American Reacts to Heritage Minutes: Viola Desmond, Laura Secord, & Maple Syrup

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Tyler Bucket

Tyler Bucket

Күн бұрын

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As an American I don't know much about Canadian history, and Canadian heritage moments are a fantastic way to learn about important events and people in Canada's past. Today I am very excited to learn about Viola Desmond, Laura Secord, & Maple Syrup. If you enjoyed the video feel free to leave a comment, like, or subscribe for more!

Пікірлер: 496
@user-kt6jv8wk5x
@user-kt6jv8wk5x 9 ай бұрын
Not trying to lessen Rosa's Incredible story but Viola Desmond's act against segregation actually predates Rosa Parks' by 9 years. Both are truly important stories that help define our countries histories.
@kristalandrews1550
@kristalandrews1550 9 ай бұрын
The word 'but' destroys every word you said before it. Don't do that.
@felderup
@felderup 9 ай бұрын
@@kristalandrews1550 the use of but fits very well, depending on the circumstances, depends on how it was used by the other party.
@jjjones4982
@jjjones4982 9 ай бұрын
I think it tells more about the countries than Viola & Rosa that it happened first in Canada so the "but" is fine with me.
@mitchelltyler5972
@mitchelltyler5972 9 ай бұрын
@@kristalandrews1550 Just limitation of language. I mean, how else would you have phrased it, "However"? They used a conjunction because it was practical..woopty fuckin doo.
@Gantzz321
@Gantzz321 9 ай бұрын
@@kristalandrews1550 BUT
@nickokona6849
@nickokona6849 9 ай бұрын
As Canadians, we owe Viola Desmond a debt we can never repay for making Canada a better place for more people.
@Trund27
@Trund27 8 ай бұрын
This is so true and so beautifully said.
@_.ChildOfGod._
@_.ChildOfGod._ 2 ай бұрын
Indeed
@Wunderbred66
@Wunderbred66 18 күн бұрын
@susanharris9734
@susanharris9734 9 ай бұрын
Viola is on our $10. dollar bill. And Laura was moving through very rough landscape to avoid soldiers not cleared land. It took her 18 hours.
@csn10
@csn10 9 ай бұрын
Not to mention the giant squirrels Laura could have encountered... among other scarier critters.
@theCurteye
@theCurteye 9 ай бұрын
He almost saw that in the Wikipedia article, and just didn't quite hold long enough.
@therren9981
@therren9981 9 ай бұрын
Yeah, the video was somewhat implying that she had a hard trek through occupied territory, but for someone who doesn't know the story it would look like a little run through hay fields with some mud here and people not paying attention there. Now it was made and released in 1993, so it's reallllly old (I'm older so I'm saying that about myself too). I'm sure if it were made in the past 10 years it would have been made much much better than this one so people can see how truly great the story is.
@daniellysohirka4258
@daniellysohirka4258 9 ай бұрын
@@therren9981 It's made better on that 10 part series.
@susanharris9734
@susanharris9734 9 ай бұрын
Plus if you have never been in the backwoods of Canada hiking in a floor length dress and petty coats LOL@@therren9981
@sirdavidoftor3413
@sirdavidoftor3413 9 ай бұрын
Laura Secord was looking after her wounded husband who was part of the Canadian militia and fought in an early battle of the war. Having lost the battle, American soldiers just moved into the homes of the settlers. While 18 miles doesn’t seem like much today, remember that she went overland, ie not using the roads. She was in occupied territory. Stay safe, stay sane, stay strong Ukraine 🇺🇦
@jenniferrollin5777
@jenniferrollin5777 9 ай бұрын
And now we have a fantastic ice cream and chocolate company named after her! ✊
@DaveGIS123
@DaveGIS123 9 ай бұрын
"Having lost the battle, American soldiers just moved into the homes of the settlers." It's almost ironic that one of the British laws that pushed the 13 British colonies into rebellion was the "Quartering Act".
@andyshaw7274
@andyshaw7274 9 ай бұрын
What struck me was, as you mentioned, rough terrain, occupied territory. But to make things worse, think about what she would have been wearing. She would have been slogging 18 miles through rough bush, trying to avoid contact with the enemy wearing an ankle-length skirt!
@huotui
@huotui 8 ай бұрын
Laura Secord makes good chocolate too!
@MarieAnne.
@MarieAnne. 7 ай бұрын
@@andyshaw7274 And probably not wearing the best shoes for such a trek.
@prophetisaiah08
@prophetisaiah08 9 ай бұрын
Viola Desmond's case was 9 years before Rosa Park's protest on the bus. The Desmond case became an archetype for challenging segregation laws both in Canada and the US; get a civil rights leader convicted of breaking a segregation law, then appeal until the law can be challenged in a constitutional court, dragging the press along the whole way to influence public opinion. It proved to be a very effective method.
@noseboop4354
@noseboop4354 9 ай бұрын
Too bad this kind of civil disobedience doesn't work anymore today, when governments can freeze your bank accounts and ban you from almost everything at the touch of a button.
@jameslatimer3600
@jameslatimer3600 9 ай бұрын
If Americans back then were as ignorant about Canada as they are today, Rosa might never have heard of Viola Desmond. Great that Viola, pictured on the $10.00 'new' bill, has become commonly known through Canada's policy regarding recognition of outstanding woman.
