In the Red Clay Podcast - Chapter 1: From Humble Beginnings

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  • Опубликовано: 24 авг 2024
  • In Chapter 1 of our 13 part podcast series, the legend of Billy Sunday Birt still hangs over a small Georgia town.
    Listen to the entire 13-episode series:
    link.chtbl.com...
    Apple Podcasts:
    podcasts.apple...
    Spotify:
    open.spotify.c...
    Music from the series:
    • Fast Train Comin'
    About In the Red Clay
    Buried deep in the past of a quiet southern town lies the legend of Billy Sunday Birt, the most dangerous man in Georgia history. A chance meeting one spring day unravels the truth behind the notorious figure and uncovers new secrets along the way.
    In the Red Clay is a production of Imperative Entertainment. The series is created and hosted by Sean Kipe and Executive Produced by Jason Hoch and Gino Falsetto. Jason Hoch is story editor. Additional editing by Jason Hoch and Shaine Freeman. Sound engineering by Shaine Freeman. Cover art by Jeana Sullivan.

Комментарии • 102

  • @sheilahardison7673
    @sheilahardison7673 3 месяца назад +7

    Love this podcast
    I'm 64 years old and I'm from Tennessee. I've heard of the DM all of my life and I'd venture to say it still exists.
    By the way, people who were Very Close to Buford said he was no choirboy. The movies portraying his life failed to include pertinent details.

  • @tabethameeks2978
    @tabethameeks2978 Месяц назад +10

    Don't let nobody anybody kid you they're still here

  • @geneland
    @geneland 2 месяца назад +3

    Traveling from the Tennessee to the Gulf Coast we happened upon this podcast on I heart radio and we were engrossed and entertained by it. Still listening to it after the vacation is over.

  • @peachqtpi
    @peachqtpi Год назад +10

    My grandfather and daddy ran moonshine in the 60s in GA. The stories are legend.

  • @davidgibbs1467
    @davidgibbs1467 29 дней назад +4

    I grew up in North Georgia I run around with some of these men kids back in the 70s at least I was told they were DM, been so long ago now just vague memories. But this story brought back some memories

  • @ericchristian6710
    @ericchristian6710 Год назад +14

    For y'all Yankees and chill'en what he says at 26:05 is " my daddy's mother, set a lot of store by him."
    Translation: she held him and his word in high esteem, and since public schools suck these days what that means is she liked him and believed in him.

    • @invxin7793
      @invxin7793 Год назад +4

      It's just sad that people nowadays don't get these sayings!

    • @molley5175
      @molley5175 Год назад

      Yankees don't know nothing. They should just stay home.

    • @invxin7793
      @invxin7793 Год назад +1

      @@molley5175 That's what i'm saying!

    • @molley5175
      @molley5175 Год назад

      @@invxin7793 can't stand them with Thier big mouths! Look at them now, coming to our areas taking over with their b.s. go home and go under, and leave the south alone! They do not belong with us!.

  • @BossHogg81
    @BossHogg81 11 месяцев назад +12

    My uncle was Sheriff Buford Pusser and the Dixie Mafia tried to murder him several times and did murder his wife Pauline. It was a crazy time back then. I really enjoyed your podcast

    • @carolynjustagagirl2315
      @carolynjustagagirl2315 9 месяцев назад +4

      WHY was B. Pusher seen carrying Pauline's shoes out of the house after he was seen putting Pauline in the car? Why did Pauline's daughter hear a shot that night? Would love to hear your thoughts. No disrespect, I have family also, some with skeletons some not. God bless & keep.

    • @jerrytownsend2043
      @jerrytownsend2043 5 месяцев назад +4

      Why did he take the long way to the disturbance instead of the more direct and faster highway route?

    • @dkanizai84
      @dkanizai84 Месяц назад +1

      Did you hear about them exhuming Pauline's body??

    • @tedestes1120
      @tedestes1120 10 дней назад

      @@carolynjustagagirl2315 NONE of what you just stated has EVER, EVER been proven or even slightly legitimized. You've been drinking ELAM Kool-Aid.

  • @invxin7793
    @invxin7793 Год назад +11

    It is worrying that more people don't know of this amazing story!

    • @gregwalter3951
      @gregwalter3951 Год назад

      Is there a discussion board anywhere?

    • @jumahbrady670
      @jumahbrady670 Год назад

      ​@@gregwalter3951no discussion board but a love for organized crime

    • @invxin7793
      @invxin7793 6 месяцев назад

      No, I don't think so.@@gregwalter3951

  • @youngtragedy3281
    @youngtragedy3281 Год назад +8

    i love hearing this los Angeles man talk about my birthplace.

  • @three23c
    @three23c Год назад +3

    Hands down the best podcast I've ever listened to.

  • @reginastone2255
    @reginastone2255 22 дня назад +1

    I definitely heard of it. I believe there were some in Southeast GA as well

  • @raysraves474
    @raysraves474 Год назад +3

    Wow!!! Poor people do desperate things . God Blessss em🫂

  • @ericchristian6710
    @ericchristian6710 Год назад +21

    We ain't got no forest floor in Georgia. We call that the ground.

