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Wyoming Traveler
США
Добавлен 24 окт 2020
Hello, folks, I am the Wyoming Traveler, my actual name is Joe. I like history, the outdoors: camping, hiking, and horse riding and backpacking. My channel reflects these. I make videos about adventure travels, historical places/sites, ghost towns, natural wonders, and old forts, mostly in the western United States.
Видео
Dull Knife Fight
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.2 месяца назад
Through out 1876 the army continued its campaign against the Sioux, Cheyenne and Arapaho in the fall and winter of 1876. In the Big Horn Mountains of Wyoming on November 25, 1876, the US Army attacked the Northern Cheyenne village of Chief Dull Knife.
Montrose A lonely Ghost Town
Просмотров 553 месяца назад
Located in an isolated part of northwest Nebraska, is the site of the ghost town of Montrose. Except for one structure, nothing of the town remains.
Warbonnet Creek
Просмотров 4483 месяца назад
A minor skirmish in northwestern Nebraska bolstered the national moral and that of the army after a classic military defeat. It also enhanced the career world famous showman.
Fort Fetterman
Просмотров 2204 месяца назад
Established in 1867, Fort Fetterman was an isolated and lonely post; however it served as the major staging center for several major campaigns against the tribes of the northern plains.
Frank Canton
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.6 месяцев назад
Many men of the old Western frontier wondered the fine line between the law and outlaw. Some jumped from one side and the other, at one time being a lawman and at others being an outlaw. One such individual was Frank Canton. He had a varied career being a cattle rustler, bank robber, sheriff, US Deputy marshal and Oklahoma Adjutant General.
Johnson County War Part 2
Просмотров 2637 месяцев назад
Conflict over land was common in the early days of Wyoming. One of the most deadly episodes was between the Cattle Barons and the homesteaders in Johnson County. Visited the sites and learn the story of the Johnson County War.
Johnson County War, Part 1
Просмотров 4068 месяцев назад
Conflict over land was common in the early days of Wyoming. One of the most deadly episodes was between the Cattle Barons and the homesteaders in Johnson County. Visited the sites and learn the story of the Johnson County War.
Joseph's Coat & Coffee Hot Springs
Просмотров 1198 месяцев назад
Yellowstone National Park has hundreds of interesting backcountry thermal features. One is Fairyland Geyser Basin (discovered by park rangers in 1976). Seven miles from the nearest trail and 15 miles from the closest road located are dozens of ancient geyser cones, hot springs and rushing creeks. It's not marked on any map, and it has been visited by fewer people than have ever stood on the sum...
The Murder of Willie Nickell
Просмотров 226Год назад
The Wyoming Range wars took the lives of many men, but the most tragic was that of a young teenage boy, Willie Nickell. This is his story.
The story of Tom Dooley
Просмотров 2,7 тыс.Год назад
The story behind the song "Ton Dooley" is a true but complicated tale of love, promiscuity, adultery, betrayal, and murderer. What are the actual facts of this story? Was Tom guilty of the crime for which he was executed?
Battle of Washita
Просмотров 427Год назад
The history between the European, and latter the United States, with the indigenous people in North America has been one of off and on conflict. Much of this conflict has involved bloody atrocities committed by both sides without regards to age or sex. While not the worst, the fight along the Washita River in Western present day Oklahoma is one example.
Nelson Story & the Great Montana cattle Drive
Просмотров 1 тыс.Год назад
The cattle drive is one of the most iconic symbols of the old west frontier. One of the most ambitious of these drives involve Nelson Story and his cattle drive from Texas to Montana.
Confederate Retreat from New Mexico (Confederate invasion of New Mexico, part five)
Просмотров 6452 года назад
Confederate Retreat from New Mexico (Confederate invasion of New Mexico, part five)
Battle of Glorieta Pass (Confederate invasion of New Mexico part 4)
Просмотров 4462 года назад
Battle of Glorieta Pass (Confederate invasion of New Mexico part 4)
Greetings from the Bent’s Old Fort. We enjoyed visiting this incredibly important Fort . I appreciate your work. I posted a video of this amazing and historical Fort. I started my own travel channel last January and look forward to hitting 4000 watch hours. I love the challenge and especially enjoy sharing this gorgeous country with as many people as I can. I have gobs of information and experience because I’ve traveled this country fulltime for over 31 years and been to over 250 National Parks, hundreds of State Parks and other public hiking locations. We enjoy “out of the way” adventures. Safe travels to you. Edit on!
I am from Texas and I did not know this tale at all! thanks for sharing!
Thanks for your comment, that is why I do these videos.
