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Episode 93 In 1892, architect Willis G. Hale began construction on a lavish apartment building on Broad Street in north Philadelphia. What began as a turn of the century residential multi family structure evolved over the last 120 years into something so much more – the Divine Lorraine. This is the story of that evolution, lead by a man named Reverend Major Jealous Divine, better known as Father Divine. Father Divine purchased the Lorraine in the 1940s and turned it into Philadelphia’s first integrated hotel. He ran the Peace Mission Movement from this ornate behemoth of a building, and after his death his wife and followers fought off efforts by Jim Jones to take over the movement. Research sources for this episode includer: The Radical Restaurants of Father Divine, Founder of Peace Mission (eater.com) by Vince DixonGlobal Non-Violent Action Data BasePhilly History Blog – The Divine Lorraine HotelThe Divine Inspiration of Jim Jones by Adam MorrisThe Guardian: An Apocalyptic Cult, 900 Dead: Remembering the Jonestown Massacre 40 Years On by J Oliver ConroyPhiladelphiabuildings.orgDivinelorrainehotel.comOFCRealty.com – Naked Philly; History Buff Willis G. HalePastor Jones meets Reverend M J Divine, better known as Father Divine by Jim JonesTwistedPhilly is researched, hosted and produced by me, Deana Marie, and available biweekly wherever you listen to podcasts. The post The Divine Lorraine appeared first on TwistedPhilly.
Episode 92 Ona Maria Judge – better known as Oney – was born into slavery in 1774 at a familiar location in Virginia: Mount Vernon. Oney’s mother Betty was brought to Mount Vernon after George Washington married Martha in 1759. Betty, and her descendants, were considered the “property” of Martha Washington’s first husband, Daniel Custis, who’d died just a few years before Martha married George. At the age of 10, Oney Judge was Martha’s attendant, caring for Martha’s wardrobe and her personal needs. Then, George became the President. He and Martha chose a number of enslaved members of their household to relocate with them to New York, and soon thereafter Philadelphia. While in Philadelphia, Oney saw free Black men and women – building a community outside the bondage of slavery. After more than six years as an enslaved woman in the President’s house in Philadelphia, and a lifetime of slavery before that, Oney Judge made the courageous decision to flee the Washington’s household. She was considered a fugitive, one that George Washington refused let go. Research sources for this episode include: Never Caught: The Washington’s’ Relentless Pursuit of Their Runaway Slave, Ona Judge by Erica Armstrong DunbarThey Were Her Property – White women as Slave Owners in the American South, by Stephane Jones-RogersPennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography The president’s house in Philadelphia – rediscovery of a lost landmark by Edward LawlerLives Bound Together: Slavery at George Washington’s Mount Vernon, an exhibition on view in the Donald W. Reynolds Museum & Education Center from 2016–2020ushistory.org – The President’s House in Pennsylvania; For Whom Will the Liberty Bell Toll? From Controversy to Collaboration by Gary B. NashEncyclopediaVirginia.orgNationalParkService.org: Excavating the President’s HouseMarthaWashington.us – ArchiveThe post The Story of Oney Judge appeared first on TwistedPhilly.
Episode 91 – Originally released February 2020 Women in white, midnight Mary, lonely roads all over the US and other parts of the world have their own legends of a young woman in a pale dress, wandering in the middle of the night searching for someone to give them a ride. Sometimes they’re searching for their true love. They hitch a ride with an unsuspecting motorist, or they mysteriously appear in someone’s car. These forlorn ladies are doomed to roam the roadways for all eternity, until their beloveds return. In the spirit of Valentine’s Day, a holiday usually considered a celebration of romantic love, lets throw a little horror into the mix. In this episode you’ll hear stories of romance that ended with at least one partner tethered to this mortal coil in the form of a woman in white, and the history behind these lovelorn hauntings. Research sources for this episode include: Big Book of Pennsylvania Ghost Stories by Mark Nesbitt and Patty WilsonGhosts of Southwestern Pennsylvania by Thomas Whiteyourbeavercounty.comPittsburgh Post Gazette Archives 1910 – 1980Altoona Tribune Archives 1920 – 1940Bristol Daily Courier Archives 1935Baltimore Evening Sun Archives 1935TwistedPhilly is researched, hosted, and produced by me, Deana Marie, and available biweekly wherever you listen to podcasts. Follow me on Tiktok and Instagram at twistedphilly to see many of the locations and histories I discuss in the show. The post The Women in White appeared first on TwistedPhilly.
