,760 Speaker 1: to find it. One of those expeditions was led by 87 00:05:06,800 --> 00:05:10,039 Speaker 1: British explorer Sir John Franklin, along with the crew of 88 00:05:10,080 --> 00:05:13,720 Speaker 1: one thirty men. In May of eighteen forty five, they 89 00:05:13,720 --> 00:05:16,400 Speaker 1: set off in two ships, the h M s Erebus 90 00:05:16,720 --> 00:05:20,760 Speaker 1: and the h MS Terror. Now Franklin was no stranger 91 00:05:20,800 --> 00:05:22,960 Speaker 1: to the sea. He'd been an officer in the Royal 92 00:05:23,040 --> 00:05:25,440 Speaker 1: Navy for years, and his new ships possessed some of 93 00:05:25,440 --> 00:05:29,000 Speaker 1: the most modern technology of the day, including steam engines 94 00:05:29,040 --> 00:05:31,920 Speaker 1: and iron rutters. These were features that led to both 95 00:05:31,960 --> 00:05:37,239 Speaker 1: ships being described as unstoppable. Their first stop after leaving 96 00:05:37,240 --> 00:05:40,640 Speaker 1: England with Scotland. From there they continued on to Greenland 97 00:05:40,720 --> 00:05:44,960 Speaker 1: and finally northern Canada. Two whalers claimed to have seen 98 00:05:45,000 --> 00:05:47,679 Speaker 1: the crew in that area around July of eighteen forty 99 00:05:48,279 --> 00:05:52,719 Speaker 1: and everyone on board seemed okay. Unfortunately, the Franklin expedition 100 00:05:52,720 --> 00:05:56,440 Speaker 1: wouldn't stay that way. Shortly after, they were never heard 101 00:05:56,440 --> 00:06:01,120 Speaker 1: from again. Two years went by and nobody knew what 102 00:06:01,160 --> 00:06:04,159 Speaker 1: had happened. There had been no letters nor any word 103 00:06:04,240 --> 00:06:07,440 Speaker 1: that the ships had found the Northwest Passage. Three more 104 00:06:07,480 --> 00:06:11,160 Speaker 1: expeditions were assembled, but not to find the passage. These 105 00:06:11,160 --> 00:06:13,719 Speaker 1: went out in search of Franklin and his crew, all 106 00:06:13,720 --> 00:06:17,560 Speaker 1: of which returned months later empty handed. Any trace of Franklin, 107 00:06:17,720 --> 00:06:23,680 Speaker 1: the crew members, or the two ships had vanished, and 108 00:06:23,720 --> 00:06:26,960 Speaker 1: then in eighteen fifty a whole fleet of ships departed 109 00:06:26,960 --> 00:06:30,000 Speaker 1: with the sole mission of locating the missing explorers. They 110 00:06:30,040 --> 00:06:32,680 Speaker 1: came to an island in northern Canada called Beechey Island, 111 00:06:33,120 --> 00:06:36,240 Speaker 1: named for the father's son duo of William and Frederick Beachey, 112 00:06:36,320 --> 00:06:39,440 Speaker 1: who first stepped foot there in eighteen nineteen. The island 113 00:06:39,440 --> 00:06:42,880 Speaker 1: proved ominous for the search party. What they discovered was 114 00:06:42,920 --> 00:06:45,320 Speaker 1: that Franklin and his crew had landed there to rest 115 00:06:45,360 --> 00:06:47,440 Speaker 1: for a time, with plans to set back out to 116 00:06:47,480 --> 00:06:50,640 Speaker 1: see later at some point. Shortly after they arrived, though 117 00:06:51,080 --> 00:06:54,800 Speaker 1: three crew members died. In the years that followed, more 118 00:06:54,839 --> 00:06:57,520 Speaker 1: details about the fate of the remaining crew came to light. 119 00:06:57,839 --> 00:07:00,240 Speaker 1: It turns out that the Arabis and terror hadn't made 120 00:07:00,240 --> 00:07:03,000 Speaker 1: it too far from Beechey Island. They'd ended up getting 121 00:07:03,000 --> 00:07:05,320 Speaker 1: trapped in the ice, and the ships were abandoned when 122 00:07:05,320 --> 00:07:07,440 Speaker 1: it was clear there was no way to break them free. 123 00:07:08,720 --> 00:07:11,880 Speaker 1: Everyone fled to nearby King William Island to regroup, and 124 00:07:12,040 --> 00:07:15,840 Speaker 1: that's where further tragedy befell Franklin and his crew. According 125 00:07:15,920 --> 00:07:18,360 Speaker 1: to the local Inuit who had seen them, about