On July 28, 1945 an Army bomber pilot on a routine ferry mission found himself lost in the fog over Manhattan. A dictation machine in a nearby office happened to capture the sound of the plane as it hit the Empire State Building at the 79th floor.
Fourteen people were killed. Debris from the plane severed the cables of an elevator, which fell 79 stories with a young woman inside. She survived. The crash prompted new legislation that – for the first time – gave citizens the right to sue the federal government.
A Museum of Sound
A Real Life West Side Story
A Guitar, A Cello, and the Day that Changed Music
A Wrench in the Works
My Iron Lung
When Borders Move
The Two Lives of Asa Carter
When Ground Zero was Radio Row
Last Witness: The Kerner Commission
Prisoners of War
The Gospel Ranger
The Rise and Fall of Black Swan Records
From the Archive: Josh's Diary
The Tulsa Race Massacre, 100 Years Later
Juan, 25 Years Later
25 Years of Radio Diaries
Busman's Holiday
The Last Place: Diary of a Retirement Home
Fly Girls
Burma '88: Buried History
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It is Free
Criminal
Ear Hustle
Song Exploder
The Truth
the memory palace