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In this first-ever Hearth & Home Horrors, we step away from grand events and turn instead to the darker histories hidden in the places we grow up, walk through, and call home. These are the stories that don’t make national headlines — the ones carried quietly in local memory, passed down in families, spoken of in pubs, whispered across generations.
In this special post-Christmas bonus episode, Rob shares three true tragedies rooted in three very different hometowns:
• Wigan, UK (1908): A coal mine explosion that tore through the Maypole Colliery, killing 75 miners and boys, and leaving a permanent scar on a northern community built on hard labour and harder lives.
• York, UK (1800s): The chilling story of Mary Bateman, the “Yorkshire Witch,” whose manipulation, fraud, and eventual murder of Rebecca Perigo reveal how fear and superstition can be twisted into something far more dangerous than folklore.
• Portland, Maine, USA (1866): A firestorm that swept through the city on Independence Day, destroying nearly 2,000 buildings and leaving 10,000 people homeless — a disaster that forced Portland to rebuild itself from the ashes.
These are small places with enormous shadows — ordinary towns shaped by extraordinary events.
Stories from hearth, home, and the edges of memory.
Settle in by the fire. Pour a drink.
This is a bonus tale told between holidays, where the world slows down and history feels close enough to touch.
By Rob Bradley4.6
5050 ratings
In this first-ever Hearth & Home Horrors, we step away from grand events and turn instead to the darker histories hidden in the places we grow up, walk through, and call home. These are the stories that don’t make national headlines — the ones carried quietly in local memory, passed down in families, spoken of in pubs, whispered across generations.
In this special post-Christmas bonus episode, Rob shares three true tragedies rooted in three very different hometowns:
• Wigan, UK (1908): A coal mine explosion that tore through the Maypole Colliery, killing 75 miners and boys, and leaving a permanent scar on a northern community built on hard labour and harder lives.
• York, UK (1800s): The chilling story of Mary Bateman, the “Yorkshire Witch,” whose manipulation, fraud, and eventual murder of Rebecca Perigo reveal how fear and superstition can be twisted into something far more dangerous than folklore.
• Portland, Maine, USA (1866): A firestorm that swept through the city on Independence Day, destroying nearly 2,000 buildings and leaving 10,000 people homeless — a disaster that forced Portland to rebuild itself from the ashes.
These are small places with enormous shadows — ordinary towns shaped by extraordinary events.
Stories from hearth, home, and the edges of memory.
Settle in by the fire. Pour a drink.
This is a bonus tale told between holidays, where the world slows down and history feels close enough to touch.

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