@prophetisaiah08
@prophetisaiah08 9 ай бұрын
@@jameslatimer3600 To the best of my knowledge, the American civil rights leaders were pretty diligant and knowledgeable about international civil rights actions. There are known cooperations between Canadian and American civil rights actors from the 1940s and early 1950s. So it's definitely possible that Parks and her allies knew of Desmond's actions, though I can't say for sure.
@lorrainegunn4111
@lorrainegunn4111 4 ай бұрын
The Black leaders of American Civil Rights were coming across to Windsor, Ontario, (*since the 1930's, to 1967), to make Speeches, and to celebrate Our Emancipation Day (August 1) Parade and Giganitic Picnics every year: Martin Luther King, and Elinor Roosevelt attended, and made speeches. Traditionally, WINDSOR was a final destination in the UNDERGROUND RAILROAD to Freedom. In 1833, Great Britain and the whole British Empire OUTLAWED SLAVERY, including: "OWNING, BUYING, and SELLING of HUMANS as PROPERTY" and on August 1st, 1834, passed "THE SLAVERY ABOLITION ACT". * There is even a photograph from 1921, showing the crowds of participants from Detroit enjoying the Emancipation Day festivities in Jackson Park, in Windsor, Ontario. There are Black History Museums nearby, and the REAL "Uncle Tom's Cabin" is just a few miles away as well, as the Picnics, in Jackson Park.
@helentrotter8703
@helentrotter8703 9 ай бұрын
Viola Desmond is on our $10 bill
@robertaewing5468
@robertaewing5468 9 ай бұрын
I was just going to say that. She was a great lady and not only a good inspiration to blacks but also to women in general. She was also a business woman in the early 20th century which was another amazing accomplishment
@deborahporter7432
@deborahporter7432 9 ай бұрын
Not only that; it won International Bank Note of the Year for outstanding design in 2019!
@terrythornton39
@terrythornton39 9 ай бұрын
Much happier to see her beautiful face on that bill than that old guy
@terrancebrown87
@terrancebrown87 9 ай бұрын
I keep every Viola I get. I’m sorry.
@Dextamartijn
@Dextamartijn 9 ай бұрын
That old guy on the bill was sir John A Mcdonald Canada's first prime minister
@darcymartin7608
@darcymartin7608 9 ай бұрын
Yes, please keep watching Heritage Minutes. I'd love for you to watch all of them.
@SarahHalina
@SarahHalina 9 ай бұрын
Agreed. They are all amazing
@allison4516
@allison4516 9 ай бұрын
The blocks of maple are maple sugar. If you haven’t tried that you’re missing out! So glad you’re reacting to heritage minutes! Hope you enjoy them as much as we all do
@karenneill9109
@karenneill9109 9 ай бұрын
Heritage minutes rule, eh! At the time when maple sugar was being discovered, cane sugar was also available in the UK. It also came in loafs like that, which had to be shaved down into granular sugar.
@Shan_Dalamani
@Shan_Dalamani 9 ай бұрын
They remind me of maple fudge. Fudge blocks that large would be insanely expensive (yes, I mean today).
@leandragilmour2806
@leandragilmour2806 9 ай бұрын
Those 18 miles would have taken far longer than 3 hours back then. She didn’t follow a road, she booked it through tough terrain and not to mention the wildlife she had to deal with.
@LadyVineXIII
@LadyVineXIII 9 ай бұрын
She didn't even have a trail, let alone a road. Bushwhacking is 100 times harder than by road or trail.
@karenneill9109
@karenneill9109 9 ай бұрын
@@LadyVineXIIIThere weren’t any roads, but she did know some of the unmapped trails used by local native peoples. A very impressive feat!
@h.calvert3165
@h.calvert3165 9 ай бұрын
As a fellow Canadian, I resent your slurs against our patriotic wildlife. What are you suggesting? That beavers accosted her? For shame! Now be Canadian. Say you're sorry! 🍁 🦫 🍁
@brittanytrusler5295
@brittanytrusler5295 8 ай бұрын
​​​@@h.calvert3165I know, I know, but AcTuAlLy... 😂 There was some more dangerous wildlife in the area back then. Bears and wolves, for example... but likely more of a concern, as she was crossing through bogs and the escapement, was the abundance of rattlers.
@FabulousGayLifestyle
@FabulousGayLifestyle 8 ай бұрын
honestly 18 miles would not have been outrageous to a farmer then. everyone walked all day, not like fat people now
@Viennery
@Viennery 9 ай бұрын
@Tyler Bucket “are the First Nations cool with the french?” Actually yes, the French and the First Nations had very good relations during the colonial era. There was a lot of trade and intermarriage, and French law considered all First Nations people across nouvelle france(Canada and America) to be equal French citizens. During English invasion of North America, the French and the natives formed and alliance in défense of each other against the English, but lost due to the sheer numbers of English arriving and navy preventing French reinforcements. The English and Spanish were brutal against native Americans, which is why we don’t hear much about their good relations with Europeans before their arrival.
@Zynnix
@Zynnix 9 ай бұрын
It definitely does depend on the Indigenous nation in particular because they're not just one amalgamous blob. They had their own alliances and disputes. For example they got along well with the Huron-Wendat, but not so much with the Kanien'keha:ka because they were more allied with the British. So all was not like super friendly, but in general, yes the French treated their Indigenous allies better than the English and Spanish.
