"...we should pass over all biographies of 'the good and the great,' while we search carefully the slight records of wretches who died in prison, in Bedlam, or upon the gallows."
~Edgar Allan Poe

Friday, August 15, 2025

Weekend Link Dump

 


Welcome!

It seems appropriate for this week's Link Dump to be hosted by an authentic 16th century witch's cat.

Just be careful how you pet him.  You don't want to turn into a frog.



What the hell is 31/Atlas?  And do we really want to know?

One of the first celebrity dogs.

A pitchfork murder.

Paging Graham Hancock!

A visit to Christ Church, Spitalfields.

There's really nothing like morgue humor.

The mystery of the Hopkinsville goblins.

Remembering VJ Day, 1945.

Poland's first encyclopedia.

The puzzling Sabu Disk.

Who were the first storytellers?

The long history of people falling out of windows.

"Visitations" in medieval England.

Some important historical jewelry.

The difference between jealousy and envy.

Did you know that Van Gogh ate paint?  News to me.

Why Beethoven was not black.

An invincible lock.

The fear of Ouija boards.  It's possible I'm wrong, of course, but I knew someone who "played" with Ouija boards, and I'm convinced it opened them up to spirits you really don't want to meet.

The man who was eaten by an apple tree.

The remains of a man who disappeared in Antarctica in 1959 have finally been found.

The "least foolish woman in France."

The 19th century ice trade.

A weird Stone Age skull.

Fatalities at a brothel.

That's it for this week!  See you on Monday, when we'll meet some very weird extraterrestrials.  In the meantime, here's a bit of lute music.

And trains.

Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Newspaper Clipping of the Day

Via Newspapers.com



Here’s an early version of those “aliens killed my livestock” stories.  (Just keep in mind that when old newspapers trotted out the "told by a person of unimpeachable veracity" card, that usually meant, "buyer beware.")  The “St. Louis Globe Democrat,” April 27, 1897:

Special Dispatch to the Globe. TOPEKA, KAN., April 26.-Millions have laughed at the Kansas air-ship, but the thing is no joke to farmer Alexander Hamilton, who resides near Yates Center, Woodson County. The air-ship not only appeared in plain view of Hamilton and his family, and frightened them out of their wits, but the captain of the vessel had the nerve to swoop down upon the cow lot and steal a 2-year-old heifer. At any rate, that is what Hamilton says, and a dozen well-known citizens, including State Oil Inspector E. V. Wharton, Sheriff M. E. Hunt and Banker H. H. Winter, testify that Hamilton's reputation for truth and veracity has never been questioned.

Hamilton claims that the air-ship visited his place a week ago to-night. He told the country people about it, but the report did not reach Yates Center till Saturday. 

"Last Monday night about 10:30 o'clock," Hamilton said, “we were awakened by a noise among the cattle. I rose, thinking perhaps my bulldog was performing some of his pranks, but upon going to the door saw to my utter astonishment an air-ship slowly descending over my cow lot, about 40 rods from the house.

"Calling Gid Heslip, my tenant, and my son Wall, we seized some axes and ran to the corral. Meantime the ship had been gently descending until it was not more than 30 feet above the ground, and ed of a great cigar-shaped a portion, possibly we came to within 50 yards of it. It consisted of a great cigar-shaped portion, 300 feet long, with a carriage underneath. The carriage was made of panels of glass or other transparent substance, alternating with a narrow strip of some material. It was brilliantly lighted within and everything was clearly visible. There were three lights, one light an immense searchlight and two smaller, one red and the other green.

"The large one was susceptible of being turned in any direction. It was occupied by six of the strangest beings I ever saw. There were two men, a woman and three children. They were jabbering together, but we could not understand a syllable they said. 

"Every part of the vessel which was not transparent was of a dark reddish color. We stood mute in wonder and fright, when some noise attracted their attention and they turned their light directly upon us.  Immediately upon catching sight of us they turned on some unknown power, and a great turbine wheel, about 30 feet in diameter, which was slowly revolving below the craft, began to buzz, sounding precisely like the cylinder of a separator, and the vessel rose as lightly as a bird. When about 300 feet above us it seemed to pause and hover directly over a 2-year-old heifer, which was bawling and jumping, apparently fast in the fence. Going to her, we found a cable about half an inch in thickness, made of the same red material, fastened in a slip-knot around her neck, one end passing up to the vessel, and the heifer tangled in the wire fence. We tried to get it off, but could not, so we cut the wire loose and stood in amazement to see the ship, heifer and all rise slowly, disappearing in the northwest. We went home, but I was so frightened I could not sleep.

