Unsung History Podcast
Unsung History Podcast
  • Видео 178
  • Просмотров 44 281
A History of Postpartum Depression in the United States | Unsung History
In his bestselling childcare manual American pediatrician Dr. Benjamin Spock advised new moms:“If you begin to feel at all depressed, go to a movie, or to the beauty parlor, or to get yourself a new hat or dress.” Although puerperal insanity had been a recognized diagnosis at the end of the 19th Century, doctors in the early 20th century dismissed the postpartum onset of psychiatric symptoms as “pure coincidence.” It would take decades of activism by both parent groups and clinicians for the effects of postpartum depression, anxiety, and psychosis to be recognized and studied, with limited federal funding for programming finally being approved in late 2016. Joining me in this episode is D...
Просмотров: 7

Видео

Segregation Scholarships | Unsung History
Просмотров 41День назад
Between 1921 and 1948, every Southern and border state, except Delaware, set up scholarship programs to send Black students out of state for graduate study rather than admit them to historically white public colleges or build graduate programs in the public HBCUs. While the individual Black students often benefited from graduate education at top-tier universities, the segregation scholarships c...
Doug Williams, Vince Evans & the History of Black Quarterbacks in the NFL | Unsung History
Просмотров 10714 дней назад
In 1946, the National Football League began the process of reintegration after a “gentleman’s agreement” had stopped teams from hiring Black players for over a decade. Even as the NFL began to re-integrate, though, racist stereotypes kept teams from drafting Black players into so-called “thinking” positions like quarterback. Black players who started at quarterback in college would be drafted i...
Jewish Patriots in the American Revolution | Unsung History
Просмотров 18221 день назад
In the Continental Army, one company of patriots in Charleston, South Carolina, was a majority Jewish, and at least fifteen Jewish soldiers in the Army achieved the rank of officer during the American Revolution, something unheard of in European armies at the time. Though their numbers were small (in proportion with their population in the colonies), Jewish patriots participated in the war, and...
Abigail Adams | Unsung History
Просмотров 64Месяц назад
Abigail Smith Adams, wife to the second U.S. president and mother of the sixth U.S. president, may be best known for exhorting her husband to “remember the ladies” as he worked with his colleagues to form a new government, but that was just one of her many strongly-held political views. Adams, who lacked formed education and whose legal status was subsumed under that of her husband, never stopp...
Hair and the American Presidency | Unsung History
Просмотров 37Месяц назад
In March 1778, while he was camped at Valley Forge, Commander in Chief George Washington sent a lock of his hair to the daughter of the New Jersey Governor. It wasn’t a romantic gift; rather, Washington was responding to a common request made to celebrities of his time, similar to the autographed photo one might request today. Because hair is so long-lasting, people of the 18th and 19th centuri...
Margaret Chase Smith | Unsung History
Просмотров 38Месяц назад
At the Republican National Convention in July 1964, Maine Senator Margaret Chase Smith’s name was placed in nomination for the presidency, and she received votes from 27 delegates, the first time a woman was placed in nomination at a major party’s presidential convention in the United States. It was only one of many firsts Smith would achieve in her remarkable decades-long career that included ...
The 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago | Unsung History
Просмотров 66Месяц назад
Even before Democrats met in Chicago in August to choose their presidential nominee, the year 1968 had been a turbulent, and often violent, time in the United States. In Chicago, the tumult of an open convention inside the International Amphitheatre was matched by the huge anti-war protests downtown. While the Democrats inside the convention hall voted down a peace plank and nominated the incum...
Sigrid Schultz | Unsung History
Просмотров 8592 месяца назад
In 1926, American Sigrid Schultz became one of the first women to head a foreign bureau for a US newspaper when she was named the chief correspondent for the Berlin bureau of the Chicago Tribune. In her 26 years with the Tribune, Schultz, using her command of German and French, her knowledge of German politics and history, and her wide range of contacts, reported on the rise of Nazism and warne...
