When I was a child, I was helping clean up and clear out an old barn from the 1700s near Wilksbare, PA. We found several Indian war clubs and a tomahawk plus a musket that was stored in the ceiling area concealed. The original owner of the farm had fought in the revolutionary war and was at the battle of Wyoming PA. We found forgotten war trophies.
@hancehanson40002 ай бұрын
WOW!!! Whattah story!!, what a discovery!!! Do you know what became of the *relics*?
@jameselliott53152 ай бұрын
@hancehanson4000 The property owner took them. They were in really good condition because they hadn't been exposed to any elements. The barn had several additions over the years and the earliest construction was deeper inside the barn.
@hancehanson40002 ай бұрын
@@jameselliott5315 Ahhhhh-MAZING!!! That kind of story is my dream.
@letsdothis90632 ай бұрын
That is cool! We had a neighbor that was in the demolition business. They were tearing down an old house (in Mississippi, I forget exactly where). The home was antebellum. They found several weapons when they pried door frames, flooring, ect.... All firearms were dated to the Civil War period or older. Most were loaded. There are several probable reasons for this being done. They could have been hiding them from the Confederates, or the Yankees. What seems apparent, is they were meant to be used immediately if retrieved by the owners.
@christaylor4477Ай бұрын
They would be museum pieces today and very valuable. Hopefully they didn't lose or destroy them
@brassteeth33552 ай бұрын
You are doing important work. Keeping our ancestry alive one story at a time. We come from strong, brave, and capable people. I love hearing about their life and times.
@EricYellowBirdАй бұрын
Bs you are all hateful and disgusting
@rt3box6tx742 ай бұрын
This was a tough one. So much detail about his torture and that of other's he witnessed.
@forceghostburtreynolds2 ай бұрын
Actual history is the best kind
@thomasmcloney14372 ай бұрын
That was very interesting. I feel his story was a true account of his suffering. Thanks and cheers.
@terrychase39692 ай бұрын
I've been studying the local Indians in Pennsylvania and I have read so many testimonials on the same thing it's horrible
@Sandbarfight2 ай бұрын
I greatly appreciate what you're doing for our people. God bless you and your Kin
@StDavidpipes2 ай бұрын
Definitely true! Read the narratives The Frontiersmen and Wilderness Empire by Allan W. Eckert . These folks in this story were mellow compared to the eye witness accounts in Eckert’s books!
@scottnyc65722 ай бұрын
Such barbarism that goes unheard among many.
@TheGravitywerks2 ай бұрын
...willfully.
@doilooklikeicare3372 ай бұрын
remember when the vikings invaded britain? or ireland? or france? barbarism from white people is a thing dont act like the natives were the only ones fighting eachother 😂
@Thoralmir2 ай бұрын
It is actively concealed by Leftists.
@leszekwolkowski9856Ай бұрын
are you suggesting that these savages were NOT noble? *shock*
@SierphamАй бұрын
People around the world at the time were like this
@rhonda82312 ай бұрын
These always shock me, they are so brutal. Thanks for reading it!
@redr1150r2 ай бұрын
Absolutely true.
@ArthurShelby481Ай бұрын
He was from Aberdeen, my home city. I remember my parents telling me about where a barn used to be that it was where ‘ the bad boys end up’ . It was where young boys and girls that had been sold into slavery. Good read.
@calebryan2401Ай бұрын
James LaFond has a great series of books on "Plantation America" and "White Slavery"
@deaddocreallydeaddoc52442 ай бұрын
I think his story was too detailed and accurate geographically and inside the incidental history to be made up. Of course, it should be easy to confirm by a real historian by checking if the families he listed as raided and murdered are true.
@lauraburroughs2262 ай бұрын
It’s horrific, but I’m glad he lived to tell his story. I believe him. There were tribes that fought with each other and tortured them too.
@tabathac4442 ай бұрын
Of course. But we are told they were mostly peaceful. 😅
@alisterx86982 ай бұрын
It’s ironic that people want to say the Europeans treated the Indian ‘s so badly to take land. but if you think about it they did nothing different than what other Indian tribes did to other Indian tribes. They massacred each other they burnt down the villages they killed everybody, including women, child, and Man to get land of their own, which caused other Indian tribes to lead the land to conquer other lands.
