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IT’S HISTORY
Unknown
446 episodes
21 hours ago
IT’S HISTORY is a ride through history – join us in discovering the world’s most important eras, the minds that changed everything, and the most important inventions of our time through weekly tales of Urban Decay. This podcast is distributed and operated by Video Brothers Music.
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History
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All content for IT’S HISTORY is the property of Unknown and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
IT’S HISTORY is a ride through history – join us in discovering the world’s most important eras, the minds that changed everything, and the most important inventions of our time through weekly tales of Urban Decay. This podcast is distributed and operated by Video Brothers Music.
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History
Episodes (20/446)
IT’S HISTORY
The secret history of Waldorf's hidden tracks
The secret history of Waldorf's hidden tracks Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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21 hours ago
21 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
What's Below New York's Central Park?
What's Below New York's Central Park? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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1 day ago
21 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
New York’s Fake Buildings - Secret Sub-Stations
New York’s Fake Buildings - Secret Sub-Stations Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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3 days ago
19 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
Boston’s Forgotten Streetcar Tunnels | The Secret Subway Beneath the City
Beneath Boston’s City Hall Plaza lies a forgotten 1898 streetcar tunnel — a sealed remnant of America’s first subway. What began as a desperate solution to 19th-century gridlock eventually evolved into a hidden web of corridors, platforms, and portals stretching beneath the city. From the Pleasant Street Portal to the long-lost tracks of Scollay Square and Adams Square, these underground passages once powered one of the largest streetcar systems in the United States. In this episode, we trace Boston’s evolution from a crooked colonial peninsula to a booming streetcar metropolis, uncovering how the rise of electrified rail led to the nation’s earliest subway infrastructure. We explore how modernization, automobiles, and shifting political priorities ultimately sealed off entire sections of the network — leaving behind abandoned chambers, hidden platforms, and tunnels that still sit below modern streets. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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3 weeks ago
21 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
Why California Abandoned the Bullet Train
What began as America’s most ambitious infrastructure project — a sleek, 220-mile-per-hour bullet train linking San Francisco to Los Angeles — now stands as a cautionary monument to over-promising and political gridlock. Billions of dollars later, California’s high-speed rail system remains unfinished. Concrete viaducts stretch across farmland like modern ruins — silent reminders of a dream that was meant to change American transportation forever. In this episode, we trace the rise and stall of the California Bullet Train: from its optimistic beginnings in the 1990s, through the voter-approved 2008 bond, to the lawsuits, budget overruns, and federal withdrawals that left it stranded in the Central Valley. How did this state-of-the-art vision become the ultimate “train to nowhere”? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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4 weeks ago
17 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
Why Atlanta's Zone 6 is Totally Forbidden
Zone Six is one of Atlanta’s most misunderstood places—feared by outsiders, celebrated by artists, and shaped by nearly two centuries of conflict, inequality, and reinvention. Once a tidy 19th-century streetcar suburb, East Atlanta gradually transformed as segregation, white flight, industrial decline, and redlining created a perfect storm that reshaped the neighborhood. By the 2000s, rising crime and decades of disinvestment cemented Zone Six as a symbol of danger in the national imagination. But behind the headlines lies a deeper history. From the Civil War battles fought on its soil to the rise of local heroes like Gucci Mane, Future, 21 Savage, Young Nudy, and J.I.D, Zone Six has become a cultural powerhouse—where hardship and artistry coexist on the same blocks. In this episode, we trace the neighborhood’s evolution from a 19th-century model suburb to a modern-day icon of Southern identity, asking what life is really like in Atlanta’s most infamous district and what the future may hold as gentrification accelerates. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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1 month ago
15 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
Why Chicago has a Bridge to Nowhere
In the middle of downtown Chicago, a massive steel bridge stands permanently upright—rusted, silent, and seemingly useless. But the Kinzie Street Railroad Bridge wasn’t always a relic. Once, it was a triumph of early 20th-century engineering—built by the same mind behind the Golden Gate Bridge—and a key artery in Chicago’s freight empire. This episode uncovers how the city that once moved America’s goods came to abandon one of its most advanced structures. From the dawn of Chicago’s railroad age to the twilight of its industrial might, discover how progress, pride, and preservation turned a working bridge into a monument suspended between eras. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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1 month ago
11 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
Why New York’s Payphones Vanished | WHAT REMAINS?
