American History Tellers - History Daily: The Wall Street Bombing
Episode Date: September 16, 2024September 16, 1920. A horse-drawn wagon explodes in the middle of New York’s financial district, killing 30 people.You can listen ad-free in the Wondery or Amazon Music app. Or for all that... and more, go to IntoHistory.com.History 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Wondery Plus subscribers can binge new seasons of American History Tellers early and ad-free right now.
Join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.
It's midday on September 16th, 1920, on Wall Street in New York City.
17-year-old messenger James Saul steps out of the road as a motor car makes its way down the busy street.
James watches the progress of the expensive vehicle with a hint of jealousy.
The driver's probably a rich investor, and James doesn't have that kind of money.
Instead, he spends his days waiting outside the New York Stock Exchange, hoping to earn a few coins carrying messages between the banks that line Wall Street. More than 50 years ago, the New York Stock Exchange became America's biggest
financial marketplace. When rich investors first started meeting there to buy and sell stock,
banks scrambled to set up branches that were close to the action. Now, Wall Street
is a bustling hub where Americans can gain and lose fortunes in a matter of minutes,
so speedy messengers like James are vital to keep the system running smoothly.
But in between jobs, messengers just have to wait around for someone to enlist their services.
A noisy group of brokers exits a stock exchange, and James looks up hopefully,
but none of them gives him a second glance. Instead, the brokers pause on the sidewalk
as a horse-drawn wagon rolls down the street. The wagon stops outside J.P. Morgan's bank,
and the driver hops down from his seat and hustles into a side alley. The wagon is blocking an
intersection, though,
and traffic can't get past. James wonders if the driver's been caught short and needs to
relieve himself. That's all well and good, but his abandoned wagon is quickly turning
Wall Street into a log jam. James is just turning away, shaking his head at the situation,
when an explosion knocks him from his feet. After a few moments, James groggily
rises from the sidewalk, a ringing in his ears and a pounding in his head. As he blinks through
the smoke, he's disoriented by what he sees. There's just a small crater in the road where
the wagon once stood seconds ago. A car that was stuck behind it is now on its side,
and splintered wood is scattered all along the street.
Windows in the surrounding buildings have shattered,
and there are dozens of people lying on the ground,
many with puddles of blood already pooling around them.
Messenger James Saul will spend the rest of the day
ferrying victims of this explosion to the hospital.
But there are more wounded than he can help, and 40 people are beyond saving.
It will soon become clear that they were not killed in a tragic accident, but by a bomb.
And not for another 75 years will America suffer a deadlier terror attack
than when New York's financial district
was torn apart by an explosion
on September 16th, 1920.
Now streaming.
Welcome to Buy It Now,
where aspiring entrepreneurs
get 90 seconds to pitch to an audience
of potential customers.
If the audience liked the product,
it gets them in front of our panel of experts,
Gwyneth Paltrow, Anthony Anderson, Tabitha Brown, Tony Hawk.
Oh, my God.
Buy it now.
Stream free on Freebie and Prime Video.
Have you ever wondered who created that bottle of sriracha
that's living in your fridge?
Or why nearly every house in America has at least one game of Monopoly?
Introducing The Best Idea Yet,
a brand-new podcast about the surprising
origin stories of the products you're obsessed with. Listen to The Best Idea Yet on the Wondery
app or wherever you get your podcasts. 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 September 16th, 1920, the Wall Street bombing.
It's April 29th, 1919, in Atlanta, Georgia, 17 months before the explosion on Wall Street.
49-year-old Thomas Hardwick places a stack of letters on the desk in his study and takes a seat. The mail's just arrived and he opens the first envelope as his coffee cools beside him. As a former U.S.
senator from Georgia, Thomas is used to receiving plenty of correspondence. Often it's just routine
business, but Thomas also gets the occasional angry letter from people who see him as a symbol of a corrupt and failing political
class in Washington, D.C. But today, before Thomas can even open the first envelope,
the walls of his study shake and a loud explosion echoes through the house.
Thomas instantly forgets the mail and rushes out of his study and down the hall to the parlor.
There, thick smoke and dust fills the room. Thomas throws open a window and
waves his arms to try to clear the air. Only when a few seconds have passed does he realize that his
wife and maid are lying unconscious on the floor. Thomas's wife is covered in blood, but her wounds
are only superficial. The same can't be said of the maid. Her hands are severely injured. And when she regains her senses enough to speak to police,
the maid explains that she was opening a package
that had just been delivered with the mail when it blew up.