"Rising early Tuesday morning, I mounted my horse and started out, hoping to find some trace of my cow. This I failed to do, but coming back to Leroy in the evening found that Link Thomas, who lives in Coffey County, about three or four miles west of Leroy, had found the hide, legs and head in his field that day. He, thinking some one had butchered a stolen beast and thrown the hide away, had brought it to town for identification, but was greatly mystified in not being able to find any tracks in the soft ground. After identifying the hide by my brand, I went home, but every time I would drop to sleep would see the cursed thing, with its big lights and hideous people.  I don't know whether they are devils or angels, or what; but we all saw them, and my whole family saw the ship, and I don't want any more to do with them.”  

The Yates Center "Advocate" said that Hamilton looked as if he had not recovered from the shock, and every one who heard him was convinced that he was sincere in every word he uttered. Hamilton has long been a resident of Kansas, and is known all over Woodson, Allen, Coffey and Anderson Counties. He was a member of the House of Representatives early in the 70s. He staked his sacred honor upon the truthfulness of the story. 

The following affidavit is given in support of Hamilton's reputation as a truthful man: 

"Affidavit--State of Kansas, County of Woodson--ss.: As there are now, always have been and always skeptics and unbelievers whenever there truth or anything bordering upon the improbable is presented, and knowing that some ignorant or suspicious people will doubt the truthfulness of the above statement, now, therefore, we, the undersigned, do hereby make the following affidavit: That we have known Alexander Hamilton from one to thirty years, and that for truth and veracity we have never heard questioned, and that we do verily believe his statement to be true and correct. 

"E.V. Wharton, state oil Inspector: M.E. Hunt, Sheriff; W. Lauber, deputy sheriff, H.H. Winter, banker; H.S. Johnson, pharmacist; J.H. Stitcher, attorney; Alexander Stewart, justice of the peace; H. Waymyer, druggist; F. W. Butler, druggist; James W. Martin, Register of Deeds; Rollins, postmaster. 

"Subscribed and sworn to before me this 21st day of April, 1897. 

"W. C. WILLE, Notary Public”

Monday, August 11, 2025

The Ghost of Mary Catherine




One of the great charms of old houses is that the many occupants it sees during its long history leave behind many varied and interesting stories.  The Stockton home in Richmond, Kentucky, is no exception.

The large, white, three-story house was built in 1880 by pharmacist Robert C. Stockton.  It remained in the family until 1937, when Stockton family history took a tragic turn.  The home's owner at that time was Edward Stockton, son of the man who built it.  After his pharmacy business was ruined by the Great Depression, Edward sought an end to his troubles by taking poison.  His death and funeral both took place in the family home.

After Edward Stockton's suicide, the home was occupied by various families.  None of them reported anything unusual until June 1983, when the house was bought by David M. Jones and his wife.  Mr. Jones was an attorney and Mrs. Jones was, coincidentally enough, a pharmacist.  If one is a believer in Fate, synchronicity--or perhaps just a cosmic bond between druggists--this might help explain what came next.

A few days after the Joneses moved in, a picture in the dining room suddenly and inexplicably came loose from its nail and crashed to the floor.  Then, a lamp in the front hallway began going on and off on its own.  When the couple replaced it with a new lamp, the same thing happened.

On the night of July 19, 1983, things really began to get weird.  At about 2:20 a.m., Mr. Jones suddenly awakened to a most disconcerting sight:  a woman was standing at the foot of the bed.  He later said, "It was just like what you would envision a ghost to look like.  She was dressed in layers and layers, vapory, flowing.  It was not really something physical, but more like an image."  The apparition had blond shoulder-length hair, sunken eyes with blackish-blue eyelids, and deep half-moon creases about the mouth.  "You could tell she was very upset," he added.

I would bet that Mr. Jones was, as well.

The being began to speak to him, in a voice that was deep and coarse and "wasn't human."  All he could make out from what she said were the words "picture" and "funeral."  Then the spirit vanished.

The next morning, the couple found that baskets that had been hanging in the kitchen were now scattered over the floor.  This postscript to Mr. Jones' uncanny encounter emboldened him to tell his wife of what he had experienced.  Mrs. Jones, probably thinking her husband was in need of one of her prescriptions, treated his story with skepticism.

