Épisodes

  • PREVIEW: History coming to your feeds this Fall
    Sep 17 2025

    Hometown History is cooking up something new for you this Fall...and it smells like cinnamon.



    To hear more, visit hometownhistory.substack.com
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    2 min
  • S2, Episode 7: Who Collected The Boats?
    Jun 25 2025

    Written and produced by Ryan Ross and Katie Feather. Mixed and edited by Katie Feather. Theme music is La Danse Timide by Howard Harper-Barnes.

    Our website is hometownhistory.substack.com and hometownhistorynj.com. We’re on instagram @hometownhistorynj.

    Thanks for listening!



    To hear more, visit hometownhistory.substack.com
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    25 min
  • S2, Episode 6: The Messy Business of Banking
    Jun 11 2025

    Written and produced by Ryan Ross and Katie Feather. Mixed and edited by Katie Feather. Theme music is La Danse Timide by Howard Harper-Barnes.

    Our website is hometownhistory.substack.com and hometownhistorynj.com. We’re on instagram @hometownhistorynj.

    Thanks for listening!



    To hear more, visit hometownhistory.substack.com
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    25 min
  • S2, Episode 5: Connection, Opportunity & Consequences
    Jun 4 2025

    Written and produced by Ryan Ross and Katie Feather. Mixed and edited by Katie Feather. Theme music is La Danse Timide by Howard Harper-Barnes.

    Our website is hometownhistory.substack.com and hometownhistorynj.com. We’re on instagram @hometownhistorynj.

    Thanks for listening!



    To hear more, visit hometownhistory.substack.com
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    28 min
  • S2, Episode 4: What's In A Name?
    May 28 2025
    (Listen on your favorite podcast player: iTunes, Spotify, Overcast, HeartRadio, Amazon Music)RYAN: The town of Clinton, New Jersey is named after a political figure. Not President Bill Clinton, not even Brigadier General George Clinton (who also served as the country’s 4th Vice President) But the 19th century Governor of New York - DeWitt Clinton. A man you might have never heard of.Historian Stephen Jaffee used to work at the Museum of the City of New York on Fifth Avenue. And to help us understand who DeWitt Clinton was, he sent my producer Katie on a little mission.SXF - NYC STREETSSTEPHEN: As I said I worked at the Museum of the City of New York, and if you go to the façade of that building there are two, like, niches, and there are two bronze statues.KATIE ON SCENE: So I'm here to see the two statues. There's the first one, it's right here.STEPHEN: One is Alexander Hamilton…KATIE ON SCENE: Pretty handsome guy. Honestly, even for a bronze statue.STEPHEN: I mean, the thing about Hamilton, apart from the fact that, you know, a big hit sexy musical was done about him is that he really was the mastermind of the federal government's financial structure and one of the major architects of the rise of the banking system in the country.KATIE ON SCENE: Okay, I'm going to walk to the other side to see if I can find the other guy. Here he is…STEPHEN: …and the other is DeWitt Clinton.KATIE:. …DeWitt Clinton. 1769 to 1828.STEPHEN: And I mean, once the musical started, we had people, like, coming up and doing stuff with this statue, of Hamilton that is, and people are kind of like, oh, who's this guy over here, you know?KATIE ON SCENE: The two icons of New York. Um, okay, just being honest here, he's a lot less handsome than the Alexander Hamilton one.MUSIC ENDRYAN: When we learned about the town of Clinton’s namesake we had a lot of questions. Why would a small town in rural New Jersey name itself after a New York political figure? A governor who was known in his day for building a massive transportation project across New York State?Why were Hunts Mills residents obsessed with this guy? Who was he? And why have we mostly forgotten about him?INTRO THEMERYAN: Welcome to Hometown History, a series about the iconic places and events that make a town someplace people call home - stories that people can tell to their friends old and new about the place they live, did live, or will live. The town of Hunts Mills changed its name to honor New York State Governor DeWitt Clinton - a man it seems it had no association with. Until you look at who DeWitt Clinton was and what he represented to this little milling town.THEME ENDSTEPHEN: DeWitt Clinton is like the best kept secret of the revolutionary era.RYAN: That’s historian Stephen Jaffee, who you heard from at the top of the episode.STEPHEN: Clinton is a New Yorker and whatever national ambitions he has, he's much more a local or a state, a statist, for lack of a better term. All of his political connections come out of being a New Yorker.RYAN: Clinton isn’t usually mentioned alongside founding figures like Hamilton, Madison, Jefferson and Adams for one pretty good reason. He kind of just missed all the important stuff.MUSIC - FIFE AND DRUMSRYAN: DeWitt was only ten years old when the revolution got going. He graduated from King’s College one year before the Constitution was signed. He got his first job in politics not because he fought on the battlefield or attended the Constitutional Convention, but because he had family connections. His first job was secretary to the Governor of New York State - his uncle George Clinton.MUSIC ENDRYAN: From inside New York’s political machine, DeWitt Clinton moved up the ranks quickly. In 1797 he was elected to the state assembly, and then to the State Senate. A few years later he became a three term Mayor of New York City. By then the Clintons had a strong grip on New York politics.STEPHEN: In New York, the Clinton clan, are creating a political base for themselves. So you have a political dynasty around a family, sort of think a little bit like the Kennedys.RYAN: Owning and running New York State politics was a strategic move for the Clintons. In the early 1800s New York and Virigina were the two most powerful states in the union. Three of the first four presidents of the United States came from Virginia (John Adams was the exception). And three of the first four Vice Presidents came from New York (again, except Adams). This wasn’t a coincidence. Candidates from Virginia and New York routinely ran together to ensure the most votes. But eventually New York State grew tired of playing second fiddle.STEPHEN: Dewitt Clinton ran for president in 1812 against James Madison and got pretty close.MUSICRYAN: So why did we never have a President DeWitt Clinton? By all accounts DeWitt was an intelligent and savvy student of politics, his political education was top notch, and he came from an extremely well connected ...
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    17 min
  • S2, Episode 3: The Singer, The Painter & The Scientist
    May 21 2025

    Written and produced by Ryan Ross and Katie Feather. Mixed and edited by Katie Feather. Theme music is La Danse Timide by Howard Harper-Barnes.

