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This Day in Insane History
Inception Point Ai
583 episodes
1 day ago
journey back in time with "This Day in Insane History" your daily dose of the most bewildering, shocking, and downright insane moments from our shared past. Each episode delves into a specific date, unearthing tales of audacious adventures, mind-boggling coincidences, and events so extraordinary they'll make you question reality. From military blunders to unbelievable feats of endurance, from political scandals to bizarre cultural practices, "This Day in Insane History" promises that you'll never look at today's date the same way again.
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History
Comedy
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All content for This Day in Insane History is the property of Inception Point Ai 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.
journey back in time with "This Day in Insane History" your daily dose of the most bewildering, shocking, and downright insane moments from our shared past. Each episode delves into a specific date, unearthing tales of audacious adventures, mind-boggling coincidences, and events so extraordinary they'll make you question reality. From military blunders to unbelievable feats of endurance, from political scandals to bizarre cultural practices, "This Day in Insane History" promises that you'll never look at today's date the same way again.
Show more...
History
Comedy
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Samuel Morse: The Failed Painter Who Stole Credit for the Telegraph and Got Really Rich Doing It
This Day in Insane History
1 minute
6 days ago
Samuel Morse: The Failed Painter Who Stole Credit for the Telegraph and Got Really Rich Doing It
On January 6, 1838, Samuel Morse first publicly demonstrated his telegraph system at the Speedwell Iron Works in Morristown, New Jersey, and managed to send a message a whopping two miles away—a distance that, at the time, might as well have been the moon.

What makes this particularly delicious from a historical perspective is that Morse wasn't even supposed to be the star of his own show. The demonstration was actually arranged by his business partner Alfred Vail, whose father owned the ironworks, and it was Vail who had done much of the actual mechanical engineering work on the device. Morse, a failed portrait painter who had pivoted to inventing after his wife died while he was away painting a portrait (he didn't receive word of her death for days, which rather motivated his interest in rapid communication), was brilliant at self-promotion but considerably less brilliant at the technical details.

The message sent that day was admirably underwhelming: "A patient waiter is no loser." Not quite "What hath God wrought"—the famous phrase he'd use six years later for the official Washington-to-Baltimore demonstration—but it did the job.

The real kicker? Morse spent much of his later life in bitter patent disputes with other inventors who had developed similar or superior systems, while Vail received a mere $400 annual salary and a one-sixteenth share of the patent rights for doing most of the heavy lifting. History, as they say, is written by those who live long enough and shout loud enough.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
This Day in Insane History
journey back in time with "This Day in Insane History" your daily dose of the most bewildering, shocking, and downright insane moments from our shared past. Each episode delves into a specific date, unearthing tales of audacious adventures, mind-boggling coincidences, and events so extraordinary they'll make you question reality. From military blunders to unbelievable feats of endurance, from political scandals to bizarre cultural practices, "This Day in Insane History" promises that you'll never look at today's date the same way again.