@doilooklikeicare3372 ай бұрын
@@alisterx8698what your saying is projection everywhere in european history all they did was kill rape and murder eachother for better farm land
@doilooklikeicare3372 ай бұрын
@@alisterx8698the literal man who “discovered” america wrote himself “these people are way to nice and respectful and would make great slaves and would be easy to exploit” if what you said is true why didnt they kill christoper the second him and his men got off their ship? why did they allow europeans to even settle with them? you are speaking from a racist ideology
@doilooklikeicare3372 ай бұрын
@@alisterx8698and of course there was wars do you think the natives just lived in harmony? its human nature to fight were seeing it today with european on european conflicts and for what? land and resources
@stacyhartman874923 күн бұрын
I just found your channel and am really enjoying it, thank you! I live in the town Fort Loudon, named for the Fort Loudoun erected in 1756 during the French and Indian War. I love learning this history we weren't taught in school, brutal though it is.
@katipohl24312 ай бұрын
True Story. Love and greetings from Germany.
@MichaelWolf9402 ай бұрын
Great story! Thanks.
@SisterWomen2 ай бұрын
Its honestly so easy to understand why these people were hated.
@imout6712 ай бұрын
The largest massacre in US history before 911 was probably fort Mims. 500 men,women and children done in around mobile Alabama. Our modern history is awful kind to the natives
@kieranmclaughlin89202 ай бұрын
Yeah, the invaders. I agree.
@hancehanson40002 ай бұрын
@@kieranmclaughlin8920 Nahh, that ain't what he's sayin---
@thomasmcintosh2977Ай бұрын
@@kieranmclaughlin8920If thats the case, you're also guilty of benefitting from the invasion and should give your home, property, pets, bank account to me since I'm a descendant 😊
@jimberlygridder183Ай бұрын
@@kieranmclaughlin8920so you are a devil like the ones who tortured and subjected humans to such cruelty that it is astonishing ? Yes..if you defend such acts then God allmighty will deal with you.
@lenormand49672 ай бұрын
The same happened to my family in Pennsylvania. After they murdered my patriarch, the indians enslaved his young son. He was never to be seen again. My matriarch, alone, raised their 5 bairn and kept their lands from predation.
@GlenLake2 ай бұрын
Great reading, thank you.
@justjosie01072 ай бұрын
Our ancestors overcame so much to build a civilized nation. We must keep what they created without apology.
@TheREALExposingtheJoyofS-px3ri2 ай бұрын
You guys didn't build any 'civilized' nation... the alien shapeshifters/ skinwalkers that work through secret societies that control all European societies/ or western society as a whole built those "civilizations" that are imitations of human civilizations with one or two true human elements from within. Europeans contributed nothing to the world ((if very little)), and this can be said for all races of man... even the North American Indians, except the North American Indians ((even tribal leaders today)) are aware of this fact still. Planet Earth is a loosh farm for the star people/ multi-dimensional alien 'gods' that created humanity in order to use us as psychic exploits. The Lakota word for "star people" is "Two-kahn-sha-la" and "Two-kahn-sha-la" is a representation of the Judaic god "Yahweh" which is not a god viewed in the same sense a Christian would view him, but such a god is believed to be a unit of aliens/ or a hive-mind... like the Borg from Star Trek.
@jimberlygridder183Ай бұрын
Yes indeed and its time white folks stopped cowering and allowing their children to be belittled and slandered. Robbing them.of positive identity. There is much to be proud of and thankful for white folks.
@bobfaam5215Ай бұрын
True . But Too much CIVILIZATION makes a person Soft , wea:k and ti:mid and Effem:inate. An Over CIVILIZED person cannot even protect his women and children. 😅 Only UNCIVILIZED and BR:UTAL people can fight wars and conquer lands and protect others. Europeans are the Descendants of BRA:VE and VIOL:ENT BARBARIANS and they should be proud of themselves. 💪🏿 💪🏿🪓⚔️🗡 Only POWER and MIGHT can ensure Order . S:laves don’t create history, only Warriors do .
@adrianmcdonald84Ай бұрын
He should have been called "Unlucky Peter".
