# The Dozier School for Boys Page: https://stenobird.com/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005/the-dozier-school-for-boys Text version: https://stenobird.com/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005/the-dozier-school-for-boys.md Podcast: [Disturbing History](https://stenobird.com/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005) Published: 2026-05-13T04:00:03+00:00 Episode link: https://www.spreaker.com/episode/the-dozier-school-for-boys--71981969 Audio file: https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/api.spreaker.com/download/episode/71981969/dhdozierfinal.mp3 Processing state: not_requested JSON: https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/disturbing-history-7341005/episodes/the-dozier-school-for-boys Duration seconds: 3740 ## Resource This episode contains discussion of child abuse, physical and sexual violence against minors, and descriptions of deaths in state custody. Listener discretion is advised. For more than a century, the state of Florida ran a place in the panhandle town of Marianna that called itself a school. It opened on January 1, 1900 and didn't close until June 30, 2011. In those one hundred and eleven years, it operated under four different names. The Florida State Reform School. The Florida Industrial School for Boys. The Florida School for Boys. And finally, the Arthur G. Dozier School for Boys. Same campus. Same staff. Same building, set back near the trees, that the boys inside called the White House. In this episode of Disturbing History, we walk through the gates of one of the most brutal institutions ever operated by an American state. We trace it from its origins in the late 19th-century "child savers" reform movement to the small white concrete building where boys were beaten with a weighted leather strap until they passed out. We sit with the survivors who carried it in silence for half a century before finding each other on the internet and going public in 2008. And we walk into the woods behind the cemetery, where University of South Florida forensic anthropologist Erin Kimmerle and her team finally answered the question families had been asking for generations. Where are our boys. You'll meet Thomas Varnadoe, the 13-year-old who died 38 days after arriving on a malicious trespass charge for stealing a typewriter. George Owen Smith, the 14-year-old whose family was told he'd been found dead under a house. Earl Wilson, the 12-year-old killed at Dozier in 1944. Robert Stephens, identified through DNA from a nephew named after him who had never been told his uncle existed.… ## Actions - request_transcript: `POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/disturbing-history-7341005/episodes/the-dozier-school-for-boys/transcription-requests` — Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode. - read_markdown: `GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/disturbing-history-7341005/the-dozier-school-for-boys.md` — Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource. A page view does not enqueue transcription. Agents should invoke `request_transcript` explicitly when they need this episode processed. ## Transcript Full transcripts are not published on public pages unless there is a clear rights basis.