She did not remain a doubter for long.  Not long afterward, Mr. Jones began to clear out a small attic-like room on the third floor.  It was full of old papers, boxes, and knick-knacks--the sort of relics that any old house inevitably accumulates.  And then he came across an oil painting dated "January 27, 1891."  It was a portrait of an old woman, dressed in mourning.

The old woman who had appeared by his bed.

Mr. Jones took the painting to a psychic, who confirmed that yes indeed, this was a portrait of his ghost, who was probably lingering in the home because of the death of some loved one.  After doing some research, Mr. Jones surmised that the ghost was Mary Catherine, wife of Edward Dorsey Stockton, who died in 1891.  Mary Catherine passed away in 1898, at the age of 69.  On the psychic's advice, the Joneses had the portrait re-framed and hung it in the dining room.

The psychic told Mr. Jones that he would probably see the ghost again around Christmas, as the spirit was fond of that holiday.  The psychic advised him, "You will look into a huge mirror with a gold frame around it in the hallway, and see her sitting in the background."

The psychic was a bit off on her timeline.  Mary Catherine did not make herself visible again until February 1984.  One day, Mr. Jones happened to glance into the mirror in the front hallway..and, sure enough, there she was, sitting in a chair in the parlor.  Some time after that, even though he was alone in the house, he felt a warm spot on the couch in the parlor, as if someone had just sat there.  

Although Mr. Jones felt the ghost was friendly and harmless, he developed a distaste for being in the house alone.  Oddly enough, his wife never saw any sign of the spirit.  However, according to the psychic, Mary Catherine enjoyed watching Mrs. Jones in the kitchen. 

On Memorial Day 1985, the Joneses visited a grave in Richmond Cemetery.  As they went past the graves of the Stocktons, they noticed that the tombstone of Matthew, son of Mary Catherine, had fallen over.  The next morning, a lamp in their dining room began flashing on and off in a particularly pointed manner.

By this time, Mr. Jones had become fluent in ghost-speak.  He said aloud, "All right, Mrs. Stockton, I'm going to call the cemetery and have them put Matthew's tombstone back up."  The lamp never flickered again.

The Stockton home was next door to the fraternity house of Tau Kappa Epsilon.  Some of the members informed the Joneses that during the two years the home was empty before the couple moved in, lights could be seen periodically going on and off inside the residence.  A past president of the fraternity, Todd Taylor, had briefly lived on the second floor of the Stockton home.  On several occasions, he heard doors open and shut, when he knew no one else was around.  He never saw Mary Catherine.  However, there were times when he thought she was in his room at night, but he was too frightened to open his eyes to check.  "Now, I'm not saying there is a ghost, but I'm not saying there isn't, either," he commented, adding, "there are some awfully suspicious things."

In October 1985, the "Lexington Herald Leader" did a story on the Stockton family ghost.  Subsequently, a man who had lived in the house in the 1970s contacted Jones.  He said he had had experiences very similar to what Mr. Jones was going through.  Although the newspaper had not given any detailed description of the ghost, this caller was able to describe Mary Catherine perfectly.

A few years ago, author Keven McQueen contacted the Joneses, who confirmed to him that Mary Catherine was still one very lively spirit.  Although his wife never did see the ghost, Mr. Jones would encounter her on a regular basis, developing an odd sort of fondness for his spirit houseguest.  Mrs. Jones' father lived in the house with them until his death in 1989.  Every now and then, he would comment, "There's a haint in this house."  He refused to elaborate on this statement.

On one occasion, the Joneses were having a dinner party.  As everyone sat around the table, they all were treated to the sight of drawers of a sideboard opening and closing on their own. 

"Who's doing that?" one of the guests asked.

"Mrs. Stockton," came the obvious reply.

On another day, a friend was visiting the house.  As she and Mr. Jones were chatting, the visitor suddenly grew pale and quiet.  Jones immediately surmised that Mary Catherine was in the vicinity.  The visitor admitted that she had seen a woman standing in a doorway.  The ghost was all in black, with her hair in a black net.  (Curiously, Mrs. Stockton had previously always worn white.  Even more oddly, this guest was the only known woman to have seen the ghost.  For whatever inexplicable paranormal reasons, Mary Catherine liked to show herself only to males.)

The Joneses told McQueen that the psychic who had advised them about the painting had told them that eventually they would have a son, which would greatly please Mrs. Stockton.  In 1993, they were indeed blessed with a baby boy.  Although they never mentioned the ghost to their son, Mary Catherine soon made herself known to him.  When he was only a toddler, he would complain to his parents about the "witch" who lived at the top of the stairs.

