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On 11 June 1962, Frank Morris and brothers John and Clarence Anglin vanished from Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary, using homemade tools, stolen raincoats, and soap dummy heads to execute one of America’s most audacious prison escapes. Whether they drowned in San Francisco Bay or reached the mainland remains unresolved to this day. The same date in 1920 gave us the phrase ‘smoke-filled room’, coined after Republican party bosses met in a Chicago hotel suite to select Warren G. Harding as their presidential candidate. In 2002, the US Congress belatedly acknowledged Antonio Meucci as the true inventor of the telephone, over a century after Alexander Graham Bell claimed the patent. And in 1770, Captain James Cook’s HMS Endeavour struck the Great Barrier Reef, forcing the crew to jettison cannons and spend weeks repairing the ship on the Queensland coast. This episode examines human ambition, historical footnotes, and the remarkable habit of turning up in the wrong place at the wrong time.
By Clara ValeOn 11 June 1962, Frank Morris and brothers John and Clarence Anglin vanished from Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary, using homemade tools, stolen raincoats, and soap dummy heads to execute one of America’s most audacious prison escapes. Whether they drowned in San Francisco Bay or reached the mainland remains unresolved to this day. The same date in 1920 gave us the phrase ‘smoke-filled room’, coined after Republican party bosses met in a Chicago hotel suite to select Warren G. Harding as their presidential candidate. In 2002, the US Congress belatedly acknowledged Antonio Meucci as the true inventor of the telephone, over a century after Alexander Graham Bell claimed the patent. And in 1770, Captain James Cook’s HMS Endeavour struck the Great Barrier Reef, forcing the crew to jettison cannons and spend weeks repairing the ship on the Queensland coast. This episode examines human ambition, historical footnotes, and the remarkable habit of turning up in the wrong place at the wrong time.