The History of Synchronized Swimming | Unsung History
Просмотров 1712 месяца назад
When the 1934 World’s Fair in Chicago was looking for an aquatic act to complement their new underwater lights, organizers turned to physical educator Katherine Curtis, who put together a wildly popular show called the Modern Mermaids. No one could quite figure out what to call it, trying out water ballet and figure swimming until a radio announcer landed on “synchronized swimming.” Soon synchr...
The FTA & Antiwar Protests in 1971 | Unsung History
Просмотров 1132 месяца назад
In 1971, a group of performers calling themselves the Free Theatre Associates (FTA), including Jane Fonda and Donald Sutherland, began putting on popular antiwar shows for audiences of active-duty GIs. Over 10 months they performed near military bases all over the United States and in the Pacific Rim. The Pacific Rim tour led to a documentary, which was released briefly in July 1972 and then qu...
The Incorruptibles & Organized Jewish Crime in New York City in the Early 20th Century | Unsung...
Просмотров 1372 месяца назад
In 1912, a group of wealthy and influential German Jews in uptown New York funded an effort to root out organized crime on the lower East Side, then the most densely populated neighborhood on Earth, home to half a million people, many of them recent Jewish Russian immigrants. As a result, a Jewish investigator and a Jewish lawyer joined the NYPD and pulled together a group of cops who refused t...
Dr. Claudia Hampton & the History of Affirmative Action in California | Unsung History
Просмотров 302 месяца назад
In 1974, Republican governor Ronald Reagan appointed educator Dr. Claudia Hampton, a Democrat active in her local NAACP, as the first Black woman trustee to the board of California State University. For the next twenty years Hampton would be known as the affirmative action trustee as she advocated for policies and budgets that would help support and diversify the CSU faculty, staff, and student...
Josephine McCarty: Mother, Lobbyist, Spy & Abortionist | Unsung History
Просмотров 243 месяца назад
Josephine McCarty, née Fagan, aka Mrs. Virginia S. Seymour, dba Emma Burleigh. M.D., was many things: mother, teacher, saleswoman, spy, lobbyist, and abortionist. And in 1872 she was also an accused murderer, after eyewitnesses saw her fire a pistol on a public streetcar in Utica, New York, killing one man and wounding another. Historian R.E. Fulton (refulton.com/), author of The Abortionist of...
Quilting & the New Deal | Unsung History
Просмотров 283 месяца назад
Quilting & the New Deal | Unsung History
The Federal Theatre Project | Unsung History
Просмотров 383 месяца назад
The Federal Theatre Project | Unsung History
The Red Summer of 1919 & Black Resistance | Unsung History
Просмотров 804 месяца назад
The Red Summer of 1919 & Black Resistance | Unsung History
The Reconstruction Era & its Aftermath | Unsung History
Просмотров 904 месяца назад
The Reconstruction Era & its Aftermath | Unsung History
The Southern Plantation System | Unsung History
Просмотров 2254 месяца назад
The Southern Plantation System | Unsung History
Slavery & Incarceration in New Orleans | Unsung History
Просмотров 1354 месяца назад
Slavery & Incarceration in New Orleans | Unsung History
The Jazz Maestros of Jim Crow America | Unsung History
Просмотров 624 месяца назад
The Jazz Maestros of Jim Crow America | Unsung History
Negro League Baseball | Unsung History
Просмотров 595 месяцев назад
Negro League Baseball | Unsung History
Log Cabin Republicans and the Gay Right | Unsung History
Просмотров 1845 месяцев назад
Log Cabin Republicans and the Gay Right | Unsung History
American Anxiety over Poor Posture | Unsung History
Просмотров 845 месяцев назад
American Anxiety over Poor Posture | Unsung History
The History of DARE | Unsung History
Просмотров 775 месяцев назад
The History of DARE | Unsung History
Alice Roosevelt Longworth | Unsung History
Просмотров 4576 месяцев назад
Alice Roosevelt Longworth | Unsung History
Eleanor Roosevelt's Visit to the Pacific Theatre during World War II | Unsung History
Просмотров 346 месяцев назад
Eleanor Roosevelt's Visit to the Pacific Theatre during World War II | Unsung History
Eliza Scidmore | Unsung History
Просмотров 646 месяцев назад
Eliza Scidmore | Unsung History
Foreign Missionaries & American Diplomacy in the 19th Century | Unsung History
Просмотров 646 месяцев назад
Foreign Missionaries & American Diplomacy in the 19th Century | Unsung History