@outdoorloser43402 ай бұрын
Thanks for the history 🍻
@deemeedee4862Ай бұрын
Totally believe because im fro Dundee & have heard similar recounts
@jimberlygridder183Ай бұрын
Such cruelty, wickedness and devilry worked by the hands of these monsters. These Indians practiced such terrible things that it leaves one astonied.
@nigelsheppard625Ай бұрын
Unfortunately, we over romanticise the culture and conduct of Native Americans and have a tendency to just blame "the White Man" for their conduct in this conflict.
@patriotpep2 ай бұрын
Hearing stories like this only justifies to me, 'Manifest Destiny'
@raclark27302 ай бұрын
Not all tribes did this. War is war, it was what it was. No need for justifications in relation to the past.
@MrSparkums2 ай бұрын
See Ochpaniztli regarding the Spanish..👍
@lizturner267Ай бұрын
As a Canadian I’m quite pleased we halted your Manifest Destiny aspirations. Honestly, do you actually know what it means? It’s never been successful in the end (examples…the Roman Empire, the Ottoman Empire, the British Empire, oh and don’t forget Hitler's attempt at manifest destiny in Europe). War is a horrific enterprise, by both sides, on both sides. Search ANY nation’s history (outside the US, high school world history is mandatory) and you’ll find the depths of barbarism a historical fact in every culture during war.
@cplmpcocptcl6306Ай бұрын
@@lizturner267Congrats on your second grade education. As a Canadian you are quite superior.😅
@jimberlygridder183Ай бұрын
@@lizturner267nope...white folks did not have reputations for beimg this inventively cruel even in times of war. The thing is..these were not rare instances of rogue bands of natives doing this. Many many Indian tribes and peoples practiced such barberism and abominable butchery. Canibalism.and all manner of torture. And they were doing this well before the white man came. Although it cannot be said of all the natives, its far too many to be discounted.
@alisterx86982 ай бұрын
I always found it Ironic that people think the Europeans treated the Indians so badly to take land. Because Indian tribes were destroying other Indian tribes burning them down, destroying everybody in there woman, man, and child which caused them to flee and take out other Indian tribes to conquer that land.
@patrickgrippo2 ай бұрын
Exactly right.who genocidally wiped the Covis people in n. America?why,the not so rear stained saints of the so called deeca iriquos , Delaware, ad. Shawnee, that's who.
@smallfeet45812 ай бұрын
And now some expect those who survived and tamed the land to step back , like cuckoos they think it's an empty nest for them ,
@suzannakoizumi86052 ай бұрын
The Indians were not Christians. We can not expect any good thing from those who do not know God Almighty.
@esmeraldagreen1992Ай бұрын
I once visited a state park thst was named after an Indian tribe that used to live nearby. Archaeologists had reconstructed a part of the village and I was surprised that it was surrounded by a 10 fet tall palisade made of sharpened logs. I asked the ranger who by the way was a tribal member why they had the palisade. He looked at me like I was dumb and said it was to protect themselves from enemy tribes who had to "bad habit" of coming overnight to steal women and children. Turned out a couple of the local tribes had a flourishing slave trade where they would kidnap people from one tribe and sell them to others.
@jdc0617Ай бұрын
Two wrongs don't make a right.
@tribequest9Ай бұрын
They weren’t called savages for nothing
@speakupriseup45492 ай бұрын
Indian pudding.....my God the savagery is chilling
@Cattrez2 ай бұрын
Damn right 💪
@DixielandTreasures2 ай бұрын
I did some research, and Google for pages says it's a molasses bread slop. The settlers ate but found out deeper that the bread pudding is a cover-up and a lie. Some of the natives were very barbaric
@Cattrez2 ай бұрын
@@DixielandTreasures to you
@pelonconstante62712 ай бұрын
@@Cattrezso you’re enjoying the series
@LibbySlaughter10112 күн бұрын
All of these stories have been horrifying in the extreme, but this one brought me to tears. So glad he eventually returned to Scotland, and God willing enjoyed some kind of family life again😢 Watching from Australia I have resolved never to complain about trifles ever again.😢
@chrism94932 ай бұрын
Well told and good enunciation, I shall subscribe.
