Killers of the Flower Moon, the new historical epic from Martin Scorsese, dramatises a series of murders that was described by press at the time as the “bloodiest chapter in American crime history”. The crimes caught the attention of J Edgar Hoover, and became the focus of one of the fledgling FBI’s first major homicide investigations. David Grann, author of the book on which the film is based, joined Elinor Evans back in 2017 to discuss the murders' horrific impact on the Native American Osage Nation.
(Ad) David Grann is the author of Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI (Doubleday Books, 2017). Buy it now from Amazon: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Killers-Flower-Moon-Osage-Murders/dp/0385534248/?tag=bbchistory045-21&ascsubtag=historyextra-social-histboty
The HistoryExtra podcast is produced by the team behind BBC History Magazine.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
An African perspective on the history of Africa
WW2's greatest battles | 1. Battle of Britain
WW2's greatest battles | Trailer
How Kissinger transformed the Cold War
Lord Byron: life of the week
Horrible Histories: 15 years of death, poo and talking rats
Medieval medicine: everything you wanted to know
Death & hubris in west Africa: how two British expeditions met with disaster
Conspiracy Revisited: The JFK assassination – Oswald’s second murder
Clotilda: the last slave ship to America
History behind the headlines: the Bengal famine
Spying in the Troubles: the murky world of double agents in Northern Ireland
Welsh mythology: everything you wanted to know
Tying the knot: 500 years of wedded bliss and marital misery
Conspiracy Revisited: The JFK assassination – 95 per cent certain?
The British empire's divisive legacy
Saladin: life of the week
Back in the USSR: the Soviet Sixties
Anglo-Saxon kingdoms: everything you wanted to know
Dinosaurs: a Victorian obsession
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Gone Medieval
Dan Snow’s History Hit
Not Just the Tudors
American History Hit
Empire