American History Tellers - History Daily: The Unearthing of the Cardiff Giant
Episode Date: October 16, 2023October 16, 1869. An American trickster masterminds the discovery of a mysterious petrified giant in upstate New York.You can listen ad-free in the Wondery or Amazon Music app. Or for all tha...t and more, go to IntoHistory.comHistory Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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It's October 16, 1869, on a farm in the village of Cardiff, New York.
Agricultural laborer Henry Nichols stabs the ground with a shovel,
pushing down with his foot, then levering up a chunk of soil out of a three-foot-deep hole.
He straightens up and tosses the dirt into a growing pile beside him.
His back aches and his arms are burning.
For the past several hours, Henry and another laborer have been digging a new well shaft.
It's hard work.
Right now, Henry is craving a pitcher of beer that the farm's owner promised when they were finished.
But they're nowhere near done with their task.
The next time Henry cuts into the ground with his shovel,
the metal edge strikes a stone.
Henry rolls his eyes.
If there are rocks in the soil, their tough job just got even tougher.
Henry tries to dig around the stone, but it's huge.
He can't find where it ends.
He calls his colleague over,
and together they scrape the soil away
from the pale rock. But this is no ordinary stone. As they clear the dirt away, it gradually
takes the shape of a human foot. Henry drops his shovel in shock. He isn't sure what
they found, but he does know that this macabre discovery gives him the creeps. After Henry reports his grisly find,
farm owner William Newell will help excavate the area.
Together, they'll uncover a 10-foot-tall stone figure
that farm owner William will confidently declare
is a petrified giant dating back to biblical times.
The Cardiff Giant, as their discovery will be named,
will cause a sensation and be hailed as
proof of the literal truth of the Bible. But it will soon be exposed as a clever fake, and William
will be unmasked as one of the conspirators behind the hoax, but not before he makes a fortune off
the supposedly lucky discovery of the Cardiff Giant on October 16th, 1869.
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From Noiser and Airship, I'm Lindsey Graham, and this is History Daily. History is made every day.
On this podcast every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is October 16th, 1869, the unearthing of the Cardiff Giant.
It's 1866 in Ackley, a small town in Iowa, three years before a fake, petrified giant will be discovered on a farm in upstate New York. George Hull crosses his arms as he listens to a Methodist
preacher rattle on in his brother-in-law's general store. George is a New York tobacco merchant,
visiting family here in Iowa.
He hasn't been here long,
but already George misses home.
He loves living in New York.
It's a fast-growing metropolis
where modern ideas quickly take hold.
So whenever George is in Iowa,
it feels like he's traveled back in time.
Here, traditional religious ideas
still hold very strong.
And today, George is carrying a new edition of Charles Darwin's groundbreaking book, On the Origin of Species, which outlines
the theories of evolution and natural selection. A few minutes ago, the Methodist minister spotted
the book in his hand and began to rail against Darwin's ideas. Now George just wants the pompous
minister to pay for his goods and leave,
but instead the preacher is confidently declaring that giants once lived on the earth.
George just shakes his head. In response, the preacher pulls a Bible from his pocket and reads aloud from Genesis chapter 6, verse 4. There were giants in the earth in those days,
and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men,
and they bare children to them, the same became mighty men which were of old, men of renown.
Then the minister asks George whether he doubts the word of God. George replies that he doesn't
take everything written in the Bible literally. But this is not the answer the minister wants to
hear. George looks to his brother-in-law behind the counter, hoping that he'll back him up. But instead, his brother-in-law profusely apologizes to the minister
for George's mistaken ideas. Meanwhile, George heads outside, embarrassed that even his family
still believes in what George thinks are old-fashioned superstitions. And for the next
two years, George simmers over this meeting with the Methodist minister. Eventually, he decides
to do something about it. He'll fool people into believing that one of the giants the minister
believes in has been found. Then he'll reveal it as a fake, proving how easy religion can mislead
people. During the summer of 1868, George starts to put his plan into action. He purchases an 11-foot
long block of gypsum and has it shipped
to a stonemason in Chicago. There, George reveals his plan and swears the mason to secrecy. He has
the block carved into the shape of a man, but one twice the size of a typical American. Next,
the statue is boxed up and transported by train and wagon to a farm in New York,
belonging to George's cousin, William Newell. Over the course
of a few days, George and William bury the statue in a corner of the farm. Eleven months later,
William hires two laborers to dig a well in the exact location that he and George buried the
statue. When the laborers discover the rock figure, William feigns surprise, declaring that
it must be the remains of a giant that lived in
biblical times. According to William, the giant's remains must have turned to stone because minerals
from nearby swamp water seeped into the body before it could decompose. That night, the two
laborers regaled the community with the news of their discovery. The next day, hundreds of people
trekked to William's fields to see it. Realizing there's an opportunity to make some cash off this trick,
William erects a tent over the statue and begins charging admission.
