The Strange History Podcast
1) The Falcon Lake Incident (1967): Canada’s Most Disturbing Physical Alien Encounter
In 1967, deep in the wilderness near Falcon Lake, Manitoba, a Canadian prospector experienced one of the most physically documented alien encounters in history. Unlike most UFO sightings, this case le...Show More
2) Rockets, Alien Warnings, and the Day We Refused to Listen
February 9th is the day history tried to warn us — clearly, calmly, and repeatedly. In this episode of The Strange History Podcast, host Amy explores the strange and unsettling events tied to February...Show More
3) Traditions Are Born, Queens Are Executed, and History Pretends Everything Is Fine
February 8th looks like a harmless date — and that’s exactly why it can’t be trusted. In this episode of The Strange History Podcast, host Amy explores the strange, unsettling, and quietly world-chang...Show More
4) Moon Golf, Presidential Cover-Ups, and the Quiet Days That Change History
February 7th looks like an ordinary day on the calendar — and that’s exactly why it’s dangerous. In this episode of The Strange History Podcast, host Amy uncovers the strange, unsettling, and quietly ...Show More
5) The Goblins of Kentucky: The 1955 Hopkinsville Encounter That Still Has No Explanation Part 1
In August of 1955, a quiet Kentucky farmhouse became the center of one of the most bizarre and unsettling encounters in American history. Eleven witnesses. Four hours of terror. Small glowing-eyed cre...Show More
6) Goblins, Knockers, and the Things Beneath Us: Dark Folklore of Underground Beings Worldwide Part 2
Long before UFO sightings and modern paranormal investigations, people across the world were already telling the same story — quietly, carefully, and with fear. Small beings living underground. Knocki...Show More
7) The Great Smog of London and the Day the Air Became Deadly
On February 6, 1952, a dense toxic smog settled over London, killing thousands and revealing that air pollution could be deadly. In this episode of The Strange History Podcast, Amy explores the true s...Show More
8) The Card Catalog That Accidentally Invented How We Search for Information
On February 5, 1885, libraries adopted the standardized card catalog, a system meant to organize books that instead reshaped how humans think about information itself. In this episode of The Strange H...Show More
9) The Winter Olympics That Almost Failed During the Great Depression
On February 4, 1932, the Winter Olympics opened in Lake Placid, New York, at the height of the Great Depression — and nearly collapsed before they began. In this episode of The Strange History Podcast...Show More
10) February 3 – The Night People Tried to Trap Lightning Indoors
February 3 sits within a long tradition of winter reports involving ball lightning — glowing spheres of electrical energy that drifted through homes and defied explanation. In this episode of The Stra...Show More