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History is Cool

History is Cool

Chance Kelly & Dr. Jaap Jacobs

History is Cool examines the incredible history of Manhattan island and TALKS to some of the people who have helped to make it incredible. We welcome guests from all walks of life including singer/songwriters, actors/actresses, professional athletes, elected officials, authors, historians and anyone who has helped to make this place what it is.Island Voices is a companion podcast to ISLAND the chronological history of Manhattan Island from 1609 to 1909, available on all major podcast directories:https://linktr.ee/ThepodcastislandClimb aboard. History is cool :) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Top 10 History is Cool Episodes

Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best History is Cool episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to History is Cool for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite History is Cool episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

History is Cool - James Golden

James Golden

History is Cool

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06/06/23 • 1 min

The coolest man -- and possibly the coolest head -- on talk radio today. 770 WABC's James Golden (aka: "Bo Snerdley").

This Friday, Oct 7 on Island Voices.

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/island-voices/id1574898368

Climb aboard.

History is cool :)

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History is Cool - Episode 10 - MINISTER, coming this Friday
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08/01/23 • 3 min

As Walloon Pierre Minuit stared into the dark eyes of those twenty-two displaced Angolans, huddled together along de Heere Wegh, alongside that fledgling "construction project" of sorts at the Island's southern tip, his refugee heart wrestled with the dutiful commitment that he had made to his employer. Because this Walloon, whose family had been in exile his entire life, had never enslaved anyone. And so, this life-long refugee and stalwart servant of God was going to need to dig deep -- into his own soul, in order to arrive at a reckoning -- one that would not only square him with the people before him -- but most ultimately with his God.

Episode 10 - Minister.

Coming this Friday.

Climb aboard.

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History is Cool - Singer/songwriter Loudon Wainwright III
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07/02/21 • 51 min

Loudon Wainwright III has been singing and songwriting for over fifty years. His dozens of studio albums are complemented by several live albums. And more recently has emerged yet another dimension to this multi-dimensional career with "I'd Rather Lead a Band" (http://www.lw3.com/album/id-rather-le...) a collaboration with orchestra leader Vince Giordano, a project that introduces an entire new musical genre for Loudy, bringing us his personalized version of "the great American songbook" of old-time standards: A Ship Without a Sail, Ain't Misbehaving, My Blue Heaven and many more. And after vowing to "never be a writer" like his famous writer father, he has done just that by penning his own, hilarious autobiography "Liner Notes" which is a must on Audible.com (https://www.audible.com/pd/Liner-Note...) Loudy also just happens to have some deep, DEEP roots in this city -- not just in "New York" but going back all the way to "New Netherland." (This particular family connection even sort of blew me away :) Join us for a retrospective on this inimitably self-styled "one-man guy", discussing the likes of Harry Chapin, Warren Zevon, "Dylan in 1963", dead skunks, along with Loudy's large and illustriously musical family. Loudon Wainwright III is a living part of this incredible city's rich history. Climb aboard and meet this uniquely talented "rascal" of a performer whose incredible career just seems to keep on going and going...

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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History is Cool - MOOKIE!

MOOKIE!

History is Cool

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05/24/24 • 51 min

Mets legend and savior - Mookie Wilson

1986 World Champion, his career will be forever marked by ONE miraculous play, but he can never be defined by any one play. As his friend and teammate Keith Hernandez said, Mookie is "one of baseball's all-time class acts."

Available on YouTube and wherever you LISTEN to podcasts. Climb aboard. History is cool.

And please hire https://legacycatering.net/ for your next outing. [email protected]

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History is Cool - 7. ISLAND - 1626 (Part Two)
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10/07/22 • 42 min

The spirit of the Walloons rises to new heights, when Walloon Pierre Minuit goes from unpaid volunteer to Governor of this fledgling "colony" in a matter of a year. And when tragedy strikes the northern reaches of that colony, Minuit, a man of action, does what no one had ever thought to do before -- and suddenly this Island has more significance and importance to this colony than ever before.

ISLAND - 1626 (Part Two) and our Season One conclusion.

Climb aboard.

History is coolTM :)

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History is Cool - 3. "Jan" - 1613

3. "Jan" - 1613

History is Cool

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09/03/22 • 25 min

Following two successful voyages to this fertile new land called "Manna-hata", Lambert van Tweenhuysen recognizes the inevitable reality of the competition developing over this lucrative new fur trade. And as Adriaen Block and Hendrick Carstyaensen race back to their Sachem at Sapokanikan for a third time, the rude encroachment of this new wave of poachers creates newfound trouble on this otherwise idyllic island. And with the sudden presence of a dark-skin crewman being called "Jan", there emerges a newfound sense of unrest, for Jacob Eelkens and the entire Adriaen Block team. And as a direct result of the untoward ways of one such poacher, Captain Thijs Volkertz Mossel and his despicable supercargo Hans Jorisz Hontom, results the defection of the one they're calling "Jan", creating Manhattan's very first immigrant -- who hails not from the Netherlands, France, Spain nor England, but rather, from the island that was tagged by Columbus as "Hispanola", or the one we call the Dominican Republic today.

Episode 3 - "Jan".

Climb aboard.

History is cool :)

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Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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History is Cool - 11. Patroon

11. Patroon

History is Cool

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08/11/23 • 31 min

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History is Cool - 2. Orson & Valentine - 1612
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08/26/22 • 23 min

In the tattered wake of Henry Hudson, Adriaen Block navigates the onrust that develops amongst both the Algonquins and the Dutch alike. And in the process, he becomes ward to two Algonquin teens whose Sachem father has requested that the Captain take boys to Amsterdam to further educate them in this growing fur trade. But the unintended consequences of this undertaking would darken the efforts of the noble Adriaen Block and his eager, fallen Catholic apprentice Jacob Eelkens in immeasurable ways.