Investigators soon realize that Thomas had been targeted by a letter bomb.
Within hours of this explosion, the U.S. Post Office is put on high alert,
and all staff are ordered to keep watch for suspicious packages.
It's a warning that comes too late to stop another explosive device being delivered to the mayor of Seattle,
but that bomb thankfully fails to detonate when it's opened.
The following day, 16 more bombs are identified in New York, and experts dispose of them safely.
By the end of the week, investigators have found another 20 bombs.
They're all addressed to politicians, newspaper editors,
even John D. Rockefeller, the richest man in the world.
And there's a common thread that links the targets.
They've all publicly attacked the anarchist movement.
In the middle of the 19th century, anarchism arose as a new political philosophy.
Its adherents believed that the world's leaders have created a system in which the powerful
enrich themselves at the expense of the less fortunate.
But they also believed that the capitalist system was on the brink of collapse, and that
all that was needed was a little push to bring it all crashing down.
To replace capitalism, anarchists favor a fairer distribution of wealth
without the need for governments,
banks, companies, or stock.
And as one of the world's biggest
but most unequal economies,
the United States was fertile ground
for the anarchist movement.
It found many supporters,
including Italian immigrants
who had settled in cities on the East Coast.
Many of them were willing to use force to overthrow the government,
and one of the tactics they used was sending bombs through the mail.
Now, years later, it seems like others are trying it again.
The parcel bombs set off in April 1919, though, have little effect.
The only device that detonates successfully is the one sent to Thomas Hardwick in Atlanta.
But the terror campaign resumes two months later,
when nine more bombs are planted on the same morning.
This second batch of bombs is more powerful than the first,
with 25 pounds of dynamite in every one, and this time they prove fatal.
A New York night watchman is killed when he picks up a parcel left outside a judge's house,
and a second death occurs when a bomb explodes on the doorstep of the U.S. Attorney General.
But that death provides concrete proof that anarchists are once again behind the attacks,
because the man killed was in the process of planting the bomb himself,
and he's a known Italian-born anarchist.
Shortly after his death is announced,
the anarchist movement makes it official and claims responsibility for the attacks.
They leave leaflets near the scene of each bombing,
announcing that a class war is beginning
and that anarchists are prepared to unleash bloodshed, murder, and destruction
in their quest to rid America of what they call its tyrannical institutions.
With anarchists confirmed as a source of the parcel bombs,
authorities will attempt to bring the movement's leaders to justice.
But when their crackdown fails,
they'll move on to alternative methods to apprehend those they suspect of anarchism,
even if it means arresting people for crimes they did not commit.
Richard Bandler revolutionized the world of self-help
all thanks to an approach he developed called neurolinguistic programming.
Even though NLP worked for some,
its methods have been criticized for being dangerous in the wrong hands.
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.
I'm Sachi Cole. And I'm Saatchi Cole.
And I'm Sarah Hagee.
And we're the hosts of Scamfluencers, a weekly podcast from Wondery that takes you along the
twists and turns of the most infamous scams of all time, the impact on victims,
and what's left once the facade falls away.
We recently dove into the story of the godfather of modern mental manipulation,
Richard Bandler, whose methods inspired some of the most toxic and criminal self-help movements of the last two decades.
Follow Scamfluencers on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen to Scamfluencers and more Exhibit C true crime shows like Morbid and Kill List
early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus.
Check out Exhibit C in the Wondery app for all your true crime listening.
This is the emergency broadcast system.
A ballistic missile threat
has been detected inbound to your area.
Your phone buzzes and you look down
to find this alert.
What do you do next?
Maybe you're at the grocery store
or maybe you're with your secret lover
or maybe you're robbing a bank.
Based on the real-life false alarm
that terrified Hawaii in 2018,
Incoming, a brand new fiction podcast exclusively on Wondery Plus,
follows the journey of a variety of characters as they confront the unimaginable.
The missiles are coming.
What am I supposed to do?
Featuring incredible performances from Tracy Letts, Mary Lou Henner,
Mary Elizabeth Ellis, Paul Edelstein, and many, many more,
Incoming is a hilariously thrilling podcast that will leave you wondering,
how would you spend your last few minutes on Earth?
You can binge Incoming exclusively and ad-free on Wondery+.
Join Wondery in Braintree, Massachusetts,
one year after anarchists began a parcel bomb campaign
against prominent American politicians and businessmen.
A janitor at the Slater and Morrill Shoe Company sweeps the factory yard,
clearing up the dust and grime that's built up over the day.