@helenemalenfant5435
@helenemalenfant5435 9 ай бұрын
Years ago when I was in university I had a friend tell me that the reason that, historically, the English did not respect the French is that they mixed so much with the ‘natives’. I was gobsmacked, to borrow a British expression. Of course she did not know that I had indigenous heritage mixed in with my French. I stared at her in silence for a long time pondering what to say. She had won a bloody Governor General medal and done a summer of volunteer work in Africa...not the sort of colonialist mentality you’d want in such an individual. I ended up commenting that, if she ever shared this historical tidbit with anyone in the future, she should, at a minimum, add some editorial comment to clarify her opinion of it. Then I let her know that I was of mixed heritage and jokingly asked if she would question our friendship.
@mightymoose1158
@mightymoose1158 7 ай бұрын
The first French were humanists. They were doing good then. Then the jesuit priests came in a screwed up a good thing. And the brits hate everybody so they had no chance except with the french people.
@MarieAnne.
@MarieAnne. 7 ай бұрын
@@helenemalenfant5435 Why would you assume a statement of fact (that makes the English look bad) means that she agreed with that sentiment?
@helenemalenfant5435
@helenemalenfant5435 7 ай бұрын
@@MarieAnne. i thought my comment made clear that I had not assumed that. That’s why I advised her that if she ever shared this comment again she should make clear what her opinion of it was. Her whole history and all that I knew about her did not jive with this sentiment and it was a rather shocking comment to make to a French person without adding some opinion about it. Hence my silence following it. She did not in fact agree with it and, I suspect, might have been going for shock value. Perhaps I should have taken more time to carefully word my comment.
@darrenmacdonald1499
@darrenmacdonald1499 9 ай бұрын
The fresh sap from the maple tree is very watery so it has to be boiled down to evaporate the water leaving the sugar. If you boil it for a short time some of the water evaporates and leaves a thick syrup, but if you process it longer it will turn into a sugar. Those blocks are a hardened version of the sugar.
@Axerix
@Axerix 9 ай бұрын
Relations between French Canadians and most Natives nations were very friendly. They teached us how to survive the winter. Really.
@charlie53echo
@charlie53echo 9 ай бұрын
Rosa Parks on the bus: 1955 Viola Desmond at the theater: 1946.
@markastoforoff7838
@markastoforoff7838 9 ай бұрын
I went to school in the 70's and 80's most of our history classes had to do with Canadian history, we learned about Laura Secord in I think gr.7 or 8. Courageous woman. A lot of immigrants here in the past few years probably recognize her name more so for a Laura Secord chocolate store that sells chocolates made by the Laura Secord company. The company was named in honour of her in 1913, she did her run in 1813.
@FoxBatinaHat
@FoxBatinaHat 9 ай бұрын
Rosa Parks happened (after) Viola. Its interesting to think who and what insoired these young women to be so brave. To do this after hearing it be done and won. Must have helped the black community everywhere.
@jerrychouinard9005
@jerrychouinard9005 9 ай бұрын
Tyler, yes the Heritage Minutes was a great awareness and learning tool and promotion. Certainly invoking a matter of pride in many of them. Viola Desmond is on our vertically printed $10 (not sure it was just a limited print). If not for these Heritage Minutes, most Canadians would probably associate the name Laura Secord with a brand of chocolate named for her. If you ever do travel to Canada I HIGHLY recommend finding a Laura Secord store.
@timhall8275
@timhall8275 9 ай бұрын
Yah..viola Desmond did what she did years before the United States .recognize human rights.generally Canada in many issues way more progressive than the states
@theguest4516
@theguest4516 9 ай бұрын
It's the hedgehogs that you gotta get!!!
@chrisgilder1844
@chrisgilder1844 9 ай бұрын
Hey Tyler, Laura Secord's journey was over some very treacherous terrain, it was not a mere jog down a country road. It was an amazing feat for a woman in enemy territory, making her way through forests and swamp to get back to the safety of Canadian territories. According to legend, "it took her approximately 17 hours to travel the distance to warn James FitzGibbon of the impending American attack".
@LadyVineXIII
@LadyVineXIII 9 ай бұрын
Wasn't there a massive bog reaching from the escarpment to the lake back then?
@janmilligan7768
@janmilligan7768 9 ай бұрын
@@LadyVineXIIIYes! It was called the Black Swamp.
@LadyYT100
@LadyYT100 9 ай бұрын
6 heritage minutes down 93 heritage minutes to go, if you are doing 3 heritage minutes each time around, it will take you 31 sessions to finish them, but it may take longer as new videos are made and downloaded to the site. Thanks for doing this.
@wildfirev
@wildfirev 9 ай бұрын
Nellie McClung's heritage minute is always fun. Wilder Penfield's one is almost iconic the last character line is spoken a lot in jest
@michellerenner6880
@michellerenner6880 9 ай бұрын
Persons under the law…
@wildfirev
@wildfirev 9 ай бұрын
I smell burnt toast.. @@michellerenner6880
@KarstenJohansson
@KarstenJohansson 9 ай бұрын
Similar but different: I'd love to see a REACT to Log Driver's Waltz and other Canadian vignettes. Log Driver's Waltz is such an ear worm if you've never heard it before, you'll never forget it after you hear it the first time.
@shannonwolff2127
@shannonwolff2127 9 ай бұрын
Yes! I love the Log Driver's Waltz.
@KarstenJohansson
@KarstenJohansson 9 ай бұрын
@@shannonwolff2127 Do you know that the guy's family recreated it in a book? I bought a copy a couple years ago. It gets read in this household often. I also love his Blackfly song, which is also an animated vignette. I think I liked the vignettes more than the shows I was watching around them as a good little Canadian kid.