For most of the 20th century, New York City rang with the sound of conversation. More than 200,000 public telephones once lined its streets — lifelines through blackouts, blizzards, and everyday life. From Wall Street to Harlem, these glass boxes were where business deals began, lovers whispered, and history unfolded. But over time, progress caught up. From the invention of the coin-operated phone to the arrival of cell networks and LinkNYC kiosks, the city’s payphones slowly disappeared. This episode uncovers how New York’s phone booths became icons of connection, symbols of privacy, and ultimately, relics of a world before smartphones. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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1 month ago
12 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
Why America's Secret Government Mega-Bunker is Under a Luxury Hotel
Beneath one of America’s most elegant resorts lies a secret built for the end of the world. During the height of the Cold War, the U.S. government secretly constructed a 112,000-square-foot nuclear bunker beneath the Greenbrier Resort in West Virginia — a hidden fortress designed to house the entire U.S. Congress after a nuclear strike. For over three decades, this top-secret facility—known as Project Greek Island—remained fully operational, maintained by undercover technicians posing as TV repairmen, and disguised beneath the daily luxury of a five-star hotel. In this episode, we uncover how it was built, how it stayed hidden, and how one journalist’s 1992 exposé brought the entire operation to light. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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1 month ago
17 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
Why New York’s Trump Tower is Totally Forbidden | Public Space Turned Inaccessible
Before Trump Tower rose on Fifth Avenue, the site was home to one of Manhattan’s most elegant landmarks: the Bonwit Teller Building. Designed by Warren & Wetmore—the same architects behind Grand Central Terminal—it stood as a testament to New York’s Art Deco age. When it was demolished in 1980, priceless architectural sculptures and details were lost forever. In this episode, we explore how a single address at 725 Fifth Avenue tells the larger story of New York’s evolution—from private mansions to department stores to modern skyscrapers. We’ll trace how the city’s balance between preservation, profit, and public access has shifted across the 20th century, and what that says about urban life today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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1 month ago
26 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
The Dangerous Mills That Changed America Forever
In the early 1800s, America was still a nation of fields and workshops — until one city transformed everything. Lowell, Massachusetts, became the birthplace of America’s Industrial Revolution, where red-brick mills, roaring turbines, and a new class of workers reshaped the nation’s economy and identity. At the heart of this transformation were the “Lowell Mill Girls” — thousands of young women who left rural farms to work twelve-hour days under deafening machines. Promised education and dignity, they instead found exhaustion and exploitation, becoming some of the first Americans to fight for labor rights. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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1 month ago
17 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
Why Blockbuster Was Abandoned & What Remains
Before streaming changed everything, one logo ruled the American weekend: Blockbuster Video. With its bright aisles and endless rows of tapes, Blockbuster turned movie renting into a national ritual — and quietly crushed thousands of local video shops in the process. By the 1990s, it had over 9,000 stores worldwide, renting 100 million tapes a week. But when Netflix came knocking with a new digital model, Blockbuster laughed — and sealed its fate. In this episode, we trace the rise, domination, and downfall of America’s forgotten video giant, exploring what remains of its abandoned stores across the country and why one last Blockbuster in Oregon still survives as a living museum of 1999. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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1 month ago
11 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
What Happened to Chicago’s Lost Lake Bridge?
In the mid-1800s, Chicago was a city fighting the lake itself. With storms eroding its shoreline and railroads racing to reach downtown, engineers made a bold gamble: they built a trestle bridge across Lake Michigan. Stretching hundreds of feet over open water, the Illinois Central’s wooden causeway carried trains above the waves—and forever changed Chicago’s lakefront. This unlikely structure triggered fierce battles over commerce, corruption, and public space. It blocked ships, created new land, and ultimately set the stage for Grant Park and the landmark Supreme Court ruling that defined America’s “public trust” doctrine. Join us as we uncover the rise, fall, and legacy of Chicago’s lost lake trestle bridge—a forgotten engineering marvel buried beneath one of America’s most iconic parks. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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1 month ago
14 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
From Hope to Horror | The Fall of Fairfield Hills Hospital
Hidden in the quiet town of Newtown, Connecticut, lies one of America’s eeriest relics of mental health history — Fairfield Hills Hospital. Once a vast psychiatric complex with miles of underground tunnels, this massive institution promised care but delivered something far darker. From lobotomies and overcrowding to wrongful institutionalizations, Fairfield Hills became a symbol of how America lost its way in treating the mentally ill. As the decades passed, it was shuttered and left to decay, its empty halls echoing with stories of suffering — and perhaps something supernatural. But how much of its ghostly reputation is myth, and how much of it is the result of what really happened inside? Join us as we uncover the rise and fall of Fairfield Hills, from its hopeful beginnings to its haunting legacy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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1 month ago
20 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
What's Below New York's Central Park?
