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Front Porch Mysteries with Carole Townsend

Front Porch Mysteries with Carole Townsend

Auteur(s): Carole Townsend
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Author and veteran journalist Carole Townsend shares remarkable tales from the South, tales of mystery, terror, and wonder. Townsend has built a career on the premise that truth really is stranger than fiction.

Here in the South, we love our stories. We begin in childhood huddled around campfires, whispering of things best spoken in the dark, confiding in our small trusting circles. Why is that, do you suppose? I have researched and investigated Southern history for more than 20 years and I believe it has to do with this region itself. There's a lot that hangs in the ether here and much that is buried deep in the soil. There's beauty here in the South and shame and courage and, make no mistake, there is evil. There's always been the element of the unexplained, the just out of reach that we can all feel but can never quite describe. And the best place for telling tales about such things is the comfort and safety of an old front porch. So I invite you tonight to come up here with me, settle back into a chair and get comfortable, pour yourself a drink if you like, and I'll share with you some of the tales best told in the company of friends, tales that prove that truth really is stranger than fiction, and I'll turn on the light. You're going to want that. I'm Carole Townsend. Welcome to my front porch.

© 2026 Front Porch Mysteries with Carole Townsend
Monde Théâtre True Crime
Épisodes
  • Chester Burge Southern Scandal And The Dead Parrot
    Jan 8 2026

    A parrot lies dead, a socialite is strangled, and a town that worships decorum can’t look away. We pull up a chair on the front porch and unpack one of Macon’s most confounding true crime stories—a case where respectability politics, race, and money twist every clue.

    We trace Chester Burge from lightning-struck teenager and bootlegger to wealthy, abrasive landlord married to Mary Elizabeth Kennington Burge, a woman firmly seated in the city’s high society. When the Klan targets a property he rents to a Black family, public pressure spikes, and weeks later Mary is found dead in their Shirley Hills bedroom. No forced entry. Jewelry within reach. A dog locked in the basement. And the strangest detail of all: the silenced parrot. Police clear the staff, suspicion converges on Chester, and the courtroom becomes a stage where character stands trial alongside evidence.

    What follows is a razor-edged examination of motive and proof. We explore the money locked in Mary’s name, testimony about violence, and a maintenance man’s claim that puts Chester’s fingerprints in the room the night of the killing. Jurors admit they dislike him but acquit for lack of proof—only for the story to swerve into an explosive second act: a 1960 Georgia sodomy charge involving his chauffeur. Power imbalances, racial dynamics, and midcentury morality collide as an appeal frees him, a late-life marriage raises eyebrows, and a Palm Beach house explosion writes a final, contested chapter.

    Along the way, we ask what a community chooses to remember, what it tries to bury, and why certain mysteries refuse to stay quiet. If you’re drawn to Southern true crime, unsolved murders, and the social forces that shape a verdict, this one will stay with you. Listen, subscribe, and share your theory—who do you think the town got wrong?

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    25 min
  • Anjette Lyles
    Dec 16 2025

    The story begins with the comfort of small-town ritual: a packed lunch counter on Mulberry Street, a hostess who knows every name, and a city that believes it knows its own. Then the pattern breaks. A husband collapses with mysterious convulsions, a second falls to a sudden fever, a mother-in-law fades under watchful care, and a child is tormented by vivid hallucinations no medicine can explain. We follow the arc from gentle hospitality to hard suspicion, from porch whispers about black candles to the cold permanence of arsenic in the lab.

    I guide you through Macon’s mid-century world—where rail lines, church bells, and business deals shaped daily life—and into the charged space where folklore and forensic science meet. Staff recall strange habits and shifting stories. An anonymous letter nudges a coroner to test a common ant poison. Exhumations confirm what the town couldn’t say out loud, and handwriting analysis tears the mask from a forged confession and a suspect will. Inside a crowded courtroom, the narrative widens to include gender, race, and power, as Georgia weighs the first execution of a white woman against its own history and ultimately declares the convicted murderer insane.

    What emerges is more than a true crime timeline; it’s a study of how communities sense danger before they can name it, how charisma can disarm logic, and how forensic toxicology reshaped the way we understand domestic murder. Along the way, we ask uneasy questions: When does intuition become evidence? How do bias and reputation bend justice? And what does accountability look like when charm is the camouflage? If this story gripped you, subscribe, share it with a friend who loves Southern history and true crime, and leave a review to help more listeners find the porch light.

    Send us a text

    Support the show

    I love hearing from listeners. Please write a review and rate the show. And please, tell your friends and share episodes on your social media.

    Your support helps us continue to research and share these fascinating stories from the South.

    Thank you!

    Support the Show:

    You can connect with me by clicking the links below.

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    29 min
  • Waverly Hills: Beauty And Bloodlines
    Nov 20 2025

    A picturesque hill in Louisville once held America’s fiercest struggle against the white plague—and the echoes haven’t faded. We follow the unlikely path from a one-room schoolhouse to a sprawling, five-story sanatorium where doctors chased a cure with fresh air, rest, and desperate procedures that often hurt more than they healed. When loss became routine, a 500-foot tunnel meant for supplies turned into a discreet route for the dead, shielding hope while the numbers climbed.

    We share the verified history: the geography that fueled contagion, the rapid expansion to hundreds of beds, and the relentless math of a disease that moved through families and neighborhoods with chilling speed. Then we step into the lore that refuses to die—Room 502 and its tragic nurses, the rooftop echoes of children’s songs, the phantom chef in the kitchen, and the body chute where whispers still seem to travel. Whether you’re drawn by Tudor Gothic architecture, the sociology of isolation, or the psychology of hauntings, Waverly Hills offers a rare crossroads of public health, design, and folklore.

    Streptomycin closed the sanatorium, but the building lived on as Woodhaven, a troubled nursing home that added another layer of sorrow before the state shut it down. Today, tours invite skeptics and believers alike to test what they think they know. We connect those past chapters to the present: drug-resistant tuberculosis, millions of new cases, and the hard truth that environment, policy, and memory still decide outcomes. Press play for a grounded, empathetic look at Louisville’s most haunted landmark—and stay to decide if the voices are myth, memory, or something in between. If this story moves you, subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review to help others find the show.

    Send us a text

    Support the show

    I love hearing from listeners. Please write a review and rate the show. And please, tell your friends and share episodes on your social media.

    Your support helps us continue to research and share these fascinating stories from the South.

    Thank you!

    Support the Show:

    You can connect with me by clicking the links below.

    Facebook:

    Instagram:

    Website:

    Tiktok:


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    23 min
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