Комментарии

  • @michaels5582
    @michaels5582 23 дня назад

    Piss off with your hasbara

  • @michellelester243
    @michellelester243 24 дня назад

    Never trust the federal government

  • @jessicamalley6201
    @jessicamalley6201 26 дней назад

    Fascinating history. I am a Townsend descending from Townsends that settled in America in the mid 1600’s. I know they spread far and wide and the history is amazing.

  • @garypiont6114
    @garypiont6114 28 дней назад

    Marines going to nam stopped at Okinawa a huge riot started many were killed.

  • @AtarahDerek
    @AtarahDerek Месяц назад

    Harper was actually 20. He turned 21 in December of that year. And Fredson wasn't the first Alaska Native to graduate college. He was the first to graduate from a university specifically, and the first male Alaska Native to graduate from college. Harper's two older sisters graduated from college with teaching degrees years before Fredson attended college. Obama restoring Denali's name would've been fine if he hadn't been a hypocrite by doing it. He stole the Nobel Peace Prize from Gao Zhisheng. It was awarded to him for the _exact same reason_ Denali was awarded to McKinley: Making stereotypical campaign promises. If Obama was going to restore Denali's name, he should've also given back the Nobel Peace Prize so that it could be properly given to the rightful winner. Taking a people from, "Nature hates you and you have to beg it to be nice or you will die," to, "The God who made nature loves you, and you respect nature because God wants you to take care of it so that it in turn can take care of you," isn't a step away from their cultural identity. It is instead recontextualizing it so that they no longer have to live in fear. Fear is not a good motivator to take care of the land. A genuine love of the land's Creator is. Besides, every culture has something in its religion or belief system that ties back to God as described in the Bible. What Karstens didn't understand--and perhaps what Stuck didn't make clear to him--was that Stuck's primary goal in everything he did was to promote the wellness of those in his mission field. That's why he wanted Harper and two of his top students on the trip. It's why he handled the publicity as he did. He didn't initially realize that Karstens felt slighted. And he tried to make his intentions clear after the fact, but Karstens refused to hear him out. Karstens liked Harper (everyone did; Harper was practically a Marty Stu), and he's the one who put Harper in the lead on summit day. But I do wonder, if Karstens had understood that Stuck wanted to use the climb primarily to bring attention to the missions to Alaska Natives, would he have gone through with his part in it?

  • @pamelasbutterflylife1312
    @pamelasbutterflylife1312 Месяц назад

    Thank you so much for shedding light on such a phenomenal woman who embodied living with no limitations, even in the Jim Crow era and segregation❤💫🦋🩷🌸! Chef/entrepreneur Mrs. Lena Richard was a powerful woman, brilliant, brave, and I am in awe! We do stand on the shoulders of giants😭. I am a health coach from Detroit. At my heaviest, I weighed 310 lbs, and I am only 5.2. In 2019, I weighed 275 lbs. I went on a miraculous weight-loss journey and lost 140 lbs, naturally in less than 2 years! I love cooking on my Facebook page. I thought about Julia Childs and her show. That made me research who was the first black woman who had a television cooking show and I stumbled across this beautiful being💫! I will get the cookbook and honor Mrs. Lena Richard's and prepare her dishes on my RUclips and Facebook channel! I will keep her legacy alive🤎! pamelasbutterflylife.com

  • @lulup1029
    @lulup1029 Месяц назад

    Good podcast! Good work! Interesting that Sigrid was protective and took a stand when the school would not accept a Jewish student. I wonder what that was about for her since antisemitism was typically and also, politically accepted.

  • @RichardStephens-bt6or
    @RichardStephens-bt6or Месяц назад

    Wow I'm 67 years of age tomorrow and I'm still fascinated about history and learning about new subjects thanks for posting. Subscribe? No brainer. Best wishes from the UK.

  • @freelancernaeemtalukder100
    @freelancernaeemtalukder100 2 месяца назад

    Hi, I am a regular viewer of your RUclips channel, if you allow me I would like to share about your youtube channel. This topic is very important for you. Nice history Thank You❤

  • @michelesalvatierra3211
    @michelesalvatierra3211 2 месяца назад

    Thank you for covering this.

  • @christinekrusky8110
    @christinekrusky8110 2 месяца назад

    I am also sitting here knitting, listening to your wonderful information on fellow knitter's during World War One. I send all my knitted items to the Salvation Army in my city for distribution and feel that I am helping out someone. I am so grateful that my Mother had patience to teach me to knit a sweater in my teens and have since been knitting my whole life. I call myself a knitaholic as I knit every day and it brings me a sense of accomplishment and peace.

  • @BCNbananas
    @BCNbananas 2 месяца назад

    Betty Dodd and the Babe were lovers. Read the biography by Susan E. Cayleff called "Babe - the Life and Times of Babe Didrikson Zaharias" in which she interviews Betty!!

  • @Carmen-D-Clinton
    @Carmen-D-Clinton 2 месяца назад

    😊 Wonderful example of leadership and fortitude. Shirley Chisholm is unforgettable 🖤 💐 ❤🎉🌐

  • @Bob-zs3ro
    @Bob-zs3ro 2 месяца назад

    I Cant Believe there are NO Comments. 😮

  • @AlexandriaMorgan
    @AlexandriaMorgan 3 месяца назад

    It’s such a shame that so much of the language and culture didn’t really work its way down. My maternal great grandmother used was from Warsaw and spoke English as a second language. I didn’t even know this until doing a 23 and me. (I’m from Peoria)

  • @LadyVTavora
    @LadyVTavora 3 месяца назад

    💚

  • @October31st1517
    @October31st1517 3 месяца назад

    more white progressive propaganda

    • @ChristopherStandardTime
      @ChristopherStandardTime Месяц назад

      here's a thought - what if you're wrong?