@EllaBee90
@EllaBee90 9 ай бұрын
The sap from the maple trees is like water. It tastes a bit like sugar, but it needs to be boiled to get it like syrup, even more for sugar - like the loaves you see. Depending on how you boil the sap, you'll get syrup, toffee, sugar - then maple cream, maple butter, maple sponge, maple flowers, maple sugar bits, maple cones, and water of maple - just pure water without the sugar. In my town in New Brunswick we have the biggest maple producer in the world with 162 000 taps.(and still growing) Americans have historical movies and series, Canadians have the Heritage Minutes. We could make so many films with all the events and people that made a difference in the Canadian history. We just don't have the budget - I know the talent is there.
@AlyssaFleming
@AlyssaFleming 9 ай бұрын
I don't know how much Tyler actually reads the comments, but I really appreciate him doing these videos. Despite the fact that I'm Canadian, I'm still learning a lot of new things alongside him. Between my frequent school absences & my lack of interest in learning about history as a kid/teenager, I don't recall ever learning about Viola Desmond in school. Better to learn late than never, though!
@carlop.7182
@carlop.7182 9 ай бұрын
Thanks for your reaction. yes, we have a reputation of being nice & kind, but we had our own demons and things were not always right. especially regarding indigenous people: see residential schools & the Indian Act. Fortunately, things changed and people want to build bridges today. Viola Desmond is the new face of our 10$ bill, if you're interested to look at that also. Have a nice day, Tyler.
@perryelyod4870
@perryelyod4870 9 ай бұрын
Is it still a vertical bill? I have one from years ago, when I was in Canada.
@b.w.6535
@b.w.6535 9 ай бұрын
@@perryelyod4870 It is.
@noseboop4354
@noseboop4354 9 ай бұрын
You do realize the Indian Act is still in force today, and still treats indigenous people as imbeciles who are incapable of managing their own affairs? And imposes eugenics based on bloodlines? It still isn't right today.
@silverwing222
@silverwing222 9 ай бұрын
Please do watch the one on the Acadian Deportation, and eventually learn more about it in a separate video. It is a significant and traumatic part of the history of the French Canadian and Acadian communities of Canada (some Acadians escaped and found refuge in Quebec during the deportation while others resettled in Quebec after the fall of New France / Canada at the hands of the British in 1760-1763).
@markmiller4609
@markmiller4609 9 ай бұрын
Tyler I have commented before I am registered with a Mohawk Nation in Ontario regarding Laura Secord I lived for a number of years in the Hamilton area now we have the Niagara Escarpment we backed on to it wooded area limestone etc Laura had to run up hill through all that trust me it can be brutal I climbed it before
@kathryndunn9142
@kathryndunn9142 9 ай бұрын
Yes i want to see more i love my indigenous people
@rockymountainlady
@rockymountainlady 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for loving us...I/We love our fair-skinned "Skywalkers" who many like me feel are unfairly categorized as white. I cannot speak for the many VASTLY different Tribes of Canada, but I can speak for mine because I was born in the '60s to 3rd Generation of "Indian" Veterans, I have a good understanding of my Country's humble beginnings with early settlers, and have lived through some of our Country's biggest evolutions, Culturally and otherwise, and I could be of significant help by sharing the real living results of our evolution together through my deep-rooted history to the lineage that stood brilliantly steadfast, and unshakeable in the response to news/warnings from warriors like Laura Secord. We fought that ambush together and together WE made Canada what it is today from all 3 coasts to the Arctic borders. I'm sorry that it appears to be becoming more rare for the public on both sides to understand that stance in Patriotism. It was most certainly not a part of our religious and federal curriculums. Secord...Bless her heart and Soul, is only one example of how we fought together or a good portion of Canada would be the USA. Yet...YET, I cannot comment using my own experiences as a living survivor of the many HOT issues of today because the public comes out like a tsunami with unbelieve ignorance and distasteful knowledge of our history. It's my opinion that 150 years of progress, in only 8 years... is on the edge of a cliff into a pool of quicksand. And it might be one of my own to jump first💔 it's not a small thing that @TylerBucket is doing fun videos of our history. I pop in on this channel when I need a patriotic lift and there you are, stating love for my being. I needed that...Mussi Cho💖
@Pam-56
@Pam-56 9 ай бұрын
Laura Secord was a true hero. The natives were part of our troops. Canada was a British colony at the time so the US was actually fighting the British. I live in this part of Canada, in fact my high school is named Laura Secord Secondary School (Secord for short).
@arrow-lo7jf
@arrow-lo7jf 9 ай бұрын
There was slavery in Canada , only for a very short time, it ended when the British stood against it but unfortunately segregation lasted way to long,God Bless Her..
@peggyt1243
@peggyt1243 9 ай бұрын
There was no segregation except in Halifax and that was a carryover from previous centuries when black people came to Nova Scotia with their "owners" after the American revolution. The virtue signaling liberals had to do a thorough search to find a black person who had been unfairly treated. No slaves were ever imported to Canada to work except for the ones who came with their American owners after the Revolution. Most black people who have ancestors in Canada came here through the underground railroad.
@user-ni1hj2ht2g
@user-ni1hj2ht2g 9 ай бұрын
Most of the slaves in Canada were native. Yes some black people too, but everyone assumes all slaves were black. Total of about 5000 people, about 1800 were black. Thomas Jefferson had over 600 black slaves. Add just the slaves owned by the "founding fathers"of the U.S. and you'll get a far greater number than the total in Canada from the time of discovery until it ended in 1833. It was legal here for a couple of hundred years.
