Stuff You Should Know - What was the Skeleton Army?

Episode Date: December 14, 2023

The Skeleton Army was a rowdy group of folks in England who battled, sometimes violently, with the Salvation Army - largely against  their efforts to keep people from drinking and having a rowdy good... time. Listen in today!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Tune in to the new podcast, Stories from the Village of Nothing Much, like Easy Listening, but for fiction. If you've overdosed on bad news, we invite you into a world where the glimmers of goodness in everyday life are all around you. I'm Catherine Nicolai, and I'm an architect of COSI. Come spend some time where everyone is welcome and the default is kindness. Listen, relax, enjoy. Listen to stories from the Village of Nothing Much, on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
Starting point is 00:00:32 or wherever you get your podcasts. Walter Isaacson set out to write about a world-changing genius in Elon Musk and found a man addicted to chaos and conspiracy. I'm thinking it's idiotic to buy Twitter because he doesn't have a fingertip feel for social, emotional, networks. The book launched a thousand hot takes, so I sat down with Isaacson to try to get past the noise. I like the fact that people who say I'm not as tough on musk as I should be are always using anecdotes from my book to show why we should be tough on musk. Join me, Evan Ratliffe, for On Musk with Walter Isaacson. Listen on the iHeart Radio App Apple Podcast
Starting point is 00:01:08 or wherever you get your podcasts. Hey everybody, we want to let you know that we are doing our traditional Pacific Northwest swing for our live show next year. In fact, the end of January next year, very early next year. And we're starting out in Seattle, Washington, on January 24th at the Paramount Theatre. It's huge. That's right.
Starting point is 00:01:30 And then on to Portland on January 25th at Revolution Hall. The place we always are. It's kind of our home away from home in Portland. And then we're going to wrap it all up at the thing that started the Pacific Northwest tour in the first place all those years back, SF SketchFest will be at the Sydney Goldstein Theatre on Friday, January 26th, right Chuck? That's right, and remember you can go to stuffyshedno.com, click on Tours, in order to get to the correct ticket link or go to the venue page only, do not go to scalpersites. That's right, and we'll see you guys in January, okay?
Starting point is 00:02:01 Do not go to scalper sites. That's right, and we'll see you guys in January. Okay. Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of I Heart Radio. Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh and there's Chuck, and, well, I was gonna say Jerry's here, but that would be a dirty, filthy lie.
Starting point is 00:02:24 True, it's you. It's you and me, Chuck. Yeah, it's about, but that would be a dirty, filthy lie. True. It's here. It's you and me, Chuck. Yeah, it's about to say just like the old days, but Jerry was around from the beginning. I wasn't around from the beginning. Man, so I guess this is a periodical situation we find ourselves in, just like the periodical situation. Can I say a couple of quick things here? Yes.
Starting point is 00:02:48 First of all, I want to congratulate listener Corey Wagner, because this topic is from Corey. Nice way to go Corey. Yeah, listener suggestion, which is great. And also want to officially welcome Mr. Gibson Bryant into the family, the new puppy. Oh yeah, he's cute. He's cute. Gibson was being fostered through the Lifeline organization that we work with a lot here in Atlanta. And Foster Mom Rachel was just wonderful and Gibson's little Koonhound Shepherd mix and he's awesome. And it's great. So far so good. He's just, he and the cats, they got to, they got to work it out. So far, it's not great. Oh no. So it just takes a little time. I figure,
Starting point is 00:03:39 you know, a week or two usually is based on like, when we've dogs at other dogs. Uh-huh. Because the cats love dogs, our dogs, but like a new dog comes in and they're like, yeah, they've got to, he has to prove himself to them. Yeah, they just got to, you know, they got to work it out. It'll take a little time, but he's a very sweet boy. He's, he's fitting right in. He looks like it. I guess you've posted pictures on your Instagram page. Yeah, Gibson's on there. Chuck the podcaster. If you want to check out this
Starting point is 00:04:12 handsome little leaky boy. Nice. Well, welcome, Gibson. Congratulations, Chuck. Yeah, to the stuff you should know family. The stuff you should know army. I see where this is going. It is. I normally would have just left it at, yes, the stuff you should know, army. I see where this is going. It is. I normally would have just left it at, yes, the stuff you should know, family, but the reason the stuff you should know, army ties into this because we're talking about armies, but fake armies. When, believe it or not, the stuff you should know, army
Starting point is 00:04:38 is a fake army. Oh, really? There's not a lot of like, international conflict or killing or shooting a machine guns with the stuff you should know Army. So yes, I would say it's a fake Army. Well, what's the very definition of Army? I don't even know. A group that engages in international conflicts and kills and shoots machine guns. Actually, well, no, it can be a large number of people organized for a purpose, like an army of photographers.
Starting point is 00:05:05 I guess so. I think those are called gaggles though. Okay. Gees enough photographers. Okay. No offense men, of course, who are great people at this stuff, you should know Army. Oh, of course. Greatest. Yeah. So there are other armies that are who's patterns of killing are questionable at best. And that includes both the Salvation Army, but less so the Skeleton Army. Because if any of the groups I've just mentioned just now bore the closest resemblance to an army, it would be the Skeleton Army. Probably, and this is when I had not even heard of until Corey Wagner sent this in. Same. And so yeah, I until Corey Wagner sent this in. Same. And so yeah, I just thought we should dive in
Starting point is 00:05:50 a little bit on the Salvation Army first, probably, right? Yeah, I'm sure people are like, what are you guys talking about with the Salvation Army? Just wait, hold your horses, please. Yeah, you've probably heard of the Salvation Army. They are, I mean, they're an international organization at this point, right? Yes. They have been doing it since the 1870s, I believe, late 1870s. And their mission is to basically combat poverty, where it's at, like they go to where poverty is at. And apparently, in
Starting point is 00:06:22 the United States alone, they serve 23 million people a year. So they're doing some significant work. And I don't wanna walk past the fact that they're also a pretty controversial organization, especially today. They're a Christian organization, a Protestant Christian organization at its core from their founding.