The last time Mr. Jones saw Mary Catherine was in 1998, when she mumbled something about a fan.  Just to see what would happen, he bought an old-fashioned cardboard fan and left it on a desk.  The fan subsequently would vanish and reappear in odd places throughout the house.

In 2001, the Joneses moved out of the house, giving the new owner fair warning about their spectral tenant.  This latest owner of the home was not a believer in ghosts. One of the first things he did was to take down the portrait of Mrs. Stockton.  Soon afterward, he lost his job.  His mother came to visit, and died on her first night there.

Mary Catherine was not a ghost to be crossed.

Friday, August 8, 2025

Weekend Link Dump

 


Welcome to this week's Link Dump!

And later, feel free to join the Strange Company staffers for a stroll.


The last of the Dionne quintuplets.  (I have to admit, I didn't know any of them were still living.)

The last of the medieval Minnesingers.

Mongolia, where dogs are both sacred and profane.

How Josiah Wedgwood went from pottery to politics.

Why our mouths have roofs rather than ceilings.

In which we learn that peacocks have lasers in their tails.

The narrator whispers, "Maybe they had boats."

A heroic naval artist.

It seems that ancient Romans camped out in the ruins of Pompeii.  An eerie thought, really.

You wouldn't want to breathe prehistoric air.

A new book reexamines WWI.

The Werewolf of Bedburg.

The UFOs of Rendlesham Forest.

The strange death of attorney Jonathan Luna.

Desi Arnaz, television revolutionary.

A mysterious shipwreck survivor.

Solving the mystery of Winston Churchill's dead platypus.

A "swashbuckling Tudor mercenary."

An actor with a devilish grin.

Terrorism in 1890s Paris.

A brief history of the word "dude."

Things Jane Austen disliked.

"Spirit in the Sky," the song that just won't go away.

Bow Cemetery in summer.

The Susquehanna "mammalian monsters."

A look at Japanese cat lore.

How DNA sent German police on a wild goose chase.

19th century sun stroke victims in the morgue.

The invention of corn dogs.

Just when you think the CIA can't get any weirder...

The papers of a noted philologist.

A "lost" story by Mark Twain.

The Walworth parricide.

That's it for this week!  See you on Monday, when we'll meet a very touchy ghost.  In the meantime, here's the one and only Spike Jones.

Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Newspaper Clipping of the Day

Via Newspapers.com



The following item was something the editors of the “London Times” did not expect to find advertised in their paper.  May 10, 1861:

Coblentz, April 25, 1861. In an almost impenetrable ravine in the declivity of Mount Rheineck, which is situate immediately on the banks of the Rhine, between Brohl and Nioderbrel (a district of the Tribunal of First Instance of Cobleutz, Rhenish-Prussia), on the 22d of last March, was found the body of some person, a female, from 20 to 30 years of age, or thereabout, concealed in a recess, covered with large stones. The period of decease cannot be precisely determined. Death was caused by a ball shot from a gun, which traversed the breast and back. Description --height 5ft. 2 or 3 inches hair, fair; teeth, sound, small, and somewhat irregularly set in the lower jaw. Chemise, cambric, 3 ft. 6 inches long, the upper hem forming a running string, with two eyelet-holes, two fine and even cords passing through in the centre of the round breast of the chemise, and below the eyelet-holes, the initials " A. E. 36" are embroidered in Gothic characters, in relief, half an inch long.

2. A nightgown of fine white dimity, collar turned down, 2 ft. 3 inches, with white mother-of-pearl buttons; some remains of a fine material, with brown and white stripes (jaconot muslin); in the white stripe is a small winding white line, with red spots. In the vicinity of the body have been found the remnants of a petticoat, 3 feet 2 inches long; it is composed of fine white dimity, striped, the same material as the nightgown. On the upper edge, which is an inch and half broad, with white riband strings, are embroidered in white letters, 2 1/2 lines, in relief, and in large characters of the German printed alphabet, the initials “M. R., 6.” The bottom hem is finished with cord in linen thread.

The fine quality of the materials and the elegant make of all these articles indicate that the victim belonged to a rich class. In consequence of the state of putrefaction and external destruction it is impossible to notice other marks of recognition. I request of any person who can give information concerning this unknown individual, and the circumstances of her death, to be so good as to furnish me with the particulars, else to communicate them to the nearest magistrates. The articles of dress above mentioned, together with the lower jaw, are deposited for inspection at my office. The Crown Prosecutor-General, DE RODENBERG.

