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#161: New London School Explosion

21 minutes

On a beautiful spring day in East Texas, tragedy came to the oil town of New London. This week we talk about the worst school disaster in American history.


#160: Sunny Ozuna and the Sunliners

13 minutes

Texas Musician Sonny Ozuna was a son of San Antonio and an important piece of the emerging Tejano movement. However in the 1950s and 1960s he was at the top of the charts with his national hit ‘Talk To Me’. This week we talk about another Tejano legend, Sonny Ozuna and the Sunliners.


#159: Stephen F. Austin—Part Two

20 minutes

Stephen F. Austin battled adversity and hardship to make his father’s dream of an Anglo-American colony in Texas a reality. The Old 300 who made up this colony would be the seeds from which eventual revolution, nationhood and statehood would grow. Unlike many of the heroes of Texas, though, Austin was a proponent of peace and loyal to the Mexican nation, until he was given no choice but to support revolution.


#158: Stephen F. Austin—Part One

17 minutes

Known as the Father of Texas, Stephen F. Austin was the first to officially bring Anglo colonists to Texas. He was fulfilling the dream of his father, Moses, who hadn’t been able to complete the work himself. Together these men braved hardship and adversity to set the stage for the great drama of Texas’ birth.


#157: Lawrence Sullivan ‘Sul’ Ross

35 minutes

He was a Texas Ranger, a Confederate general, governor, and the president of Texas A and M. This week we look at the amazing life of Lawrence Sullivan ‘Sul’ Ross.


#156: McLaurin Massacre

15 minutes

By the 1880s, native Americans in the Frio Canyon in the Texas hill country had been almost completely wiped out. The once prosperous Comanche, Kiowa, Tonkawa, and Lipan Apache that had called the area home for thousands of years had been forced onto reservations far from their ancestral lands or massacred, driven off the land desired by Anglo settlers. Most of the area residents were convinced that the Indian Wars were over, and the frontier was safe to inhabit without fear of attack. But one last incident would come to be recognized as the final Indian raid in Frio Canyon.


#155: Master Sergeant Jose Mendoza Lopez

19 minutes

Today we celebrate another Texan Medal of Honor recipiant whose story of valor sounds like something out of a comic book. (Take that, Mr. Hitler!) But the reality is much more interesting.


#154: World Tour of Texas

28 minutes

There’s no denying that Texas is a vast place. From the Piney Woods of East Texas to the deserts of El Paso, from the beaches of the Gulf Coast to the plains of the Panhandle, Texas is a state that is bigger than England and France, combined. But few realize it’s so big you can go all over the world and never leave the Lone Star State. Within its pleasantly-shaped border you can find world capitals, ancient cities and even entire nations.


#153: Charles Whitman and the Tower

38 minutes

Fifty years ago, an ex-Marine and former student of the University of Texas climbed into the university’s clock tower with an arsenal of weapons and opened fire onto students walking through the campus. It was the first modern mass shooting, and was one of the defining tragedies in the history of Austin and Texas.


#152: The Von Erichs Part Two

26 minutes

They were the heroes of Texas wrasslin’, the legends of Dallas’ world famous Sportatorium, and the idols of millions. For a few years their star shined brighter than any in the Lone Star State before heartbreaking tragedy destroyed their empire. This week we look at part two of the triumph and tragedy of Texas’ greatest wrestling dynasty.

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