On the other side of metal railings, two factory workers struggle up the street, each with a heavy box in their arms.
The janitor smiles and waves as they pass.
They're carrying the company payroll, and when the janitor finishes his shift, he knows his weekly pay packet will be waiting for him.
But as the janitor resumes sweeping, a commotion breaks out. He turns to see two men pointing
pistols at the workers carrying the payroll. One of the workers drops his box and tries to pull
out his own pistol, but before he can draw, the robbers open fire and he falls to the ground.
The other worker stands rooted to the spot, still clutching
his box. It's obvious to the janitor that this man is terrified and doesn't know what to do.
But the robbers do. They turn their weapons on the second worker and gun him down too.
Then the robbers spot the janitor. He ducks behind a crate as they begin shooting at him
through the railings. The janitor presses himself against the
ground as bullets slam into the wooden box he's taken shelter behind. But after a moment, a Buick
motor car races up the street and screeches to a halt next to the robbers. The two men stop shooting,
throw the payroll boxes into the trunk, and climb in before the car races off. Only then does the
janitor dare emerge from his hiding place.
He scrambles over to the two wounded workers, but it's too late to save them. They're already dead.
When police arrive, the janitor gives a detailed statement about everything he's seen.
Down at the station, he looks through pages and pages of mugshots of known criminals
in case any of them are responsible for the robbery. And after
examining dozens of them, the janitor finally recognizes one. It's the driver of the getaway
car. And according to the notes underneath the mugshot, the man is an Italian anarchist.
Ever since last year's parcel bomb attacks, anarchists have featured heavily on police
most wanted lists. Five months ago, the U.S. Attorney
General Mitchell Palmer ordered the mass arrest of all known and suspected anarchists. What became
known as the Palmer Raids saw 6,000 foreign-born suspects arrested across 36 cities. But the
heavy-handed approach was criticized by civil rights groups and legal aid was arranged for the arrested anarchists. In the end, the vast majority were released without charge. But the violent robbery
in Braintree gives the authorities another excuse to act against the anarchists. Attorney General
Palmer pressures the police to wrap up the case quickly. After the failure of his mass raids,
he's eager to secure a real victory against the anarchist movement.
And in the process of working through the getaway driver's associates,
the police put several Italian anarchists under surveillance.
Eventually, they think they've found the car used for the robbery in the garage.
And when three men arrive to pick the vehicle up, police swoop in.
One of the arrested men has an alibi for the day of the
shooting, but the other two do not. Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti are charged with robbery
and murder. But the evidence against Sacco and Vanzetti is thin. The car in the garage doesn't
match the witness's description. It's an Oldsmobile, not a Buick. And although Sacco and Vanzetti both
own guns like used in the robbery,
they're a common type, and thousands of other weapons could be a match too.
This leads anarchists to view the arrest of Sacco and Vanzetti
as another attempt to intimidate and unfairly target them, just like the Palmer raids.
But their protests don't stop prosecutors from indicting Sacco and Vanzetti for murder
after a three-month investigation. But it's not just prosecutors who've been busy. The anarchists,
too, have been plotting. Two days after Sacco and Vanzetti are indicted, on September 16, 1920,
one of these anarchists will drive a horse-drawn wagon down Wall Street, a road that symbolizes
everything the anarchists hate
about capitalism. The driver will block the street and abandon his vehicle seconds before a bomb
aboard the wagon explodes, plunging the financial district into chaos and sparking a mystery that
will last more than a century. In November 1991, media tycoon Robert Maxwell mysteriously vanished from his luxury yacht in the Canary Islands.
But it wasn't just his body that would come to the surface in the days that followed.
It soon emerged that Robert's business was on the brink of collapse,
and behind his facade of wealth and success was a litany of bad investments, mounting debt, and multi-million dollar fraud.
Hi, I'm Lindsey Graham, the host of Wondery Show Business Movers.
We tell the true stories of business leaders who risked it all,
the critical moments that define their journey,
and the ideas that transform the way we live our lives.
In our latest series, a young refugee fleeing the Nazis
arrives in Britain determined to make something of his life.
Taking the name Robert Maxwell,
he builds a publishing and newspaper empire that spans the globe. But ambition eventually
curdles into desperation, and Robert's determination to succeed turns into a willingness to do anything
to get ahead. Follow Business Movers wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen ad-free
on the Amazon Music or Wondery app. Are you in trouble with the law? Need a lawyer who will fight like hell to keep you out of jail?
We defend and we fight just like you'd want your own children defended.