Starting point is 00:06:42 So they have sometimes unfriendly views or have held unfriendly views toward LGBTQ plus community. And now they've kind of revised it to say like, yeah, we don't mind. Just don't tell us that you're gay. You can come work with us anytime you want. And that's not quite enough, but at the same time, there's people who are on the conservative Christian right who are like, that's too far. So the salvation army finds itself in a very ticklish position right now. And I just, that doesn't have anything to do with this particular episode, but I think it'd be kind of disingenuous to just not mention that at all.
Starting point is 00:07:21 Yeah. They were founded by a gentleman named George Booth. He was born in England and nodding him in 1829 and was a Methodist preacher at first and was, you know, the picture I get of George Booth from kind of reading up on him is that he kind of from the start was a bit of a rabble ralzer within the church as far as like, you know, he was industry preaching, he was frustrated with the sort of formalities of the church, the higher arches of the church, probably felt like, you know, the church isn't helping the people that are most in need.
Starting point is 00:07:58 Yeah. It was maybe a little too disconnected from poverty and like the real people out on the streets. So that was sort of his, it seems like he was charged from the beginning, like within himself, to do something bigger than just be a standard Methodist preacher. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, I get the impression he kind of touched on at that. He probably viewed the church as an institution as really detached from the people who needed it's helped most. So he started an organization, he decided to kind of go help people where they're at. So he started street preaching, apparently based
Starting point is 00:08:37 on American revivalists of the early 19th century. And like he would just stand on the street corner and preach and so too would his wife This is a time where if you were super religious like this and you said women can preach to and let's go help the poor directly That was deeply progressive at the time in England England was so ridiculously stodgy conservative that I read about a magazine That in its inaugural edition promised that it would do nothing to help along this morbid desire for change that they were just going to keep things exactly the way that they were. And that's what the establishment wanted. People like George Booth are like, that's not working for a whole huge segment of society. People like George Booth are like that's not working for a whole huge segment of society.
Starting point is 00:09:29 Yeah, his wife, Catherine Mumford, when they married played a big part, played a big part in this whole story actually. So you can kind of put a, no, don't put a pin in her. She's, she's there. I can't see the skeleton army putting a pin in her. No pin, this is, or maybe flinging a dead rat her way. Yeah. Nope, and this is maybe flinging a dead rat her way. Yeah. So in 18, as a story goes, at least in 1878, he was dictating a letter and he said, the Christian mission is a volunteer army, capital C, capital M. And then he said, no, no, no, strike that and perhaps struck it himself and crossed out volunteer and wrote down salvation, a salvation army.
Starting point is 00:10:06 And that was sort of, you know, salvation army is so ubiquitous, especially around Christmas time in the United States when they, you will, people, I think, generally sort of associate salvation army with either dropping off clothes and toys that you don't want at a salvation army store or buying things from a salvation army store or Around Christmas when they have Santa Claus is ringing that bell With that kettle outside and they are asking people to donate their spare change or what have you? Yes, and if you know by Christmas time You get annoyed at that ringing of the bell that you hear all the time.
Starting point is 00:10:45 How your lucky stars that you weren't born in England in the 1870s, because you would have been super annoyed by the Salvation Army at that time. Yeah, absolutely. And that was sort of my deal with the Salvation Army. That's how I knew them. And I knew they did obviously a lot of charitable works, but I didn't really ever stop to think about the whole army thing, the military aspect. Because when I earlier said like an army can be just a collection of people, that wasn't
Starting point is 00:11:16 how they meant it. They meant it is in, you know, not we're going to take up arms, but they gave themselves, they were uniforms, they gave themselves military ranks, Booth named himself the general, and it became like, I think their newspaper was called the War Cry, their initiation creed were called the Articles of War. So they really sort of, I don't wanna say leaned into,
Starting point is 00:11:38 I'm really trying to stop saying that. They were army forward. Yeah, they were very army forward in a sort of militaristic sense. But again, not like, hey, we're going to, you know, start a real war, but they were just like, we're warriors for Christ, basically. Yeah. To be initiated, you had to kill a man with your bare hands. They were pretty serious about the army thing.
Starting point is 00:12:03 Yeah. But the reason that they were so into the army, that was part of the zeitgeist at the time. This is the Victorian age, the English empires at its peak at the time, and the English Empire got that way because of the military. So the military is highly regarded. So it kind of made sense to kind of go with that. It'd be like today, oh boy. It'd be like fashioning yourself after the Swifties. If you were founding like a new rescue mission organization, I would mess with them. No, you would not.
