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S3 Ep27: In the Palaces of Crowded Kings: A Conversation with Kenton Spading

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Manage episode 472813760 series 3396427
Content provided by Chasing Earhart. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Chasing Earhart or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
Several years ago, I started hearing about a man making his way through the Amelia Earhart/Fred Noonan disappearance case. What caught my attention wasn’t just his research—it was the way his name kept coming up.
From the moment I became involved in this story, I’ve been drawn to the lesser-known nuances that make up the towering mystery of Amelia Earhart. As I got to know people in the field, one name surfaced repeatedly. No matter the theory, no matter the angle, everyone seemed to be talking about the same guy. He’s written books, published papers, and contributed to nearly every version of this story—including his appearance on Vanished: Amelia Earhart, where he explored a well-known collection of bones discovered on Nikumaroro. That discovery, made by British colonial officer Gerald Gallagher, remains one of the most hotly debated pieces of evidence in this case. Were those bones the final remains of Amelia and Fred, stranded castaways on a remote Pacific island? Or is the truth something else entirely?
When I looked into his work, I immediately understood why he was so widely respected. He doesn’t care about being right. He thinks bigger. His neutrality has allowed him to move freely across this story, collaborating with some of the most prominent figures in the investigation—people who sit in opposing camps, defending starkly different theories.
How does someone do that? How do you keep an open mind in a case that seems determined to pull you down an endless rabbit hole? Tonight, we find out. It’s time to open your ears and your mind. We’re making stops on Nikumaroro, Orona, and Buka—by way of St. Paul, Minnesota.
Welcome back to Chasing Earhart. This is Kenton Spading.
LINKS
SHOW NOTES & FURTHER READING
  • A Lost Sailor or Amelia Earhart? Lost Norwich City Crewmen: Potential Sources of the Human Remains Discovered on Gardner Island (now Nikumaroro Island) in 1940 @ Academia.edu
  • St. Paul employee part of team searching for Amelia Earhart @ US Army Corps of Engineers
  • Null Hypothesis @ Wikipedia
  • Amelia Earhart's Shoes: Is the Mystery Solved? @ Amazon
  • Vanished: Amelia Earhart "Left for Dead" (Part Two) @ Spotify
  • The Chater Report @ TIGHAR's Official Website
  continue reading

112 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 472813760 series 3396427
Content provided by Chasing Earhart. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Chasing Earhart or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
Several years ago, I started hearing about a man making his way through the Amelia Earhart/Fred Noonan disappearance case. What caught my attention wasn’t just his research—it was the way his name kept coming up.
From the moment I became involved in this story, I’ve been drawn to the lesser-known nuances that make up the towering mystery of Amelia Earhart. As I got to know people in the field, one name surfaced repeatedly. No matter the theory, no matter the angle, everyone seemed to be talking about the same guy. He’s written books, published papers, and contributed to nearly every version of this story—including his appearance on Vanished: Amelia Earhart, where he explored a well-known collection of bones discovered on Nikumaroro. That discovery, made by British colonial officer Gerald Gallagher, remains one of the most hotly debated pieces of evidence in this case. Were those bones the final remains of Amelia and Fred, stranded castaways on a remote Pacific island? Or is the truth something else entirely?
When I looked into his work, I immediately understood why he was so widely respected. He doesn’t care about being right. He thinks bigger. His neutrality has allowed him to move freely across this story, collaborating with some of the most prominent figures in the investigation—people who sit in opposing camps, defending starkly different theories.
How does someone do that? How do you keep an open mind in a case that seems determined to pull you down an endless rabbit hole? Tonight, we find out. It’s time to open your ears and your mind. We’re making stops on Nikumaroro, Orona, and Buka—by way of St. Paul, Minnesota.
Welcome back to Chasing Earhart. This is Kenton Spading.
LINKS
SHOW NOTES & FURTHER READING
  • A Lost Sailor or Amelia Earhart? Lost Norwich City Crewmen: Potential Sources of the Human Remains Discovered on Gardner Island (now Nikumaroro Island) in 1940 @ Academia.edu
  • St. Paul employee part of team searching for Amelia Earhart @ US Army Corps of Engineers
  • Null Hypothesis @ Wikipedia
  • Amelia Earhart's Shoes: Is the Mystery Solved? @ Amazon
  • Vanished: Amelia Earhart "Left for Dead" (Part Two) @ Spotify
  • The Chater Report @ TIGHAR's Official Website
  continue reading

112 episodes

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