- Видео 83
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Custerkiller76
Добавлен 16 дек 2019
Видео
Kidder Fight
Просмотров 2182 года назад
This is the story of the Kidder Massacre. The tragic events led to the deaths of 12 troopers and two confirmed Indians in what is now Nebraska. This is their story.
National Park Service Battle Reenactment Policy
Просмотров 733 года назад
This video explains why the National Park Service does not permit reenactments.
I'm Blue Da ba dee (Civil War Edition)
Просмотров 2613 года назад
It seemed like a good idea at the time
The 1814 Destruction of Fort Washington
Просмотров 5533 года назад
On August 27th, 1814, the first Fort Washington was blown up by its own men. Learn about what led to this destruction and what happened next. Ask yourself, what would you have done?
Mysteries of the Hopewell
Просмотров 5 тыс.3 года назад
This is the official 19 minute orientation film of Hopewell Culture National Historical Park
Battle of Ladysmith Podcast Part 3
Просмотров 553 года назад
John Mackenzie’s britishbattles.com podcasts
Battle of Ladysmith Podcast Part 2
Просмотров 763 года назад
John Mackenzie’s britishbattles.com podcasts
Another Such Victory, Battle of Guilford Courthouse
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.3 года назад
Another Such Victory, Battle of Guilford Courthouse
Fort Stevens and Civil War Defenses of Washington NPS
Просмотров 2583 года назад
Fort Stevens and Civil War Defenses of Washington NPS
Battle of Chancellorsville Documentary
Просмотров 2343 года назад
Battle of Chancellorsville Documentary
A true classic.
8:57 *BAYONETS*!!
I have 2 of his paintings. The jerk line. And the wagon boss. Both in these pictures
This number, the rank and file of an entire division of men marching under direct brutal, merciless artillery fire with shot and shell exploding everywhere. can break even the hardest of men into a mushy puddle of tears. Suspense, horror, and glory all carefully bundled together perfectly together. If Gettysburg didnt have such an outstanding soundtrack for its time it would not have been the same movie. "It is well war is so terrible... For we should grow too fond of it." Robert E. Lee - CSA General of the Army of Virginia.
Good The pictures look like paintings by C M Russell. Great western artist
They fought on the 30th of October 1899 and not the 29th. The Boer force consisted of 7 500 men and not 30 000. I guess I've heard enough after slightly more than one minute.
Lost War of 1812 intentions of annexation of British Colonies Canada
Marie Wells
Baylee Camp
Treutel Points
Chard the engineer. He just came to build a bridge. But he sure got more than he ever bargained for. Waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay more!
Michaela Via
Casey Trail
Kovacek Roads
They had over a year to fortify and prepare for a siege and did almost nothing and didn't even consider secondary echelons and dispersing the defenses.
I don't see Part 1 of 5 for Gettysburg? Anyway you could post it?
(41) I saw the movie as a youngster (my grandma took me) - the reason I never found this song track till much later: The horse's name was "Tonka" - ridden by Sal Mineo(sp?)... idk when the name changed, but I remember the ending differently when I saw it again years later.
Damn GoooD Soundtrack !!! d{{{👁👄👁}}}b👍
Gettysburg (Instrumental) Star Trek: The Next Generation ("The Wounded")
Henry, Henry! We need help!
A song for a friendgroup
I like the subject matter, but the vid is blurry. Maybe it's just me though.
This version makes me sleepy
Agreed. This should not be a sleepy lament.
@@PirateCommander :(
Now this is what I am talking about
Why is this dedicated to a traitor? Good bit of history and well done none the less.
🩸🩼🩻 🤕 Lord, have mercy.... I met a Veteran who served in the🚩 First Corps, 1st Guard Tank Army 🇷🇺 at Kursk. 🌍🧭💥☠️😣🕰️ He could not speak of the experience other than to say, "It was criminal" ⚰️⚰️⚰️❤️🩹 🕊️ Most Holy Theotokos save us! ☦️ ⛪
Excellent! Thanks for posting. One of John Barry's top 10-15 film scores!
Such a great film & soundtrack, thank you 😁
vikings only viking dig holes and mound dirt. No natives made these they are viking camps occupied by later people. google viking earthen forts same exact syle of building
brilliant film showing heroism on both sides.