Starting point is 00:12:38 So he established this in pretty short order, he started to use the Salvation Army to just, it was set up to achieve his aims. And his aims, we kind of touched on a little bit, but they're pretty straightforward. And the biggest one really is, if you want to help poor people go to the poor people and help them directly, that's how you help poor people. That's just what you have to do. You have to get your hands dirty as it was. That was pretty much the foundation of the Salvation Army. From what I can tell, it's a big part of it still today. Yeah, absolutely, which is great. Their mantra was soup, soap, salvation. In other words, help
Starting point is 00:13:22 feed the poor, help, I mean soap, I don't think they literally meant to help clean them, but they may have just sort of too. I think that sort of stood for lift people out of poverty and also bring them to Christ. I mean, that was a big part of it. We can't ignore that. And as it pertains, say what?
Starting point is 00:13:43 Bring them to who? Christ, Jesus Christ. Oh, oh Jesus Christ. I got you Do you think I'm it Jimmy Christ? Billy Christ name. I don't think so I think Chris He could run out of town on a rail house pronounce people would say Chris these days, right sure Sure, I mean that that's got to be a last name. C H R I S T. Yes. If we have any listeners out there who that's your last name and you go by Christ, please write it. We want to hear all about your life. Yeah, especially if it's Jimmy Christ, I would love to know you. And another big part is it, especially as
Starting point is 00:14:18 it pertains to the skeleton army who will learn about here in a minute is that alcohol is bad. They were way way into the temperance movement and alcohol was just a big, big evil. And that would factor really, really heavily into the goings-on between the salvation army and the skeleton army. Yes. They also, like we said, women can preach. That was very radical, very progressive at the time. And they also were super into music. I don't, I didn't see why, I guess, General Booth himself was
Starting point is 00:14:53 particularly into music, because again, this whole, this whole organization seems like an extension of him and his wife as well. I don't want to just call her that, Catherine. Yeah, Catherine's views as well. I think they kind of jibed really well together, but you're into the same bands. Exactly. There was a quote that's often attributed to George Booth that may or may not have been said by him, but it fits. It's, why should the devil have all the best tunes? And I'm pretty sure he was making a failed reference
Starting point is 00:15:25 to black Sabbath. Right, and eventually Striper. No. He would have been way indistriper. I was reading about them the other day. Striper. I can't believe I didn't tell you this. Did you, how far did you follow them?
Starting point is 00:15:40 When did you leave off from Striper? When did I leave the Striper Army? Yes. You know, as I sort of transitioned out of going to church, so that would have been like middle high school. So they were still doing like the black and yellow? Yellow and black attack? Yes.
Starting point is 00:15:58 I think that was the name of one of their records. Yeah, I mean, they were still around. I think this was right before they had a secular ballad hit. Okay. Yes. So, yes, they, you transitioned and shortly after that, they transitioned and they left all that god stuff behind and released a couple of albums and if they did not do very well, I think they were pretty surprised. They thought, well, we'll just go more mainstream. And it didn't work. They were more successful mainstream-wise
Starting point is 00:16:30 as a Christian forward metal band than they were as like a regular metal band. Yeah, the sweet brothers. Is that who they were? Yeah, Michael and Matthew sweet. Like Matthew sweet, I want you to be my girlfriend Matthew sweet No, in fact, maybe it wasn't Matthew. Maybe I'm conflating, but I know Michael sweet was I think he was the the singer Okay, Michael sweet and then I think the drummer was Jimmy Christ
Starting point is 00:16:57 No actually Oh, man. I remember some of those names. I don't remember or maybe the drummer was the other brother. I remember he played sideways on stage. Oh, it did. That's awesome. Which is interesting. Do you still have the action figures? No, I don't know if I still have that record. I'll have to look through my vinyl.
Starting point is 00:17:15 Yeah, you do. Uh, yeah, I was into that for a little while. Okay. Well, at any rate, I don't, yeah, I just, I don't remember how I was reading about Striper, but I was reading all about their career the other day. I don't know how I stumbled on it. It's easy to fall into a Striper rabbit hole if you're a certain age. I did.
Starting point is 00:17:30 Yeah. So, yeah, they were in the music. The thing is, and they wanted to use music, not Striper, we're talking back about the Salvation Army. Although, they, Striper wanted to do the same thing. They wanted to use music to get God's message across. Absolutely. Unlike striper, they had zero musical talent, but were very happy to be as loud as possible. So you know the image you have of like,
Starting point is 00:17:55 temperance people and like kind of old like goody-to-shoes Christians in the 19th century, banging on a huge drum singing songs about Jesus and all that. Sure. That is based in reality. That was a salvation army and everyone who wasn't in the salvation army loathed them for that. Yeah, it was pretty annoying if you were enjoying a pint in a pub and the salvation army
Starting point is 00:18:20 came around. Yeah, because in addition to going to the poor, where the poor were, they figured if you want to save sinners, go to where the sinners are. So they would storm into pubs and start singing religious hymns at the top of their lungs, banging drums, like telling people they were going to hell. And these people are just trying to unwind, you know, after a hard day's work at the docks. Or who knows?
Starting point is 00:18:41 Or they had no job and they were just getting loaded. Yeah. Or they're celebrating a promotion at the docs. I don't know. The thing is they did not want to hear that at the time. And even if you weren't in the pubs, just hearing them go down the street, preaching all day, Sunday, sometimes during the week too, they really purposefully made a nuisance of themselves
Starting point is 00:19:01 because they were really assertive and hostile almost and shoving their message about salvation down everyone's throat whether they wanted to hear it or not. All right, I think that sets the stage. Time for a break? Yes, for sure. All right, we'll be right back after this. You bet. Tune in to the new podcast, Stories from the Village of Nothing Much. Like easy listening, but perfection. If you've overdosed on bad news, we invite you into a world where the glimmers of goodness in everyday life are all around you. I'm Catherine Nicolai, and you might know me from the bedtime story podcast, Nothing Much
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Starting point is 00:22:36 as Isaacson breaks down how he captured a vivid portrait of a polarizing genius. Listen to On Musk on the iHeart Radio app Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Alright, so the stage is set. The Salvation Army is firmly in place and they are going around aside from doing great things for the poor. They are going around and go into pubs and banging their pots and pans and their drums and they're singing all these religious songs and the people do not like it. So that is the sort of the position that they're in at this point. So what forms is what's called the skeleton army to literally combat the salvation army. Ed helped us out with this one. And there's, I would argue that there aren't two origins.
