The Dollop with Dave Anthony and Gareth Reynolds - 158 - The Jumper - Robert Emmet Odium
Episode Date: March 9, 2016Comedians Dave Anthony and Gareth Reynolds examine swimmer and jumper Robert Emmet Odlum. SOURCESTOUR DATES REDBUBBLE MERCH...
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Hello you're listening to the dollop. This is a bi-weekly American History
podcast. Each week I read a story from American history to my
friend. Gareth Reynolds who has no idea what the
topic is going to be about. Nailed it. Man we're good. That was close.
Particularly me. Well it's really stumbled on podcast. Bit of a train wreck on
podcast honestly. I liked it. God do you want to look who to do? I'll do one bottle.
People say this is funny. Not Gary Gareth. Dave okay. Someone or something is tickling people.
Is it for fun? And this is not gonna come to tickling clodcast. Okay. You are
queen fakie of made-up town. All hail queen shit of Liesville. A bunch of
religious virgins go to mingle and do what? Fray. Hi Gary. No. Is he done my friend? No.
August 31st. Sorry. 1851. Sorry. You said something. I just, it's mine. Okay.
Robert Emmett Odom was born in Ogdensburg, New York. He was named after Irish
nationalist Robert Emmett, a rebel leader who led a rebellion against the
British, got captured and executed for treason. That'll show him. And then name
your boy after that guy. That'll teach him. Name our boy after that dead guy. Yep.
Robert had six siblings, two of them died during childhood. God it must have been so
weird for most of like you know half of your siblings that just died. That's how
it was. You brought me, I mean no matter look at the pictures when you're ten
like I'll remember Grace and Charles. They were fun toddlers. They should have
named kids until they were 12. Yeah. That's what I would have done. I'd be like
one, two, three, age your 12th birthday. You're gonna be named Larry. This year my
parents gave me the name Larry for my birthday because I made it to 12 without
polio. St. Lawrence County native, Robert learned to swim in the St. Lawrence
River at a very young age and he was a very, very good swimmer. But then his
father died in the mid-1850s so the family moved. They moved around looking
for places to settle. First they went to New Orleans, then New York City, then
Boston, then Detroit, then Cleveland, and then Montreal. Then on to St. Louis where
they stayed for a little bit and then they went to Cuba and then back to
New Orleans. What? Cuba's a weird call. Cuba's a really weird call. That's the
weird one. But all of those places are weird at this time because there's no
fucking cars or planes. Yeah. They must have just taken forever. Oh my god with
all the all the alive kids and then you're probably dragging the dead kids behind
you. Yeah and more and more. I mean you're really putting a lot more in
peril. It's a total nightmare. Maybe they were just trying to kill kids. I hope so.
And then they ended up back in New Orleans where they arrived on the same
day the state of Louisiana ratified the Confederate Constitution. Finally. So shit's
on. Finally. So shit's on. Good call. Robert's older brother had joined the Union
Army. That's the good one. Well. His jury's still out. So the family went in
search of his older brother. David. To congratulate him? I don't know. They've
already been all over the fucking world. They're not gonna find the guy. You can't
find anybody in that time and especially when they're in an army they're
always fucking moving around. Imagine finding someone. In that time when
someone left. Imagine finding someone. Impossible. Not then. If they're gone
they're gone. I mean especially in the middle of a fucking war. Hey have you
seen Bob? You have to go everywhere and put up signs. It's crazy. So they went
to. Missing son. They went to Illinois and Kentucky and then ended up just
moving to Memphis, Tennessee. They would never see David again. Okay. I told
them that's what would happen. You warned them. David served under. This is the
best part. He served in the army under an alias. So he picked a different name
when he joined the army. That made it harder.
Complacates matters. And he vanished after the after the battle of Shiloh. They
did not know if he had died been captured or deserted. So we never get
closure on our David. You know David's a mystery. It's one of the great mysteries
of America. What happened to David? I like to think he opened up a little B&B.