Whether you're facing a drug charge, caught up on a murder rap,
accused of committing war crimes, look no further than Paul Bergeron.
All the big guys go to Bergeron because he gets everybody off.
You name it, Paul can do it.
Need to launder some money?
Broker a deal with a
drug cartel? Take out a witness? From Wondery, the makers of Dr. Death and Over My Dead Body,
comes a new series about a lawyer who broke all the rules. Isn't it funny how witnesses disappear
or how evidence doesn't show up or somebody doesn't testify correctly? In order to win,
at all costs. If Paul asked you to do something, it wasn't a request.
It was an order.
I'm your host, Brandon James Jenkins.
Follow Criminal Attorney on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen to Criminal Attorney early and ad-free right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts.
It's the evening of September 16th, 1920,
on Wall Street in New York,
a few hours after a bomb exploded and killed 40 people.
52-year-old director of the Bureau of Investigation,
William Flynn, steps out of a motor car, his feet crunching on broken glass.
But as William approaches the New York Stock Exchange,
he's irritated to see dozens of men already sweeping up the debris and washing blood off the sidewalk.
Earlier today, William was having lunch in Washington, D.C.,
when a waiter interrupted with a message about the explosion in
New York. William immediately raced to Manhattan by train to take charge of the investigation,
but his bureau is still only 12 years old and lacks authority, so police in New York haven't
bothered to wait for William to arrive before cleaning up the crime scene. William hurries to
find the officer in charge and tells him to stop.
But the officer refuses.
He's under orders from the New York mayor,
who's determined to prevent a financial panic and insists that the stock exchange must reopen tomorrow as normal.
William sighs.
In his haste, the mayor has destroyed evidence
that might help identify the perpetrators of the bombing.
Still, William gets a stroke of luck when a nearby post box is emptied.
Inside, a letter carrier finds four crude flyers
from a group calling itself the American Anarchist Fighters.
The leaflets are similar to flyers that were found in parcel bombs
mailed to prominent Americans last year,
but these new ones demand the release of political prisoners,
including Nicola Saka and Bartolomeo Vanzetti. But with the physical evidence of the bombing destroyed,
William doesn't have many other avenues to investigate. Over the next few weeks,
his agents try unsuccessfully to find the printer who made the flyers. They have more luck tracking
the blacksmith who shod the horse that pulled the wagon into Wall Street, but he can't provide any helpful information.
So the trail goes cold.
All William can do is blame the bombing on anarchists generally.
Their terror campaign will continue, off and on, for another decade.
But they will never succeed in toppling capitalism or provoking a class war. Still, the Wall Street bombing will
remain the deadliest act of terrorism in United States history until the Oklahoma City bombing
in 1995. And unlike that tragic event, exactly who was responsible for the Wall Street bombing
is still a mystery today. The official line from authorities remains only that unknown anarchists killed 40 people
when they targeted New York's financial district on September 16, 1920.
Next on History Daily, September 17, 1849, Harriet Tubman escapes from slavery with her
two brothers and goes on to become an American
hero. If you like American history tellers, you can binge all episodes early and ad-free right
now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts. Prime members can listen
ad-free on Amazon Music.
And before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey at wondery.com slash survey.
From Noiser and Airship, this is History Daily.
Hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsey Graham.
Audio editing by Mohamed Shazib.
Sound design by Molly Baugh.
Music by Thrun.
This episode is written and
researched by Scott Reeves, edited by Joel Callan, managing producer Emily Burke, executive producers
are William Simpson for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
I'm Tristan Redman, and as a journalist, I've never believed in ghosts. But when I
discovered that my wife's great-grandmother was murdered in the house next door to where
I grew up, I started wondering about the inexplicable things that happened in my childhood bedroom.
When I tried to find out more, I discovered that someone who slept in my room after me,
someone I'd never met, was visited by the ghost of a faceless woman. So I started digging
into the murder in my wife's family, and I unearthed family secrets nobody could have imagined. Ghost Story won Best Documentary
Podcast at the 2024 Ambies and is a Best True Crime nominee at the British Podcast Awards 2024.
Ghost Story is now the first ever Apple Podcast series essential. Each month,
Apple Podcast editors spotlight one series that has captivated listeners with masterful storytelling,
creative excellence, and a unique creative voice and vision. To recognize Ghost Story being chosen
as the first series essential, Wondery has made it ad-free for a limited time,
only on Apple Podcasts. If you haven't listened yet, head over to Apple Podcasts to hear for yourself.