4:12 A black man and Inuit groups headed to the Arctic? Where’s that action-adventure movie?
@ChineduOpara2 ай бұрын
Disney's Lawyers and PR division haven't given clearance yet.
@devileyez782 ай бұрын
Disney will figure it out. Or they’ll make a Christopher Columbus movie and have Donald Glover play him. Don’t worry
@bufordhighwater98722 ай бұрын
It's called Glory and Honor. It came out in 1998. Delroy Lindo won an award for his portrayal of Henson.
@ChineduOpara2 ай бұрын
@@bufordhighwater9872 At first My dyslexic brain read your comment as "Glory and Hole" 😄😄
@abdulsmith92982 ай бұрын
@@devileyez78Critical 😂😂😂 i'm only laughing Kuzz you're so on point with that one for real
@knorman7172 ай бұрын
I felt so many things while watching this! I felt anger at how Henson was so disrespected in the moment, but then I felt so grateful to hear how he and Ootah, Egingwah, Seegloo, and Ooqueah were finally honored. I’m also grateful that you are telling their story so we can all honor their memory. Thank you!
@danielland37672 ай бұрын
Same cause I knew about Henson but not the others
@agapitoliria2 ай бұрын
I am severely disgusted by these white explorers. Coloniser elitists to the very end.
@stephenmeier46582 ай бұрын
Feelings are clouds which obscure the light of truth.
@yvonneplant9434Ай бұрын
Sometimes justice takes a while.
@carlathomas5807Ай бұрын
PBS should also review the autobiography of William Shakespeare. His own description of himself doesn’t sound “European”
@MattMullins-x7o2 ай бұрын
Perry did NOT want to admit that a black man beat him there first. As a black Baltimore native, we knew who he was.
@mysteryof7Ай бұрын
That’s Sad. Such a likely story, as been proven time and again.
@JoseyTurn17Ай бұрын
We know his name and say his name in Black homes and Black Churches, we say his name.
@MattMullins-x7oАй бұрын
@@JoseyTurn17 Damn right.
@yvonneplant9434Ай бұрын
I,too, knew who he was. He was not unknown to people.
@thaliahall4599Ай бұрын
Yes!
@escritora842 ай бұрын
It's not shocking to see how poorly Henson was treated, but disheartening all the same. I'm glad the indigenous folks were far more welcoming and saw them as their family. Had it not been for the connections Henson made with them, Peary would've never made it as far as he did.
@johnwattdotcaАй бұрын
Many British and European explorers died in the Arctic because they didn't associate with the Inuit. It's ordinary to think Inuit live in igloos, when that's something they build along the way, to sleep or shelter from a storm. They had underground cities, well below the frost line, usually 20 to 40 people.
@jimmybellmon1268Ай бұрын
@@johnwattdotca The Inuit story should be more well known. All our history mention are eskimos and the stereotypes they have for them.
@thaliahall4599Ай бұрын
Exactly!👍🏽
@SelfBegottenАй бұрын
@@johnwattdotca Didn't know that, thanks!!!
@kyt-nh1ef2 ай бұрын
"The Kind One..." that's a way better reputation than "which asshole exploited people and got to the North Pole first?"
@agapitoliria2 ай бұрын
Makes you wanna cry at how they must have been treated by white explorers if that's even a title to give to someone. Just... kind.
@hendersoncnc2 ай бұрын
Lmao
@hendersoncnc2 ай бұрын
@@agapitoliriaexactly what I said them white folks must’ve been treating them like ish
@johnwattdotcaАй бұрын
There was a metal meteor lying on the surface of a rock island. Many Inuit traveled to get the metal to make hooks and spear points. One English explorer found out and loaded it up, what made them die in the Arctic.
@savemykind587716 күн бұрын
@@johnwattdotcaWhat thoughtless SOB was that?
@robocat102 ай бұрын
When I was a child, Matthew Henson WAS a household name in my household.
@TheCumQuat420692 ай бұрын
Same! My grandma has a TON of individual books about different blk pioneers, engineers, doctors, writers, etc. She had a book allllllll about Hensen! I gotta go grab them now and give em all a reread.