@LittleSeasonist2 ай бұрын
It certainly would be flying everywhere, you got a chuckle outta me brother, may the Most High Father bless you & keep you Blessings Shalom fam 🫀
@redr1150r2 ай бұрын
People just can't see the forest through the trees. Most Indian tribes of those days, would have have given the Scandinavian Vikings a run for their money. Don't be fooled, they had become experts in their style of warfare after centuries of incessant butchery against their tribal counterparts across the American continent . They were capable of any kind atrocity imaginable towards one another, so when Europeans showed up they were fresh meat on the table. Warriors were judged by the loot they could gather and bring home after returning from these forays. They were not only also judged for their bravery in battle, but also the damage they could inflict upon enemies including torture. Slavery was also a common practice throughout the tribes. Women were taken as sex slaves red, white, it didn't matter. I'm part Indian on my mothers side. My ancestors would have skinned and burned you alive and laugh about it over dinner. Don't fool yourselves. They were human beings capable of any atrocity known to man, but they could also be generous, kind and keep their promises.
@chuckzimmerman37112 ай бұрын
Well said. I also have Indian blood have known first hand most of us should never drink. I also grew up in Pennsylvania and live now near susquehanna river. My grandfather grew up on a reservation and was very mean
@redr1150r2 ай бұрын
@@chuckzimmerman3711 I see you have a nice German last name, mine is Ellefson from my fathers side. All 100% Scandinavian workaholics. 🙂 My mothers family has been for 400 years, and if you count the American Indian part of it, actually for thousands of years which to me is amazing. I have her European ancestors going back some 80 generations and it goes further. Liberal thought has placed the Indian culture on a shiny peaceful pedestal, not to be ever questioned. Mel Gibsons "Apocalypto" is one such case. It drove liberal Hollywood crazy along with the activist crowd. It was 100% accurate. The other side of the coin was, people in south America and Mexico sometimes lined up for a mile to see it. I did some research and it portrayed the warrior class of the "Holcane" tribe that were so ferocious, that they even Scared the Aztecs. Bucks County, Pa., is where some of my ancestors were from and one, or more married Algonquin women. Most of my Mothers ancestry is from further west in Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Texas. Her family names are on the Dawes Indian rolls from the 1800s. I have to get to work on balky KIA that has electrical problems. Nice to meet you. 🙂
@MbisonBalrog2 ай бұрын
Injins can’t get through Viking armor. The movie Pathfinder proves this 😅😅😅😅
@UrsulaPainterАй бұрын
Totally worthy. Human inhumanity to other humans fills in the gaps in our knowledge of our own human nature.
@katherinethegreatАй бұрын
Truly gr8 vid & firmly believe TRUE story!
@daqt6079Ай бұрын
He absolutely was telling the truth.
@hydrashieldbasementservice845321 күн бұрын
The story doesn't fit their narrative.... absolutely true
@FranklinNewhartАй бұрын
As a Mohawk I find this interesting in that these people where stealing our lands and we felt that they needed to be removed from the land. War is hell and our whole world was being destroyed. Yes we where savage in our ways but war is like that.
@karlscher5170Ай бұрын
It was not your land because as primitive sa wages you had no use for it. War is not the torturing of women and children. Thats only the way of you psy chos.
@Guvnor100Ай бұрын
The problem is many people try to deny this truth and just blame the white man for all the bad. The first Indians meeting the white man traded guns from them and used them to attack other tribes. This tribe traded money for scalps, wasn't a resistance to invaders at that point at least, it was business. Nobody is clean in this, but as you say, war is war. The winner takes all, the loser loses, nobody can go back and say this and that is unfair and that the victory is not deserved.
@zachhughes9149Ай бұрын
The French were the instigators here, not that that excuses all the torture. Short of French payment or a smallpox outbreak, the Iroquois preferred to avoid fighting (the Mohawk not so much) in favor of trading land they themselves had stolen in Virginia and Ohio to appease the English. And all might’ve been forgiven on both sides if you’d chosen the right side in the Revolutionary War, but you all got terribly confused, to the point of splitting, when the English started fighting the English. It’s an interesting thought, how different America might look if the entirety of the Iroquois Confederacy had joined the Revolution.