I have been unable to find if the mystery of the woman’s identity--let alone who murdered her--was ever solved.

Monday, August 4, 2025

Murder by Toothbrush: The Strange Case of Tita Cristescu




1930s Romania may not have been a paradise for most people, but for a young Bucharest actress named Tita Cristescu, life was pretty darned good.  She was well-connected (her father, Gheorghe Cristescu, was a prominent figure in Romanian politics,) she had a successful theatrical career, and was pretty enough to be named “Miss Romania” of 1933.  Tita was engaged to be married to Hotta Cuza, a young Romanian diplomat.  She seemed perfectly happy, and was full of hope for the future.


One January night in 1936, Tita’s parents came over to her apartment for dinner, leaving about 11:30 p.m.  After her parents left, Tita told her maid, Maria, to go to bed.  As she spoke, she took a capsule from a box and swallowed it.  Maria assumed it was one of the “reducing capsules” Tita took every night.  Maria went to bed, but was awakened half and hour later by Tita’s sister, Mrs. Mikai Gregorian.  Mrs. Gregorian, her voice shaking with fear, told the maid, “Get a doctor, at once.  Tita is very ill.”


Maria hurried from the apartment, but by the time she returned with a physician, Tita was dead.  Mrs. Gregorian told the doctor that, while passing by the apartment building, she noticed that her sister’s light was still on, so dropped by for a brief visit.  Tita was wearing a negligee, and was in her usual high spirits.  However, after chatting for a few minutes, Tita suddenly went silent and stared ahead blankly.  She fell onto a chair and said, “Get me a glass of water.  Something is going on inside me.  I am thirsty all of a sudden and I have a dreadful taste in my mouth which is queer because I have just brushed my teeth.”


She gulped down the water, but then dropped the glass.  She turned very pale and gasped, “I am going to be awfully sick.  Get a doctor.”  By the time Mrs. Gregorian awakened Maria, Tita had fallen unconscious.  Several minutes later, she died.


When the police heard all this, their assumption was that, despite Tita’s seemingly ideal life, the young woman had committed suicide.  Actresses, they nodded sagely, were notoriously unstable, and beauty queens were the worst of the lot.  Besides, who would want to kill her? When the autopsy revealed Tita had died from cyanide poisoning, the authorities believed it was “case closed.”  They were ready to label the death as a tragic self-poisoning, and move on.


Tita’s parents were outraged at this verdict.  They were convinced their daughter had been murdered, and they even had what they believed to be an obvious suspect: a wealthy engineer named Liviu Ciulley.  Ciulley, they declared, had been in love with Tita, and was maddened with jealousy over her plans to marry another man.  Police scoffed at this theory.  They pointed out that Ciulley had been married for ten years, and had shown no signs of wanting a divorce.  Gheorghe Cristescu was unpopular among many circles--a contemporary newspaper described him as “a socialist demagogue of the most radical and spectacular sort”--so few people took his claims seriously.  However, the sudden and mysterious death of a beautiful young actress was like catnip to the newspapers.  Tita’s demise became a genuine public scandal.


The publicity forced the authorities to reopen the case, which included questioning Liviu Ciulley.  Ciulley told police that for five years, he and Tita had a secret affair, but more than a year ago, he became tired of the her and broke off their relationship.  He added that in recent times, Tita had financial problems, and was always pestering him for loans.  As a result of this harassment, he was positively relieved to hear of her marriage plans.  Furthermore, he could prove that for more than a week before Tita’s death, he had been with his family in Sinaia, a considerable distance from Bucharest.


Ciulley seemed sincere, and police were able to confirm his alibi.  However, investigators also turned up something that seemed to contradict the suicide theory: The night Tita died, she had asked the daughter of her apartment building’s janitor to wake her very early the next morning, as she had a lot of shopping to do.  The police were not yet convinced of Ciulley’s innocence.


A search of Ciulley’s apartment found nothing incriminating.  When police visited the home and office of his brother, a doctor named Alexandra Ciulley, they initially saw nothing suspicious there, either.  Then, a particularly snoopy detective found a glass syringe hidden under a sheaf of bills.