7:25 Marine Corps hymn
I was using a collection of military music to set the background, the story is what was important. Thank for watching and commenting
I AM OFFENDED that political correctness is more important than the words of the orriginal lyrics. The orriginal lyrics give insight into America's rich past, too soon forgotten. 😢
I agree. Thanks for watching
Please take this as a compliment. As the years have gone by watching your western histories, I've noticed a vast improvement in your style and delivery with every vid. Keep up the good work. Thanks.
I do. Thank you for watching the videos and most of all you’re encouraging comment. Thank you.
Great graphics, though access is limited you provide great graphics and dialogue, I’m able to picture myself there. Plus I have the bonus of experiencing those cold “WINDY” winters!👍 keep it up. “Those that forget the past are doomed to repeat it”- George Santayana
Thanks, I appreciate your support
More videos 👍👍👍👍
I am trying to. Thanks for the support
I love history and you have some of the best on your channel. It's sad that the monument for the Native Americans is not better maintained.
Thanks for the compliment, encouragement and support.
First off, you misspoke when you said Emily came to New Washington in 1865, I think you ment 1835., honest mistake. Second the fact that Bollard recounts a veteran of the battle of San Jacinto relating the story of the Yellow Rose on a steam ship in 1842 suggests the legend existed in 1842, unless of course you're suggesting that Bollards journal is a forgery, which you do not in the video, although you later state it is suspect without explanation. If Bollards journal is authentic, it doesn't matter when it was published. Unless Bollard has a reputation as a lier, I submit he was relating a story told to him by a veteran of the battle, which would indicate the central seed of the legend existed in 1842, only 6 years after the Texas Revolution . Third you state Tolbart called her the Maid of Morgan's Point. I live near Morgan's Point and it is no where near New Washington, it is on west Galveston Bay not far from San Jacinto, and has an important history of that area even before the revolution. If Tolbart found original lyrics, which is unsubstantiated, I suggest a hunt for this amongst his papers be attempted. Perhaps you are suggesting Tolbert lied about this? Perhaps Emily ended up in Morgan's point on Galveston Bay or perhaps that was a different Emily. Either way the central legend existed in 1842 if Bollards account is true. I have found that the central seed of most legends is usually rooted in some kind of truth. Knowing the history of song writing it is common for songs of the period to be stolen adapted and rewritten to suite the new version to the current time. You have exemplified this in the modern rewriting of the lyrics. I will stick with the legend that the Yellow Rose was a soiled dove that did in fact keep Santa Anna occupied at the prescribed moment in history at San Jacinto. The changing versions of the song are of no surprise as it still goes on today, just ask the rock bands that have been sued for stealing songs from old blues singers and publishing their versions as their own. But that is a story for a different video 😎. The Yellow Rose of Texas, helped win the battle of San Jacinto, in lore...
Informative, playful and visual. Thank you very much for showing us some important bit of history.
Thank you for your kind comment and for watching the video.
Good video 👍🏼
Thanks, your comment is much appreciated.
Private land ,that really stinks. Do you have to own the land the people walk on?
That is the rule we live under today. If people were more considerate, maybe not so.
I love these stories of the old west. The reservation system was necessary to stop the Indians from killing each other as well as the Whites. It is a shame that the reservations were not given the resources promised, or it might have worked out better.
In Wyoming, Nevada, and many other Western and Mid Western States , there are today in 2024, 150 years after this all happened, huge, hundreds of miles long tracts of basically empty, unused, unoccupied lands. No farming, no ranching, nothing.All once Indian Lands, but no more, they were driven off it. And it is clear that it was NOT because anyone "needed" the Land ,as 150 years after the fact, it is still not being used for anything.I think this reality is a very sad commentary on what was done to the Indians .You can say whatever you want, but it simply doesnt hold water to say it was because anyone " needed" that land more than the Indians did.At least the Indians actually lived on it and used it - which is more than can be said for these huge expanses even today.
This would be an interesting debate topic.
boo hoo
We should never have messed with the native Americans in the first place. Leave em alone ! But the history of the world is of one group of people not minding their own business but instead bothering their neighbors and waging war. Thus is the world.
I agree with your last statement. We live, however, in an unkind world. The indigenous people of North America or war with each other long before the Europeans showed up. Remember, the night before the attack the Cheyenne were celebrating and attack on a Shoni village. An item I did not mention, is that among the belongings of the seventh cavalry. Was a sack with a hands of about a half a dozen children. I don’t think these children were Cheyenne. As you say, “ Thus is the world.”
When you show a photo of Dull knife use his photo and not Little Wolf
You are right, I apologize and will correct it in my next video featuring Dull Knife
The rifles that the Cheyenne left behind or were lost in the battle were collected and thrown onto the fire of other Indian possessions after the battle according to the landowner who talked to our group when I visited the area on a tour many years ago. I believe she said either her father or grandfather took the remnants of the old weapons and with the help of a welder turned them into some sort of agricultural harrow.