@karlscher5170Ай бұрын
Savages own no land
@FranklinNewhartАй бұрын
@@zachhughes9149 If we had favoured the Revolution we would have been the victims in the trail of tears that followed in the 1800's. As it where we fared much better with large land grants in Upper Canada. But we also got screwed with the Treaty of Ghent in that we where supposed to get our own country which would have been a buffet zone between Canada and the US of A. However if we had gotten the country it would have been invaded by the Americans in the War of 1812 anyway.
@sugarmuffin3192 ай бұрын
@unworthy history , have you considered a video covering the story of Mary Rowlandson in Lancaster Massachusetts?
@unworthyhistory2 ай бұрын
Great suggestion, thank you! I need to do more northeast history.
@charliehay15202 ай бұрын
These settlers are the blood,and backbone of America and the freedom we have today is because the great sacrifices of blood,sweat and tears Laid down by our forefathers
@deadhorse13912 ай бұрын
Great video, thanks Whether true or an assortment of others experiences I don’t know but these Indians were certainly cruel enough to have done all this
@janemaas42252 ай бұрын
This historic story is definitely true. Terrible things were done to immigrants by the North American Indians that they are now ashamed of. Changing a cultural precedence is difficult to do. Look at the Middle East today. Well done.
@barb.gerhard95012 ай бұрын
No one today from either side should be made to feel ashamed for things they didn't do, Jesus said that everyone will be held to account for their own sins not for the sins of others. thats why He came to bring reconciliation of all humanity to our creator.
@margitwes64952 ай бұрын
Are you ashamed of the genocide white people inflicted on the native population? They were literally fighting for their survival.
@Nasoorkuwait98Ай бұрын
Im a doctor from the middle east. 40 babies, rap*s? All proven false. I wouldnt be surprised if this story was made up to demonize natives. Get ur invading zio ass out of our land. U will never know peace living on childrens GRAVES. Def true he says as if he was one of the natives who took him. F off
@johnovanic95602 ай бұрын
For myself what I take away from the story is that Peter relies on the sovereignty of God to help him through the most excruciating times.
@suzannakoizumi86052 ай бұрын
Yes, and so do I. I rely on God Almighty, Jesus, and The Holy Spirit. I need at least one miracle a day.
@michaelmiller68482 ай бұрын
nothing much more rare than a noble humane Natuve American
@germaineprien76912 ай бұрын
I would tend to believe his account.
@scottystroll2 ай бұрын
Cowards attacked women and children in my opinion
@JohnnyDanger369632 ай бұрын
DANCES WITH WOLVES!!!❤
@pelonconstante62712 ай бұрын
@@JohnnyDanger36963what does that mean?
@jamesmain83952 ай бұрын
@@pelonconstante6271what do you think or maybe you dont
@JohnnyDanger369632 ай бұрын
@@pelonconstante6271 watch the movie
@pelonconstante62712 ай бұрын
@@jamesmain8395 I’m wondering if he is referencing a Hollywood movie as a historical occurrence
@christaylor4477Ай бұрын
People don't realize how barbaric the indians were. Cutting the scalps off red headed woman as trophies. The trail of tears, they kept their black slaves to carry their things. So much misconception about them being loving, teepee living, natives.
@n0110Ай бұрын
I know Right? The Trail of Tears was the least horrific thing to happen to them same with Columbus and also the American Settlements Massacres like Wounded Knee and the general colonization is questionable if it really even happened
@leszekwolkowski9856Ай бұрын
so much for the idea of the "noble savage"
@Heywood.Jablome2 ай бұрын
Wth was up with those French tho??
@jamesrichards27202 ай бұрын
What happened to his wife? The Indians killed her? 😢
@TheEggmaniacАй бұрын
Indian Peters story is amazing. I can see it being made into a Hollywood film. There is so much more to his life story, including how he fought against the French, in America, and then was captured by them. After this he returned to Scotland and his story of trying to legally fight the people who had sent him to Americas a child, and get compensation from them. The poor guy forced into exile, as a child. Even when he seems to have turned his luck around when reaching adulthood, then undergoes torment and torture. Awful descriptions and even if some of it is true, ultimately its the native Americans, who will suffer. Whose land had been invaded and settled. But as an individual, Peter is a victim of abuse throughout his early life. His survival story is amazing.
