Dark History: Where The Darkness See’s The Light copertina

Dark History: Where The Darkness See’s The Light

Dark History: Where The Darkness See’s The Light

Di: Rob Bradley
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A proposito di questo titolo

Step into the shadows of the past—where truth is more disturbing than fiction. The Dark History Podcast drags the forgotten, the forbidden, and the downright horrifying stories of our world into the light. From blood-soaked streets of Victorian London to the twisted minds of history’s most ruthless figures, every episode plunges you into an immersive narrative built on meticulous research and haunting detail.
Hosted by Rob Bradley, Dark History doesn’t just tell stories—it makes you feel them. Each episode unravels real events that shaped our world in ways you were never taught, told through vivid storytelling that grips you from the first word to the last breath.
History isn’t always written by the victors. Sometimes, it’s whispered from the gallows, buried beneath ruins, or etched in blood.
If you crave the truth behind the horror, and the stories history tried to forget—welcome to The Dark History Podcast.
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Mondiale
  • Exhibit I: The Killer's Timepiece
    Jan 21 2026

    A cracked brass pocket watch. Its glass is shattered. Its hands are frozen at 3:47.

    This is Exhibit I of the collection — recovered from the body of Thomas Cutbush in Whitechapel, 1887. At first glance, it’s unremarkable. A cheap timepiece. A forgotten object. But this watch was not used to keep time. It was used to announce endings.

    In the gaslit streets of Victorian London, Cutbush approached women with the same ritual. He would ask the time. When they answered, he would show them his watch — its ticking loud in the silence — and tell them their time was nearly up. What followed was violence, measured not in minutes, but in obsession.

    This exhibit traces the short, brutal career of a man some later suspected as a precursor to Jack the Ripper — a figure hovering on the edge of that greater terror. It explores fixation, escalation, and the thin line between the forgotten attacker and the monster history remembers.

    The watch stopped during Cutbush’s final struggle, wrenched from motion as he was overpowered, its hands locked forever at the moment his violence ended. It has never been rewound.

    In this museum, time does not heal. It only remembers.

    *** Patreon link https://patreon.com/Darkhistory2021?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=join_link ***

    Merch: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/dark-history?ref_id=36220

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/darkhistorypod?mibextid=LQQJ4d

    Discord https://discord.gg/3mHPd3xg

    Email: darkhistory2021@outlook.com

    Tiktok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMLSvwJJV/

    YouTube :https://youtube.com/c/DarkHistory2021

    Twitter: @darkhistory2021

    Instagram: @dark_history21

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    12 min
  • S5 E1 When the Clock Ran Out: The Last Men Killed in the Great War
    Jan 14 2026

    At 5:10 a.m. on November 11th, 1918, the First World War was officially over. But the killing didn’t stop.

    Six hours later, as clocks edged toward eleven, men were still being ordered forward. Shells were still falling. Machine guns were still firing. And across Europe, soldiers who had survived four years of industrial slaughter were killed in the final minutes — some seconds — before peace.

    In this episode of The Dark History Podcast, we narrow the lens to those last moments. We follow the final soldiers killed by Britain, France, the United States, Canada, and Germany — men who endured the entire war only to die when it no longer mattered. George Edwin Ellison. Augustin Trébuchon. Henry Gunther. George Lawrence Price. Names tied not to victory or defeat, but to timing.

    This isn’t a story about treaties or triumph. It’s about delay. Obedience. And a war that refused to end cleanly.

    Because when the guns finally fell silent, the world moved on — and left these men behind.

    *** Patreon link https://patreon.com/Darkhistory2021?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=creatorshare_creator&utm_content=join_link ***

    Merch: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/dark-history?ref_id=36220

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/darkhistorypod?mibextid=LQQJ4d

    Discord https://discord.gg/3mHPd3xg

    Email: darkhistory2021@outlook.com

    Tiktok: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMLSvwJJV/

    YouTube :https://youtube.com/c/DarkHistory2021

    Twitter: @darkhistory2021

    Instagram: @dark_history21

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    33 min
  • S4E24 Hearth & Home Horrors
    Dec 29 2025

    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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    16 min
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