Right? Yeah. Yeah right on the river. Retired. Fuck yeah. Sort of lived like Johnny
Cakes and the Sopranos. Mm-hmm. There it is. Log cabin. You got great ideas. Boyfriend.
On April 4th 1864 the family's Memphis home was destroyed by Union forces to
make a firing path for artillery. Now that's a that's a total disregard of
someone's house. Well and also that's why you got it. You got to check your
insurance policies to see if you're covered for fire linings. For but
that's when they you could while they turned on your house you could go what
about to the left. Could you guys maybe just. No there's a big space over there.
Use our living room. Use our living room. So they moved to Mobile, Alabama. They got
deeper in it. They were like let's go farther down. Let's find crazier areas.
Robert left and he left the family and got a job as a T-merchant in
Philadelphia in 1870. Sure. So he's like at this point he's like I just like I'm
super into tea. The tea is my thing. And I'm gonna just dedicate my life to it.
Then he moved to St. Louis and then he moved to Chicago and then in 1878 he
moved to Washington DC. Well can I ask were they compulsive movers? There's an
issue. Are they sharks? That I couldn't figure out. If they stopped moving do they
die? They would not stop moving. I mean it must have just been insane. You'd get
unpacked and they'd be like we're going to Cuba. Wouldn't that be great if this one
this dollop ended up being about a moving company? That would be great. But it's not.
Okay. Union movers. So in Washington DC that's where he opened up a swimming
school. I was gonna actually guess that.
Robert was very interested in teaching not just swimming but safety. Water
safety. Well that feels like a part of swimming in a way but okay. And to bring
attention to his cause he started doing stunts. Oh well here we go. What do you
mean? Here we go. He'd hold his breath underwater. Here we go. Four minutes at a
time. Oh boy. He would challenge anyone to swim races. Okay. Anyone. He had like a
standing like bet for like 500 bucks or whatever. Anybody he'll take on anybody
but no one would take him on because he's the fastest fucking guy. Right. And
then there were the jumps. He liked to jump from bridges. No. Here we go. Are we
already there? We already started. And obviously we're developing. He used the
just jumping off of bridges. Well he used the jumps to spotlight two main
safety issues. First he thought everyone should know how to swim and that
people who were in and also that people who were in high rises when fires broke
out should be able to jump to the safety of nets of firemen. So those are the two
points he was trying to make by jumping off bridges. That you should know how to
swim and secondly you shouldn't be afraid to jump out of a building into a
fireman's net. I'm not sure if either one need the bridge. I'm okay well we'll
get there. Couldn't you just put I mean were other was he training people to
jump off the bridge? Hold on now. Oh god. I mean we're about to hear about a
lemming squad. The fire problem was a legitimate problem. Fires were common
and Americans were building taller and taller buildings and it was very hard
for the firemen to get up there and save people because ladders only went so far.
Right. This is before they knew about building bigger ladders. Right. So right.
They were like well the ladders only go so far. That's right. He's actually
right. Look it does stop. You're the one building buildings taller than the ladders.
All right. That's why people are dying. Shorter buildings more of them. So if you
jumped high up so if you were trapped high up in a building right your only
option is to jump. There's no ladder option. Right. Now this led to other
issues. First people were scared to jump out of a building. Why. Because it's a
building. Oh. And second people at that time thought that if you jump from a
building and we're plummeting down you would die because you wouldn't be able
to breathe. Right. Because you. The commonly held thought. Because the air is
underwater. It's a commonly held belief. Had anyone ever jumped. Because you're
because you're moving so fast now that you've jumped that you're going past the
air. So literally nobody could be like no I was breathing. Look. It's a. If you
are trained to think based on cartoons. Oh right. I forgot. Two things can happen.
Right. You can't breathe when you're falling and secondly you can step out of
a house that's been shot out of a can. Sure. Sure. Okay. You can't breathe when
you're falling through the air. Okay. Makes total sense. They actually thought
falling would stop breathing. The theory had not yet been tested. Oh that may.
