『Transportation Tragedies』のカバーアート

Transportation Tragedies

Transportation Tragedies

著者: Transportation Tragedies
無料で聴く

True stories of transportation disasters where everything went wrong. From shipwrecks and train wrecks to doomed expeditions and deadly shortcuts, Transportation Tragedies dives deep into the human stories behind history’s most haunting journeys. These aren’t just sudden accidents. Many are slow, unfolding collapses—where decisions, mistakes, and human limits turn bad situations into deadly ones. If you’re drawn to real history, high-stakes decisions, and stories of survival, failure, and human error, you’re in the right place.Transportation Tragedies 世界
エピソード
  • The Meek Cutoff Disaster – A Shortcut to Death
    2026/05/07

    In 1845, nearly 1,000 pioneers set out for Oregon. Around 200 wagons chose a new route—the Meek Cutoff—promising a faster path west.

    Instead, it led them into one of the most brutal overland disasters in American history.

    Water disappeared. Oxen collapsed. Families were stranded in a barren alkaline desert with no clear way forward—and no easy way back.

    In this episode of Transportation Tragedies, we follow the wagon train day by day as hope gives way to exhaustion, desperation, and impossible decisions.

    This wasn’t a sudden catastrophe.

    It was a slow collapse—mile by mile.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    15 分
  • USS-Shenandoah-Disaster-Torn-Apart-at-6000-Feet
    2026/05/07

    In the early morning hours of September 3, 1925, a 680-foot U.S. Navy airship was torn apart in the sky over Ohio.


    The USS Shenandoah—once the pride of American aviation—flew straight into powerful storm updrafts that pushed it beyond its limits. Within minutes, the ship broke apart midair, scattering sections and crew across the countryside.


    Some men were killed instantly. Others survived falls that should have been impossible.

    In this episode of Transportation Tragedies, we reconstruct the Shenandoah’s final flight—from the warnings before takeoff to the moment the airship came apart at altitude.

    This wasn’t just a disaster.

    It was a failure of judgment… thousands of feet above the ground.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    21 分
  • S.S. Californian – The Ship That Watched Titanic Sink
    2026/05/07

    On a freezing, perfectly still night in April 1912, over 1,500 people were dying in the Atlantic Ocean. Just miles away, another ship sat in the darkness… and did nothing.

    In this episode of Transportation Tragedies, we examine the S.S. Californian and its captain, Stanley Lord—a man whose decision not to act would ignite outrage, destroy his career, and spark a debate that still hasn’t been settled.

    With distress rockets lighting the sky and a nearby vessel clearly visible on the horizon, why didn’t the Californian respond? Was it caution… confusion… or a catastrophic failure of leadership?

    You decide.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    16 分
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c
まだレビューはありません