@zorabean2 ай бұрын
Mine too
@chicaliqc2 ай бұрын
When?
@miapdx5032 ай бұрын
I knew of Henson, I did not know he was black! History whitewashed...😒
@lademac57912 ай бұрын
Same here. In my neighborhood in Baltimore, we even had a public school named for him.
@EyeoIsis2 ай бұрын
Thank you for revealing the hidden history of North Pole exploration and telling Matthew Henson's story.
@CharlottePoe2 ай бұрын
Peary couldn’t acknowledge that there were others with him at the north pole, even when they were right there with him. But Matthew the Kind One never forgot the Inuit friends and explorers he traveled with, and made sure their courage and skill was recognized along with his own! What a guy. What a legacy of integrity, far more admirable than what Peary hoped to achieve! Matthew Henson is an example of what a true hero looks like. He’s the kind of historical figure I’d want to teach children to admire, both for his bravery and for his loyalty and camaraderie.
@jennaywilliams1024Ай бұрын
There are so many more...
@str8alphamaleАй бұрын
But isn't that in the blood of most Europeans. Why are you surprised.... The sad part was the little nature boy that they kidnapped and did tests on him as a specimen.
@cmaven4762Ай бұрын
The sad part about Perry is that he would still have been recognized without this pettiness. It was, after all, HIS expedition. He was the leader. He would have been recognized. But his lack of honor at the time is resulting in his loss of prestige today.
@tres31118 күн бұрын
I know right? there’s a black trans lesbian behind every great white mans accomplishments. Remember when Bojangles Washington the 3rd helped Henry Ford build the first model T? Or the 4th astronaut that held the camera for that lying Neil Armstrong who stole all the glory! Even the moon is actually black! …racist ass lunar surface.
@nca479416 күн бұрын
@@cmaven4762the irony is we still see remnants of that mindset in society today. I often think about how much farther along we would be as a country if people realized African American progress is American Progress. Some only understand progress to mean me before you. We'll never reach our full potential as a nation until those mindsets die.
@grandsome12 ай бұрын
The history books should remember them like this: First people recorded people on the north pole: Ootah, Egingwah, Seegloo and Ooqueah. First person of Old World descent on the North pole: Henson. First White man who sadly got overcome by their racism due to the delirious cold but nonetheless sponsored the expedition on the North pole: Peary
@bufordhighwater98722 ай бұрын
It's commonly called the Peary-Henson Expedition, and Peary's own accounts state that Henson was the first to physically reach the Pole. Their falling out probably had more to do with Henson being the only one capable of proving that the expedition may not have actually reached the North Pole.
@ExploreVanIsle2 ай бұрын
Learning that colonialism is both black and white: priceless.
@culifabrizio1479Ай бұрын
@@bufordhighwater9872pin this
@williamm5538Ай бұрын
NO SIR THERE WERE BLACK PEOPLE IN AMERICA BEFORE WHITES AS WELL.
@conscious258Ай бұрын
@ExploreVanIsle what an idiot
@dorothyjohnson67432 ай бұрын
I learned about Matthew Henson a long time ago. History erases people of color's contributions to world history and American history. We have to make an effort to discover everyone's contributions to history. It's what I love about history 😊
@lsowner102 ай бұрын
Black Americans not “people of color!”
@quincybirwood26292 ай бұрын
@@lsowner10 It's actually people of color. There are people of color from many nations around the world that have been erased from history including Black Americans. Don't get caught in that trap. Anyone, regardless of origin, with an extraordinary contribution should be recognized and have their moment in the spotlight and place recorded in history.
@davruck12 ай бұрын
@@quincybirwood2629wrong. Black Americans specifically have had their contributions given to “POC” which is a generic meaningless term. No culture is more disrespected than Black American culture.
