Back to Show
Watch Preview
REEL SOUTH
The Day That Shook Georgia
Season 9
Episode 901
In 1971, one of the worst industrial tragedies in U.S. history shook rural Southeast Georgia. The victims were predominantly Black women, manufacturing trip flares for the Vietnam War. Over 50 years later, survivors and first responders shed new light on the bravery and sacrifice of that day, and a grassroots campaign seeks to award the victims with the Congressional Gold Medal.
Support Provided By

16:53
A historian revisits the oral history of a 1920s school teacher in the Mississippi Delta.

17:18
An ode to one man’s fight against strip mining the Appalachian mountains he loved dearly.

14:26
Jared Dawson embodies his drag persona, Lavonia Elberton, in Atlanta, Georgia.

30:26
A Southern restaurant adjusts to newfound fame after appearing on Korean television.

24:04
Two Korean-American adoptees meet their birth mothers for the first time.

27:09
An Alabama inmate fights to keep a jailhouse romance alive while advocating for parole.

27:32
Youth suicide at a Louisiana juvenile detention center exposes a legacy of abuse.

56:15
An ode to the poetry and power of the American South’s diverse landscape and its stewards.

Unlock with PBS Passport
55:46
Louis Armstrong was an icon, but for Sharon, he was the father she could never reveal.

56:04
One man standing in the way of a petrochemical plant expansion refuses to give up.