Beautifully done program. Very interesting - lovely narration. Thank you!
@waffles41702 күн бұрын
There were caskets rolling down the highways in some places. Look at the confluence of the rivers.
@GrahamJ-n4p2 күн бұрын
Fantastic
@paulsullivan2292 күн бұрын
If I had been in that garden drawing my last breaths I could very easily have surrendered my soul with gratitude.
@s.v.27962 күн бұрын
So i read most of the comments and my question is: How many people actually watched the video? Around the 9 min mark they address the point that are the basis of most of the negative comments.
@JohnWittmeyer5 күн бұрын
Why didn’t they use dental records?
@inventorylady533 күн бұрын
Some had been buried in the middle 1900's. People in the rural south didn't have money for that. Many didn't even see doctor's on a regular basis back then.
@waffles41702 күн бұрын
@@inventorylady53Middle to late 1800’s too.
@shelveyphillipsbowman80375 күн бұрын
Seems like they could just rebury bones and put up a memorial and put all names on it
@garymoore25355 күн бұрын
The significance of bombing of RAF airfields is massively exagerated. The South East of England was smothered in aerodromes and airfields. For EVERY single RAF airfield there was a specified alternative so the Luftwaffe would have had to knock out BOTH the main and back up airfields to materially impact the RAF. In point of fact even seriously damaged airfields were usually returned to service in just a matter of hours. Goering could have bombed airfields until the cows come home ......he was simply wasting time, aircraft and his pilots ! 🤷♀️
@freddyhollingsworth59456 күн бұрын
I put a Butterfinger candy bar in my Mom's right hand just before we lowered the casket, so if they ever find a Butterfinger in a casket, it will be my Mom.
@cynthiaarrowsmith57096 күн бұрын
No vaults??
@KellyinMemphisDD2146 күн бұрын
So these men left their wives and children in slavery as they enjoyed a hearty feast of swine…typical.
@1romans1226 күн бұрын
Thank you, this was nice.
@historical_docs3 күн бұрын
I'm so glad you found it nice! These women deserve to be remembered.
@jcortese33006 күн бұрын
A beautiful paean of praise to the most perfect thing in the sky that isn't a living creature. I'm an American and so should be all about the P-51, but there truly is nothing in the sky more beautiful than the Spitfire except raptors, songbirds, and the like. Think of what that means: it took Mother Nature 4.5 billion years to surpass this work of genius, heroism, and love. And it warms me to know that even a grizzled jet fighter pilot is moved to tears by the Spitfire. Watch one take off -- it doesn't look like a machine being shoved by force off of the ground. It looks like a raptor release, like when a rehabilitated eagle picks up its claws, and just ... goes home, into the sky where it belongs. The Spitfire WANTS to fly.
@Rafael_19656 күн бұрын
I used to ride by Littleton Cemetery after work at night, on my bike...was creepy.
@glennevans61886 күн бұрын
First few frames of this doco reveal inaccuracies. Aircraft pictured show Dauntless SBD dive bombers that were US Navy and not involved. Also, IJA Betty Bombers shown were not involved. Only IJN Kito Butai single engine aircraft bombed Darwin.
@xenocampanoli8156 күн бұрын
Aren't those planes at 26:50 Hurricanes, NOT Spitfires?
@kayceegreer44186 күн бұрын
I can't find episodes 1 and 2 can you hook me up with a link?
@historical_docs2 күн бұрын
Of course, kzbin.info/aero/PL7w9b7vtbmK8CL57OR8zNxg3S99rPQSy6
@richardbanks56286 күн бұрын
Do dogs in Australia have an Australian accent in their bark? lol.
@richardbanks56286 күн бұрын
They have a beautiful accent in Australia.
@neoAREAXIS6 күн бұрын
its below a church.. 😂
@neoAREAXIS6 күн бұрын
ashes to ashes.
@danroose38136 күн бұрын
Cremation... We don't need to take up land when we are dead... Ashes to ashes dust to dust
@DetectiveNigginz-n9h7 күн бұрын
@4:25 I'm pretty sure they were lost before the flood, you know when they died.... These people talking about the dead are so F'd in the head. You can't put the dead to rest, your not God.
@Observing-NPCs4 күн бұрын
wtf
@DetectiveNigginz-n9h4 күн бұрын
@@Observing-NPCs Yeah that's the short version of what I was saying. But we can't "lay someone to rest", once a person dies they aren't in their old body that rots away, no one would rest as ashes or in a box in a hole. So WTF indeed. If a person isn't a born again Christian then upon death they die and goto hell and nothing you can do would ever comfort them or would they have any knowledge of.
@digishinegrow7 күн бұрын
Great video! A few small changes to your metadata-like optimizing titles, tags, and descriptions-could help your channel grow even faster. Happy to share tips if you're interested!
@ahafeel7 күн бұрын
He is perhaps the last American cabinet member to stand up to the Israeli Zionist deep state in the US... Shows the consequences of putting real American priorities over those of the Israeli Zionist deep state running America
@bellaluna29217 күн бұрын
This is why New Orleans bury the dead on top of the ground instead of under ground.