The roads and lanes leading to William's farm grow crammed with buggies and carriages from across the state.
New Yorkers are eager to pay their 50 cents to catch a sight of the Cardiff Giant.
Church leaders hail the giant as proof of the veracity of the Bible,
saying it must have died in the great flood of Noah.
Then, after a few days, William gets an offer he can't refuse.
A consortium of local businessmen, headed by David Hannum,
pays him $23,000 for the petrified giant.
Within days, the 3,000-pound statue is excavated,
lifted from its hole,
and taken to Syracuse in upstate New York.
There, the Cardiff giant will go on display
and attract even more visitors.
And among them will be the most famous showman of the age
who will turn the saga of the bogus biblical creature
on its head by creating a forgery of a fake.
Richard Bandler revolutionized the world of self-help
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Even though NLP worked for some,
its methods have been criticized
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Throw in Richard's dark past
as a cocaine addict and murder suspect,
and you can't help but wonder
what his true intentions were.
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It's early November 1869 at a showground in Syracuse, New York, a few weeks after the discovery of the Cardiff Giant. P.T. Barnum pays his entrance fee and pushes through a tent flap into a small, gloomy
auditorium. He takes a seat near the front as the rest of the audience files in, hushed in
anticipation. Thirty-four years ago, Barnum began his career in show business. He also charged
customers 50 cents to see a blind and paralyzed former slave who he claimed was the 161-year-old
former nurse to George Washington. Impressed by
how easy it was to scam gullible New Yorkers out of their money, he created Barnum's American
Museum on Broadway. He stuffed the building with a host of curiosities, including a supposed mermaid
and an actor with dwarfism marketed as General Tom Thumb. Now Barnum is here in Syracuse on the
trail of a new attraction,
one that he hopes will keep New Yorkers coming through his museum doors.
At the front of the auditorium, a showman hypes the audience with a story about the discovery of
the Cardiff Giant and the mystery surrounding the biblical creature. When the showman gives a signal,
the lights are turned up and the Cardiff Giant is revealed, a large stone figure on a wooden platform.
It's so well-preserved that the audience can see the giant's ribs, Adam's apple, even its faint
smile. Crowd gasps in shock before bursting into applause. From the audience's reaction,
Barnum is satisfied that the Cardiff Giant would be a suitable addition to his museum,
so he seeks out David Hannum, the local businessman who bought the statue from William Newell. After introducing himself,
Barnum offers $50,000, more than double the amount David paid to purchase the petrified giant.
But David thinks he's going to earn far more than that in ticket sales, and so has no hesitation in
turning Barnum down. Barnum, though, is too wily an operator to spend his time negotiating.
Instead, he has one of his men sneak into the tent
and create a wax cast of the Cardiff Giant.
Back in New York City, Barnum's staff create a replica.
And within days of his return,
Barnum announces a new display in his museum,
the genuine Cardiff Giant.
He urges his customers not to be fooled
by the other petrified figure in
upstate New York. He assures them that one is fake, but his is the real giant. And many believe him.
Before long, a long line of New Yorkers snakes along Broadway, lining up to see the highly
publicized Cardiff Giant. But David Hannum doesn't take well to Barnum's replica, drawing bigger
crowds than his own original Cardiff Giant.
So he files a lawsuit against Barnum, alleging that the showman's petrified giant is fake and demanding that it be taken off display.
As part of the legal wrangling, both sides hire experts to argue that the opposing gentleman's giant is not real.
