Before the Devil Had Wings Episode 6: The Devil Takes Flight

January 18
27 mins

Episode Description

For nearly a century, the American Republic quietly honored an obligation it never named. The office of the presidency changed hands repeatedly, from the generation that fought the Revolution through the age of internal fracture, yet the payments continued. Each envelope carried the same phrase: for services rendered.

This episode follows the final years of a man in the New Jersey Pine Barrens who walked where the nation could not. As the country turned its attention to mass armies and open battlefields, the obligation ended not with debate, but with neglect.

By the opening decades of the twentieth century, the presence in the Pines no longer frightened in the old way. It functioned. It kept outsiders hesitant and questions unanswered. When the nation began outlawing what it could no longer manage openly, there were already places where authority arrived late, if at all.

The story had prepared the ground.

The Jersey Devil was not created by panic. It endured because it was useful.

ChatGPT was used to generate the show artwork- the research, writing, and recording are all original work.


Email me: njhistorypodcast@gmail.com


#JerseyDevil #NewJerseyHistory #PineBarrens #AmericanFolklore #ProhibitionEra #HauntedHistory

Bibliography

  • John McPhee, The Pine Barrens (1967)

  • U.S. Presidential Papers, 1789–1865 (National Archives; Library of Congress)

  • William Livingston Papers (New Jersey State Archives)

  • Burlington Gazette (1870s)

  • Atlantic County Pilot (1880s)

  • Camden Post (1890s)

  • Charles B. Skinner, Myths and Legends of Our Own Land (1896–1900)

  • New Jersey and Pennsylvania Newspaper Archives (1909)

  • Proceedings of the New Jersey Historical Society (early 20th century)

  • New Jersey State Police Annual Reports (1910s–1920s)

  • U.S. Treasury Department Reports (1919–1925)

  • Nelson Johnson, Boardwalk Empire (2002)


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