Greetings to all my American friends from across the water in little old Scotland. I love the history of the USA, especially the South, and these photos were simply stunning. God Bless America ❤🤍💙
@angkawijayab23766 сағат бұрын
Watching from Indonesia. Thanks a million for this historical video that make us be grateful as human being until this present day. Even I am far from American continent, nowadays it seems we are closer due to the internet. Moreover, WE ARE THE WORLD... live in the 1 world .
@goodfoottoo11 сағат бұрын
In 1847, my maternal great great grandmother came across the Oregon Trail with her parents and ten of her siblings to the Oregon Territory, settling the town of Albany in the Willamette Valley, with two other families. My son is a fifth generation Oregonian. A number of them would die within ten years due to hardships and lack of medical care. I’m honored to be a descendant of these brave souls.
@KatWells-b6z12 сағат бұрын
Just fascinating
@kathe992ilo621 сағат бұрын
I learned so much. The photo of pre Times Square, was especially eye opening.
@BarbaraButtonКүн бұрын
Always wondered why there are no photos of the tall buildings being built in the new cities. Hmmm.🤔
@govindagovindaji46623 күн бұрын
But for the sad, yet needful reminders of senseless slavery, child labor, the warring with and the robbing of the land and resources of Native Americans, and the destruction of the Sequoya trees, this was a wonderful tribute. It seems just about everyone worked danged hard back then. How only one, two, three hundred years makes such a difference is remarkable in itself. Thank you to all who are working on this project.
@masafumi11173 күн бұрын
アメリカが良いってところが😂笑わせてくれる
@jodygoar70713 күн бұрын
Would be ok, but sucks to listen to the woke garbage.
@courageouscontroversy233 күн бұрын
So many people fail to realize the lingering pain of all those families who lost loved ones…
@armando26173 күн бұрын
la fotografía y el video son inventos maravillosos
@MJW663 күн бұрын
Great video
@Theblankwindow4 күн бұрын
Thank you.
@HáKuNaBatata-w4f5 күн бұрын
❤❤❤
@R9m54LZX5 күн бұрын
Interesting comments ... but near genocide of Native Americans, slavery, child labor, and other unmentioned misdeeds are stains on the fabric of America. Let us not repeat the mistakes of the past, but try to build a better future for everyone.
@james-pierre76345 күн бұрын
A major omission were the slums of New York City where European immigrants were housed in the early 1900’s.
@alphadog33845 күн бұрын
My grandparents lost their business in a major flood in the early 1920s. Change their city and their direction in life. My mom knew someone who's brother was lost in a major snow storm. (Early 1900s) He was a paper boy in a large city for that time. The family didn't know if he had survived the storm it took a few days to a week to hear from him.
@johnrobinson44456 күн бұрын
In 1642, my earliest known American ancestor came to what is now the United States. Yeah, a few things have changed since then.
@AlexDeLaO-kd1yi6 күн бұрын
When I think of the past pre-car I think of the amount of shit and dead horses/donkeys/mules. When we see history we forget history smelled lol. Also not even hairy but overgrown bushes.
@deaddocreallydeaddoc52446 күн бұрын
10:20 several inaccuracies here; first the Bison hunting occurred after the Civil War, which makes it late 19th century, not early. The Second Battle of Adobe Walls involved 28 Buffalo Hunters which included Bat Masterson, later a famous U.S. Marshall, and the famous mile distance shot by William Dixon, which occurred in 1875, with serious buffalo hunting only beginning in 1873. Second, indigenous people's dependence on the Bison only began once the horse was introduced from Europe. Before that, the Buffalo were difficult to hunt because all indigenous people in the Western Hemisphere had to go on foot. In 1850, the U.S. government made it illegal to hunt buffalo as it was recognized as food for both the natives and settlers. But the law could not be enforced. The Sheepeaters were supplied with government rations in exchange for allowing white settlement, as all tribes were eventually. They accepted the change and continued to be free to hunt sheep. They were not suppressed or exterminated.
@deaddocreallydeaddoc52446 күн бұрын
9:15 This is not true. By that time a general peace had been established in the Pacific Northwest. The years of strife were the 1860s and earlier. See - "The Deadliest Indian War in the West - The Snake Indian War," Gregory Michno. (I live in Vancouver, Washington, just a few miles from Fort Vancouver, which was the center of military and fur trading activity in the Pacific Northwest. Both Ulysses S. Grand and George Marshall were stationed at the fort in their time.
@asgharniazi21226 күн бұрын
USA 🇺🇸 is great country❤
@donnamills99236 күн бұрын
Oh, dear. Way back then they were putting the whales in danger with those d@mn windmills!
@daveoelke8576 күн бұрын
Excellent documentary. Thank you! 🎥📽️
@ronwilliamson-uz7kb7 күн бұрын
In 1863 my great grandparents didn't go anywhere.