That's what I understand. Which was obviously a problem because to test it
you might die. So you can see the catch 22. Sure. So you really had to be. You
really had to have some strong beliefs that. But he's jumping off bridges. So
here we get ready. Robert was the man. He started jumping from higher and
higher places. In 1880 he jumped from 100 feet up into the Potomac. It was not
injured. But did he breathe? Well so far he's fucking he's fucking shattering
people's minds. Yeah. And he kept at it gaining fame and jumping from higher
distances hitting the water feet first and never getting injured. So he's the
fucking man. He's fucking blowing everyone's minds like look this shit's
real. This jumping and breathing shit is real. I'm breathing. I'm swimming. I'm
swimming. I'm breathing. I'm jumping. Then I'm breathing again. His swimming
school became more and more popular and he became known as Professor Oedlem.
Sure. In this in the census he listed himself as the Professor of Swimming.
They're like well there's one of you. That's our official count. There's one
swimming professor. The Professor of Swimming. His jumping and swimming school
attracted the city's elite and the fancy people. I love the fancy people.
Abinah Corsett did. He taught the kids of presidents and senators and higher up
military men. Come on bring the kids down. I'll teach them about the government
and throw them off a bridge. The first lady Mrs. Garfield came in 1881. He added
a gymnasium to the swim school and even though the swim school was very
successful Robert kept jumping and doing stunts. I feel like that's maybe
something you hang up. Yeah I think you wrap it up. You're the
athlete who's open to car dealership. You get a successful swim school. You're good.
You don't need to keep playing football Johnny. You did your time at
the University of Iowa. You're good. You're good to go. In 1881 he
quote challenged any man in the United States to swim him for anywhere from 250
to 500 a side. No one took the bet. That same year he held his breath under water
for three minutes and ten seconds and of course everyone thought that was
amazing. Yeah that is amazing. In 1882 Robert jumped from 110 feet up on a
ladder that was placed on the deck of a steamer. He splashed into the water
unharmed even though he went in at an angle. Okay. All right. Eventually people
moved on. You know his time. That's so great that people are eventually like well
he's jumped off of all the things we can see. Let's move on. He held his breath a
number of times. He's jumped in gravity. We now know you can jump and breathe. I
assume other people open up swim schools because the swim school fell in hard
times. He closed it. That's it. End of the swim school. I heard the doctor of
swimming put him under. Well everyone knew. And the president of swimming. He then
got a job. Governor swims. He then got a job as a professor of swimming at the
Hygia Hotel in Hampton, Virginia. Now this. It's getting a little sad. Before hand
was known as a lifeguard. Yeah. But he made sure the title was professor of
swimming. Yeah. So he's hanging on to some shit. That's gonna be great though
when they're like we have to make a professor of swimming is on duty sign.
I'm sorry. What? We need we have we've we no longer we fired the lifeguard. Right.
And now we don't have a lifeguard. So we just we have a professor of swimming. So
we're gonna need a sign that says professor of swimming is on duty. I'm not
understanding. So there's so we found a guy who jumps off of bridges. Okay. And
he's the professor of swimming. Well that doesn't sound like and now he's gonna
sit in that elevated chair. Did he go to Harvard? He jumps into is swimming is
swimming. Something you can get a doctor it in. No. But don't ask him any of these
questions when you see him. Okay. Just make a fucking sign. Why don't we hire
somebody else because what about a lifeguard that matches the sign. There
birds kid down the street. He can do it. He said I want to be the next lifeguard.
I'm he he is as much as a lifeguard and he is a professor. Again just make a sign.