@sevenstarsofthedipper10472 ай бұрын
He is an ancestor of Taraji P. Henson
@jarvisaddison8560Ай бұрын
Facts @@lsowner10
@danielland37672 ай бұрын
Matthew Henson was well known in Baltimore in the 80's/90's we knew he was critical to the success of that mission just like Lewis Latimer was critical to Thomas Edison light bulb, both would be nowhere without Black excellence with them
@kathleenfelkner90912 ай бұрын
This is the first time I heard about Lewis Latimer. Thank you. Yet another important black person in history to look up.
@danielland37672 ай бұрын
@@kathleenfelkner9091 no problem, that was another Black Inventor that I was taught growing up. Any questions on both come back and ask
@MrMetro-mt5qv2 ай бұрын
Henson's story would make a great movie.
@dreynolds48832 ай бұрын
Hollywood will only do it if they can find a way to have a White hero or savior in the story 😂
@TheMysteryDriverАй бұрын
@@dreynolds4883have you been paying attention to Hollywood movies lately?
@vanillavania.Ай бұрын
@@TheMysteryDriver Care to explain?
@utubes720Ай бұрын
@@vanillavania.I can try: Black Panther 1 + 2, AMISTAD, Us, Get Out, Hidden Figures, Moonlight…
@boston_octopus_442Ай бұрын
@@utubes720 Hidden Figures!!!! ❤❤❤❤❤
@Pippis782 ай бұрын
How depressingly unsurprising that this is the first time I've heard this man's name.
@vanillavania.2 ай бұрын
Same here.
@MrElliotc02Ай бұрын
You haven't read any accounts of polar Exploration then.
@TheMysteryDriverАй бұрын
@@MrElliotc02that was my thought too. My entire life Henson has been known to be the most likely person to be first to the north pole. As a kid I went to his grave at Arlington as well. Parents took me their for a school project I was doing in elementary school.
@MalyunAndTheSapphireАй бұрын
I went to a mostly black staff elementary. I learned the real American history. The week we learned about him, they turned our playground into the Arctic, and we explored the school ground, and we searched the school ground for specimen that i now know were planted. He was one of my favorite explorers growing up.
@strokestv2 ай бұрын
Okay first of all - this production?!?! AMAZING WORK TEAM! Such a good job keeping us engaged with all the animation and Harini - you ate that miss mamas! Keep it up! Love these so much.
@colinleat83092 ай бұрын
Hansen was a truly remarkable person, Perry's treatment of him after the fact... deplorable.
@maxwarboy36252 ай бұрын
aye, the lore that is being written is dep lorable
@mo_0912Ай бұрын
Considering their history, I am not surprised.
@GratitudeGriot2 ай бұрын
love how the host (para)phrased it: there was a race to see who would be the 1st white man to reach land that Indigenous people had already explored😂
@saturationstation14462 ай бұрын
thats a good summary of the past 500 - 750 years of human history. europeans claiming ownership of everything thats clearly not theirs or that they had little to nothing to do with creating/completing. like taking credit for ww2 victory when most of the damage done to germany was from the ussr since europeans have some deep hatred for leftists that burns brighter than their hatred for those that arent eurocentric. without that maniacal hatred,, germany would have focused on deposing all the monarchs in europe and would have easily succeeded due to europeans having the weakest fighters/soldiers on earth at the time.
@justjast2 ай бұрын
Haha! I caught that, too - made me feel sure and appreciate that the rest of the film was going to be honest.
@cinnamonstar808Ай бұрын
So I was born eons after this event. I was still taught skin color is based on Hemisphere. Which clearly is a FALSE idea. 2:53 "son of the equator" 4:20. "Skin similar " We are still taught BP are only from Africa even when they are on other continents as natives. That poor education was told to Henson. The reason why he cannot go to the north pole. People of his skintone were living there.
@prettypic4442 ай бұрын
Henson's story is so interesting (I read his autobiography earlier this year). I'm honestly surprised it hasn't been made into a movie yet! you could flashback to his life while following his journey to the pole
@TheMysteryDriverАй бұрын
Better to be an HBO mini series.
@caroleappling20072 ай бұрын
Taraji P Hanson’s ( the actress) great great -grandfather Joseph Henson ,was Mathew Henson’s brother. They have stolen so much of our accomplishments.