Beautiful…it is actually Welsh origin
It's Irish origin its ours dont try to claim it, Thomas Moore published in 1813 in Ireland
@@FionanUaMurchadha Agreed. I'm Welsh. I'm able to reason that Frongoch [Cymru/Wales] might be a 'bit' of a contrary linguism argument though. Cofiwch Dryweryn and I'm not arguing. Frongoch WAS overlooking Llyn Celyn. If you still are panties in a bunch, show me your high strung face ?
My parents were born in Mexico, but i was born in this free beautiful country, This one nation under God was supposed to a constitutional Republic and should've been ran by the people, F the democracy, We The People should run this nation ✝️🇲🇽♥️🇺🇸
Custer had attained the rank of Major General of Volunteers during the Civil War. However, this rank was applicable only to the volunteer army. After the Civil War, the volunteer army disbanded, and Custer eventually accepted a commission as Lieutenant Colonel in the Regular US Army. It was with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel that he led the 7th US Cavalry Regiment to Little Big Horn and his death.
I never knew George Custer had a brother! He was killed at Little Bighorn also.
Thomas Ward Custer born 1845 , 2 Medal of Honor Civil War..Brevet Colonel..Boston Custer, Nephew Harry AUTIE Reed..
Propagannda and misinformation.
Bragg🤦🏽♂️
They must have had large cities, they have just deteriorated to the point no one has been able to find the remains. The walls surrounded cities, not ceremonial places. Artisans and astronomers wouldn't have lived in huts.
Now that the Irish people are being attacked by the mass foreign immigration of the Globalist agenda, we can ask the question- What is an Irish person? - . The answer is, anybody who can really dance to "The Irish Washerwoman" is Irish, if they want to be.
Who voted the Pakistani as Taosaich? Hope I spelled that right. 🇺🇸🇮🇪
@@jimreilly917 You did not spell it right, it is Taoiseach.
@@FionanUaMurchadha thanks. Gaelic spelling is really funky.
Ask the king of England if he wants to sail over.
We'll drink the wine till the cup is dry, And kiss the girls so they'll not cry, And toss the dice until we fly, To dance with Jak o' the Shadows. We'll dance all night until the moon runs free, And dandle the lasses upon our knee, And then you'll ride along with me, To dance with Jak o' the Shadows. We'll sing all night, and drink all day, And on the girls we'll spend our pay, And when it's gone, then we'll away, To dance with Jak o' the Shadows. There's some delight in ale and wine, And some in girls with ankles fine, But my delight, yes, always mine, Is to dance with Jak o' the Shadows. We drink all night and dance all day, and on the girls we spend our pay, and when we're done, then we'll away, to dance with Jak o' the Shadows. We'll toss the dice however they fall, And snuggle the girls be they short or tall, Then follow young Mat whenever he calls, To dance with Jak o' the Shadows. We'll toss the dice however they fall, And snuggle the girls be they short or tall, Then follow Lord Mat whenever he calls, To dance with Jak o' the Shadows. We'll give a yell with a bloody curse, And hug the maids, it could be worse, As we ride away with the Dark One's purse, To dance with Jak o' the Shadows!
Beautiful, thank you.
Very cool video
My 2X grandfather was John Carroll Kilburn formerly of Marmadukes 18th Arkansas Infantry redesigned as the Consolidated Confederate 3rd Infantry under General Cleburne’s Division at Stones River. A devoutly religious man he was a conscripted member of the Searcy County Peace Committee and assigned to company K under Col Ira Robertson (a cousin by marriage) JC Kilburn was subsequently KIA on the last day of the battle and is buried at Jeffersons Barracks, St Louis Mo.
Despite being totally inaccurate, it's a good song.
Good post I liked the photos of the soldiers that were involved in Little Big Horn.
You may need to practice left and right…
George Custer was a brevet brigadier general during the Civil War, but during and at the Battle of Little Bighorn he was a lieutenant colonel.