The detective noted that when he found the syringe, a look of fear suddenly crossed Dr. Ciulley’s face.  “What did you hide that for?” the detective asked.  The doctor hesitated, but after a bit of pressing, said that a month before, he had loaned a syringe to his brother, because Liviu said he needed to give injections to his children, who were suffering from sore throats.  Alexandra continued, “When I heard that my brother was charged with having poisoned the actress, I got frightened.  I knew that he was madly in love with Tita Critescu, and I had a terrible suspicion that he might, in point of fact, have committed the murder.  I was afraid that if the police found the syringe in his flat, they might feel justified in their suspicion that my unfortunate brother had injected the poison into the girl’s reducing capsules and would consider the syringe as decisive proof.  I wanted to remove it before the police found it, and on Friday, January 10, I went to my brother’s flat to hide the syringe somehow.”


Alexandra said that when he went to Liviu’s flat, his brother was not there.  He found the syringe in the nursery, but he didn’t know what to do with it.  He finally threw some parts of the syringe down a narrow street, keeping only the glass cylinder.  Detectives went to the place where Alexandra said he had thrown the items, and sure enough, there they were.  When police confronted Liviu, he calmly replied, “My brother is a fool, trying to destroy evidence that is not evidence or I would have destroyed it myself.”  However, after further interrogation, he was forced to admit that he had lied when he said he no longer cared for Tita.  Things became even worse for Liviu when they found witnesses who asserted that the morning before Tita died, he had made a quick trip to Bucharest.  The following day, after the news of Tita’s death hit the papers, Liviu wanted to visit her apartment, but his wife, who knew of his affair with the actress, went into such hysterics at the idea that she threatened to shoot herself.  (I would have thought that her husband would have been the one she wanted to pump full of bullets, but I digress.)


Police assumed that Liviu had wanted to go to Tita’s flat in order to remove something incriminating, but what?  If the “reducing capsule” had been poisoned, Tita had taken the last one in the box.  Then, it occurred to them that right before she died, Tita mentioned that she had just brushed her teeth.  A second, more careful autopsy revealed that her gums were deeply impregnated with cyanide.  Traces of the poison were found on her toothbrush, and her half-empty tube of toothpaste contained a massive dose of it.


The question of how Tita died was finally answered.  Someone had taken off the cap of toothpaste, used a syringe to squirt a fatal dose of cyanide into the tube, and replaced the cap.  


Unfortunately, the question of who did this dreadful deed was not solved so easily.  Liviu Ciulley was put on trial for murder, but although his actions were certainly suspicious, prosecutors were unable to bring an airtight case against him.  Under oath, his servants denied that he had left his house before Tita’s death.  The jury brought in a verdict of “Not guilty.”


After Ciulley’s acquittal, the police half-heartedly continued their investigation for a time before admitting defeat and placing Tita’s poisoning into the cold case file.  The mystery is still discussed in Romanian true-crime circles--in recent years, rumors have emerged that Tita’s maid, Maria, poisoned her employer out of jealousy—but the young actress’s peculiar murder remains as murky as ever.

Friday, August 1, 2025

Weekend Link Dump


 


Welcome to this week's Link Dump!

The Strange Company staffers have decided this is Take Your Kittens To Work Day.


Cats Vintage Postcard 1907 A Proud Mother Landor - Picture 1 of 2


Five really weird books.

A murder in Madison County.

The author of William the Conqueror's "medieval big data project." 

You can now read online the oldest known book about cheese, which for my money is one of those times when you have to salute the internet.

17th century ship's doctors also had to be mental health therapists.

Indonesian monkeys are enough to make Bonnie & Clyde blush.

The Royal Navy's bombardment of Sidon, 1840.

The world's longest lightning strike.

2,500 years ago, a Siberian woman had some incredible tattoos.

In which we learn that Abbey Wood has an abbey.  And a wood.

Thomas Wolsey and the 1513 invasion of France.

When a B-25 hit the Empire State Building.

When undertakers bargain over ice.

An ancient message from Moses?

That time when the Golden Gate Bridge almost got a roller coaster.

The unique misery of headaches.

A man dies while a passenger on a plane...and then disappears.

An 18th century man's many careers.

Two connected tragedies.

An early Hollywood scandal.

The mysterious petroglyphs of Oahu Beach.

Archaeologists have just discovered a new language.

The body under the floorboards.

When New York was the City of Oysters.

A new theory about Jimmy Hoffa's disappearance.

The paintings that were designed to comfort those about to be executed.

What happens when psychiatric patients suddenly become sane?

A disappearance with possible ties to the CIA and Watergate.

A New Year's Day disappearance.

The people of 1925.

That's it for this week!  See you on Monday, when we'll look at an unusual murder method.  In the meantime, here's an instrument that's new to me.