@edwardhall184Ай бұрын
Here I am…. 60 years old and although I knew of Matthew Henson , I did not know of the mistreatment towards him by Admiral Peary after their journey nor did I know the names of the indigenous native men who assisted them on their quest…. Thank you for enlightening me👍🏽✊🏽
@mypal19902 ай бұрын
Matthew Henson blazed the trail for exploration but his legacy was smothered due to prejudice. Now he's vindicated after so much digging. It's unfortunate that it was past his death to realize it.
@danielland37672 ай бұрын
He is vindicated publicity, being from Maryland he was regularly regarded im Baltimore City Public City schools
@MattMullins-x7o2 ай бұрын
@@danielland3767Facts. I'm from Bmore and remember as a kid on the school bus the Driver would pick us kids that attended the school back in the early 90s. 1600 N Payson St. That's the address.
@danielland37672 ай бұрын
@@MattMullins-x7o yeah the fun part about the internet now it local history people who where major players in history are finally getting their dues
@MattMullins-x7o2 ай бұрын
@@danielland3767 100 percent. I took history at both Morgan & Coppin St. It's amazing how now we have the tech in place at a time to truly reveal the true history to ppl.
@itsquitntimeisrael6519Ай бұрын
JUSTICE DELAYED, IS JUSTICE DENIED..
@lorenkelley15682 ай бұрын
Thank you for this story. I had never heard of Henson. He clearly deserves whatever honor is belatedly bestowed on him.
@allenman972 ай бұрын
Fun fact Taraji P Henson the actress is his niece.
@ravi123462 ай бұрын
Half-great-great-grandniece, it looks like. His half-brother was her great-great-grandfather.
@devileyez782 ай бұрын
Jim Henson was his great nephew also. I love fun facts
@abdulsmith92982 ай бұрын
That's hella dope for real! You learn something new everyday if you keep your mind open
@ShybowMabharani2 ай бұрын
And she's breaking new ground as an actress!!!❤❤
@stephaniehasaclue45242 ай бұрын
Hi @@ravi12346, why was it necessary to include the term "half"? I am asking because in the black American community most of us do not acknowledge "half" when it comes to our siblings. Perhaps this is because of the painful history of the black American family structure which consisted of black slave families being torn apart and sold as well as slaves being treated like animals forced to breed. This resulted in many black children being "half" siblings but you will almost never hear the term "half" used in the black American community when describing or introducing a sibling even if we share only one biological parent. When those from other communities and mainstream media point out "half" it always seems offensive. In these instances many of us say, "Why did they have to say half sister (brother)? What difference did that make to the story or event that took place." So that is why I am asking you why did you comment "half"? The only reason I can conclude is that it is said to make someone feel or seem less.
@wkylehamilton2 ай бұрын
Amazing video, I knew of Matthew Henson from Wikipedia but this video was seriously such a great dive into his accomplishments. Thank you so much for making this video, it's important.
@sheilaross14492 ай бұрын
First heard of him in the song "Black Man" by Stevie Wonder.
@NeheC72 ай бұрын
North Arctic Explorer Mr. Matthew Hensen born 1866 has an amazing story that is well known across the African American Communities. Hensen also has family members in the North Arctic because he had children from a local woman during his explorations. I just left Antarctica in March and Explorer Mr. George Washington Gibbs Jr. born 1916 in Jacksonville Florida was the first Black Man to reach Antarctica and the South Pole in 1939. I’ve studied Mr. Gibbs for a few years, on my Antarctica trip I introduced Gibbs history to the ship and the actual land point named after him in Antarctica. His daughter Ms. Leilani Raashida Henry wrote a recent book “The Call Of Antarctica” about her father’s exploration. Explorers Hensen and Gibbs are true trailblazers and maybe you could also do a show on Mr. Gibbs also. Fortunately I’ve been able to travel to all seven continents and I enjoy geography, archaeology, anthropology and history. Thank you PBS for this show and your important work throughout the decades.
