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Monday, August 10, 9-10 pm ET
Encore presentations: An instrument that may have been recovered from the Hindenburg; a book that may have been a gift from John Adams to his son; a home in the Bronx that may have been the birthplace of hip hop.
Hindenburg Artifact - A Hoboken, New Jersey, man has a
palm-sized, army-green metal box that looks like an instrument
panel. Beneath a shattered plastic covering is a sliding, numbered
scale; knobs on each end move a lever across the scale. German
writing indicates the country of origin. Might this instrument have
been recovered from the crash site of the Hindenburg in Lakehurst,
New Jersey? Family lore says that a distant relative was among the
many bystanders plucking souvenirs from the wreckage of the
terrifying disaster. Chemicals from the fire or balloon envelope
gas would have evaporated 10 minutes after the explosion, but the
broken plastic can be tested for age and heat distress with
forensic analysis of the instrument. HISTORY DETECTIVES host Elyse
Luray travels to Atlanta and the New Jersey landing site of the
ill-fated zeppelin to determine if the instrument panel is in fact
from the horrifying crash.
John Adams Book - A woman in Littleton, New Hampshire, inherited
her husband's aunt's belongings, which include a curious
late-18th-century book titled Trials of Patriots. It contains what
appears to be President John Adams' signature in three places, and
includes an inscription, "Charles Adams from His Father, 1794." The
book is a collection of trial transcripts chronicling the sedition
trials of Irish and Scottish radicals. If the book is indeed from
Adams to his son, it could reveal pivotal clues about the
inner-workings of this presidential family. In Boston and John
Adams' hometown of Quincy, Massachusetts, HISTORY DETECTIVES host
Gwendolyn Wright examines the Adams family's correspondence and
conflict as they balanced home life with public service.
Birthplace of Hip Hop - A hip hop enthusiast from New York City has
always heard that 1520 Sedgwick Avenue in the Bronx is the
birthplace of hip-hop. The story goes that on August 11, 1973, DJ
Kool Herc, a building resident, was entertaining at his sister's
back-to-school party and tried something new on the turntable: he
extended an instrumental beat (breaking or scratching) to let
people dance longer (breakdancing) and began MC'ing (rapping)
during the extended breakdancing. This, the contributor believes,
marked the birth of hip-hop. The music led to an entire cultural
movement that's altered generational thinking - from politics and
race to art and language. HISTORY DETECTIVES host Tukufu Zuberi
sets out to examine an inner-city environment that helped lay the
foundation for a cultural revolution.