@peggyt1243
@peggyt1243 9 ай бұрын
Slavery might have been legal in Canada since it was not specifically illegal until about 1830. It was however not normal, actually quite rare. @@user-ni1hj2ht2g
@tristanridley1601
@tristanridley1601 9 ай бұрын
Tyler, the war of 1812 is the war where the USA invaded Canada, because Britain was busy with Napoleon. When it was over, the British negotiated instead of Canadians, and they handed Canadian territory to the USA even though we held American border forts. Worse yet, our native allies lost EVERYthing. All of Ohio and a lot of nearby land in other states was taken unjustly from the native British allies and annexed by the USA. It was one of the greatest betrayals in semi-modern history, in my opinion. Now, American education teaches American students only the few British naval counter-attacks, like the invasion of New Orleans. They even pretend it was an American victory, even though the American goal of taking Canada was a complete failure.
@dennisdwyer6500
@dennisdwyer6500 9 ай бұрын
Tou couldn't have written this better Iris. Michigan also should be a part of Canada if it wasn't for the British
@donnaogorman4935
@donnaogorman4935 9 ай бұрын
Laura Secord's home is a historic sight in Niagara on the Lake
@ThursdayNext67
@ThursdayNext67 9 ай бұрын
For your next video, I'd recommend the Herirage Minutes for Sam Steele, Wilder Penfield, and Vikings
@robertaewing5468
@robertaewing5468 9 ай бұрын
Laura Secord was another amazing woman and there was a chocolate and ice cream shop created in her name, I used to assistant manage one of the shops in Toronto
@djdissi
@djdissi 9 ай бұрын
Lol I worked at a Laura Secord shop as well, in Montreal
@visaman
@visaman 9 ай бұрын
A school in Vancouver is named after her.
@Nate099
@Nate099 9 ай бұрын
The French and Indigenous First Nations had very good relationships and intermingled. United by their joint resistance throughout various periods of time against the British who wanted to eradicate both minority groups. There’s even a federally recognized First Nations ethnicity, “Métis” (pronounced: Mate-Y) which are ethnically (a specific) First Nations and French offspring, creating their own unique indigenous identity.
@breannacarels6479
@breannacarels6479 9 ай бұрын
My husband and his family are Métis: a distinct people , formed from the marriages of indigenous and European (French) women and men. They have their own unique culture and traditions and currently have special recognition by the government.
@antipodesman2
@antipodesman2 9 ай бұрын
Ever been to Ile a la Cross in Saskatchewan ? I was there over 20 years ago in the winter by ice road. Had to keep the doors open ÷) One of the earliest settlements in Canada.
@gamexsimmonds3581
@gamexsimmonds3581 9 ай бұрын
The part that makes Viola Desmonds story so cool is that unlike Rosa Parks she wasnt really an activist until thos moment, she didnt go to the theater with the idea of standing up for Civil Rights.she was a suceasfyl black business woman from Halifax and in Halifax in 1946 I dont think they had white only sections anymore. But she was on a Business trip and her card needed to be repaied in New Glasgow so while she waited she decided to see a movie. She entered the theater a normal customer, and left a Lady of history, a civil rights hero. I find it so honorable to stand by your principles and take a stand in the moment, when its unplanned and when its not something you set out to do
@meeting_meghan
@meeting_meghan 9 ай бұрын
So its Viola (V-eye-ola) as said at the end of that heritage minute. Laura Secord herself was a real person, but the story became a but mythologized, and now we have a chocolate shop company called Laura Secord's. Also I believe that would have been hardening maple sugar so it could have been cut into smaller pieces for candy and melting into other shapes for adding to foods or eaten as is. That would not have been a cheese or loaf, even if it was loaf shape. I'd suggest checking out "The Discovery of Insulin", "Jackie Robinson", & the "Avro Arrow" next.
@GoWestYoungMan
@GoWestYoungMan 9 ай бұрын
Edmonton Grads, Nitro, and Avro Arrow are amongst my favourite Heritage Minutes videos. Like many of these videos they shone a light on bits of our history that would otherwise get overlooked.
@mass4552
@mass4552 9 ай бұрын
The video for Jacques Plante kept popping up. I think Tyler would enjoy that.
@heinrichredlich3594
@heinrichredlich3594 9 ай бұрын
@Tyler Bucket..make sure you watch the one about the Acadians. You could probably do a whole video on these other 'French Canadians' who are very important in the maritimes.
@jackrainey4489
@jackrainey4489 9 ай бұрын
And when you watch it, know that the word Cajun is an anglicized spelling of the French pronunciation of Acadian. The Cajun peoples of Louisiana are descendants of the Acadians that were deported by the British. That is not mentioned in the Heritage minute if I remember correctly.
@DaveGIS123
@DaveGIS123 9 ай бұрын
In 2018, Viola Desmond's picture was put on the Canadian $10 bill. The opposite side of the bill is a picture of the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg, the first national museum ever located outside Canada's National Capital Region. Yes, Canada's history is not squeaky clean, but we're willing to learn from our mistakes. And, yes, Canada even has a national museum for human rights!
@meggo329
@meggo329 9 ай бұрын
You realize Laura Secord is an American who loved Canada and was so loyal she risked her life to save those men
@johnt8636
@johnt8636 9 ай бұрын
Yup, and her father moved the family to the Niagara Peninsula in 1795. Laura was five years old. So...
@Trygvar13
@Trygvar13 9 ай бұрын
Actually although she was in born in the US her family who were Loyalists moved to Canada in 1795 so she was no longer American by 1813. She was Canadian.