    Our website is hometownhistory.substack.com and hometownhistorynj.com. We’re on instagram @hometownhistorynj.

    Thanks for listening!



    To hear more, visit hometownhistory.substack.com
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    24 min
  • S2, Episode 2: When the Red Mill Was a Mill (And When It Wasn't)
    May 14 2025

    Written and produced by Ryan Ross and Katie Feather. Mixed and edited by Katie Feather. Theme music is La Danse Timide by Howard Harper-Barnes.

    Our website is hometownhistory.substack.com and hometownhistorynj.com. We’re on instagram @hometownhistorynj.

    Thanks for listening!



    To hear more, visit hometownhistory.substack.com
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    13 min
  • Episode 1. WHEN THE RED MILL WAS A MILL (AND WHEN IT WASN’T)
    May 7 2025
    New Jersey is known for its turnpikes and commuter rail systems. For things like the Sopranos and the Jersey Shore. But farms and parks and woodsy hiking trails? Not so much.Hence why New Jersey’s state slogan “The Garden State” has become…a bit of a popular punchline.CLIP - MISS CONGENIALITYVICTOR MELLING: “Why is New Jersey called The Garden State?GRACIE HART: “Because it's too hard to fit 'Oil and Petrochemical Refinery State' on a license plate."RYAN: I always loved that movie (first DVD I owned). Ok, so maybe the New Jersey we think of today isn’t exactly a picture of environmental bliss. But New Jersey’s Garden State identity is alive and well in some parts of the state…you just have to know where to look.SFX TRANSITION TRAFFIC TO RIVER SOUNDSRYAN: Hunterdon County is located along New Jersey’s western border. In this sleepier half of the state you can find much of what you’d expect The Garden State to be known for - large open spaces, forest, farmland. Over the years newspaper articles have described Hunterdon as picturesque, bucolic, quaint, pastoral.RYAN: And if Hunterdon County represents what’s remaining of New Jersey’s Garden State identity, then the town of Clinton NJ, located IN Hunterdon County, is it’s platonic ideal. Clinton has the honor of being called the county’s “cultural heart” and Hunterdon’s “best kept secret.”MUSICRYAN: But just like they say “don’t judge a book by its cover,” you shouldn’t judge a small New Jersey town by its, well, picturesque postcard views.CLIP[Spooky sounds] VOICE 1: “Wow this is intricate” VOICE 2: “The sons of Archibald Taylor track him down beat him really badly and cut his ear off” VOICE 3: “It was very secretive that I would haul all these mannequins to Clinton. And maybe there’d be an arm hanging out the window.”RYAN: Because we spent the last six months visiting Clinton. And I can tell you it’s a town that has a LOT of stories to share. It’s played a role in the American Revolution, the rise of industry, and suburban growth in the state. It’s witnessed the rise and fall of financial institutions, and has been the center of controversy and family drama. It's a town that, over the years, has had to reinvent itself…and I mean that quite literally.INTRO THEMERYAN: Welcome to Hometown History. A series about the iconic places and events that make a town someplace people call home - stories that people can tell to their friends old and new about the place they live, did live, or will live. And we’re back baby! This season we’re bringing you stories about a NEW small New Jersey town: Clinton, NJ.RYAN: Stories of how Clinton militiamen were instrumental to George Washington’s crossing of the Delaware; about how Clinton was named after a very unusual political figure (not the one you’re thinking of); and how it survived New Jersey’s highway and transportation boom years. Plus stories of professional rivalries, family betrayals and even a little bit of arson. So actually, not so unlike a season of The Sopranos after all.THEME ENDRYAN: The Red Mill is not just AN icon of Clinton, it’s THE icon. Before I knew anything about Clinton, New Jersey, I knew the Red Mill. And before I knew the mill’s name, I had seen its picture—a three-story, barn-red building on the banks of a scenic river. Its image can be seen all over the state in tourism advertisements for New Jersey. In 2019, it was even painted on the side of a United Airlines Boeing 757 operating out of Newark Airport. I’ve spent a lot of time in Clinton these past few months, researching it’s history and getting to know its residents.RYAN: And whenever I ask someone “What’s in Clinton, New Jersey?” or “What is Clinton known for?” they inevitably say “the Red Mill.” The Red Mill IS Clinton, and Clinton IS the Red Mill. There’s no tighter bond between a town and its landmark. Well, except maybe the Eiffel Tower and Paris, but you get what I mean. But unlike the Eiffel Tower, there’s quite a few more ghosts associated with this landmark.SXF from HAUNTED RED MILLRYAN: I’m speaking, specifically, of the haunted house that the Red Mill houses every October.GINA SAMPAIO: It's all these different rooms and each room kind of has a different theme and there's like things that touch you or things that are uneven or like there's people that you don't know if they're real or not.RYAN: That’s Gina Sampaio, she is the Executive Director of the nonprofit group that runs the Red Mill.GINA: There's animatronics, there's, um, then you walk through this spinning vortex of like lights and colors…RYAN: Gina is exactly the kind of person you’d imagine running this event. She even calls herself a “grave weirdo” when she explains that one of her hobbies is taking care of and researching old gravestones. All that being said, Gina would much rather run a haunted attraction than be in one.GINA: I took my daughter to ...
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    18 min