forty 126 00:07:18,400 --> 00:07:22,240 Speaker 1: crewmen had succumbed to starvation, while Franklin himself along with 127 00:07:22,320 --> 00:07:26,520 Speaker 1: two dozen officers, had perished in eighteen forty seven, and 128 00:07:26,680 --> 00:07:29,400 Speaker 1: based on what little evidence was found, it seems that 129 00:07:29,440 --> 00:07:31,720 Speaker 1: at least some of the crew had turned to cannibalism 130 00:07:31,800 --> 00:07:35,200 Speaker 1: for survival. Others wrote letters in their final days that 131 00:07:35,240 --> 00:07:38,400 Speaker 1: were eventually found during an eighteen fifty four excursion to 132 00:07:38,520 --> 00:07:41,600 Speaker 1: King William Island. But perhaps the most chilling remnants of 133 00:07:41,600 --> 00:07:46,600 Speaker 1: the Franklin expedition were left back on Beechey Island three graves, 134 00:07:46,840 --> 00:07:49,280 Speaker 1: all clearly marked in honor of the first men to 135 00:07:49,360 --> 00:07:54,360 Speaker 1: die on Franklin's crew, William Brainy, John Torrington and John Hartnell, 136 00:07:54,920 --> 00:07:57,400 Speaker 1: and those bodies were exhumed in the nineteen eighties by 137 00:07:57,480 --> 00:08:00,960 Speaker 1: dr Owen Beatty, a forensic anthropology is from Canada. Who 138 00:08:00,960 --> 00:08:04,840 Speaker 1: performed autopsies on all three of the bodies. The remains 139 00:08:04,880 --> 00:08:09,120 Speaker 1: had been impeccably preserved by the freezing temperatures underground. Now 140 00:08:09,160 --> 00:08:11,280 Speaker 1: it had originally been believed that the men had died 141 00:08:11,280 --> 00:08:13,680 Speaker 1: of lead poisoning from the cans used to hold their 142 00:08:13,720 --> 00:08:16,320 Speaker 1: food and fresh water, but it was later determined that 143 00:08:16,360 --> 00:08:19,000 Speaker 1: the men in these graves had died from either pneumonia 144 00:08:19,480 --> 00:08:23,000 Speaker 1: or tuberculosis. They had already been in poor health when 145 00:08:23,000 --> 00:08:26,800 Speaker 1: they landed on Beechey Island, the harsh environment had only 146 00:08:26,840 --> 00:08:32,360 Speaker 1: made things worse. The men were eventually reburied alongside a 147 00:08:32,440 --> 00:08:35,280 Speaker 1: fourth Thomas Morgan, who had been part of an eighteen 148 00:08:35,280 --> 00:08:38,720 Speaker 1: fifty four expedition to find them. His cause of death, though, 149 00:08:39,160 --> 00:08:44,040 Speaker 1: had been scurvy. Today, explorers visit Beechey Island to see 150 00:08:44,080 --> 00:08:47,040 Speaker 1: the graves for themselves. They pay their respects to the 151 00:08:47,080 --> 00:08:50,160 Speaker 1: men who brave the Arctic in search of the Northwest Passage, 152 00:08:50,520 --> 00:08:53,079 Speaker 1: unaware that it had all been a one way trip, 153 00:08:53,559 --> 00:08:55,640 Speaker 1: and they get to see for themselves one of the 154 00:08:55,720 --> 00:09:00,000 Speaker 1: last places that Franklin and his crew ever visited, where 155 00:09:00,080 --> 00:09:07,160 Speaker 1: the environment is only slightly colder than the truth. I 156 00:09:07,200 --> 00:09:10,720 Speaker 1: hope you've enjoyed Today's guided tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. 157 00:09:11,040 --> 00:09:14,160 Speaker 1: Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, or learn more about 158 00:09:14,160 --> 00:09:18,720 Speaker 1: the show by visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. The show 159 00:09:18,920 --> 00:09:22,240 Speaker 1: was created by me Aaron Manky in partnership with how 160 00:09:22,280 --> 00:09:25,880 Speaker 1: Stuff Works. I make another award winning show called Lore, 161 00:09:26,120 --> 00:09:29,720 Speaker 1: which is a podcast, book series, and television show, and 162 00:09:29,760 --> 00:09:32,000 Speaker 1: you can learn all about it over at the World 163 00:09:32,040 --> 00:09:37,480 Speaker 1: of Lore dot com. And until next time, stay curious. Yeah,