Okay. Professor of swimming is on duty. Okay. Professor of swimming must be on
guard at all times. Okay. But look you're you're talking to me like I'm not the
professor of signage. Right. Sorry. A professor of signage. Yes. So and I'm
off you show me a little more respect and I'm the professor of managing this
hotel and that's the sign we need you to make. Also will you talk to the
professors of towels and see if they can turn over some of the rooms. Yeah. You
guys can tell some of the professors of sleeping here are running out of their
towels. There Robert really showed off his swimming skills by swimming an 18
mile trip from old point comfort to ocean view and back. How long 18 miles
fucking in the fucking water. So he's not kidding around. He is you know he's
fucking serious. He has a PhD in water. He's a good swimmer. He has a PhD in the
water. He also saved the life of a 16 year old kid at the hotel who happened
to be the son of former VP Schuller Colfax. Oh I really loved the Colfax
administration. Right. Very good. Well yeah and then and then right after that
Robert got in a malaria. On May 24th 1883 the Brooklyn Bridge opened. Finally. It
was a suspension bridge that stood over 200 feet above the water. That's pretty
high. Oh God. The country was very impressed with the new bridge as was
Robert. Oh God. In 1885. For different reasons. Word got out that Robert was
going to try to jump off the bridge at an area that would be 130 feet above the
water. His previous highest jump was 110 feet. He wouldn't be the first to want
to Ronald Donaldson whose parents were assholes. Ronald Donaldson had tried
while the bridge was being built in 1882 to jump off of it. He tried it three
times. Once he was stopped by the wind. I assume. Okay. I mean he wasn't stopped
by the wind. He pushed it out because of wind. But maybe he went up there and he
tried to jump and the wind kept blowing him back. That would be so great if he
jumped and was just suspended and just like blew back up onto the bridge. Oh three
times. It's just too windy. The wind won't have me today. Look I'll do it again.
You guys see this right? I'm back. Sorry. The other two times the construction
workers stopped him. Right. Robert was next. He went to New York and there he
was interviewed by the New York Herald. Quote. If I should die I don't want the
public to think that I had no good object in view. I want the Herald to
explain that I have for years illustrated the fact that men do not die
while falling through the air. Oh my god. And that no matter if men or women
were 100 feet high on the roof of a burning building they would not hesitate
to jump into a net if they read that I had jumped 140 feet from the Brooklyn
Bridge. I'm saving lives. He's already proven that you're saving lives. I think
I think that run might come to an end soon. I'm just picturing five people
standing on the burning building that's about 150 feet high and one guy is
saying don't jump you'll die. Well the truth is though they burned it. The truth
is though if it's windy there's no point in jumping you'll just blow right
back into the burning fire. That is true. Which is very tough. So this is
clearly for science. Yes. Also he didn't have a lot of money and was hoping
the fame would help him financially. There we go. But the New York City
authorities got wind of his plan mostly because he didn't interview for the New
York Herald and were set not to allow him to pull off his feet. On the
morning of May 19th, 1885 Robert went to confession at the Church of the
Redemptionist Fathers. Then he got together with a few buddies. They
included boxer Patty Ryan, wrestler William Muldoon and actor Henry Dixie.
That's quite a table. Yeah he's got a fucking he's like he's like a young Leo.
Yeah this is like the Brat Pack. Robert then sent two of his friends James
Haggart and a Mr. Cluss up to the bridge to scope it out. Were they drinking? No I
don't think. I didn't see any indications that they were drinking. Because if you're
drunk and you go through there you can't breathe. That is true. Yeah. Beneath the
bridge a tugboat full of people hung out a hundred yards away from the bridge
and on board they had a rescue swimmer to help them out in case there was a
problem. There were thousands of spectators in the area and a lot of
cops. Every horse-drawn carriage that came to cross the bridge was accompanied
by a cop on foot. So here I didn't I don't really understand so if you're
looking for a guy you know what the guy looks like would stop the carriage and
question the people in the carriage but what they did was is they just walked
along the side of it. Yeah see that'll stop police work. Yeah that's good detectiveing.