@eyden1562
@eyden1562 9 ай бұрын
Anybody recognize Robert Knepper in the Laura Secord vid...? Lol I love catching glimpses of these celebrities early gigs. Haha
@krissywilbur3484
@krissywilbur3484 9 ай бұрын
I haven't really been able to afford cable for years, and after everything went digital so that you cant even watch local stations without cable, i haven't seen Heritage Minutes for years, and thanks to you Tyler Bucket, i am now aware that they are still making them!!
@historyfreak6591
@historyfreak6591 9 ай бұрын
The other shocking pount about Viola's story is that she wasn't even alive when her pardon was granted. From what I saw in the articles you read, she passed away in the 1960's and her pardon was granted in 2010. Like to not even be pardoned in your own lifetime is just shocking
@hugoangers8991
@hugoangers8991 9 ай бұрын
Hi Tyler! I am a Québécois (french-canadian living in Québec city). I am still learning English. I don't know which part of USA you are from but your English is very clear and easy to understand!!! I understand you almost as well as a french speaker! Sometimes when I hear Americans from southern parts of USA talking, it is for me almost impossible to understand! I really enjoy your videos. You are making such funny and interesting comments and you are very enthusiastic! Keep making videos on Canada! 👏💚😃
@letitbesummer6536
@letitbesummer6536 9 ай бұрын
Tyler you amaze me! One of the few Americans who actually is interested & learns things about Canada. Lol. 😅 Thank you
@robertrichey211
@robertrichey211 9 ай бұрын
One of the ferries crossing Halifax NS harbour is named Viola Desmond. She was a very brave woman.
@kenneth7027
@kenneth7027 3 ай бұрын
Not only on an award winning Canadian ten dollar bill, but on a postage stamp as well. Deserves great respect!
@dadalorian99
@dadalorian99 9 ай бұрын
17:39 maple fudge of some sort. An excellent source of sugar that can be transported easily.
@donnaogorman4935
@donnaogorman4935 9 ай бұрын
I am descended from Laura Secord. Two cousins live in the US..one was up to visit a number of years back and while we were out wandering came across a Laura Secord kiosk. My cousin asked if we could get a free box of chocolates. 🙄 No, if you want to bring your Mom a box of them. Favourite chocolates in the family as far back as I can remember. BUT when the company was taken over they changed
@MarieAnne.
@MarieAnne. 7 ай бұрын
How would a random employee at a Laura Secord kiosk know that you and your cousin were descended from Laura Secord?
@donnaogorman4935
@donnaogorman4935 7 ай бұрын
@@MarieAnne. Exactly...that is what I told my cousin.
@g8kpr3000
@g8kpr3000 9 ай бұрын
Laura Secord is a Canadian hero. If you visit Canada, you will see a well known Chocolate shop that uses her name. However most school kids learn of her amazing feat in grade 6 or 7.
@LouismarieBelanger
@LouismarieBelanger 9 ай бұрын
Maple sugar blocks. There is two kinds of maple sugar: the soft one and the hard one. Both are very good indeed. 😋😋😋😋😝
@OnyxMoneyDrops
@OnyxMoneyDrops 9 ай бұрын
Laura Secord worked with the native people to help her reach her destination. Together they finished the 30km trek and prevented the invasion that could have lost them the war. She was very important in Canadian history
@kopitarrules
@kopitarrules 9 ай бұрын
I would think those bricks would likely be what I have always heard called "maple fudge" a version of of fudge made with maple instead of chocolate. VERY tasty. Worth trying if you ever get the chance. For your next heritage minute reactions I would reccommend "Sitting Bull" "vikings" and "underground railroad" all of which will, in different ways probably, surprise delight and slightly sadden you. (There are like dozens I could recommend but for this old Canadian boy those stand out.)
@zephyr332
@zephyr332 9 ай бұрын
The fact that you’re an intellectual and interested in learning makes you even more beautiful, Tyler. Look at YOU rakin’ in the love! - KENNY from Toronto.❤
@sharronobrien542
@sharronobrien542 9 ай бұрын
You are understating the time involved.The average time to walk a mile is 15-20 minutes. SHE had to run through the woods, up hills and over very rough country. It took her 18 hours to reach McFibbons.
@TheSobeysworker
@TheSobeysworker 9 ай бұрын
Please react to ALL the heritage minutes. They're so iconic and i wish they regularly played on TV today
@danielmackay1386
@danielmackay1386 9 ай бұрын
They are maple sugar blocks
@karlweir3198
@karlweir3198 9 ай бұрын
Thanks for doing these. I've always loved these commercials it always taught me something
@Bob-ok4nv
@Bob-ok4nv 9 ай бұрын
Do John McCrae
@Ken-lz3ld
@Ken-lz3ld 9 ай бұрын
Do John McCrae
@Kesbyk
@Kesbyk 9 ай бұрын
Do John McCrae please
@RobBLee-ze1lm
@RobBLee-ze1lm 9 ай бұрын
Do John McCrae please 🙏🙏🙏
@dawnchiasson8099
@dawnchiasson8099 2 ай бұрын
Viola's grave is in Halifax's Camphill Cemetery, right next to the Public Gardens, for anyone visiting the city, along with other notable historical Nova Scotians, like Alexander Keith. Worth a visit!
@gazzmanp
@gazzmanp 9 ай бұрын
Mmmmmm.... Laura Secord chocolate...🤤
@kenrichardson6567
@kenrichardson6567 9 ай бұрын
Awesome to watch these again.Thank you..And I am glad you are enjoying these.looking forward to move..the I smell burnt toast one is a good one as well.