Starting point is 00:23:41 There's one origin, but the sort of second part of the origin story we'll get to, is that fair to say? It's fair but confusing, sure. All right. Well, the first, you know, basically how they formed is what we've been talking about. They were literally just annoyed at the Salvation Army coming around telling them not to drink singing songs and loudly preaching and disrupting their pub time. And so the initial response was just jeering at them. I sit down and have a beer, you know, that kind of thing, being very sarcastic. And then things started just to escalate, sort of little by little little because these were drunks basically. Right.
Starting point is 00:24:26 And when you're someone engaging a drunk and telling them not to drink, that's not going to go over too well. And Timpers will genuinely flare at some point. Yeah, for sure. I think we said the Salvation Army set itself up in 1878. By 1879, the first newspaper account of a clash between the Salvation Army and people who hated the Salvation Army, made it into a newspaper. I think there was an incident in Liverpool. And this is not the first incident, it's just the first incident that got written up in the paper.
Starting point is 00:24:59 And the reason it got written up is because there was a riot, a riot. People hated what the Salvation Army was doing so much that they would often trigger riots whenever they started doing their marches. And they were roundly blamed for this. Like at the time, as we'll see, it kind of came out differently in the end, but everyone blamed them for just existing and doing what they were doing.
Starting point is 00:25:24 They felt that the Salvation Army was responsible for the riots that the people who were against the Salvation Army would carry out when the Salvation Army came around. Yeah, exactly. So 79, like you said, was the first noted one in Liverpool. And then, you know, if you read contemporaneous accounts, which we did of the time, they just started popping up here and there. In March of 81 in the eastern of London, there were some guys leaving a pub and they beat up a bunch of Salvation Army, I guess what would they be called, soldiers? Yeah, I think so.
Starting point is 00:26:03 Okay. There were some Salvationists women, which they were called, soldiers? Yeah, I think so. Okay, there were some salvationists women, which they were called, hallelujah, lasses was a nickname that were entrapped with some rope by the crowd. They were getting hot coals thrown at them. And this sort of played out, how it played out in most places.
Starting point is 00:26:20 Things got pretty ugly when I joked about throwing dead rats at them, I wasn't kidding. That was a real thing that they did. Apparently, dead rats and live cats, and at least one instance. Yeah. There was another instance where there was a guy who was testifying during a Salvation Army meeting, and 40 people with chamber pots stormed the, and dumped urine all over the man. Yeah. That happened. They were in their own meeting. They weren't even out on the street or in a pub.
Starting point is 00:26:51 That's how hated these people were. They would be physically assaulted. They would have, they would have just all sorts of stuff thrown at them in addition to dead rats, dead fish. And there were plenty of accounts of not just men, but also women and even children being assaulted by the crowds. But you said the hallelujah glasses
Starting point is 00:27:11 were basically roped with hot coals thrown at them. There was an account somewhere that said between 12 months, this would have been in the, probably the early 1880s. Across England, 669 salvationists, 251 of those were women, were quote, knockdown kicked or brutally assaulted. 56 buildings of the army were stormed and partially wrecked. That was another thing that people against the Salvation Army like to do. They like to try to burn down their meeting halls, sometimes while they were in it. And then 86 salvationists, 15 of them women were
Starting point is 00:27:45 thrown in prison. So like, it was a, it was a really like hardcore thing to go out and do as a salvation army soldier. Yeah, oh, absolutely. And so, yeah, I hope he didn't pain it. It's too light of a brush. Like, oh, they would just sort of, you you know yell at them and cheer at them and throw dead rats and things. It got physically violent. It was not a good scene. The Salvation Army for their part when you mentioned the music one thing that they were fond of was and they still do that today in England is they take popular songs and change the words at like soccer games that their football games. Like these these old school pub sing-alongs,
Starting point is 00:28:27 they would change it to their local football team or whatever. And so the history of just changing lyrics, I mean, I say it's a little lazy, quite honestly, maybe write a new song altogether, but that's okay. Sure. But they would do that,
Starting point is 00:28:42 the Salvation Army would do that. So they would take popular pub songs, change up the lyrics to suit them and their Christian message, Ed dug up some of the titles that were pretty great. Oh, every land is filled with sin is not bad. My favorite is the devil and me.
Starting point is 00:28:58 We can't agree. I hate him and he hates me. It sounds like agreement. So, let's do another nothing to think about it. But this is what's going on. This only angered the people in the pubs even more because they're like, those are our songs and they're, hey, let's get drunk songs that we sing together. Don't change them around and sing them in our face because I might assault you or dump
Starting point is 00:29:22 urine on your head. Yeah, there was another song that kind of gets across the Salvation Army sentiments about the places they were visiting. It's called out of the gutters. We pick them and There was I read that there was resentment among a lot of the lower working class groups who were getting visited by these people being helped out with their Poverty strickiness who were like this is my neighborhood that you're talking about and singing about as the gutter. So they offended, they managed to offend and annoy essentially everybody.