@pakkiaraj36937 күн бұрын
Sep11th tatajamath porsian congeress missionaries community, Germany French England 3idiets dravidian pattanam origin doctors Palestinians, Isrealian cyber criminals 🆚 Kzpprzizq@pussiuraqi @pakkiaraj son of russian american citizenship houses sofar
@MaineUSA7 күн бұрын
Blame it on global warming LOL
@LifeAdviceSite7 күн бұрын
They demolished a whole building instead of changing out the tin roof? 🤔
@efraimmedina4617 күн бұрын
The smell must've been horrible, god bless those workers
@SharonJacobs-r2h8 күн бұрын
"If you want to see the character of a community, pass by their cemetary." ... Benjamin Franklin...🥀😞🥀
@test_subject_usa50178 күн бұрын
Narrator Nick Shatzki did good. I thought it was the AMAZING Peter Thomas at first. That, imo, is the greatest compliment a narrator or voice in the media can receive.
@RavenElise-yc7qn7 күн бұрын
Came here to say the exact same thing! RIP Peter, you still put me to sleep 💕
@amandaweber63158 күн бұрын
I find it heart warming , that such an amazing effort was undertaken to identify as many lost soles as possible. So many people made such loving efforts for family member and loved ones. A wonderful but heart breaking documentary
@janetkipina7 күн бұрын
It's soul. Good lord. A sole is what's on the bottom of a shoe
@amandaweber63157 күн бұрын
Oops. Thanks I knew it was wrong but I've never been a very good speller, ever.
@lisabunnie229608 күн бұрын
Such sorrow.
@loveislove48799 күн бұрын
I remember this flood. It was covered by The Weather Channel and on the news a lot. Lots of levee breaks. Folks in towns along The Mississippi River and its tributaries havent seen anything close to that since. I cant imagine the smell from some of the more recent burials. The putrid smell of death is the worst smell there is in my opinion. When the ppl say they "lost" their loved ones, its true but it happened the day they died.
@gardenpixie209 күн бұрын
This is a whole lot of white privilege here too😏 There are sooooo many mass graves across the world and noone is trying to identify each bone in those ones🤷🏻♀️
@johndyson41099 күн бұрын
The Battle of Britain. Never was their so much done by the so few that benefited the so many...
@Saba-lz2qg9 күн бұрын
My greatest appreciations to those. Thank You, the greatest generation for made Europe a free place to live in. Now when You’re almost gone, no one is still here to tell and learn us about the necessity of stand up for freedom and fight. God bless You all, brave women and men.
@berniefynn66239 күн бұрын
THEY ALSO FLEW THEM BA CK FROM CANADA.
@Rocksyrose9 күн бұрын
God doesn't like evil
@Bristoll1709 күн бұрын
One of the most enjoyable 51min and 43sec I've had the pleasure of watching. An incredible era with incredible people. What the world these days seems very short of.
@Leeza-G10 күн бұрын
It’s very sad that the families had to experience this. My deepest sympathies to all. 🙏🏽🫶🏼🙏🏽 I wonder about the embalming chemicals that must have been released in the river and soil. This is tragic.
@megbellamy771910 күн бұрын
Very impressed with this series
@megbellamy771910 күн бұрын
What a great program
@Paddysavage473810 күн бұрын
The early immigration of over 150,000 from Ulster between 1700/1750 established what everyone today refers to as the American and Canadian accent. Their Countryfied brogue which is a mix of Irish and Scottish Gaelic combined with English unique to Ulster and more specifically Tyrone, Antrim, Derry and also Donegal as it was populated by the same people as those in Ulster before 1922. There was high immigration from Donegal as they had a lot in common with those from the six Counties. Remember Donegal was included in the area for Plantation. The Southern accent is very different to that of the North. NOTE: Newfoundlanders speak like they just arrived from Limerick. There are people in the Caribbean who also have the Southern accent. This is due to the kidnapping of Irish from Coastal villages and others being transported by the British. White born residents in Jamaica are excellent examples.
@penelopewebling108510 күн бұрын
This is what happens when you build on fllood plains but they do it all the time!
@Rocksyrose9 күн бұрын
This is what happens when generational evil is present.
@msbigdog14609 күн бұрын
@@Rocksyrose🙄🙄
@Paddysavage473810 күн бұрын
Very enjoyable and informative although could have included more regarding the immigrant from Ulster and the tremendous contribution provided to American and Canadian Society. The commentators could have included someone representing Ulster. You Quinn or O’Brien was from Ulster of course,however, was not a typical example of the immigrant in 1700/1750s. Andrew Jackson represents such immigrants as does Ulysses Grant Great Military Leaders and the 1st and 2nd Presidents of Irish Ancestry. 21 Ulster and 3 from the Republic. The Founders of the Mellon Bank are also representative of Commerce and the Legal System as Supreme Court Judges. Frontiersmen such as Davey Crockett, Kit Carson, Jeremiah Johnston, and a host of others are also representative of the Ulster Immigrants. Many also made their mark in Canada.
@Paddysavage473810 күн бұрын
The Irish aren’t Irish until they leave Ireland. The immigrants change within themselves while Ireland stands still, unchanged. The people left behind are unchanged and still need to get up and go to work every day. Tim Cashman found that out when he returned expecting things to be as he remembered.