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History Buffoons Podcast

History Buffoons Podcast

By: Bradley and Kate
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About this listen

Two buffoons who want to learn about history!

Our names are Bradley and Kate. We both love to learn about history but also don't want to take it too seriously. Join us as we dive in to random stories, people, events and so much more throughout history. Each episode we will talk about a new topic with a light hearted approach to learn and have some fun.


Find us at: historybuffoonspodcast.com

Reach out to us at: historybuffoonspodcast@gmail.com

© 2025 History Buffoons Podcast
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Episodes
  • The Origin of Weird: Prince of Poyais - Gregor MacGregor
    Jul 3 2025

    Have you ever wondered what happens when charisma, opportunity, and audacity collide? The result might look something like Gregor MacGregor's breathtaking 19th-century fraud that cost hundreds of lives yet went largely unpunished.

    Step into the 1820s where a young Scottish adventurer transforms himself from military man to royalty through sheer imagination and chutzpah. After participating in Latin American revolutionary conflicts, MacGregor returned to London bearing an impressive title: "His Serene Highness Gregor I, Sovereign Prince of Poyais and Cacique of the Poyer Nation." The catch? Poyais didn't exist.

    MacGregor's genius lay in his comprehensive approach to nation-building—on paper. He created currency, a constitution, a flag, detailed maps, guidebooks, and even a coat of arms for his fictional paradise. His descriptions of Poyais were masterfully crafted: rivers flowing with gold, hillsides scattered with gemstones, perfect weather, and a magnificent capital city complete with an opera house and cathedral. British citizens, entranced by the promise of new opportunities in the tropics, sold everything they owned to purchase land in this Eden.

    The tragic reality revealed itself when approximately 270 settlers arrived at the uninhabited jungle of the Mosquito Coast in modern-day Nicaragua. Finding no development whatsoever, they faced deadly tropical diseases instead of prosperity. Before rescue arrived, about two-thirds perished from malaria, yellow fever, and dysentery—a devastating human cost of MacGregor's elaborate lie.

    Perhaps the most astonishing part of this story isn't the fraud itself but its aftermath. Despite exposure in Parliament and newspapers, MacGregor was never successfully prosecuted in Britain. He simply moved to France, continued his scheme there, and eventually returned to London to sell even more Poyais bonds! He finally retired to Venezuela where, incredibly, he received military honors and a hero's funeral upon his death.

    Subscribe now to hear more incredible tales of history's greatest frauds, misadventures, and bizarre twists that somehow never made it into your textbooks. Let us know what historical hoaxes fascinate you most, and we might feature them in our upcoming episodes!

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    This website contains affiliate links. This means that if you click on a link and purchase a product, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support the running of this website and allows me to continue providing valuable content. Please note that I only recommend products and services that I believe in and have personally used or researched.

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    23 mins
  • Slipped on a Pair of Trousers: Sarah Rosetta Wakeman
    Jun 24 2025

    History's attics hide remarkable stories, and few are as compelling as Sarah Rosetta Wakeman's. At just 19, this strong-minded woman from rural New York made a decision that defied every convention of her time—she cut her hair, put on men's clothing, and became Lyons Wakeman.

    The eldest of nine children born to struggling tenant farmers in 1843, Rosetta faced limited options. Marriage wasn't in the cards, and her family's crushing debt demanded all hands working. When she discovered that coal hauling on the Chenango Canal paid better than any "women's work," she embraced a male identity that offered both financial stability and personal freedom.

    But when Union Army recruiters appeared offering a $152 enlistment bounty (worth over $3,000 today), Rosetta saw an opportunity she couldn't pass up. As Private Lyons Wakeman of the 153rd New York Infantry, she performed every soldier's duty—standing guard, drilling with precision, even engaging in fistfights—all while maintaining her secret identity. Her letters home reveal a practical motivation far removed from patriotic fervor: "I am as independent as a hog on ice," she wrote, proud of her $13 monthly salary that helped sustain her family back home.

    For almost two years, Rosetta served without detection, first in Washington DC and later in Louisiana during the brutal Red River Campaign. She survived the Battle of Pleasant Hill only to fall victim to dysentery, dying at 21 in a New Orleans hospital where not even the attending doctors discovered her biological sex. Buried under her male identity, her remarkable story remained hidden until her letters were discovered a century later.

    Dive into this incredible story of a woman who challenged 19th-century gender expectations not through protest, but through quiet, determined action. Her surviving letters paint a vivid picture of Civil War life and reveal a pragmatic spirit who saw male disguise not as political statement but as a practical path to independence. Subscribe to hear more hidden stories from history that will change how you see the past—and perhaps the present too.

      • An Uncommon Soldier: The Civil War Letters of Sarah Rosetta Wakeman, alias Pvt. Lyons Wakeman, 153rd Regiment, New York State Volunteers, 1862-1864 by Sarah Rosetta Wakeman https://amzn.to/463jhcu
      • Wakeman, Sarah Rosetta – Civil War letters and biography. An overview by the American Battlefield Trustbattlefields.orgbattlefields.orgbattlefields.org.
      • Bierle, Sarah Kay – “From History’s Shadows: Sarah Rosetta Wakeman.” Emerging Civil War (Mar. 30, 2024) – Analysis of Wakeman’s letters and life

    Send us a text

    Support the show













    This website contains affiliate links. This means that if you click on a link and purchase a product, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support the running of this website and allows me to continue providing valuable content. Please note that I only recommend products and services that I believe in and have personally used or researched.

    Show More Show Less
    52 mins
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