Starting point is 00:29:54 And yet, what was really interesting about this is that they started to grow. Like each Sunday, there'd be more and more of them, and more and more of them. And they would, like their meeting halls would get bigger and bigger to grow. Like each Sunday, there'd be more and more of them and more and more of them. And they would like their meeting halls would get bigger and bigger because there were more Salvation Army members who had joined, who had been picked out of the gutter, or who had said, I'm giving up the devil drink or whatever reason, had decided to join the Salvation Army. And we're now the very people who were annoying their former selves. Yeah, or their friends. the very people who were annoying their former selves.
Starting point is 00:30:25 Yeah, or their friends. Man, I'll bet that was uncomfortable. Oh, man. So they had other tactics. The Salvation Army had white uniforms. So they would try and mar those uniforms in a number of ways. One is there was a narrow alley leading to one
Starting point is 00:30:43 of their meeting halls and they would paint a sticky tar on the alley walls. They would throw eggs that had blue paint in them. They would then in turn sometimes take the original pub songs that they had changed Salvation Army into Christian songs back into more body versions of their Christian songs and sing them back into more body versions of their Christian songs and sing them back into them and even mess with their old sort of motto which was soup soap What was the third one salvation?
Starting point is 00:31:14 Soup, soap, salvation to beer beef beer and back which is tobacco It's pretty hilarious. So yeah, so there people were getting creative, but it was also truly violent at times. It was, and even if it wasn't violent, think about how annoyed you'd be if you weren't on either side. Because it gave people who would give the greatest resistance and hostility toward the Salvation Army were the exact same people that would do this in a pub today. Twenty-somethings who are already feeling pretty rowdy, probably the drunkest of the people in the pub. Imagine just being like us chuck, we're just trying to have
Starting point is 00:31:53 like here in a booth and not only is the Salvation Army going off, but now it's being doubly amplified because the other people, these hooligans are essentially pushing back just as loud if not louder. I would just be like, shut up. Well, that's why we end up in a coffee house and then we've lost all credibility as cool guys. We could, we end up in a coffee house and we just bring our own flasks, right?
Starting point is 00:32:19 Oh, there you go. We just regain some credibility. Did we ever have credibility as cool guys? Psh, I did. I don't know about you. I did not have credibility as cool guys? I did. I did not. Yeah, you did. I did not. Yeah, I did not.
Starting point is 00:32:30 I did not. I did not. I did not. I did not. I did not. So, we should talk a little bit about Susanna Beatty. She was a captain in the Salvation Army who died in either 1881 or 1882. And the Salvation Army will say, and there are some contemporaneous accounts too that we saw in newspapers and stuff,
Starting point is 00:32:56 where she was essentially killed by the skeleton army. She was beaten. I saw in one of the newspapers that said she was kicked in her womb. I was hoping you weren't going to say that. That is so tough to hear. It is. It is. Well, and I don't know if that implies that she was pregnant because I didn't see that. I don't know. I think that what they were saying is she probably had internal bleeding from from in her abdomen from those injuries. I couldn't quite tell, but at the end of the day, she was killed by this skeleton army, which is horrific, and this elevation army today, named Sura and celebrates her as their
Starting point is 00:33:32 first martyr. Also, some skeleton army member was killed by a cop, I think, was cracked in the head with the baton. That's a skeleton army guy, right? Yeah, a skeleton army guy, but this sort of thing didn't happen much in terms of the skeleton army and the police because it seems like the police. And almost every case was anti-savation army. And it looks like it, depending on where you were and what was going on and who the particular cop was, may have even sort of helped things along or let the skeleton army go and maybe aided them a little bit
Starting point is 00:34:12 and a lot of these riots. Yeah, we kind of touched on it earlier that the establishment wanted things just as they were. They didn't like this progressive hostile Christian group, like organizing the working classes, right? So they were, since they were already in charge, they were basically, if not directly informing the courts and the police, like not to intervene against the skeleton army. And certainly if anything, if you're going to arrest anybody, arrest those rabble-rousers, the Salvation Army. So they had no formal structural protection essentially.
Starting point is 00:34:49 If they did anything, they usually arrested the Salvation Army members. Most of the time, they didn't do anything because the power structure in each town was pretty much diametrically opposed to the Salvation Army. Yeah, absolutely. And then in that one article that you sent from back then,
Starting point is 00:35:08 it seems like a lot of these counter-protests, if you want to call them that, or these riders were either brewery owners or brewery owners and their employees. So it kind of became like a literal war against like, temperance and alcohol. It was so heavily intertwined. Because these brewers were like,
Starting point is 00:35:32 we don't want these people come in here and you know, the writings on the wall of what's going on in America. And we're not gonna have a prohibition. So the brewers and their employees are like fighting back against these people preaching against alcohol. Yeah. And again, I don't want to like underestimate the impact that these, the idea that they were
Starting point is 00:35:52 organizing the working class had on scaring the upper class as well. Yeah, yeah. Because at the time, if you were, you know, wealthy, if you had a title, like you were in charge, if you were working class, you were not in charge. The best you could hope for is that the wealthy would look out for you when they were making laws, which probably didn't work out very much. So that was a big part of it, too. And then also, even Protestants didn't like them. Because remember, George Booth was like, I don't like this church hierarchy stuff.
