Icebreaker

Published Jan 9, 2024, 10:00 AM

It only takes on person to make big waves in most industries. These two tales, though, are more curious than most.

Welcome to Aaron Manke's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of iHeartRadio and Grimm and Mild.

Our world is full of the unexplainable, and if history is an open book, all of these amazing tales right there on display, just waiting for us to explore. Welcome to the Cabinet of Curiosities. Bob Nelson was born in Boston, Massachusetts, in nineteen thirty six. From the moment he let out his first cry, the cards were stacked against him. His father left, his mother struggled with substance abuse. His stepdad was a literal mob boss. With zero support or guidance. Bomb dropped out of high school in the mid nineteen fifties. He drifted around Boston before moving to Los Angeles, California, where he got a job as a television repairman. Bob liked to work, and he kept the job for years, and then in nineteen sixty two, when he was twenty seven years old, something happened that changed the course of his life forever. He happened upon a book called The Prospect of Immortality. The title caught his eye and he started reading. In the opening pages, the author, doctor Robert Ettinger wrote, most of us now living have a chance for personal physical immortality. We need only arrange to have our bodies after we die stored in suitable freezers against the time when science may be able to help us. Sooner or later. Our friends of the future should be equal to the task of reviving and curing us. This idea became known as the theory of cryonics, and it must have come as quite a shock to Bob. Remember this was nineteen sixty two. There had never been a successful heart transplant before. The theory that a person could be frozen and brought back to life was less medical and i'm more science fictional. But Bob, nearing thirty years old and not having much to show for it, desperately needed something to believe in. The prospect of immortality became his bible, and he wasn't the only one. That same year, he saw a flyer for a meeting of the Cryonics Society of California. The prospect of immortality had made such a stir that people were actually organizing and trying to make the author's theory a reality. The Bob made a note of the date and address. The night of the meeting, he was nervous. He later told a reporter, and I quote, I remember going and thinking I'm not going to be allowed in because I'm not a scientist. I went in and I came out voted president. Just like that, Bob found himself serving as a leader in a growing movement. He embraced his role, connecting with dozens of others who were as passionate about cryonics as him. There was just one problem. None of them were actual doctors or scientists. On the whole.

