Let George Do It 1950 06 05 (195) The Witch Of Mill Hollow
# Let George Do It - "The Witch of Mill Hollow"
Deep in the fogbound hollows of Appalachia, George Valentine finds himself caught between superstition and murder when a reclusive woman accused of witchcraft turns up dead under impossible circumstances. Is she truly a victim of supernatural vengeance, or has someone in the isolated community used fear and folklore as the perfect smokescreen for a calculated killing? This episode crackles with the authentic dread of rural suspicion, the creeping sense that in these shadowed hills, not everything can be explained by rational detective work. As George peels back layers of local legend and whispered accusations, he discovers that the real darkness in Mill Hollow isn't born of curses—it's rooted in jealousy, desperation, and the desperate need to silence inconvenient truths.
By 1950, *Let George Do It* had become one of radio's most beloved detective programs, with Bob Bailey's world-weary George Valentine navigating cases that television would later struggle to capture with such atmospheric precision. Unlike the glamorous detectives of the big city stations, George was an ordinary man dropped into extraordinary circumstances, solving crimes through dogged determination rather than heroic gunplay. The show's strength lay in its refusal to rely on formula—one week a locked-room puzzle, the next a psychological cat-and-mouse game or a murky tale of small-town vice. This particular episode showcases what the program did best: taking listeners far from their living rooms and depositing them in genuinely unsettling places where danger lurked behind every shadow.
Don't miss this masterwork of suspense and rural gothic atmosphere. Tune in to *Let George Do It* and discover why millions of listeners made this appointment radio essential listening every week.