Starting point is 00:36:24 I'm just going to go start preaching on the corner. That was very much carried into the Salvation Army. So the Protestant churches, the Methodists in particular, were like, we don't like you. The Catholic really didn't like them because there was that whole Catholic Protestant division that dated all the way back to the 16th century. So basically no one liked this elevation army and everyone was essentially working against them. Yeah, for sure. Depending on, I mean, it depends on kind of where you were and who was there as to how violent this could get. If they, if there was like a sort of a younger, more rabble rousing preacher, a lot of times, especially if it was like a sort of a younger more rabble rousing preacher
Starting point is 00:37:05 A lot of times especially if it was a woman that was coming in and leading the charge things could escalate a little more quickly I know there was a 20-23 year old woman a captain in the Salvation Army named Ada Smith who Was really enthusiastic and really like to get in the faces of these dudes in the pubs. And other times, you know, it was someone who maybe wasn't quite as in your face. And things didn't go quite as sideways. Apparently, if it was a tourist town or a port town, had a lot to do with it too, right? Yeah, for sure, because if it was a tourist town, you don't want like the Salvation Army running around telling everybody they're going to hell,
Starting point is 00:37:46 that's not good for tourism. So they're actually directly affecting people's livelihoods. That's one. If it was a port town, there's probably a lot of drinking going on. So the people in the town don't want to hear that. If it was a, like say a country town, suburb of London, it was probably a little more genteel.
Starting point is 00:38:10 I get the impression that the more rough and tumble the populace, the more incidents of violence, the Sevation Army faced. But also, I don't wanna make it sound like they weren't triggering people. They definitely were that Captain Ada Smith you mentioned. She was in Worthing. In Worthing was essentially ground zero for riots that took place in the mid 1880s. Like straight up riots where the people were attacking the town hall because they're so upset about the Salvation Army being
Starting point is 00:38:41 around. Like they were they were provoking people for sure. I'm not blaming them for riots, like as we'll see in a minute that they were, but they definitely were provoking people intentionally as well. Yeah, yeah, for sure. Should we take another break? Yeah. All right, we'll take our second break and we'll talk about the sort of where these guys might have come from on the skulls and army side to begin with. Tune in to the new podcast, Stories from the Village of Nothing Much, like Easy Listening, but Perfection. If you've overdosed on bad news, we invite you into a world where the glimmers of goodness in everyday life are all around you. I'm Catherine Nicolai, and you might know me from the bedtime story podcast, Nothing
Starting point is 00:39:48 Much Happens. I'm an architect of Kozy, and I invite you to come spend some time where everyone is welcome and kindness is the default. When you tune in, you'll hear stories about bakeries and walks in the woods. A favorite booth at the diner and a blustery autumn day. Cats and dogs and rescued goats and donkeys. Old houses, bookshops, beaches were kites flying, and pretty stones are found.
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Starting point is 00:41:45 What he got was a subject who also soed chaos and conspiracy. I'm thinking it's idiotic to buy Twitter because he doesn't have a fingertip feel for social emotional networks. And when I sat down with Isaacson five weeks ago, he told me how he captured it all. They had Kansas spray paint and they're just putting big axes on machines and it's almost like kids playing on the playground. Just choose them up left, right, and center. And then like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, he doesn't even remember it, getting the bars, done an excuse, being a total f***. But I want the reader to see it in action.
Starting point is 00:42:18 My name is Evan Ratliffe, and this is On Musk with Walter Isaacson. Join us in this four-part series as Isaacson breaks down how he captured a vivid portrait of a polarizing genius. Listen to On Musk on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. So skeleton army is kind of this formalized term for the groups of people who essentially organized to try to beat the salvation army out of town, do whatever they could to get rid of them, including lots and lots of violence. And again, trying to burn down their meeting halls and stuff.
Starting point is 00:43:08 And there's a historian named, I think John Hare, who wrote an article in 1988 in folklore that Ed found, where he basically says there's a really high likelihood that the skeleton armies actually grew out of what are called the bonfire boys, or bonfire clubs, who would celebrate the 5th of November, not the 5th of May, but the 5th of November, in the same way that people used to celebrate Devils Night in Detroit, In the same way that people used to celebrate devil's night in Detroit by just burning down everything in sight, marching and just causing trouble and getting super drunk. Yes. And as it will probably do one on this in full at some point, but remember, remember the fifth of May.
Starting point is 00:44:01 We're laughing because Josh said May and we cut it out. Yeah. Or did we leave it in? I think we cut it out. Yeah. Or did we leave it in? I think we cut it out. I guess we'll see. The fifth in November goes back to if anyone has ever seen the movie V for Vindetta. So good. With Natalie Portman.
Starting point is 00:44:16 Good movie. And Guy Pierce. Yeah, of course. Oh, no. Yeah, it was Guy Pierce, right? No, it was the weird clone guy from the Matrix. Him. Oh, he was, yeah, he was the dude. The Mr. Runders. Yes.
Starting point is 00:44:33 Yeah, what's a, what's a guy's name? Hugh Laurie. In 1605, there were Catholic conspirators who tried to blow up Parliament because that would have killed the Protestant king James I and hoped that there would be a Catholic king to fill that role, to fill that power vacuum. It's a great point. And England would be, you know, back to being a Catholic nation after the split from
Starting point is 00:45:04 in 1534 that you talked about earlier that King Henry the eighth brought about. So remember, remember the fifth of November, every November fifth there was, and I believe still is just a lot of sort of celebrations, big parties, big bonfires, they would light tar barrels on fire. It got pretty rowdy, and like you said, they were called the Bonfire Clubs, and there are historians, namely that one guy you talked about, who basically say, these guys were still around in the 1870s and 1880s.