@ApaxcadАй бұрын
I live in Aberdeen and will know where he lived 10miles outside Aberdeen Ellon>?
@vikingskuld2 ай бұрын
Thanks after hearing many of these stories I find it hard to imagine they left any of the natives alive. Thanks for the history
@ronallens62042 ай бұрын
Unworthy history is propaganda free !!!
@markjohnson52762 ай бұрын
Note he said the snow season was only two months long in 1753.
@patrickgrippo2 ай бұрын
Snow season pretty much like we a u as lly have experienced in w.pa in 2023/2024??? Nothing odd or different about fluctuate in climate.
@chuckzimmerman37112 ай бұрын
Global warming don't forget
@BwanaFinklestein20 күн бұрын
@@chuckzimmerman3711 😂😂😂
@johnwright9372Ай бұрын
The myth of the "noble savage" have been around since the early 19th century. Descendants of native tribes and modern observers today have made fashionable the belief that their ancestors were peaceful pastoralists victimised by a genocidal European invasion. The truth is that barbarism in war was and is common to all humankind.
@rabby77777Ай бұрын
wow brilliant
@dogparty-tt8qw2 ай бұрын
Why doubt this account? It seems there are many like it.
@CoryBoyd-ro4gkАй бұрын
I want to hear about how Quannah Parker brought the Peyote to the plains tribes,and was instrumental in forming the Native American Church. Cary in Tucson
@arthurzengeler82962 ай бұрын
It seemed like a true story to me. However, ironically, I recently saw a video that said the Indian people, were peaceful, and friendly. And that stories of their barbarism, were very few ! They were just simple people, that wanted to be left alone.
@jamesmain83952 ай бұрын
Bull shxt
@ccampbell72142 ай бұрын
Lewis and Clark's journey across America is a pretty good documented account...
@suzannakoizumi86052 ай бұрын
They fought between themselves too Not all rainbows and unicorns.
@BwanaFinklestein20 күн бұрын
The French Jesuits' accounts of the Iroquois and Huron tribes fighting each other... and the level of horrific tortures inflicted (this was in the early 1600's in Upper Canada), mainly by the Iroquois, are so disturbing, they are not taught in Ontario schools any more. We are truly woke.
@dinkohrvat344Ай бұрын
The native tribes were extremely vicious when given an opportunity .
@gregoryluckie1649Ай бұрын
TRUTH is Always Much Stranger than Fiction...
@emadbagheri2 ай бұрын
This story made very little sense to me, I can't remember any other instance recorded where they took old men and grown fight-capable men but killed the women and children ... also them burning horses in a barn rather than taking them ... am I the only one? Update: just looked up "Indian Peter" ... I'm not the only one lol
@dailycontrarian32192 ай бұрын
Wow they were savages. Clearly the settlers couldn't peacefully co-exist with them.
@JohnnyDanger369632 ай бұрын
DANCES WITH WOLVES❤
@joshmontgomery40402 ай бұрын
@@JohnnyDanger36963 great movie but, a total fiction.
@drivebyquipper2 ай бұрын
@@StDavidpipes That's a stretch.
@StDavidpipes2 ай бұрын
@@drivebyquipper your opinion is respected.
@zachhughes9149Ай бұрын
Coexistence was actually the norm much of the time. These sorts of things typically only kicked off when the French incentivized them to attack the English or vice versa, or when smallpox broke out. The Iroquois were savvy and preferred trading with whites to fighting them, which is pretty much the case everywhere all of the time. Not that I’m doubting this story at all. But there was legitimate effort from both sides to get along and it often worked. It was the American Revolution that ended up being their undoing. They got confused and split and lost almost everything and have had to practice their coexistence in Canada ever since George Washington showed them the door.
@dreamarouse3197Ай бұрын
Alot of People today couldn't even fathom what life was really like back then
@riosdepr20102 ай бұрын
Yep yo le creo,i believed sii😢
@dancetothenight2 ай бұрын
Holy Fck. What a story.