@haroldshubert5251Ай бұрын
He's the great grand of the actress .It's said.She also resembles him
@conniegrant939Ай бұрын
Thank you for our history that they have covered up or erased and definitely ignored. Thank you so much.
@TomMS2 ай бұрын
I'm really frustrated that I never learned about this before (I'm 24 now), but what an amazing story! He overcame adversity in every way and at every step to accomplish something truly remarkable.
@NotlaCharonboatmanSurazal2 ай бұрын
Henson was an outstanding explorer. He demonstrated the unique ability to survive numerous situations. First he survived modern civil society (a time of unfair laws targeted against specific groups). The harsh unforgiven arctic wilderness and third, the indignity of being denied recognition for a major achievement for which he risked his life. He was truly remarkable .
@azborderlandsАй бұрын
It’s not stolen, you’re seeing it right here.
@mwangimukuhaАй бұрын
Justice served! As a Kenyan, it brings me joy to learn about this 😊. 🇰🇪❤
@missmillib2 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this beautifully narrated, illustrated and packaged history. I had no idea about Henson and the indigenous explorers!!!
@pointlessNYC2 ай бұрын
I learned about him in third grade, we got stickers of people for black history month and put them on each day of the month. Thank you for expanding my knowledge on this, and I would love to read his book.
@Scott-vr3kfАй бұрын
I love this channel! I've got a daughter who's almost here and will definitely be sharing this kind of content with her as she grows.
@MariaVosa2 ай бұрын
I first learned of Henson reading about him in a collection of short biographies of overlooked scientists and explorers by Stephen Jay Gould. The image of a White man being pulled on a sleigh by a Black man and several Inuits and then getting credit for being the first man on the North Pole never left my mind afterwards. I wish you had mentioned that Henson also got a son, Anauakaq, with an Inuit woman - his only descendent. Peary also had children with an Inuit woman.
@saturationstation14462 ай бұрын
basically an example of how eurocentrics have always gone about life. make everyone else do the work with a gun pointed at them and take credit for everything once its done like they did virtually every part by themselves. its the "self made man" trope but made honest
@danielleshanti2 ай бұрын
I first heard of Matthew Henson in the opening of the musical Ragtime! Robert Peary's name is pronounced "pairy," which I also learned in Ragtime. It's too bad no one caught that before the video was released.
@Zaihanisme2 ай бұрын
I'm glad his name is mispronounced, he deserves no proper mention that absolute piece of shit destroyed the life of an Inuit child as well, Minik! Read about it at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minik_Wallace
@TheMysteryDriverАй бұрын
Ya I've never heard it pronounced the way she was saying it.
@ecamp63602 ай бұрын
Same story with Everest. Tenzing Norgay basically carried Edmund Hilary to the summit.
@cedricnicholson7446Ай бұрын
Yeah and Norgay only has a mountain range named after him on Pluto.
@donahunt8322 ай бұрын
Thank you for telling his story so wonderfully, i'm from Baltimore so i'd heard previous versions but none as encompassing as yours. Even better was having this story told by a melanated person
@MgtatesАй бұрын
Loved learning more about Matthew Henson's story. Well done!
@kendi1417Ай бұрын
PBS Origins always enlightening!
@larasoto19912 ай бұрын
What an amazing story, so well documented and kindly narrated. Thank you! Also, this could be an epic movie!
@ChristopherBrown-m9w2 ай бұрын
True facts Matthew Henson is the half brother of Josiah Henson and the half great-great granduncle of Taraji Henson.
@saraht9442Ай бұрын
Great work!! There is a great book I used to read to my students about Henson. He was also great with medical skills. That was almost 30 years ago. I don't remember the name of the book, but I see that amazon has several books on him now.
@lbjcb52 ай бұрын
I love this story. Josh Gates mentioned him in his Explorer's Club show.
@vernessatucker8647Ай бұрын
Wow, this is an amazing story. I never heard before. Matthew Henson was an awesome guy, thanks for sharing.