Starting point is 00:45:38 And there's a lot of evidence that kind of shows that they were probably also like, hey, we've got pitchforks, we've got torches, we have the same sort of anti-establishment attitude. So we'll just sort of start doing Skellas Narmee stuff as well. Right, there was actually a 1885 article in the Sussex Coast of Mercury newspaper that basically said that they were watching the Skeleton Club, the new Skeleton Club there coast of Mercury newspaper that basically said that they were watching the skeleton club,
Starting point is 00:46:06 the new skeleton club there in Worthing that had been formed March. And they were actually using the old bonfire club banner. Like they didn't even bother to create a new one. They just basically slapped skeleton over bonfire club. Just to get the point across here, that like these were the exact same people essentially. They just took their bonfire club thing and actually directed it toward a purpose. It was purposeless before. It was all celebratory, rabble rousing. Now it was, we're actually going to use those same tactics to get the Salvation Army out of town. Yeah, exactly. The skeleton army
Starting point is 00:46:42 would usually black their faces. Sometimes they did wear masks, but to let each other know like who they were, they would wear the color yellow somewhere. A lot of times with like a ribbon or some kind or a sunflower to identify one another. And yeah, it seems like that they were just basically the same people, just, well, not the same people, kind of thinly disguised as the skeleton army. And these things would just happen all over the place in England until someone would come in, read the riot act literally, and break it up, and say, you know, you have to disperse now.
Starting point is 00:47:20 Sometimes that went okay, and sometimes it didn't. Yeah. So the riot act, I didn't actually know the origin of it, did you? Yeah. Oh, you did. I know. English major. So, I didn't realize that. So, I'm going to explain it to people who didn't realize it either, okay?
Starting point is 00:47:35 No, you should. So, when you read somebody the riot act, you're basically telling them that you know like how they're acting, you give them a warning about it if they act that way. Any further, they're going to have their iPhone taken away or something. Right. There's actually a riot act from 1714, the British riot act.
Starting point is 00:47:52 And what you would do is if you were, you know, rioting, if you were breaking stuff, if you were a rowdy crowd, the army would come out and read the riot act that basically said, you got to stop what you're doing in disperse or the army's going to make you disperse. And if you didn't disperse after reading the riot act, then the army would be forced to make you disperse.
Starting point is 00:48:13 And the skeleton armies, throughout England, I think more than once, had the riot act read and had the army called out on them because they were rioting so hard against the Salvation Army. Riot Hard is a great album title. For Striper. Yeah, maybe. For the new Striper. Are they still together? Did you find that out in your deep dive? I don't remember where the last album was, but I'm pretty sure it was in the 2000, so they might be. I'm not sure. I don't remember. Sorry. I could see them still playing shows with less teased hair, but still sort of long and maybe
Starting point is 00:48:54 like a half-shaven beard kind of thing. Yeah. Do you remember when we saw a Deesniter? Oh, yeah, that's right. I can imagine that they probably look a lot like these night or these days compared to how desniter used to look. Yeah, we were on a talk show. This is back when people used to call us for stuff like that.
Starting point is 00:49:14 Weirdly early on, we got way more press and invites to be on TV than we do now. I'm fine with that. I like it now. Oh, no. I totally am. I don't want to go. I like being put out to pasture. Yeah, I do too But yeah, Deesoniter was also a guest on the show and we and we met him like not in the green room
Starting point is 00:49:30 But like backstage or something I would say I'm passing. Yeah, he was yeah One way we're like hey Deesoniter Just kind of gave us like a heads up if I remember correctly I say and we were on first and I think our joke at the time was that we opened up for twisted history Yeah, yeah I think, and we were on first and I think our joke at the time was that we opened up for twisted sister. Yeah. Yeah. Uh, this last part that we're going to talk about, I don't fully, fully understand to be honest. Uh, it has to do with, um, the court system and whether or not, uh, and peaceful assembly
Starting point is 00:49:59 and whether or not, uh, you can say, hey, it's a peaceful assembly. If you know you're going there, and you're going to egg on people that will react in violence, is that still a peaceful assembly? Yeah, it ties into what I was saying earlier that people used to blame the Salvation Army, including the courts for inciting riots just from doing their thing.
Starting point is 00:50:23 So while they were loud and they were singing off key and they were in your face about how you're going to hell, they were still under English law assembling peaceably. They weren't breaking stuff, they weren't breaking, they weren't breaking any laws, they weren't hurting anybody like physically or anything like that. So technically it was a peaceful assembly, but because almost invariably in some of these towns, when they showed up and did their thing, a riot would break out,
Starting point is 00:50:53 the Salvation Army was held responsible in the courts for triggering riots. And they're like, you can't assemble anymore because you incite riots. You're very present. And finally, some appellate court in the United Kingdom was like, that don't quite track. Right. They said something like, what has happened here is that an unlawful organization has
Starting point is 00:51:14 assumed to itself the right to prevent the appellants and others from lawfully assembling together. Okay. Basically saying that a man may be convicted for doing a lawful act if he knows that his doing it may cause another to do an unlawful act. And the extent of that is that you're not responsible for the act of another person. If there, it's like if you trigger somebody and they punch you in the face, they're in trouble for punching you in the face, you're not in trouble for triggering them.