Let the criminal emerge to you. Thank you. Don't find him. After two hours the
cops thought they had Robert. They stopped a suspect and questioned him. The
man said he wanted to jump and didn't think it was anyone's business to stop
him. A few other officers then surrounded the carriage as it slowly moved
forward. They were not going to let this man out of the carriage. They thought
they had the situation under control. Problem was that guy in the carriage was
a decoy. I knew it. That was James Haggard. That fucker. Two out of yards back
Robert was riding in a wagon which slowly made its way across the bridge. When
it got to the desired location Robert hopped out dressed in a bright red
swimsuit. Well it's good though keep the people can see it. Yeah I assume all it's
amazing that his plan worked so well. Yeah like a guy in a carriage said I'm
going to jump you can't stop me and then kept moving forward and again all the
cops went we've got this guy says he's gonna jump and then they all clamored
around that and then a guy in a big red bathing suit jumps out. See I just don't
think the guy who wants to jump off the bridge is gonna tell you. That's what I
thought. Yeah but it was a very honest time. Yeah so this was the first lie. So
the guy in the bright red I love that he's wearing a bright red swimsuit.
Gorgeous. I'm picturing what Rodney Dangerfield wore at the end of Back to
School. Yes. He walked over to the railing climbed up and got himself into
the proper jumping position. The cops suddenly realized they'd stopped the
wrong guy and started rushing over to Robert. The crowd went completely
silent. Robert Emmett Ullam raised a hand high above his head which he would
use as a rudder to steer himself into the proper position as he hit the water.
What? So he's gonna use his hand. He held up his hand like a shark fin. He's gonna use his
hand like a rudder to keep himself from tilting or going in a weird way. Is he diving or jumping
feet first? He's jumping feet first. Right. So his arm his arm up helps him to steer his
body. All right. All right. Okay. And it's a good normal look too. It's a normal look.
And then he jumped. It took him three seconds to hit the water. Oh god. The first
hundred feet of the jump went great. Dave. What? That's great. And the next hundred went
greater. No. That's not right. Oh no. It's easy for the first hundred to go great. It's the
last one that counts. Then he started to slant a little bit. Wait. I thought he was
ruddering with his hand though. He wasn't ruddering right. It could have been the
wind or he may not have been able to jump the way he wanted because of the rushing
police either way. Slanting is bad. He tried to correct it with his hand up but it was too
late. He did not hit the water first feet. He landed on his right side in his hip area.
Water splashed 20 feet high. Oh god. Which is not a good sign. No. He went underwater
and when he came up he was floating face down which is the. Which is the signal that you're
okay to survive the emergency crew. That's the signal. That's the international signal for
him. He's fine. He's face down. He's face down. He's gone you guys. He's gone. He did it.
His rescue guy jumped off the tugboat and swam as quickly as possible to Robert.
When he reached him he put his shoulder under Robert's head and lifted it out of the water.
Thousands watched while they pulled Robert's limp body out of the river.
They brought him to the tugboat's galley where they started resuscitation.
He stayed unconscious for a long time. Then he started to stir. He opened his eyes and asked
is it all over? Did I make a good jump? So when he hit the water he became a five-year-old.
I wish that they had told him the truth that it was shit. There was a shit jump
and a shit landing but they didn't. They all told him it was great.
Oh great. Really terrific. Were you running with that hand?
He like a boat up there. Robert then tried to sit up which turns out was a very bad idea.
Blood came out of his mouth which it's not supposed to do if you know anything about the human body
and then he asked am I spitting blood as more blood poured out of his mouth?
Really good jump Robert. Really nailed the jump. Just can't say enough about it.
His friend Robertson told him it was not blood it was just brandy.
Yeah you hit the water so hard you got a bottle of booze in your belly.
It's right here in this book called science.
You popped your brandy sack. Yeah you know what they say.
That happens. You get hit hard enough you become booze.
You're like a bourbon tap. Get some glasses. Let's celebrate the perfect jump with a glass
of the brandy from his body. He's doing it. He's drink the fucking blood.