Episode 90 – Originally released January 2020 Content warning: this episode contains discussions about sexual assault and murder. Listener discretion is advised. Between the summer of 1997 and August 1999, six women in the Rittenhouse Square neighborhood in Center City, Philadelphia, were raped by a man known only as the Center City Rapist. One woman, Shannon Schieber, was murdered in May 1998. All of these attacks occurred within about five blocks of one another. The first two attacks were little more than one block apart, yet it took years before these assaults were linked by the Philadelphia Police Department. In the spring of 2001, a series of assaults in Fort Collins, CO, almost mirrored the attacks in Philadelphia. The trail of the Center City Rapist went cold until police from different states worked together to identify the man who terrorized two cities thousands of miles apart over a span of five years. This is part two of a two-part episode about the victims and survivors of the Center City Rapist. If you or someone you know has been the victim of sexual assault, you can contact the National Sexual Assault Hotline at 1-800-656-4673. Research sources for this episode include: The Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network (RAINN)The National Sexual Violence Resource CenterThe Philadelphia Inquirer Archives 1997 – 2004The Philadelphia Daily News Archives 1997 – 2004Inquirer Magazine Archives: A Baffling Case, by Barbara Boyer, July 21, 2002,The Guardian: Investigating Rape in Philadelphia: How One City’s Crisis Stands to Help Others by Joanna WaltersThe Daily Pennsylvanian: The Story of Shannon Schieber by 34th Street, January 22, 2004The Marshall Project: Rape isn’t rape, is it? by Christian Miller and Bob MeagherThe Washington Post: Maryland Politics by John Wagner, February 13, 2013People Magazine Investigates: Terror in Philadelphia (available for purchase on YouTube)The Fort Collins Coloradoan Archives 2000 – 2004Catholic Mobilizing NetworkThe Catholic ReviewTwistedPhilly is researched, hosted, and produced by me, Deana Marie, and available biweekly wherever you listen to podcasts. Follow me on Tiktok and Instagram at twistedphilly to see many of the locations and histories I discuss in the show. The post The Center City Rapist: Part 2 appeared first on TwistedPhilly.
Episode 89 – Originally released January 2020 Content warning: this episode contains discussions about sexual assault and murder. Listener discretion is advised. Between the summer of 1997 and August 1999, six women in the Rittenhouse Square neighborhood in Center City, Philadelphia, were raped by a man known only as the Center City Rapist. One woman, Shannon Schieber, was murdered in May 1998. All of these attacks occurred within about five blocks of one another. The first two attacks were little more than one block apart, yet it took years before these assaults were linked by the Philadelphia Police Department. An investigation by the Philadelphia Inquirer in 1999 uncovered a period of more than a decade from the mid ’80s to the late ’90s when 30% of reported crimes were classified as non criminal emergencies. At least two of the assaults committed by the center city rapist fell into this classification. DNA went untested, and a 911 call made the morning Shannon Schieber was murdered was “unfounded.” Today the Philadelphia Police Department is an example of how to effectively support sexual abuse survivors, how to respectfully care for them and bring their attackers to justice. Sadly, it wasn’t always this way and that culture of hiding violent crimes, in many cases sexually violent crimes against women, may have contributed to the rape of a dozen women across two states. This is part one of a two-part episode about the victims and survivors of the Center City Rapist. Research sources for this episode include: The Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network (RAINN)The National Sexual Violence Resource CenterSerial Murder and the Psychology of Violent Crimes: Serial Killers and Serial Rapists Preliminary Comparison of Violence Typologies by Stacey Shipley & Bruce ArrigoThe American Criminal Law Review: Georgetown University Law Center – Tolling Time: How John Doe Law Indictments are Skirting Statutes of Limitations and Crippling the Criminal Justice System by Emily ClarkThe Philadelphia Inquirer Archives 1997 – 2004The Philadelphia Daily News Archives 1997 – 2004The Guardian: Investigating Rape in Philadelphia: How One City’s Crisis Stands to Help Others by Joanna WaltersThe Daily Pennsylvanian: The Story of Shannon Schieber by 34th Street, January 22, 2004TwistedPhilly is researched, hosted, and produced by me, Deana Marie, and available biweekly wherever you listen to podcasts. Follow me on Tiktok and Instagram at twistedphilly to see many of the locations and histories I discuss in the show. The post The Center City Rapist: Part 1 appeared first on TwistedPhilly.