An interesting story, and probably right, early settlers did not let much go to waste.
EXCELENT PRESENTATION!I WONDER IF THE PAWNEE AND CHEYENE GOT TO KEEP THEIR CAPTURED HORSES.
Not sure, I am assuming they did. Thank you for your comments.
Accurate report, congrats! I walked the Battlefield some 44 years ago, myself and a friend. I will never forget that location and the beauty there and the history.
Thank you for your kind comment, Johnson County Wyoming is full of history and beautiful landscapes.
Great video again, thank you!
Thank you for the kind comment and watching the video.
Thanks
J'y étais en Août 1989...... Magnifique voyage..................
This was my relative and L H. always claimed his innocence. I don't understand why there aren't a bunch of movies that depict his gang. In one magazine, they called him the leader of the greatest crime syndicate the West has ever known. He stole horses and cattle from Colorado to California. It's rumored his nickname was "Mushy." That was my nickname in high school because my cousin said I was just as crazy as him, lol.
I enjoyed the video. This is the first time I ever heard an explanation for the name "Yellow Hair" and it makes sense. I don't understand why you said about the shooting/killing "what happens next is more of a scene of fiction than an actual event"? There are several eye witness accounts and there is no doubt that Cody killed Yellow Hair in single combat after they both fell from their horses, and took his scalp. He may have exaggerated the event in reenactments but the basic facts are true. The scalp was confiscated from Cody's family in recent years.
Thanks for your comments and I am glad you learned something from the video. That is one of my goals in making them. My comment about the fight between Cody and Yellow Hair was not a question about the authenticity of their fight, but its dramatic sequence of events. The idea of two people riding towards each other shooting and both of their horses falling and them getting up and shooting back at each other again it’s something you would expect in a fictional setting, not in real life. It just shows that history and real life can be stranger than fiction.
Great short video, appreciate your efforts
Thanks for your support
Indians were well known for generally not being very good shots
I am not sure about Indians in general, but Yellow Hair was not that good a shot, or maybe his rifle sites were off. Thanks for watching.
Well done. I have been to that site twice, and you have shown the area as it is.
Thanks for your comment and your viewing
Great job! Love it, thanks. :)
Thank you for your kindcomment..com it is greatly appreciated.
The song about Tom Dula was written by Thomas Charles Land in 1868. The Kingston Trio were the ones who sang it and made it the most popular in the 50s.
Thank you for your informative comment, I appreciate it, as well as viewing my video.
I grew up on a ranch about five miles from Jay Em. In the late 50's and 60's My dad would take me to Jay Em to visit with Lake Harris at the general store. They always had some great stories about the town and surrounding areas of Jay Em. I was always treated with a grape soda and sometimes a fudgsicle if I behaved. Jay Em was also the home of the 4-H overnight camp that was held every July. I learned how to safely shoot a .22 rifle, which came into good use when I was in the Navy. When I go back to visit, I always try to make it there and show my family Jay Em. Lots of good memories of such a great little town.
I am glad you enjoyed the video and that it brought back. Pleasant memories. Thank you for watching.
@@WyomingTraveler Lake Harris was my Grate Grate Grand Father. unfortunately he died the year after I was born. Never meet the man or much of my extended family. Thanks for posting the video I've driven by this town many times in the last 20 years never knowing what I was passing by. I should visit it some time.
@joelSplittgerber I love to hear some stories Lake was my Grate Grate grandfather.
@@natlkjh8677 next time you’re in the area, you should drive through Jay Em. It’s a cute little community, though all the businesses are closed. Thanks for watching the video and your comment.
"Get 'em skeered, and keep the skeered on 'em." -Nathan Bedford Forrest
Well done 👏🏼
Thank you very much
I genuinely appreciate your comment about the authenticity of the Red Cloud statement. I am not a deep researcher so your insight is valuable. Thanks.
Thank you for your comments and watching my videos
I believe Red Cloud said: "The white man made us many promises...more than I can remember. And he only kept one. He promised to take our land...and HE TOOK IT!" Incredibly poignant.
I don’t know if Red Cloud actually made that comment or not. If he did, it is ironic, since the Lakota took the black hills and the Powder River country from the Crow.
The story I heard was that Santa Anna often seduced women with his large eight sided four room tent & all the extravagant accoutrements. Then send them away when he was tired of them. Emily was, apparently, different. Santa Anna was so enamored that he refused to leave his tent. Emily knew she must keep him entertained & convinced another captive to escape & alert Sam Houston’s army. Houston’s army numbered 900 men compared to Santa Anna’s 1,300 men. The battle ended in 18 minutes with Houston’s army triumphant & the battle cry, “Remember the Alamo! Remember Goliad! God and Texas!” Santa Anna was said to have turned tail & ran, clad only in his underwear & a pair of slippers.