Episode 2 - Orson & Valentine, 1612.

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History is Cool - 5. New Netherland - 1619
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09/16/22 • 33 min

After toiling away in this fertile new land for the entirety of his young adult life, Jacob Eelkens was certain that the advent of this "New Netherland Company" would be his opportunity to shine in this priceless market. But upon Captain Hendrick Carstyaensen's return to the Hudson, Jacob would be shattered to learn that not only was he and his uncle Hendrick Eelkens not included in the exclusive list of investors for this company, but that Jacob's entire existence here, would now be thoroughly regulated by this newfound entity.

And suddenly Jacob's childhood as a shamed outcast in Rouen, France cloaks the fallen Catholic in a murky darkness, and when he retreats to the hills above Sapokanikan, he formulates his own, odd three-way alliance, between himself, the increasingly detached Orson, and the man who most wants to see Hendrick Carstyaensen disappear -- the inimitable Hans Jorisz Hontom.

Episode 5 - New Netherland.

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History is cool :)

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One of the reasons I find this story of the Island of Manhattan so fascinating is the propensity of varied twists and turns that it takes en route to becoming today’s epicenter of the universe. Author Fawn Brokaw Doyle beautifully illustrates several of those early twists in her new book Salt People of the Cloud Houses.

Now if you’ve never heard the name Sarah Rapalje, for one thing, we know you’re not up to date on our podcast. But then again, don’t feel too bad. After all, this is our lost American history. But you see, when this young lady was born to French-speaking refugees on that warm June night back in 1625 she would thereby attain the unprecedented distinction of becoming the very first European to be born in the place that would eventually come to be known as “New York”. But proceed with caution here, mensen - if you’re anything like me or author Fawn Brokaw Doyle, you just may find yourself getting lost in this lost history altogether. Because the more one peels back the layers, the more fascinating it tends to become.

The title speaks to a key component of this story – the relationship between the locals and the settlers. You see, these pale-faced beings had only just arrived in this land a year earlier, traveling across the great waters via their majestic floating houses, whose sails appeared as clouds. The title addresses directly the awe of the Native Munsee people for this fairly amiable band of newcomers: “salt people of the cloud houses”. And then there was “Mannatu”, the Algonquin word they used to articulate that particular awe - meaning too wondrous to understand. This sentiment was not just about the miraculous mode of travel, but also because of the unprecedented opportunity that they brought with them.

Fawn’s book is technically “a novel”, but her curiosity has hereby transformed her into an exhaustive researcher – yielding remarkable insight into this story and to this culture. Sarah Rapalje’s parents were mere teenagers on a wing and a prayer. Her father, 19 year-old Joris Rapalje, was a penniless Walloon (reformed Protestant) exiled from the place we call Belgium today. Her mother was 18-year old Frenchwoman Catalyna Trico. The flight of this dashing young couple from the oppressive forces of the Spanish (Catholic) Hapsburg Empire at the outset of this rather audacious endeavor proved serendipitous to both them and the Dutch West India Company. The specifics of that endeavor? To form a colony in the region that we essentially refer to as the greater tri-state Metropolitan region today. Why there? Well, in order to cultivate commercial control of all beaver and otter pelts in this fairly uncharted region that seemed to lay strategically far enough between the other European activities already underway in this New World: the French fur operations based in Quebec, and the sputtering English attempts at colonization off the coast of Cape Cod and in Jamestown, VA. And when a Company recruiter approached Joris about jumping into this ambitious undertaking, unlike his young, able-bodied Dutch counterparts belonging to the Netherlands, he felt he had very little to lose. Sailing across the Earth to make his way in the wilderness among savage beasts and savage men was not an issue for this wayward Calvinist. In fact, it rather energized him. So the intrepid descendant of the Gaelic-Belgic tribe agreed, on one condition: that the Company arrange for his marriage to Catalyna prior to boarding the ship. And desperate for able-bodied young families to populate this fledgling experiment on the unknown side of the planet, the Company officials complied with the request and arranged for the marriage of Joris & Catalyna in the Walloon Church in Amsterdam one early spring day in 1624, the day before they departed for the place that would become the greatest city on Earth.

The author drills down so deeply into New Netherland that you can smell the oliekoeken (the Dutch ancestor of our doughnuts), and feel the hard, smooth wampum shells that 15-year old Sarah transfers from her own soft palm into the hardened one of the gruff vendor as payment for the savory indulgence. Fawn Brokaw Doyle is not just a writer but an archival devotee of the first order. And, quite frankly, one of the most artful tellers of this crazy, incredible history that I have myself yet come upon.

Salt People of the Cloud Houses will be available Sarah Rapalje’s 400th Birthday: June 9, 2025 on Amazon and Bookshop.org. Links can be found on Fawn's website:

https://www.fawnbrokawdoyle...

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FAQ

How many episodes does History is Cool have?

History is Cool currently has 24 episodes available.

What topics does History is Cool cover?

The podcast is about History and Podcasts.

What is the most popular episode on History is Cool?

The episode title '1. Manna-hata - 1609' is the most popular.

What is the average episode length on History is Cool?

The average episode length on History is Cool is 28 minutes.

How often are episodes of History is Cool released?

Episodes of History is Cool are typically released every 14 days.

When was the first episode of History is Cool?

The first episode of History is Cool was released on Jul 2, 2021.

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