4.8 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 6 September 2021
⏱️ 32 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | Why are you listening to his podcast when they're a puddle to be jumped in? |
| 0:04.8 | Come on, let's get outside and take on autumn. |
| 0:09.4 | All the need is a pair of wales in a pot of patty for loo. |
| 0:13.8 | It's made with calcium and put him in a d for immune support. |
| 0:18.4 | My mum says healthy mischief needs healthy bones. |
| 0:23.0 | And she knows best most of the time. |
| 0:26.8 | Take on autumn with patty for loo. |
| 0:31.8 | During the early 1960s an unassuming house in Houston, Texas caught fire. |
| 0:37.8 | In the aftermath, the local fire inspector ordered that the place be cleared out of debris. |
| 0:42.8 | A nurse who had been hired to care for a couple of the elderly residents of the home took on the task. |
| 0:48.8 | And as a result, decades worth of junk was carted from the attic and tossed out to the curb. |
| 0:54.8 | Among these items were a few genuine World War I uniforms, some very old records, and a stack of notebooks. |
| 1:01.8 | There are multiple published versions of what happened next, but one way or another, |
| 1:05.8 | those notebooks made their way into the hands of a local junk man named Fred Washington. |
| 1:12.8 | He took them to his junk shop, the Ok Trading Center, where they lay stacked on the floor partially covered by a tarp because the roof leaked. |
| 1:21.8 | Then in 1969 an art history student named Mary Jane Victor stumbled across those notebooks inside the junk shop, |
| 1:29.8 | and was amazed at what they contained. |
| 1:33.8 | At the time, Victor was working for an art patron and ares named Dominique Demeniel, who had tasked her with keeping an eye out for unusual surrealist and primitive art. |
| 1:43.8 | Victor told her boss about what she found, and shortly thereafter the ares paid Washington $1,500 for four of the earliest notebooks. |
| 1:53.8 | What these books contained were page after page of colorful paintings and collages, of dirigible like flying machines, |
| 2:03.8 | and in between the detailed illustrations were scribbles of text and even coded messages, all of which added up to tell a remarkable story. |
| 2:13.8 | These were the notebooks of oppression immigrant and former butcher named Charles Delshaw, who spent much of his retirement hold up in his step-daughter's attic, |
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