Thanks for your comment, but my research debunks any connection between Emily Morgan and Santa Anna.
@@WyomingTraveler Thank you. The story was from an old Paul Harvey The Rest of The Story… probably circa early ‘70s? As our nation grows older old tales/legends are “changed” as new research is found. I thought it was an interesting tale. Especially about the enemy running away in his skivvies. ☺️
@@Standinthegap4ever Paul Harvey told many interesting stories, but they were not always historically accurate.
Santa Anna was captured wearing a private”s uniform
@@WyomingTraveler Thank you. Isn’t it interesting how legends come to life & “gain truth”, even though it turns out not to be true? Some legends are like a giant game of telephone…. the last story is sometimes far different than the original. Details are forgotten or deemed not important to the story. Some things are added as elements to the story are list, forgotten or outright embellished.
GOOD PRESENTATION,I FIND WESTERN HISTORY INTERESTING.
Thank you for your kind comment, I am glad you enjoyed the video. More are on the way.
Pleasure working with you Boss 🫡
The pleasure was all mine. I’ll be emailing you soon.
Thank you for this informative video again. I like the history of Wyoming, especially in the times of Red Cloud. Greetings from Germany.
I’m happy you enjoyed this video. Thank you for watching and commenting,
Thank you very much for making this! A great summary of an important part of the Yellowstone story!
Thank you for your kind comment
Thank you for not being a robot voice...
Thank you for watching, I like to do my own work.
I appreciate someone taking the time to tell a story. Subbed.
Man my inital thought when I Realized you were going to go in and discover what transpired was like oh my god as someone who's come to know the history for quite awhile are you ever in for the horrific shock of your life when you find out what happened, it''s honestly one of the most outraging events to ever happen in the united states and it's history. You know most of us, I'm 38 now but I learned when I was much younger but my generation was largely as naive a new born about labor history and had no idea like I grew up in a town where the local grocery store was unionized so even in childhood I had seen workers go on strike, strikes were the exception though they were definately not the norm and I had seen them picket Fred meyers as a kid and I had assumed that it might be hard to get the union to agree to go on one but that we had always had the right to provided we convinced the rest of our union coworkers. Bu nooo... What happened taught me that the history of labor is covered in blood and that our Freedoms and rights that we take for granted even today were literally the product of hard fought battles that at times the ultimate price was paid in sacrifice for the rights to.
Thank you for watching the video and commenting. This channel is to show historical sites as excess today until the story behind them. The Ludlow massacre is just why of the mini brutal events in the early days of the labor movement.
The Best Quality of this 👍song is by Wilf Carter 👏,Good backstory,👋
Thanks
Good video,are there any books about this
Thanks for the kind comment, I am happy you enjoy the video. The Grattan Massacre is covered , in various degree in many of the books about the First Sioux War, "All Because of a Mormon Cow: Historical Accounts of the Grattan Massacre, 1854-1855" is one of the few books that deal only with the massacre. I obtained much of my information from the rangers at Ft. Laramie Historical Site. If you ever get a chance do visit the park. Enjoy your research
Thank you for replying,keep up the good work 👍
l used to think this song is from the US cavalry in Civil War. Thank you for telling the background story.
Thanks for watching and I am glad that you are able to learn something new
Qante heer thee videeo
To qiet i cant hear it
The Lieutenant's name was Beecher not breacher he was a relative of Harriet Beecher Stowe
Thanks for the information
I heard they thought they had cannons in the fort that’s why the Indians wouldnt attacked because they were terrified of those cannons
The fort did have cannons and the Indians were aware of them, but that is not why the Indian did not attack. The Indians Concept of war did not have sustained continuous military campaign. It’s more what you might call hit and run warfare. They had just won a great battle and wanted to return to their camp to care for their injured, more than their dad and celebrate their great victory.
Who's the guy reading this? Great story, and I love Ft. Casper's history, but they could have found a better reader.
, thanks for watching the video, ha, ha, I agree they should find a better reader. Unfortunately, they is one person me. I do the filming, the research, write the script, edit and narrate the video. I do not have money in the budget to hire a greeter. If you were willing to do the narration, I would greatly appreciate it.
I'm glad for this video but am very annoyed that you did not give the location for the corner wall remains of Fort reno at 4:13 thru 4:30 of the video. I would like to make a mark of that point on my Google Maps app.
I am happy that you enjoyed the video, but sorry that you are annoyed or disappointed. I did not give the location of the walls remains. If you go to Fort Reno, the monument to the fort sets, roughly in the center if you look to the south east, you will see the remains of the corner past and walls. I hope that helps you.
@@WyomingTraveler Ok, thanks for that very much!