Here we go a toast to our best friend and hero. Look at him go. Cheers.
That's so good. The boat made its way to shore. It was a total of 35 minutes after the jump.
Oh so not a lot of time for him to sit there just puking blood.
When he was taking off the boat on shore.
It took another 20 minutes for an ambulance to get there.
Well. They probably weren't ruddering right.
By the time the ambulance arrived. Robert Emmett Odom was dead.
Time of death 6 from the jump right. Yeah okay.
Time of death 618 it's hard it could have been a lot of people thought it was a flu.
I thought it was old age maybe. Or brandy.
Yeah it was brandying. Time of death 618 p.m.
The undertaker's wagon took him to the corner.
His spleen, liver and kidneys had ruptured from the impact.
He had three broken ribs and many severe bruises. He also had tuberculosis.
But probably not from the jump. He hit it so hard that he got T.V.
Yeah he went so hard in the water he got T.V.
His death was listed as due to concussion.
So his brain was fucking rattled as well. I mean imagine what is.
It was a multiple rattle. If they said you died from concussion
imagine what his fucking noggin looked like.
If only the Will Smith doctor was around back then.
Thank you. His sister Charlotte came to collect his body four days later on May 28th.
She had a discussion with the corner about why his heart and liver were missing.
The corner denied he had anything to do with it.
That's not my I don't why would I be.
There's just two IOUs sitting in his body.
I'm just the corner. I just I just did the thing I took.
I'll be honest. I think they fell out in the water.
They did. He hit it so hard.
Parts of him popped out.
He hit the water so hard that his liver and kidney fell out of his body.
Thank you. So.
Anyway you're a woman go away.
Also do you want to buy a kidney?
People then look for someone to blame for his death.
Yep. Who is our scapegoat? Mrs. Garfield that cunt.
Robert's mother blamed his friend Paul Boyton who had captain the ship
the tugboat ship and been the rescue diver.
He he wrote her a letter denying responsibility and had it published in the New York Times.
She then went to see Paul Boyton in New York but was met instead by a lawyer and a judge
who told her she should avoid slandering Boyton.
Robert's mother then claimed Boyton had letters that had been that had he had destroyed
in which he pushed Robert to come and make the jump.
She eventually wrote a biography about Robert titled
The Life and Adventures of Professor Robert Emmett Odlem
containing an account of his splendid natatorium in the national capital.
So the whole front was just words.
They didn't know how to.
Well the the front of the book is a chapter of the book.
They didn't know how to make titles.
It's a really kind of catchy title.
It's one of the worst things about this time period is the extensive titles of books.
I mean I guess you had time to sit around and look at the books of titles.
Yeah there was like 90 books.
Yeah you profess you like it's not like you were you were you know the back then you
fucking hung around your town.
You often didn't go anywhere.
So they were like two stores and a right a donkey like that's
his cops his friends fingers pointed everywhere except of course at the guy who had left to
his death. Everyone said he was brave kind caring man and that his jump was for science or whatever.
Now people knew that if you jump from a high bridge you wouldn't die from falling through
the air but instead when you hit the bottom.
But does it doesn't isn't that in this time think about how crazy everybody is.
How there has to be people who are like I told you you can't breathe.
Yes of course they were.
I mean even if he was like blood you could easily blame that on not breathing on the way down.
Of course of course there were those people and they were fucking tons of them.
See so you can't breathe when going through the air.
He is the first man who jumped from the Brooklyn bridge but he's not the first man who jumped
and lived that guy happened later.
There was a guy next to said he did it but it is apparently a lie.
But that's a stunt and it's another guy actually did it.
That's a risky move anyway.
What you know saying you did it saying you did it.
That's a dangerous start.
I agree anyway that's that's the story of Professor Robert
Emmett Olam.
Well swimmer the Professor of the Water.
Swimmer pretty pretty bold move.
Right.
Yeah so yeah anyway.
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