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1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries PodcastAuthor: Jon Hagadorn Podcast Host
Where History Comes Alive! A fast-paced, well-researched weekly podcast covering a wide range of historical events, persons, places, legends, and mysteries, Hosted by Jon Hagadorn, the selection of stories and interviews includes lost treasure, unsolved mysteries, unexplained phenomenon, WWII stories, biographies, disasters, legends of the Old West, American Revolutionary history, urban legends, movie backstories, and much more. Available wherever podcasts are found, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Comcast, Google Play & others. Episodes air Sundays at 12pm ET and Thursdays at 6am ET. Follow us at www.Facebook.com/1001Heroes and Twitter @1001podcast. Language: en Genres: History, Society & Culture Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
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CHARLES DICKENS AND THE STAPLEHURST RAIL CRASH: FOUND IN THE FOOTNOTES
Sunday, 25 January, 2026
Make Sure to catch Dickens GREAT short story 'The Wreck of The Golden Mary' NOW at 1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales! FOUND IN THE FOOTNOTES CHARLES DICKENS AND THE STAPLEHURST RAIL CRASH Podcast Script – Charles Dickens and the Staplehurst Rail Crash As many of you know,I'm a huge fan of classic literature and four of our 1001 podcasts are packed with My renderings of short stories and novels from the greats like Robert Louis Stevenson, O. Henry, and Charles Dickens- just search 1001 Classic Short Stories and you'll see what I mean. Charles Dickens gave usGreat Expectations, A Tale of Two Cities, A Christmas Carol, And many more … This is a mostly unknown story about Charles Dickens which I had never known-- until I found it in the footnotes. Picture this. It's a warm June evening in 1865. The countryside of Kent is slipping past the windows of a train bound for London. Inside one of the first- class carriages sits one of the most famous writers in the English- speaking world — Charles Dickens. He's tired, he's thinking about deadlines, and beside him is something priceless: the handwritten manuscript for a new novel, Our Mutual Friend, not yet finished, not yet safely delivered to the public. Then — without warning — the world breaks apart. The bridge ahead has collapsed. The train plunges into open space. Carriages snap loose and tumble into the river below. Iron screams, wood splinters, steam hisses into chaos. In moments, what was a quiet journey becomes one of the worst railway disasters of the Victorian age. And somehow — impossibly — Charles Dickens survives. He climbs out of a shattered carriage suspended over the river. He tends to the wounded. He witnesses death at arm's length. And before he leaves the wreckage, before he allows himself to process the shock, he does something extraordinary: He climbs back into the ruins to retrieve his manuscript. Tonight's episode is about that moment — the Staplehurst rail crash, the night Charles Dickens cheated death, and how a single train accident quietly reshaped the final years of one of literature's greatest voices.