@Veronicabac7 күн бұрын
Interesting! Thank you for sharing!
@agnieszkapasinska83147 күн бұрын
You never talk about soldiers from worse 😉 East/ Middle Europe, but ealier destroyed than West in 1939 and then nobody helps Westerplatte in Poland and other countries of Middle and South Europe. Why? Soldiers from all world has the same problem. Go for war like heroes but come back with different memories😉🥰. 🕊️🌍🌏🌎🌌🚀not wars against civilians which are families a lot of solidiers. ❤️🔥 We can't see Britan soldiers fight for Great Britan like for example 303 toghether with Raf. And Warsaw in fire, only Dresden and London. Not Paris. Why? You can proud of your soldiers, but remember about all. That's why wars aren't hard solution for any conflict, idea and background of some worldviews. 🌬️🍃🌱🌳🌲
@ajerKanofficial229 күн бұрын
Saya orang indonesia ingin tahu sejarah yang pernah ada di dunia luar negeri
@carollever46629 күн бұрын
We appreciate your hobby, sharing these interesting historical photographs. Thank you 😊
@Viking-i1w9 күн бұрын
aku suka video sejarah perang ini 😢
@KWills-z1l9 күн бұрын
wonderful smart white people
@KWills-z1l9 күн бұрын
we built this country foreigners can go home
@JayKarpwick7 күн бұрын
"We" are ALL immigrants in some way or another. One branch of my family's been here since the 1700s. Is that still too "foreign" for you?
@DavidBertling9 күн бұрын
My grandfather was born in 1880 . 10 kids . 5 served abroad in WW2 . 1 uncle and my father served abroad in the Korean war . Took no money for their service . Then built America . Each alone . No employees and never no slaves . No way in Hell . They helped everyone . Now you have insane idiots labeling them as racists . My mom and dad were tortured 3 yrs . Murdered and ripped off all they worked like dogs for . Done by African illegal alien murder gangs that ran the nursing homes in MD. Tenn. And tx . I've been homeless for 20 yrs cause I had to drop my work and life and spent 75,000.00 nationwide trying to stop it. I couldn't because the satanic law and their pigs protected the African murder gangs that did the same things to all the WW2 generation that built this country . Who should fry in HELL ? If not for my people and myself there would be no America for those maggots to execute !
@lindaingram488910 күн бұрын
I Love that we don’t have to read about photo content. We get to look at everything in the picture whilst you tell us what it’s about . Thank you. ❤
@jenniferhenriquez530410 күн бұрын
Thanks for such a nice video!
@pamscarr869610 күн бұрын
A terrible mispronunciation of Kosciusko, Mississippi.
@garytumbleweed41110 күн бұрын
ITS STRANGE THAT BLACK DUDE WAS GUARDING NEGROS FOR SALE ...
@malikraj90910 күн бұрын
I am from India & a big fan of your content. But I don't know why U don't include photos of Asian countries. !!!!
@Im-From-the-stars7 күн бұрын
As you can see this channel is fairly new and it’s based off of American heritage and history so far. I don’t know what the plan is for this channel because i don’t own it.
@janadvorackova222410 күн бұрын
👍👍👍
@EpicJourneysOfficial10 күн бұрын
🙂✌️
@dimakelly10 күн бұрын
very nice
@EpicJourneysOfficial10 күн бұрын
Thanks!🙂
@celticfiddle760510 күн бұрын
I really liked that, thank you.
@EpicJourneysOfficial10 күн бұрын
📷🙂✌️
@ВладимирАнтипов-и1в10 күн бұрын
Субтитры на русском очень крупные, закрывают фотографии.
@toniedwards939810 күн бұрын
Like so many here, I am the ancestor of immigrants to this country. Sadly today, many Americans have forgotten their immigrant roots, and what it was like to be an immigrant just seeking a better life.
@pintukumar-ub2hv10 күн бұрын
Intresting to see this beautiful history of America❤️🇺🇸
@hminebridaa335211 күн бұрын
بعض العرب الذين قدموا إلى أمريكا من لبنان وسوريا شكلوا رابطة شعراء المهجر منهم ايلياء أبو ماضي
@Charlotte-bn4gp11 күн бұрын
9:11 The sheep eaters "considered Yellowstone in their permanent home", it wasn't "considered", it was their home until the "white" man intruded upon them and their lifestyle....my ancestors, the Cherokee, and what "white" men did to them has left a bitter place in my heart😢
@jillyd280711 күн бұрын
I watched it all in the UK 👏👏👏
@charlypetra19111 күн бұрын
Nice Presentation.
@marionbartley21411 күн бұрын
Thank You for sharing photo's of earlier days gone bye. Many hard working people in the photo's. Just trying to survive and create a new life for themselves.