@DataLal
@DataLal 9 ай бұрын
The "i smelled burnt toast" one is for Dr. Penfield
@Saintly2
@Saintly2 9 ай бұрын
Anyone else yelling at Tyler to keep scrolling on Viola’s bio so he notices how Canada honoured her?? 😊
@howardhales6325
@howardhales6325 9 ай бұрын
Tyler. Ryan is his brother. And yes, I yell at him a lot.
@Saintly2
@Saintly2 9 ай бұрын
@@howardhales6325 oh dear!!
@sadp9013
@sadp9013 9 ай бұрын
I love every story about thr french and native getting togetter. For good and for bad. Im the resulte of that. My famillt came too new france in 1650. And got mix some where in the line with native. Mostly french tho
@murrayc9615
@murrayc9615 9 ай бұрын
Yet, another urban myth here in Nova Scotia is that the story of Viola Desmond actually made its way to Rosa Parks which inspired her refusal to give up her seat on the bus
@bonniespruin6369
@bonniespruin6369 8 ай бұрын
They named a chocolate company after Laura Secord. My husband and I used to go to the mall and go to the Laura Secord shop to get an ice cream cone with the signature chocolate on top. It was sooooo good. They sold chocolates as well. I didn't know about the woman, Laura Secord, until this Heritage Minute came on TV.
@TH3B0N3Y4RD
@TH3B0N3Y4RD 9 ай бұрын
These Heritage minute videos remind me of the 90s being at my Grandparents place watching cable. God i miss them. But its cool to show my kids!! Thanks Tyler. Great content. Your an honorary Canadian in our eyes buddy! 😁
@visaman
@visaman 9 ай бұрын
Hockey Night In Canada.
@alisonduncan3578
@alisonduncan3578 2 ай бұрын
Oh and those bricks are just big chunks of maple syrup fudge. After you condense the maple syrup out of the tree by boiling it for a really long time it gets thick like syrup but you have to boil it for a really long time to get the water content down. If you pour that syrup on snow it turns into toffee but you don’t eat the snow part you just eat the Toffie
@fnanette1
@fnanette1 9 ай бұрын
You need to go to a Sugaring Off party. They are great fun and , yes, it’s the best way to eat when fresh, rolled on a stick straight from the snow.
@xstitch1954
@xstitch1954 9 ай бұрын
I love these Heritage moments, I've learned some historical things I'd never really heard of before. The last one looks like slabs of Maple Fudge (delicious).
@paulahillier1390
@paulahillier1390 4 ай бұрын
From Niagara , we have Laura Secord house, you can visit. We also have a chocolate company named after her.
@katfinn9352
@katfinn9352 9 ай бұрын
HI! Keep watching these. They are all excellent and fascinating and educational. Love your reaction.
@lisecarrier4531
@lisecarrier4531 9 ай бұрын
As a Canadian who lives in the same area Laura Record travelled if you saw the terrain as it is today and imagine it untouched you'd be even more impressed as it's rough.
@jeanlucfaille7495
@jeanlucfaille7495 9 ай бұрын
when you boil eastern maple 104 f (40 gallons of water dunne 1 gallon of syrup) if you continue to do so you get taffy 112 f (on the snow) if you stir the taffy you get sugar (the kind of bread) 17:35
@anne-9374
@anne-9374 9 ай бұрын
Tyler, you need to look into the maple production…from collecting the sap ( water) from the tree, boiling etc. To make syrup, taffee, sugar, etc.
@Metal-Josh
@Metal-Josh 9 ай бұрын
I like these. Your reactions for sure but also remembering these heritage minutes. They would sneak these in during commercial breaks. Great way to reach the masses. I think one toud like is the one on Jacques Cartier. You’ll like it
@rosaliegolding5549
@rosaliegolding5549 9 ай бұрын
That was super interesting Tyler and thought provoking , many thanks for your choice of video today 🤗👍👏🤷‍♀️
@ShawnHCorey
@ShawnHCorey 9 ай бұрын
@17:25 Those are bricks of maple sugar. They are nothing but sugar. They are made by boiling all the water out of the syrup in a loaf pan.
@habfan3527
@habfan3527 9 ай бұрын
Viola is now on our $10 dollars bill
@brucebannerman6848
@brucebannerman6848 4 ай бұрын
Violas Way is the name of a street beside the former Roseland building, Violas Place is a church building used as shelter for needy people in New Glasgow, N S
@jenniferchalette4746
@jenniferchalette4746 8 ай бұрын
Laura Secord also is a chocolate chain retail store in Canada. It sells high end quality box chocolates and ice creams. The chocolates have the side portrait of Laura Secord on them as a cameo style. We have one here in Cornwall, Ontario where I am from. Please research more on that. P.s. they are delicious!! Also! Music wise check out the band "The Barenaked ladies" they're the ones you hear at the beginning of the big bang theory ☺️
@HHLyndhurst
@HHLyndhurst Ай бұрын
Many comments regarding Viola Desmond on our $10 bill, (as of 2016) the only woman to appear on any Canadian denomination. Cannot leave out Laura Secord either. Heritage Minutes focus on the individual and how their courage and steadfastness shaped the country we have today. You covered In Flanders Fields in another video and it's why in Canada/UK that we wear poppies on Novermber 11th, Remembrance Day. To honour those who gave their lives so we could live freely. As my Grandad (served in the Royal Canadian Navy) said "Freedom is never free."
