The History Listen
Compelling history from Australia and around the world.
How much power does the federal government have to protect Australians from international threats?
Compelling history from Australia and around the world.
Growing up Regina looked totally different from her brothers and sisters, she thought she was adopted. But her mother told her that was only partly true. With just a handful of letters from both her parents Regina starts to dig into her family story and finds a while lot of surprises along the way.
In 1806, Maori chief Te Pahi was gifted a silver medal by Sydney Governor Philip Gidley King. He had come from Aotearoa to establish trade.
But the medal then disappeared.
Two centuries later, Te Pahi's medal resurfaced â in a Sydney auction house
Minna Muhlen-Schulte knew her surname came from her German grandfather whoâd married her Australian grandmother in the 1930s and had lived in Berlin. But she knew very little about her grandparentsâ experience during World War Two, Â except that her grandfather fought on the âotherâ side, with the German army. So Minna goes in search for her familyâs wartime story.
Producer Fiona Pepper had always known her great grandmother died far too young, but until recently, she never knew the full story.
At the height of the Cold War a New Zealand teenager is sent to a hospital in the Soviet Union to grow new fingers on her left hand. Sounds like fiction? This actually happened to Miranda Jakich and she tells her tale on The History Listen.
Hidden family truths are discovered as two sisters follow the trail of their late fathers' secret life.
It's the 19th February 1937, and a Stinson passenger plane leaves Brisbane for a routine flight to Sydney, but it never arrives. Instead, its disappearance sparks one of the most extensive air searches in Australia.
A lost ship, A lost sailor, a lost identity. In November 1941 as war drew closer to Australia. the HMAS Sydney and its crew of 645 sailors disappeared off the Western Australian coast after being ambushed by a German raider. Months later the body of a sailor washed up on tiny Christmas Island and was laid to rest by locals. Half a century on this unknown sailor would help unravel the mystery of how the pride of Australiaâs navy just vanished.
What if the only tool you had to escape from a prisoner-of-war camp in WW1 was a homemade Ouija board? The story of a wild and elegant hoax concocted by two British soldier POWs to hoodwink their captors.
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