The Los Angeles cryonics community was populated by self identified futurists, people who were interested in technology that might arise in the future. They were basically a ragtag group of dreamers with a very loose grip on medical science. All their plans for freezing human bodies were purely theoretical, that is until nineteen sixty six. That year, a seventy three year old psychology professor named doctor James Bedford joined the Cryonic Society of California. But he didn't plan on being a member for long. He was dying of kidney cancer, and he volunteered to be the first ever human cryonically frozen. The Cryonic Society agreed to doctor Bedford's wishes. As morbid as it sounds, they were actually excited about the opportunity to make their dreams a reality, and they got to work right away. Bob contracted a company to build a cryonic capsule, which is basically a super insulated coffin, and started trying to source liquid nitrogen. But the Society's plans quickly went awry. Doctor Bedford died much sooner than anticipated, weeks before or the cryonic capsule was set to be finished, and before they had any liquid nitrogen at their disposal. As the president of the Cryonic Society, this was Bob's problem to solve. Unsure what else to do, he contacted friends and neighbors, asking them for help. He scrounged up enough ice to fill the bed of his truck, and then he put doctor Bedford's body inside and drove the corpse to a friend's house, where it stayed in a freezer for three weeks. Surely this wasn't what the late professor had signed up for, but there was no turning back now. When the cryonic capsule was finally finished, doctor Bedford was frozen right away, or at least the way the Cryonic Society thought was right. A mortician injected him with a medical grade anti freeze, and a special machine pumped oxygen into a system. The liquid nitrogen still hadn't come in yet, so they lined the coffin with dry ice and put doctor Bedford's body inside, for all its gore and imperfection. The Cryonic Society touted this as a success. Nelson had led the world's first cryonic freeze, and he did it without so much as a high school diploma. The story inspired futurists worldwide, and more signed up to have their bodies preserved. Many of the attempts were total disasters, but around five hundred people, including doctor Bedford, remained frozen to this day, awaiting a future in which they might be resurrected. And while many modern scientists say cryonics is just wishful thinking, others believe there could be some truth to the theory. Just ask MIT graduate Robert McIntyre. In twenty sixteen, he successfully froze a rabbit and then brought it back to life. The rabbit was unable to make an official statement on the matter. But if doctor Bedford is ever revived, I imagine that he'll be anxious for some conversation. Luckily he won't have any problem breaking the ice. Sometimes a mistake is like a pencil on paper. It's easy to erase. You can apologize, go back and fix your work and do better in the future. But other times, one small oversight is like stepping on a landmine. It sends your whole life up into smoke. Just take the story of e. Forbes Smiley. Beginning in the nineteen eighties, Smiley worked as an antique map dealer. A tall, well dressed man with glasses and gray hair, he certainly looked the part. He specialized in rare maps with artistic or historical value, especially those from the American colonial era, and he was credited with assembling some of the most important map collections in North America. He often spent his days pouring through the archives at esteemed institutions like the British Library, the New York Public Library, and Harvard University. Smiley was extremely successful in his field. He owned multiple homes, He went on frequent lavish vacations. He had last network of friends in the art community, including wealthy clients and well respected academics. All of this to say, when Smiley entered Yale University's bin a key rare book and manuscript library on June eighth of two thousand and five. The staff recognized him. They were happy to set him up with a table in a chair where he could sit and peruse a stack of books filled with rare maps. As he flipped through the pages, Smiley felt a tickle on his nose. He pulled a handkerchief out of his pocket and sneezed into it. He had no idea, though, that at that very moment, he had made a mistake that would ruin his career forever. When he was finished with the books, he got up, pushed in his chair, and wave goodbye to the librarian. She went to tidy up the table and notice something on the floor right beside the chair that Smiley had been sitting on was the blade of an exacto knife. The librarian panicked. There was only one reason a person would bring something like that into the biny key. She ran to call security, and officers caught Smiley before he made it off campus. They searched the antique dealer's briefcase, and inside they found three rare documents, one of which was extremely significant. It was the first ever North American map to label Plymouth, Massachusetts, and it was made by Captain James Cook. This paper alone is estimated to be worth more than one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and Smiley had cut it right out of those library books. He probably would have gotten away with it too, if not for that sneeze. When he reached into his pocket for his handkerchief, he accidentally dropped the blade of his Exacto knife onto the floor. Talk about a fatal mistake, E Forbes. Smiley was promptly arrested. A further search of his briefcase revealed even more rare documents. When he went to trial in two thousand and six, Smiley admitted to stealing at least ninety seven maps from six different institutions, worth a total of about three million dollars. As for why he did it, well, apparently the successful antique dealer had accumulated quite a bit of debt. His lavish lifestyle was bought on credit, and he found himself unable to make the necessary payments, so he took to nabbing rare maps and selling them quickly at a massive profit. Because many of the documents he'd stolen had already been sold. Collectors were forced to return items that they had paid tens of thousands of dollars for. According to the judge, though Smiley was very remorseful. After the ruse was up, he made the effort to return as many stolen maps as possible and agreed to pay two point three million dollars in restitution. Because of this, he was only sentenced to three and a half years in prison. These days, Smiley is once again a free man, but his time in the antique business is definitely over. He now works as a web designer and landscaper on Martha's Vineyard, keeping relatively low profile. It's obvious that e Forbes Smiley made some very bad choices, but I think he'd prefer to say that he simply lost his way. He fell off the map for a while, and now hopefully he's back on the right path. I hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, or learn more about the show by visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. The show was created by me Aaron Mankey in partnership with how Stuff Works. I make another Award winning show called Lore which is a podcast, book series, and television show and you can learn all about it over at the Worldoflore dot com. And until next time, stay curious.

Aaron Mahnke's Cabinet of Curiosities

From the creator of the hit podcast Lore comes a new, bite-sized storytelling experience. Each twice 
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