@nicolemarois5900
@nicolemarois5900 9 ай бұрын
In Québec, we have a good relationship with Aboriginal people ever since Jacques Cartier discovered Canada or Kanata! Remember, we were not colonialist as the English people were. We were not trying to eradicate Aboriginal people.
@mariearrington3591
@mariearrington3591 9 ай бұрын
Yeah, not, remember Oka?
@Malfehzan
@Malfehzan 9 ай бұрын
@@mariearrington3591 A lot has changed in 250-300 years. But Nicole is right that, at that time, the authorities weren't so much concerned with taking the indians out of the land (or taking "the indian" out of "the man", re: resident schools) as they were with trying to keep their settlers settled and not out-to-party with the autochthones in the backwoods. Champlain had seen what Cortez et al. had done in South-America and wanted none of it.
@nicolemarois5900
@nicolemarois5900 9 ай бұрын
@@mariearrington3591 This was a dispute of territories, nothing else!!!
@RogersMgmtGroup
@RogersMgmtGroup 8 ай бұрын
Laura Secord’s name was used for a 111 year old Canadian chocolate company which has kept the name famous. She has been featured on a Quarter coin as well.
@juliesollis9262
@juliesollis9262 3 ай бұрын
I did know about Rosa Parks is the US, but didn' t know about Viola Desmond in my country!!!😮😮😮 I am learning about history too. Laura Secord I did know though. Thank You for dealing with the Heritage Minutes history❤
@jerseyknots2321
@jerseyknots2321 3 ай бұрын
Viola Desmond has now also been honored posthumously as her picture is on our $10 bill.
@jerseyknots2321
@jerseyknots2321 3 ай бұрын
All the Heritage minutes can be found on KZbin. Some very interesting videos to watch.
@juliesollis9262
@juliesollis9262 3 ай бұрын
@@jerseyknots2321 Really? I had no idea. Have to find a $10 bill to see. TY for the information
@paulahillier1390
@paulahillier1390 4 ай бұрын
The maple "loaf" is just maple syrup cooked all the way down, so there is less moisture. It is a sugar bomb. One tint piece is all you need. 🍁💣
@rally7126
@rally7126 9 ай бұрын
Love that you've discovered the Heritage Minutes. I would also recommend the following: Agnes MacPhail Responsible Government Emily Murphy Basketball The Bluenose (the Bluenose is on our dime) Expulsion of the Acadians (my family is Acadian on my mother's side)
@williamharding4260
@williamharding4260 9 ай бұрын
Not only came out of the blue to you, Tyler, it shocked me too, about this in Canada.
@PeekabooBlitz
@PeekabooBlitz 9 ай бұрын
Tyler, please check out Heritage Minutes: Wilder Penfield and Heritage Minutes: The Discovery of Insulin. Also, where are you from? I am an American that moved up to Canada recently to marry a Canadian. If you ever want to visit Canada, we have a room for you. 😉
@debs11100
@debs11100 9 ай бұрын
That was wonderful Tyler. I grew up watching these.
@kalemacpherson1542
@kalemacpherson1542 2 ай бұрын
The roadway by where the Roseland building is is now called Viola's Way, as well they named the local homeless shelter in her name
@PaulVandersypen
@PaulVandersypen 9 ай бұрын
Sadly, most Canadians today only know of Laura Secord because there is a box of chocolates with her name (and signature, which is cool) on it. The chocolates are amazing and very popular around Christmas. She had nothing to do with the creation of the chocolate company, and was long deceased before the company was founded.
@Viennery
@Viennery 9 ай бұрын
Those are blocks of maple sugar at the end of the
@kalemacpherson1542
@kalemacpherson1542 2 ай бұрын
I walk by the Roseland Theatre daily, it's now owned by Jamie MacGillivray, a very successful businessman who owns an insurance and law firm. Its called Bespoke Motor Company now where he works on his pasttime building vehicles
@caroldavis6104
@caroldavis6104 9 ай бұрын
I know you must live in the south because there are definitely parts of the US THAT GET LOTS OF SNOW. THE WINTER WEATHER in Buffalo is worse that toronto😊
@user-ni1hj2ht2g
@user-ni1hj2ht2g 9 ай бұрын
For sure he's no where near the border, he just recently figured out that Niagara Falls is on the border . Still hasn't figured out that States like Maine and Vermont produce maple syrup. Think a lot of his not knowing things must be faked. He frequently claims to not knowing things that he has already reacted to
@Siluialwin
@Siluialwin 9 ай бұрын
At the end it is just blocks of maple sugar....you boil the syrup down to a thick syrup and then whip it until it becomes a sugar (similar in texture to a brown sugar) these can then be put into molds to make maple small maple leafs like you can buy today or into loaves like in the video. ...think of them as giant sugar cubes which could then be shipped back to Europe or stored for future use.
@InkyJinks
@InkyJinks 9 ай бұрын
Please check out the Wilder Penfield Heritage Minute! He was a pioneering neurosurgeon who mapped the cerebral cortex. It's the reason people joke about smelling burnt toast in relation to neurological events like seizures.
@glen3679
@glen3679 9 ай бұрын
You have to do Sam Steele of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police to predecessor of the RCMP
@mikewhite723
@mikewhite723 9 ай бұрын
There is a large candy store all around the country named after Laura Secord
@proteus404
@proteus404 9 ай бұрын
The Halifax explosion heritage moment is one that always gets me. The man saved 700+ lives
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