    • @billharden7127
      @billharden7127 11 дней назад

      It's the same here in SOUTH CAROLINA.

  • @edisont.picard4112
    @edisont.picard4112 8 месяцев назад +24

    Who in Georgia calls the trunk a "boot"? That's how the Brits talk. I've never heard an American say that.

    • @beckyparadise3707
      @beckyparadise3707 5 месяцев назад +4

      Depends on where in ga u r from and what decade

    • @bethbrafford1752
      @bethbrafford1752 2 месяца назад +1

      My mother was from Eastern North Carolina and she said boot

    • @ToddiGreat-le2qu
      @ToddiGreat-le2qu 2 месяца назад +1

      Turtle hull

    • @PETMonique
      @PETMonique 2 месяца назад +1

      I'm from SC and I call it the boot

    • @melindalemmon2149
      @melindalemmon2149 Месяц назад +1

      My MS Marine daddy always said boot. Made my brother climb in and sleep.

  • @tnreprasentog7769
    @tnreprasentog7769 2 года назад +6

    My great grandfather was a moonshiner back in the day in the hills of Kentucky and Tennessee his name was Lucian Bone

  • @SifuTimBerkemeier
    @SifuTimBerkemeier Год назад +6

    I was visiting a friend in Georgia and ran into Billy at Walmart.
    I never heard of the Dixie Mafia or any of the Georgia stories. Billy led me to this podcast.
    Real nice man
    A great podcast,you did a great job putting this together.
    I love the sound effects of the fire and crackling you just did a real good job here.
    Got yourself a new subscriber
    I may have a story for you in the near future, let me know if you're interested

  • @Turtlepower518
    @Turtlepower518 Год назад +6

    My Great Uncle was murdered by the Dixie Mafia. Its been years since i was told the story by my grandma. I do recall her saying he was shot, thrown into an old well and dynamite being involved. His body wasnt discovered for years. That was my childhood introduction to The Dixie Mafia

    • @Turtlepower518
      @Turtlepower518 Год назад +3

      Also, his murder was the result of an argument/bar fight. Quite possible this mans Father was the one who did it as listen and read about how and why he did certain things

    • @RDT-alwaysandforever
      @RDT-alwaysandforever 6 месяцев назад +1

      If you're not already aware, the Dixie Mafia wasn't just a Georgia "thing." Alabama, Georgia and Mississippi each had their own "chapters" if you will which were called Dixie Mafia. I suspect Louisiana did as well but have no confirmation. Each group operated and controlled within its own state UNLESS a specific situation was bettered handled by someone with either more experience and/or wasn't known in that state. (e.g., Mississippi DM might call on a member of Alabama's DM for a job in Mississippi) Your great-uncle was probably murdered by the DM state "branch" where his murder occurred. Someone commented on a different chapter that Buford Pusser, of "Walking Tall" fame, was his uncle. Members of the DM have always been suspected in both Pusser and his wife's (earlier) death. Those suspects are/were members of MS (and possibly AL) DM.

  • @peachqtpi
    @peachqtpi Год назад +3

    Stoney loved his father. He might have idolized him when he was young, but no more. He’s very honest about his father. He’s also very open about how much he loved his father, and honest about their life outside the crime.

  • @trent3872
    @trent3872 5 дней назад

    Ive lived in some back woods Georgia places, man theres some dark creepy places, but i guess every state has them.

  • @johnbrowning4490
    @johnbrowning4490 Год назад +4

    This podcast is great! I went to that bookstore and bought the book, can’t put it down , that cyclone and Billy’s ability to drive that car,, I wonder who runs the the show in all these counties today, the government?

    • @baxterfarmandhomestead7481
      @baxterfarmandhomestead7481 2 месяца назад

      It’s been the government since the early 1900s if not earlier. The Dixie Mafia covered more than a few counties. It covered the Southeastern United States.

  • @gavinwilson114
    @gavinwilson114 Год назад +4

    My father was clifford lean wilson 3rd macon ga dixie mafia moonshiner and hit man my grandmother told me about 6 robberys and 4 muders from the 80s to like 90s to the early 2000s

  • @emersontayten
    @emersontayten 10 месяцев назад +1

    Fantastic production. On to part 2. Subbed. Nice work!

  • @berenisv4553
    @berenisv4553 Год назад +3

    This is a gem

  • @watchdog304
    @watchdog304 2 года назад +4

    Fantastic job!

  • @FlyingPusssyfoot
    @FlyingPusssyfoot Год назад +4

    I've heard about these guys like they were either Robin Hood type characters or pure evil.
    This has been amazing. Your channel deserves more subscribers. Liked subscribed and shared!

  • @teresastark6055
    @teresastark6055 21 день назад

    It is a household conversation in my parts. Look up the Sherry murders in Biloxi.

  • @davidswint9238
    @davidswint9238 2 года назад +3

    Awesome job!

