Episodes
Friday Jun 19, 2020
The MP and the Cold War
Friday Jun 19, 2020
Friday Jun 19, 2020
Our Pride Month 2020 special! In 1959, British MP Harford Montgomery Hyde loses his seat because he campaigned for gay rights. In an unexpected way, his job is a surprising victim of the Cold War. But it’s also foreshadows a remarkable change in societal views that’s about to come in the next decade.
Friday Jun 12, 2020
The Maroons and the Nova Scotians
Friday Jun 12, 2020
Friday Jun 12, 2020
In 1800, the Sierra Leone Company has a problem, the settlers they brought from Nova Scotia are rioting over rising food prices. Could the solution to their issues come from the same frigid Canadian province?
Friday Jun 05, 2020
The Soldier, The Restaurant and The Law
Friday Jun 05, 2020
Friday Jun 05, 2020
A black Canadian soldier returning from World War II can’t get a meal in his hometown because of racism at local restaurants. So he decides to do something about it. Changing the law is a big challenge, but fighting the system and changing minds is even bigger.
Monday Jun 01, 2020
The French Bandits and The Black Flag Army
Monday Jun 01, 2020
Monday Jun 01, 2020
In 1883, some rogue French soldiers are occupying Hanoi. The Vietnamese can’t defeat them in the city, but they have a plan: lure the French into an ambush using schoolyard taunts. Will the French fall for the trap, and what will it mean for the history of Vietnam?
Friday May 22, 2020
The Playwright, the Dictator and the Revolutionary Idea
Friday May 22, 2020
Friday May 22, 2020
In a world where theatre is banned, putting on a play is a risky business! But from tough times, come great ideas. In Oliver Cromwell’s England, a criminal poet laureate without a nose is about to change the face of English theatre forever.
Friday May 15, 2020
The Carnations, The Revolution And The Terrible Song
Friday May 15, 2020
Friday May 15, 2020
A young woman offers a soldier a flower, a symbolic representation of the choice he faces. Will he defend his post and trigger a bloodbath, or will he accept the carnation and join the revolution? The future of Portugal hangs in the balance.
Friday May 08, 2020
The Battle and the Victory Day
Friday May 08, 2020
Friday May 08, 2020
To celebrate the 75th anniversary of Victory in Europe Day, we have a story from the waning days of World War II. Three forces are descending on a German prisoner of war camp full of French VIPs and assorted European resistance fighters: an American company with 4 Sherman tanks, a large group of fanatical SS troops and, most unlikely of all, a group of former German soldiers turned Austrian freedom fighters. Their inevitable collision will create one of the strangest battles of the entire war, just days before it came to an end.
Monday May 04, 2020
The Queen and the Guerrilla War
Monday May 04, 2020
Monday May 04, 2020
By the 1600s in the African kingdom of Ndongo, traditional power structures have been overturned by Portuguese slave merchants. The King, or Angola, is weak, forced to negotiate with the European colonizers, while ruthless warriors gain power from European allies. But a Queen emerges, and leads her people into a guerrilla war that will re-shape Africa for the next century.
Wednesday Apr 15, 2020
The Cowboys and The Spy
Wednesday Apr 15, 2020
Wednesday Apr 15, 2020
On Valentine's Day in 1915, a lone Canadian soldier guards the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa from a reported fleet of UFOs. Could aliens be part of a German plot to attack Canada? What about an army of cowboys? For a German spy in the USA, no plot is too outlandish.
Friday Apr 03, 2020
The Epizootic
Friday Apr 03, 2020
Friday Apr 03, 2020
It’s 1872 and an epidemic is sweeping North America, causing wide spread economic and social hardship, even though the disease never directly killed a single human. What can we learn from the “epizootic” that devastated the continent nearly 150 years ago?