@petrenaoldfield5294Ай бұрын
This is so remarkable enlightening. Thanks for sharing, i never knew about Mr Henson at all. What a man.
@TIGERZY2K2 ай бұрын
Unfortunately the Afro Americans hardly got any credits for their contribution in various disciplines even in early 1900s.It was sad how Blacks were treated as inferior beings during that time.Hence Henderson never got the credit for discovering North Pole inspite of all his hardwork during the freezing winters of Greenland
@soulspirationgoddessАй бұрын
What’s done in the dark always comes to light. Thank you for sharing this! ❤
@twinstalkitupАй бұрын
Marginalized communities not being given credit … no surprise there! Insecurities impacting culture and acceptable norms, meant that acknowledging contributions or discoveries would stay hidden. Keep up the amazing work
@cherylbristol5144Ай бұрын
Thanks for this history. There’s so many accomplishments of people with melanin that history writers have not recognized.
@jonbettson74352 ай бұрын
Thank you! I cried, got shivers and I smiled a lot. That was amazing.
@chestersanders5496Ай бұрын
I have always been very proud to have attended Matthew A Henson elementary school
@deed50492 ай бұрын
I learned about Henson in grade school. This is America people. To know what that means should leave no shock at accounts like these.
@louisjov2 ай бұрын
Speaking of the Arctic, Franklin and the other European expeditions failed to traverse the Northwest Passage with each attempt, always doing things the "European" way, and promptly met disaster. Finally one dude was like "hey you know these people who have lived here for thousands of years? Maybe we should ask how they survive in this environment" and Roald Amundsun promptly navigated the Northwest Passage
@saturationstation14462 ай бұрын
doing things the european way is why 99% of the human species has died from labor induced starvation in the past 75 years
@A.Filthy.CasualАй бұрын
Ngl that closing line made my well up a bit
@ms_cartographer2 ай бұрын
I wish we could have a TV series about him.
@Picasso_Picante92Ай бұрын
I'm 60 years old. And now I am learning this. I hate my shitty NYC public school education. What a waste of my precious years.
@bbills41862 ай бұрын
He's a household name in Black households particularly for people like me, a Gen-Xer who went to all Black schools. Henson was in the pantheon of Black historical figures which included MLK, Harriet Tubman, W.E.B Dubois, Booker T. Washington, Madame C.J. Walker, Phyllis Wheatley. We had to learn true American history at my schools and it was reinforced at home. ☮️
@JoseyTurn17Ай бұрын
Henson is a household name in Black homes and Black Churches. We Say his name, Henson And we appreciate him on the US stamp😍
@jennaywilliams1024Ай бұрын
Y'all have to do thousands of these now.
@FarmerRiddickАй бұрын
Fascinating story from our US history! I enjoy facts like this very much!
@AfriasporaFilms2 ай бұрын
Good video. You left out Henson and Peary both had Inuit wives for the excursions and fathered half Inuit sons. The scholar from Harvard was primarily responsible for revealing that secret and ultimately reunited Henson’s US descendants with his Inuit descendants.
@aazhieАй бұрын
What a remarkable and brave gentleman! I hope more people are learning about him now! Matthew the Kind One, thank you
@juliahenriques2102 ай бұрын
I've heard of this guy, and I'm not even from North America.
@SageKwadwoАй бұрын
Being a child not older than 10yrs old i remember reading about this and i was so proud of this black man who was a great explorer long live your name
@moesisme2Ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. I learned about this guy in elementary school but could never remember his name as a adult
@katherinealianoruiz57612 ай бұрын
the montage at the end brought me to teaaaars, this was amazing 🥹 so grateful to now know this story
@foreverwantingpie2 ай бұрын
Wow thank you this series is going to continue to be amazing I'm sure
@KeithBlanchard-d5lАй бұрын
This is why some don’t want history taught, not his story
@cedricnicholson7446Ай бұрын
I knew that the first non indigenous person to reach the N. Pole was black. This was a great video and hopefully it informed a lot of people who never knew about Matthew Henson. There was a movie in the 90’s starring Delroy Lindo as Matthew Henson called Glory and Honor.