A renowned Yale paleontologist writes a scathing report about David Hannum's
Syracuse giant, questioning why there are fresh tool marks on the stone. The report concludes
that the original Cardiff giant is a most decided humbug. The paleontologist's critiques are a
revelation. Of course, Barnum has known all along that his giant is fake, but this report convinces
him that David's must be too. The
Americans' public suspicions are further aroused when witnesses swear they saw a mysterious,
heavy box arriving at William Newell's farm the year before. They start to question why William
wanted a well dug on that exact part of his property. Realizing he's about to be exposed,
the originator of the plot comes clean. George Hull confesses to a newspaper reporter that he had the statue made and buried to
demonstrate the foolishness and gullibility of Christians who readily accept the literal
truth of the Bible.
With this confession, David Hannum's case against Barnum collapses.
The judge rules that Barnum cannot be litigated against for making a fake copy of a fake giant.
But still, the American public doesn't seem to care that both petrified figures are fake. George rules that Barnum cannot be litigated against for making a fake copy of a fake giant.
But still, the American public doesn't seem to care that both petrified figures are fake.
In the weeks following George's admission and the judge's ruling, the lines outside
Barnum's American Museum are as long as ever, and the attraction they still want to
see is the now-disproven Cardiff Giant.
The forgery has become as big a story as the original find, and the statue
is affectionately called Old Hoaxy. The saga of the Cardiff Giant will leave Barnum with a healthy
profit, to the disdain of the scheme's mastermind, George Hull. Irritated at missing out on a fortune
himself, George will attempt a second act of trickery. He will become a serious fraudster,
and this time he will be motivated purely by profit.
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You can listen to The Best Idea Yet early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to the best idea yet early and ad free right now by joining Wondery Plus. It's spring 1877 in Beulah, Colorado,
seven years after the Cardiff Giant was revealed to be fake. George Hull
pats down the top of a recently refilled hole in the ground and grins at his companion,
fossil collector William Conant. William is George's newest co-conspirator, and together
they've just set in motion George's latest scam. After the Cardiff Giant was unmasked
as a hoax, George spent years testing various techniques to create a more
convincing fake petrified body. Once satisfied with the result of his experiments, he fashioned
a human figure out of rock dust, clay, plaster, and animal bones. Then he added a tail, hoping to
trick scientists into thinking that the creature was a common ancestor of humans and monkeys.
George cooked the statue in a kiln for several days
before bringing it here to the Badlands of Colorado.
He intends for it to be discovered
among the region's fossil beds,
but thanks to the Cardiff Giant,
George is too infamous to carry out the scheme on his own,
so he let amateur fossil hunter William in on the plot.
Now George is showing William exactly
where the new, fake, petrified body is buried, and William assures George that he'll remember the plot. Now George is showing William exactly where the new, fake, petrified body is
buried. And William assures George that he'll remember the location. Three months later,
when George is back in New York, William pretends to stumble across the stone body on a fossil
hunting expedition. And just like the Cardiff Giant, the petrified figure becomes a local
sensation, soon named the Solid Muldoon after a popular wrestler.
Having learned his lesson the last time, George leaves William strict instructions not to sell
the fake body. William follows orders and displays it in towns and cities across America,
sharing all the proceeds with George. But without P.T. Barnum's showmanship,
the Solid Muldoon doesn't capture the nation's imagination the same way the Cardiff Giant did.
And George doesn't have much time to cash in.
Because it's not long before an acquaintance who's in on the scam leaks the secret
that the Solid Muldoon is the work of George Hull, the infamous creator of the Cardiff Giant.
And when the news breaks, people quickly lose interest.
The Solid Muldoon disappears, never to be seen again.
But the stone statue that started
George's career as a hoaxer, the Cardiff Giant, will pass through several hands until it's put
on display at the Farmers Museum in New York. It remains there today and still draws interested
onlookers, just as it did more than 150 years ago, after the fake giant was discovered by farm laborers on October 16, 1869.
Next on History Daily, October 17, 1945.
A labor demonstration in Buenos Aires demands the liberation of the country's ousted and imprisoned vice president, Juan Domingo PerĂ³n,
giving rise to a new populist movement known as Peronism.
From Noiser and Airship, this is History Daily. Hosted, edited, and executive produced by me,
Lindsey Graham. Audio editing by Mohamed Shazi. Sound design by Molly Bogg. Music by Lindsey Graham. This episode is written and researched by Scott Reeves Executive Producers are
Alexandra Curry-Buckner for Airship
and Pascal Hughes for Noiser
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