The Hidden History Podcast cover art

The Hidden History Podcast

The Hidden History Podcast

By: Aiden Thomas
Listen for free

Summary

You use them every day.

You've never thought twice about them.

And yet — the objects in your home have stories more dramatic, more political, and more surprising than anything you'd find in a history textbook.

The Hidden History Project is a narrative history podcast hosted by Aiden Thomas, uncovering the untold stories behind the everyday inventions that built the modern world. From the refrigerator that reshaped entire cities, to the dishwasher that quietly changed women's rights — every invention has a secret past. And it's more dramatic than you'd think.

Each episode drops you inside a specific moment in history and follows the forgotten figures, accidental discoveries, and world-changing consequences that your textbooks left out.

New episodes every week.

Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts.2026 Hidden History
Social Sciences World
Episodes
  • Before Refrigerators, Food Didn't Spoil — It Killed You
    May 11 2026
    Before the refrigerator, milk could kill you. Meat lasted a day. And in the summer, heat turned every meal into a race against time. This is the hidden history of the refrigerator — and it's not about kitchen appliances. It's about a Boston entrepreneur who shipped ice to India and became known as the Ice King. It's about toxic chemicals that quietly killed families in their homes. It's about a global environmental treaty that reshaped international law. And it's about how one humming box in your kitchen rebuilt agriculture, transportation, and the entire global food system.I'm Aiden Thomas. And in this episode of Hidden History, we trace the history of refrigeration from ancient Persian underground ice vaults to the chemical breakthrough that made cold safe — and the hidden cost that came with it.Because it was never really about keeping food cold. It was about pushing back against time itself.This episode covers: ancient food preservation, the 19th century ice trade, Frederick Tudor the Ice King, the invention of Freon, the Montreal Protocol, and how refrigeration reshaped what the world eats.Take a look around. History is everywher
    Show More Show Less
    13 mins
  • From Yemen to Keurig: The 600-Year Obsession With the Perfect Cup of Coffee
    May 11 2026
    For most of coffee's history, your morning cup was gritty, bitter, and full of sludge. People drank it that way for 600 years because that's just how coffee was.Then a frustrated German housewife punched holes in a tin pot, tore a page from her son's notebook, and accidentally changed the way the world drinks coffee.In this episode of Hidden History with Aiden Thomas, we trace the obsessive 600-year quest for a better cup. From 15th-century Yemen to the 18th-century French Biggin pot, through the 1865 American percolator and Angelo Moriano's first espresso machine — to Melitta Bentz's 1908 kitchen breakthrough, the post-war Mr. Coffee revolution, and the single-serve Keurig pod that finally made effort optional.It wasn't just a drink. It was 600 years of humanity refusing to settle for a bitter cup.Take a look around. History is everywhere.
    Show More Show Less
    7 mins
  • The Woman Who Invented the Dishwasher Because Her Servants Kept Breaking the China
    May 11 2026
    In 1886, Josephine Cochrane watched her servants chip another piece of her fine china. And she said the line that would change kitchens forever: "If nobody else is going to invent a dishwashing machine, I'll do it myself."She wasn't an engineer. She wasn't a scientist. She was a wealthy Illinois socialite who was tired of her dinner parties costing her heirloom porcelain.In this episode of Hidden History with Aiden Thomas, we trace the dishwasher from ancient Roman sand and wood ash, through the two hours a day people spent scrubbing by hand, to Cochrane's revolutionary hot-pressurized-water machine — unveiled at the 1893 World's Fair as the "Lavadora." We follow it through restaurants and hospitals, the post-war suburban kitchen, and into the modern engineering marvel that uses less water than washing by hand.It wasn't an appliance. It was the quiet automation of half of humanity's unpaid labor.Take a look around. History is everywhere.
    Show More Show Less
    9 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c
No reviews yet