Yes but addressed according to highest rank achieved even if it was a brevet rank. I understand that Eisenhower,s actual rank was Colonel and the General rank was a brevet during WW2.. Officers who had Seniority had to take orders from him when appointed Supreme Allied Commander... McArthur called him the Best Clerk I ever had... The man had no combat experience ..compared to MacArthur and Patton yet he held rank over them...
@@ArthurKeen-kt9we , that is interesting about Eisenhower. A cursory search shows him to be breveted all the way to 4-star, then permanently promoted to B.G., M.G, and then... SUPREME ALLIED COMMANDER. 😁 I had no idea.
I think those mounds are where they buried their dead. Just a guess.
You did a really good job on this documentary. I especially enjoyed the pow wow drum music as the background I would just maybe bring it down just a little bit so we can hear your narration more clearly. I also enjoyed all the historical artwork. As an enrolled citizen of a native tribe, I wonder how people in America would react if a foreign country invaded these territories that hold our house, families, and the graves of our ancestors. Still, it is heartbreaking that so much blood was shed on both sides.
I am going to get kicked off this comment tread for being the most militarily challenged OR the just "The Dumbest One." For two days, I have looked for a military term. The name I cannot recall either and I couldn't find it in the many dictionaries I searched or by researching one battle I recall it being used in. I just can't find it, but I can describe it. I am working with a federal patent attorney to describe a project management structure and decision making procedure for project management. Many corporate structure terms were borrowed from the military. The top lawyer is the "General Counsel." This term has applicability outside the military in a generic way as a great description of DELEGATION OF AUTHORITY FOR DECISION MAKING FROM THE HIGHEST RANKED TO HIS NEXT IN COMMAND. The best description I know is the use of it at Gettysburg for a reason I can't recall either and didn't find researchingthe battle. I believe General Longstreet was undecided (on some crucial aspect of the following day's fighting tactic. He sent it down a level to be decided by General's under his command BY VOTE. There is also a vote procedure, even, on who goes first, and more. IT HAS A NAME, NEITHER OF US CAN RECALL IT, I researched hours night before last and was up early and still cannot find it. The patent attorney can't either. I thought I was a Dictionary Whiz .... I found out I am not. I finally started crying way past the time to stop trying and upon realizing I AM TOO DUMB TO USE THE DOD DICTIONARY OF MILITARY TERMINOLOGY! It is either a trick on civilians or the Mother of ALL Dictionaries. I am going to invent a term for it ... but that term is good. Does anyone know it? It's OK if you don't answer. I am not answering me either.
FUN FACT: When white fur traders first came north in the 1600s, they met the Indigenous people at Obadjiwan, where they established a fur trading post in the shadow of the rich silver fields. However, neither the white traders nor the clergy had any knowledge of the enormous silver wealth in the overlooking hills. When the Hudson Bay fort overcharged the Indigenous hunters for guns and bullets, the hunters simply went into the bush and fashioned bullets from pure silver. They never told the fort’s factor of the rich silver deposits that lay in the hills nearby. So why this silence? Anson Gard, who chronicled the Cobalt silver rush, wrote that the Indigenous people were aware of the presence of the silver veins, but they believed that great misfortune would befall them if the white men knew. We find a similar code of silence among the Ojibwa who mined copper along the northern Great Lakes. The Ojibwa story of Nanabijou serves as a cautionary tale against sharing the secrets of mineral wealth. Nanabijou was a giant who protected the Indigenous people of the northern boreal forest. Nanabijou revealed the secrets of a rich silver mine to the Ojibwa, but warned that they must never share this information. Despite their best efforts, the white men learned of the location of the mine at Silver Islet on Lake Superior. They came with their dynamite and shaft-sinking machines, and Nanabijou was turned to stone, becoming the famous Sleeping Giant in the harbour of Thunder Bay. The Ojibwa lost their guardian and were left exposed to the destructive influx of white men. A year after the Silver Islet Mine was established in 1868, the Hudson’s Bay Company relinquished control of their vast trading territories across the North in a deed of surrender to the newly established country of Canada. This opened the region to a flood of railway workers, trappers, and prospectors, who brought with them the exploitation, alcohol, and disease that devastated the traditional economies of the northern Indigenous peoples. So I’m pretty sure Tonto would agree.. bad trade kemosabé.