@Teresia1217 сағат бұрын
My first relative to hit American soil was in 1732. He had been taken from his family to be a slave. They were from Wales. It was an English Lord who needed a servant to come with him to America. His family gave themselves up to be endentured servants to go with him. His wife and children. He ended up flogged to death by the Govenor of Massachusetts for saying something negative about him. But he had repeated what his owner had said. His owner was kicked out of Massachusetts and moved to Virginia. That was the beginnings of the Pendley's in America.
@sheepdog11022 ай бұрын
Savage people!
@JohnnyDanger369632 ай бұрын
DANCES WITH WOLVES❤
@cedricliggins75282 ай бұрын
Some nerve
@jamesblackshaw132Ай бұрын
All this happened in rural America without a single shot being fired i don't believe it😅
@Erock51682 ай бұрын
Savage is a good word
@EricYellowBirdАй бұрын
Fk you too your a descendant of a thief and a murderer , karma hold a place for you and yours you hateful piece of sht
@robertpettit26362 ай бұрын
Tend to beleave it was a true story
@georgebaldwin4941Ай бұрын
I say of the grafics how could you not believe this story!
@johnovanic95602 ай бұрын
As far as his story being true or not it would be hard to determine unless you could prove the validity about the white people he came in contact with. He was very specific in naming these people if you could validate where their Farms were and if in fact they were in that location that he described. The barbarism of some of these tribes are well documented as well as the Revenge of the settlers for their actions. While none of this is taught as actual history today I'm glad you give us an insight into these old manuscripts because we can't know where we're going if we don't know where we've been.
@REmm-rf8flАй бұрын
Ok I’ll say it, they’re animals. And there were ‘peaceful’ Indian tribes and groups but those who inhabited the Ohio and the southern plains were animals. Plain and simple. It’s the fact they find it fun.
@thorkushari4027Ай бұрын
You forget that the French were paying them to take the scalps. So who are the animals?
@REmm-rf8flАй бұрын
@ both
@AlanSamdler2 ай бұрын
Sounds probable.
@gordonmccreadie2008Ай бұрын
That writing is a legal document of their murder as it named them also.
@davidcunningham2074Ай бұрын
too gruesome not to be true.
@jameslanning84052 ай бұрын
If nothing else, it would have been good soil, for the production of Jack Crabb... (Little Big Man). But when light is brought to the darkness of evil doings, the guilty will always cast dispersions on the light bearer. Even so, there were many books written about the tales of the wild and open lands of the Americas. Some were romanticized to be sure. Others were very genuine, putting the horrors and death of a savage land to paper. If Peter's story was true, then why should he not make some small token, for his efforts, his loss and his mental anguish, at the hands of those that would see him in the least, as the 'enemy.' And at the worst, an animal that needed to be killed off?
@pelonconstante62712 ай бұрын
Didn’t hear them say what Indian tribe they were. Any guesses?
@unworthyhistory2 ай бұрын
My guess is Delaware, but some sources say Cherokee.
@pelonconstante62712 ай бұрын
@@unworthyhistory I Enjoy the channel as always. Thanks 👍🏽
@manleynelson94192 ай бұрын
The Cherokee wouldn't have been that far north was probably the Delaware being that far east but if they're being paid by the French they could have come out of the Ohio river valleys so it's hard to tell but Delaware would be my guess I'm from Winchester Virginia and family from all around that area who fought in the French and Indian War who were there since the late 1600s and are still there. My mom's family did come over on the Mayflower some of them we have family reunions with 3000 people or more. We were the first German settlement on the banks of the Tappahannock called Germantown. Just send it from two of the 13 families from there on and on. We've heard these stories like this in bulk since I was a child but this is the most detailed one I've ever heard
@Dan_Ben_MichaelАй бұрын
I think I will take his story of captivity with a grain of salt. The story about the brain boiling while the captive was still alive for hours sounds medically impossible. Also, why would they take old men instead of young children who they could raise and induct into their tribe to boost the numbers as many Native Americans were known to do. No doubt there were horrific acts perpetrated by both sides, that’s not in dispute. I’ve read many factual accounts from America as well as read and heard oral histories passed down from my ancestors here in Australia about massacres by Europeans and by Indigenous peoples. It’s a fact of frontier life all over the world that when cultures clash there are going to be tit for tat brutalities occurring.