At over 840 acres, Central Park is bigger than the nation of Monaco—and every hill, pond, and path was built by hand. But the real history of New York’s most famous park lies below the surface. Beneath the lawns are traces of forgotten neighborhoods, lost infrastructure, and tunnels that shaped Manhattan’s rise to power. In this episode, we uncover what truly lies under Central Park: the remains of Seneca Village, one of America’s first communities of free Black landowners; the massive Croton Reservoir that once supplied New York’s water; and the modern tunnels that keep the city alive today. Along the way, we’ll separate fact from legend and reveal how the park’s buried past tells the story of New York itself. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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2 months ago
21 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
Why Dark Entry Forest is Totally Forbidden
Hidden deep within the forests of Connecticut lies the ruins of a vanished colonial village — a place that locals call Dudleytown. Once a small farming community, it mysteriously disappeared from maps, leaving behind only stone foundations and a legend that refuses to die. Today, the area is sealed off by a private corporation called Dark Entry Forest, Incorporated, which has spent decades keeping trespassers away. Their secrecy has only fueled speculation about what really happened there. In this episode, we uncover the real story behind Dudleytown — from its humble 18th-century origins and harsh winters to the myths of a generational curse that supposedly doomed its settlers. Along the way, we explore how this abandoned Connecticut village became one of America’s most infamous “haunted” sites, and why even today, no one is allowed to step foot on its land. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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2 months ago
16 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
Why California has a Bridge to Nowhere
High in the San Gabriel Mountains outside Los Angeles sits one of California’s strangest landmarks — a massive concrete arch that connects to no road and leads to nowhere. Known as the “Bridge to Nowhere,” this isolated span was once the centerpiece of a highway meant to cut through the mountains, linking Azusa to Wrightwood. Built during the Great Depression under the Works Progress Administration, the bridge embodied the optimism of its time. But in 1938, catastrophic floods wiped out the road it was meant to serve, leaving the bridge stranded in the wilderness. Abandoned by planners but preserved by history, it has since become a hiking destination, a bungee-jumping site, and a haunting symbol of ambition versus nature. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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2 months ago
12 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
Why There’s a Hidden Station Under New York's Waldorf Astoria Hotel
Beneath the streets of Midtown Manhattan lies a secret rail siding few New Yorkers know about: Track 61. Originally built in the 1910s as part of Grand Central’s service yard, it once hauled coal and ash. But when the Waldorf Astoria rose above it in 1931, the track was reborn as a private platform—linked directly to the hotel by a massive freight elevator. Over the decades, it carried generals, presidents, and celebrities into the Waldorf’s back halls. Franklin D. Roosevelt himself used it, while Andy Warhol staged a party there in the 1960s. Yet much of Track 61’s legend comes from myth, not fact. In this episode, we’ll uncover the truth behind the secret platform, its origins in New York’s golden age of rail, and why it remains one of the city’s most enduring urban mysteries. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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2 months ago
21 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
Why Some McDonald’s Are Left Abandoned
Did you ever wonder what happens to McDonald’s after the golden arches go dim? Across the globe, thousands of locations have been demolished, replaced, or — stranger still — left abandoned. From a UFO-shaped McDonald’s in England to a floating restaurant known as the “McBarge,” to a frozen-in-time outpost on a remote Alaskan island, these forgotten arches reveal an eerie side of fast food history. In this episode, we trace the rise of McDonald’s from its postwar boom to its strangest abandoned locations, exploring how nostalgia, decay, and urban legend collide in the ruins of the world’s most famous fast-food chain. What do these lost restaurants say about modern life — and why do they capture our imagination long after the fries have gone cold? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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2 months ago
17 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
What's Below Chicago's Bean? The Lost Railyard
Beneath Chicago’s gleaming Cloud Gate lies the city’s most dramatic makeover. This episode traces Grant Park from marshland and post–Great Fire landfill to a soot-choked Illinois Central rail yard—and the century-long fight to keep the lakefront “forever open, clear and free.” We follow Daniel Burnham’s 1909 vision, Montgomery Ward’s lawsuits, and the philanthropists who turned coal dust into culture with Buckingham Fountain (1927) and a growing civic stage. Then we jump to the 1990s deck-over that birthed Millennium Park: Frank Gehry’s Jay Pritzker Pavilion, Jaume Plensa’s Crown Fountain, and Anish Kapoor’s Cloud Gate—plus the hidden world beneath it all: Millennium Station, the Pedway, miles of garages, and relic freight tunnels. By the end, you’ll see why Chicago’s front yard is both a monument to beauty and a marvel of buried infrastructure. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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2 months ago
33 minutes

IT’S HISTORY
IT’S HISTORY is a ride through history – join us in discovering the world’s most important eras, the minds that changed everything, and the most important inventions of our time through weekly tales of Urban Decay. This podcast is distributed and operated by Video Brothers Music.