  • @caseyaylward8853
    @caseyaylward8853 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great show

  • @crystalblissett6304
    @crystalblissett6304 Год назад +13

    My grandfather was a boss in the Dixie Mafia and was one of the last to get caught. He only got caught because he had a counterfeit press but the fbi never connected him to the Dixie Mafia because everyone was too scared to rat him out.

    • @invxin7793
      @invxin7793 Год назад +2

      What was his name?

    • @nothingbuttrue9875
      @nothingbuttrue9875 Год назад +1

      Was he from a little town called Waco Georgia

    • @gibsonrickenbacker6317
      @gibsonrickenbacker6317 Год назад +2

      What was his name? My grandfather is in this podcast. He was one of the six kingpins

    • @Blumonkeyyt
      @Blumonkeyyt Год назад +2

      My great grandma was n the podcast

    • @SharkGirl655
      @SharkGirl655 Год назад +1

      My great uncle was Harold Chancey. I grew up hearing so many horrible stories.

  • @diggernash1
    @diggernash1 Год назад +4

    Hoschton is pronounced Hoosh tun; sorta rhymes with whoosh...

  • @user-jy3xo2we1r
    @user-jy3xo2we1r 28 дней назад

    Timeless...

  • @sepperD3
    @sepperD3 Месяц назад +1

    My grandfather served nearly 20 years in Louisiana for his connection to kirksey nix and others in the 1960s he was called for interviews and book deals but he never spoke at all until he was 80 about what all happened but he did claim that " Dixie mafia" was a made up name created by news papers he went to his grave with a lot of guilt but I loved hearing the stories

  • @fixitallpaul4847
    @fixitallpaul4847 6 месяцев назад +1

    Im in NH and remember hearing about the Dixie Mafia.
    We had a mafia in Boston called the winter hill gang.
    Whitey Bulgers group.
    When you heard talk about winter hill someone would always bring up the Dixie mafia.

  • @ericchristian6710
    @ericchristian6710 Год назад +4

    I'm not far from there. I had a buddy who told me his relative started it but I don't remember if he told me a name,I do remember that he said it was around winder and I thought he was wrong because I had only heard of them being in miss. I've heard a few other stories about people being connected to them and I always thought they were lying because I didn't think they had ever been anywhere around here. Now I see I was wrong

  • @f2foutdoors
    @f2foutdoors 10 месяцев назад +5

    Sherriff Pussier died in a solo car accident on his way back from a daughters sporting event. Sad part is she was in a car behind him to see it.

    • @carolynjustagagirl2315
      @carolynjustagagirl2315 9 месяцев назад +1

      And intoxicated.

    • @DaleDanErnie
      @DaleDanErnie 9 месяцев назад

      Buford pussers death was thought to be an assassination.

    • @Randers69
      @Randers69 8 месяцев назад

      She was dunk and hey... Remember, Democrat politicians ran these people off the road like princess Diana. Keep that in mind you ignorant little boy

  • @carolynjustagagirl2315
    @carolynjustagagirl2315 9 месяцев назад +3

    Love your podcast, however BUFORD was not murdered he was drunk driving and wrecked.. Do you know his Bac??

  • @chocolategravyandbiscuits8418
    @chocolategravyandbiscuits8418 20 дней назад

    This is one of the best podcasts I’ve listened to. Didn’t listen on RUclips but almost want to relisten

    • @DJK-cq2uy
      @DJK-cq2uy 16 дней назад

      😂😂pfffft hmmmph

  • @donnaturner4795
    @donnaturner4795 Год назад +1

    I thought for sure he'd have put copperheads in that ole car...

  • @kerrynixon3968
    @kerrynixon3968 2 года назад +2

    Wow, good stuff

  • @robbie5984
    @robbie5984 11 месяцев назад +1

    Are these different than the episodes on Apple Podcasts? The audio seems different.

  • @user-md6ye9zn9t
    @user-md6ye9zn9t 4 месяца назад +1

    Dixie mafia originated in Arkansas lol

  • @northwestarizona8542
    @northwestarizona8542 24 дня назад

    No way can I push Like, as it'd bring up triple 6. I just can't do it.

  • @user-qs6du3xg9e
    @user-qs6du3xg9e Год назад +2

    10

  • @mikey-joecaudell8808
    @mikey-joecaudell8808 7 месяцев назад +1

    Its pronounced "hoosh-tun" Georgia

  • @williammagnuson8508
    @williammagnuson8508 24 дня назад

    Is that where the name boot ledger originated?

  • @DJK-cq2uy
    @DJK-cq2uy 16 дней назад

    Good grief...wth is this nonsense?

  • @SharkGirl655
    @SharkGirl655 Год назад +2

    Any other Chanceys from Winder here? Did you guys also grow up learning about your own family in school?

  • @donnaturner4795
    @donnaturner4795 Год назад +1

    I thought for sure he'd have put copperheads in that ole car...

  • @donnaturner4795
    @donnaturner4795 Год назад +1

    I thought for sure he'd have put copperheads in that ole car...

  • @donnaturner4795
    @donnaturner4795 Год назад +1

    I thought for sure he'd have put copperheads in that ole car...