@CoryBoyd-ro4gkАй бұрын
When you accomplish great feats of adventure people who live humdrum lives get jealous.
@ronallens62042 ай бұрын
Interesting.. 7 years if a biblical limit for forced slaves
@suzannakoizumi86052 ай бұрын
Yes. Set free after 7 years! God is good.
@robynmarler1951Ай бұрын
Disturbing.🙏
@janedoe-vh4uk2 ай бұрын
Whew.
@thedeathwobblechannel65392 ай бұрын
To hear the modern Indian descendants describe it we just came and took everything. The tale of the noble savage continues to be destroyed they were just outright savages and that's that
@fellfields21432 ай бұрын
Well, we did come and take it, there was cruelty on both sides. No way to fix it now, but certainly interesting to learn about.
@TheREALExposingtheJoyofS-px3ri2 ай бұрын
They were far more than just savages, but also extremely spiritual people... And true spirituality is not anything that is represented by Christianity or "morality". The European soul isn't based upon spirit/ or the golden light, but that of the black sun. Native Americans were no doubt savage to some degree, and I won't argue that... But at least we didn't bend a knee to the Europeans in the same way that every other non-Aryan race on the planet did... And that is something that I'm extremely proud of in the case of my father's blood line/ Lakota Sioux.
@suzannakoizumi86052 ай бұрын
@@TheREALExposingtheJoyofS-px3riJesus Christ is LORD and Savior of the universe. He loves you. Run to Him.
@TheREALExposingtheJoyofS-px3ri2 ай бұрын
@@suzannakoizumi8605 Jesus Christ doesn't exist... And why would I live my life on a contradiction? lol
@suzannakoizumi86052 ай бұрын
@@TheREALExposingtheJoyofS-px3ri Jesus is LORD. He exists forevermore. Please run to Him while you can. Jesus loves you. Ask Him sincerely to show Himself to you. He will answer.
@joshmontgomery40402 ай бұрын
❤
@wendamaltessee2 ай бұрын
Today it is accepted as an axiom that the Scaligerian version and the true history is the same thing. But it is not true. The historians who think that they study the 'ancient' and the mediaeval history in are fact analysing not the reality, but an artificial world, some fairy-tale phantom-mirage, created by the historians and editors of the XVII-XVIII cc. Today the historians use the distorted and edited texts from the XVII-XVIII mistakenly considering them as the 'authentic ancient primary sources'. The historians are immersed in a fantasy world, spending their entire professional life in it. They have no idea that this 'virtual reality' was concocted by their recent predecessors. The made up world turned out to be complex, intricate and at first glance gives the impression of something very solid and consistent. But it is not so. Unbiased outside perspective, based on the objective methods of dating, rather quickly detects all the tell-tale signs of the sandcastle in the fairy tale construction. Further analysis results in this building collapsing.
@nevillegriffiths4395Ай бұрын
Is it not unusual that the indigenous tribe did not take the horses but instead burnt them?
@enzomolinari9141Ай бұрын
Although taking it to a whole another level, by today's international law, the Indians had a right to resist settler colonialism by armed resistance if necessary holy crap 😂
@aistisnarmontas4515Ай бұрын
When I read article I thought he was enslaved by Indian immigrants from India :D
@fiddleback1568Ай бұрын
The 1960's was a time of unrestricted liberal propaganda. They tried making Custer look like a genocidal madman in movies. When he wasn't. Just an example.
@April-t6z20 күн бұрын
Nobody's perfect
@dionpeek4339Ай бұрын
Difficult to listen too.
@therover4141Ай бұрын
Well i thought the natives were peace loving people of the land lol.
@fletchdad87552 ай бұрын
How did his wife die ?
@Richard-xy7buАй бұрын
Not saying the story isn't true but the timeliness is off. The French and Indian War was before the revolutionary War.
@Cherbear609Ай бұрын
Hello?!? Of course his story is true! Nobody that hadn’t experienced this night-mare could have ever dreamed up factual truths!
@MbisonBalrog2 ай бұрын
Why anyone settle frontier by self all alone? If you want farm need armed guards all time.