@johnmorgan-gc8lyАй бұрын
Way to go Explorer Extraordinaire Matthew Henson 👏 Your life is an inspiration to black people and may we never forget your name ✨️ ❤️
@isaacmukalazi9090Ай бұрын
I've never heard of that story, thank You for sharing. The truth is finally coming Out. Isaac from Uganda
@hubertrobinson8825Ай бұрын
I'm now 68yrs old many yrs ago I read the same thing in natural geographic it said Perry was unable to walk properly and stop to get some rest Hansen kept on with Perry's permission not thinking that Hansen would've made it and like you said he was upset that Hansen being a black man did something neither he nor his rival did and also the magazine said Hansen was very good at using the instruments and and during a long stay with the natives they both had native wives and kids if you can find the publication of the Nat Geo magazine I don't remember the yr or the month bit it's right there even pictures of his kids at the national cemetery in the ceremony everything now is digital but back in the day all my spare time was spent in books
@PokhrajRoy.2 ай бұрын
I’ve heard so many Polar Explorations and respect to everyone who has been on those expeditions.
@BeKind-t6qАй бұрын
This is a really cool story I hadn't heard about before! 😯
@tonytaylor35912 ай бұрын
Thank you for this awesome reminder!! I hope kids of all races will learn this and be inspired. There were some facts in this video that I myself never knew. Great Job!!
@sarahlee198792 ай бұрын
The montage at the end 😭😭😭
@chiobialo4390Ай бұрын
Hollywood, Hollywood, Hollywood, … You can be so disappointing. Why is their no movie about Henson yet?
@CindyPlaysGamesАй бұрын
Thank you for sharing this bit of history!
@junethanoschurchill67502 ай бұрын
Wow i remember learning about him in elementary school. Hopefully he is becoming more recognized!
@sarahwatts71522 ай бұрын
Amazing that someone with that background wasn't seen as being tough enough
@CstylesXАй бұрын
Thank you for sharing this story!
@boom2.0Ай бұрын
Why isn't this taught in schools? Why do only learn this from places like Pbs? Thanks Pbs.❤
@aaaaa5272Ай бұрын
Thank you for this documentary. I didn't know that. I am happy, that the world has changed (but still some steps to go)
@rhiannablumberg48032 ай бұрын
incredible. inspiring story! not a dry eye over here!!! well done!!!
@MrTwenty20video2 ай бұрын
Thank you for presenting this history. ❤
@rgrifferon11 күн бұрын
Beautiful presentation, thank You.
@MeMyHustleN-IАй бұрын
Gen X urban dwellers from NYC know Mathew Henson. Stevie Wonder wrote a song with lyrics about him. It's on the Songs in the key of Life album. " It's time we learned this world was made for all men".
@BKaneNp82 ай бұрын
Respect, Mr Henson!
@RonniesRambles2 ай бұрын
It's just heart-breaking to learn of the way people have been treated, it dampens the feeling of celebration I'd like to feel for Henson and the guides. He deserved to be celebrated and experience the energy.
@bjdefilippo447Ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this story. I hope that Henson's work is taught to kids with the prestige is deserves.
@wilsondoswelliii3127Ай бұрын
Thank you for this😊😊😊😊❤❤❤
@djmoulton15582 ай бұрын
Great story well told!
@MrElliotc02Ай бұрын
I read about Henson 65 years ago. Hie name and presence were acknowledged in every account I've read since.
@Cocokisslovely6 күн бұрын
Thank you for this my lady!😊
@smittytrill613Ай бұрын
Thank You PBS!❤
@TheKathybarth2 ай бұрын
Fascinating. Thank you.
@windlessoriginals11502 ай бұрын
Thank you for this great series.
@gmg90102 ай бұрын
It seems like Peary if not for the pressures of society at the time. Especially if he wrote in the heading of Henson’s book.
@mrswole5650Ай бұрын
Yes we definitely need a movie ✊🏾
@nylis638Ай бұрын
Read about a man named York, who was pivotal in the Lewis and Clark expedition.