Starting point is 00:51:40 Right. As much as you despise what the person might be saying, they might be saying it right in your face, you can't hit them. That's breaking the law. Right. As much as you despise with the person might be saying, they might be saying it right in your face, you can't hit them. That's breaking the law. Yeah. Yeah. Telling somebody that they're going to hell right in their face, it's not breaking the law. And so that actually established precedent in the English speaking world. And I think 18, 18, 82, uh, Bade versus GilS, established that the Salvation Army had the right to piece of Lee assemble, even if it triggered riots, and that really kind of led to the idea that you can piece of Lee assemble, even if the people don't want to hear what you have to say,
Starting point is 00:52:18 and will riot, it's on the rioters, not on you, the person provoking them. Yeah, and I think the question since then has been the sort of gray area of what constitutes a peaceful assembly. Yeah, which is, I mean, yeah, if you're like a young anarchist, are you gonna sue the government for breaking up your peaceable assembly? Good to know. So you're really kind of at the mercy
Starting point is 00:52:43 of whatever mayor or police chief who runs the town that you're really kind of at the at the mercy of whatever mayor or police chief. Yeah. Who runs the town that you're you're assembling in. But there's a law in or there's a case that's that precedent in 1977 National Socialist Party of America versus Village of Skokie. There was a bunch of Chicago Nazis that wanted to march in Skokie where that which had a huge population of Jewish Holocaust survivors. Right. And Skokie said, no, you can't do that here in the Nazis, Sudom and one. They didn't actually ever march, but they won that case. And it established that no matter how reprehensible your views, you have a right to say them
Starting point is 00:53:18 in America. It's part of your first amendment rights. And that is what the Blues Brothers are referencing when they said they hate Illinois Nazis and they drive through that bandstand and make Henry Gibson and his Nazi friends jump into the river. That's what they're talking about.
Starting point is 00:53:37 That case. That's pretty cool. I thought it was pretty cool too. Are you got anything else? I got nothing else. This is good. I thought it was good too too. Are you got anything else? I got nothing else, this is good. I thought it was good too. Who was it, Corey?
Starting point is 00:53:49 That was from Corey, great suggestion, Corey. Great suggestion, Corey. And yes, this was a good one, Chuck. Since Chuck said this was a good one, and I agreed. I think it's time for listener mail. I'm going to call this nice little additional nugget of info from John. Hey guys, I was listening to the episode on the Franklin expedition.
Starting point is 00:54:09 Long time listener, first time writer by the way. In the episode you collaborated to make up the pun name for a bad sailor, Leadfoot McCant swim. I didn't remember that until he wrote it. It was pretty funny. And it brought up a nugget of the fact I learned a few months ago. I'm not sure if you were making this joke because of this, that you knew a lot of sailors back in that time
Starting point is 00:54:30 couldn't swim, but you were right. Many sailors back in the day couldn't swim for a number of reasons. They range from a lack of resources, such as warm water, and time in which to learn, to the desire of not to prolong suffering, which might happen. If you were to find yourself overboard, like, huh, just go down, I guess. It's pretty hardcore, pretty hardcore. Sadly, stopping a ship or going back to Save a Sailor did not or could not have happened very often. So drowning might be the fastest and easiest way to go.
Starting point is 00:55:00 Picked up this nugget from Peter Stark's book, A Story That Covered the Origins of A Story A Oregon, being set up as a private trading colony by John Jacob Astor in an attempt to monopolize the Pacific fur trade. If you're ever running low on topics, this would be a great episode, but I don't expect you're running low, so I plan on hearing about it in about 20 years. Yeah, you never know. You never know. Who was that?
Starting point is 00:55:26 That's from John, he says, thanks for the knowledge. Yeah, you never know, John. Thank you for the knowledge. We appreciate you, Big Tony. That's a good one. Non-swimming sailors. Yeah, I did not see Oregon fur trading coming into that story, but here we are.
Starting point is 00:55:39 Yep. Well, if you want to be like John and get in touch with us and make a suggestion for an episode, we'd love that kind of thing. You wrap it up, spank it on the bottom, and send it off to Stuff Podcasts at iHeartRadio.com. Stuff you should know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app. Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Starting point is 00:56:14 Tune in to the new podcast, Stories from the Village of Nothing Much. Like easy listening, but for fiction. If you've overdosed on bad news, we invite you into a world where the glimmers of goodness in everyday life are all around you. I'm Catherine Nicolai and I'm an architect of COSI. Come spend some time where everyone is welcome and the default is kindness. Listen, relax, enjoy. Listen to stories from the village of nothing much on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. app, Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. In the new Amy and TJ podcast, news anchors Amy Robock and TJ Holmes explore everything
Starting point is 00:56:51 from current events to pop culture in a way that's informative, entertaining and authentically groundbreaking. Join them as they share their voices for the first time since making their own headlines. This is the first time that we actually get to say, what happened and where we are today. Listen to the Amy and TJ podcast on the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Walter Isaacson set out to write about a world-changing genius
Starting point is 00:57:18 in Elon Musk and found a man addicted to chaos and conspiracy. I'm thinking it's idiotic to buy Twitter because he doesn't have a fingertip feel for social, emotional, networks. The book launched a thousand hot takes, so I sat down with Isaacson to try to get past the noise. I like the fact that people who say I'm not as tough on musk as I should be are always using anecdotes from my book to show why we should be tough on musk. Join me, Evan Ratliffe, for On Musk with Walter Isaacson. Listen on the iHeart Radio App Apple Podcast or wherever you get your podcasts.

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