    • @October31st1517
      @October31st1517 Месяц назад

      @@ChristopherStandardTime Thos Puerto Rican 🇵🇷 has done his homework.

  • @betaomega04
    @betaomega04 4 месяца назад

    That ""apology" From Steele? The same Chicago Sun-Times article that EVERY left-leaning media outlet cited? Yeah...that was proven to be an unsubstantiated lie, which is why it was retracted.

  • @michaelzurowski9442
    @michaelzurowski9442 5 месяцев назад

    There ought to be a doc on the Polish historical museum of Chicago. Think on it. Dr. Michael Zurowski, Montreal/Warsaw.

  • @RaiderRSupastar
    @RaiderRSupastar 5 месяцев назад

    I read Lynch Street I think the title of the book was that told the story. Horrible . It was bound to happen

  • @marioborkowski5894
    @marioborkowski5894 5 месяцев назад

    Historically ,we never liked germans and back stabbing ruskies. Just leave Poland be or you will find out.

  • @marioborkowski5894
    @marioborkowski5894 5 месяцев назад

    The Polish name for the neighborhood in Chicago is and was "Jackowo "

  • @AlexanderLiberman-ks1mu
    @AlexanderLiberman-ks1mu 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you very much for bringing this piece of history to light. I had to search for specific keywords just to find any information.

  • @lenambrooks8632
    @lenambrooks8632 6 месяцев назад

    I was there. Monumential experience!!

  • @henkverhaeren3759
    @henkverhaeren3759 6 месяцев назад

    Impressive story. Respect for Elizabeth 🙏

  • @carolinebyrne9392
    @carolinebyrne9392 7 месяцев назад

    THERE WERE 8 MILLION PEOPLE IN IRELAND NOT 22 THEY WERE VERY SELF RELIANT MAKEING ALL OF THERE OWN CLOTHES KNITTING SHAWELS AND THE WORLD FAMEMUS ARRAN SWEATERS AND THEY DID NOT ONLY LIVE ON PATATOES THEY KEPT THE GENTLEMAN WHO PAID THE RENT A PIG OR TOO CHICKENS GOATES EVEN A COW FOR MILK CHEESE AND BUTTER FISHING WAS COMMON EVEN IN THE SOCALLED BARRON WEST OF IRELAND SO FAR FROM THE POOR DOWNTRODDEN PESENTS THE EARLY 20 CENTUREY TUGS WOULD HAVE YOU BELIVE THE NATIVE IRISH HAD ONE OF THE MOST HEATLTY DITES IN ALL OF EUROPE

    • @carolinebyrne9392
      @carolinebyrne9392 7 месяцев назад

      THE CATHLOIC CHURCH AND THE IRISH OWN LAZY ATITUAED OF SURE IT IT WILL BE ALL RIGHT LET YOUR MAN OVER THERE SURT IT OUT SURE HES A VERY STIEGHT TALKER AND A SOUND MAN WE ARE OFF TO THE PUB WHERE WE ALL CAN DO ALL OF OUR FIGHTING

    • @carolinebyrne9392
      @carolinebyrne9392 7 месяцев назад

      PLUS THERE IS A SNOBBISHISH CLASS SYSTIME MUCH WORSE THAT EVER EXISTED IN ENGLAND THATS RAPMNED IN IRELAND EVEN TO THIS DAY ITS WHAT MY MUM USED TO CALL THE PENNY LOOKING DOWN ON THE HALF PENNY IE TO IRISH GIRLS BOOTH WATERESS A MUCH MORE SKILLED JOB THAN IN THE US ONE STAYES IN IRELAND THE OTHER DOING THE SAME JOB BUT THE ONE IN THE STATES IS BOSTING ABOUT HOW MUCH TIPS SHE IS GETTING AND PAYING TO GO TO COLLAGE TO STUDY BS WHILE HER FRIEND WAS JUST A WAITRESS TO WHICH HER FRIEND SHOR BACK YES BUT AT LEAST I AM GETTING TRAINED IN SILVER SCERVICE A TO YEAR CORSE AND I AM GETTING PROPERLY PAIDE TO WORK FOR IT YOU MY DEAR ARE THE DIFFRENCE BETWEEN A NURSE AND A WARDSMAID I FEED ONE END WHILE YOU WIPE THE OTHER BRILL ANSWER DONT YOU THINK THIS WAS MY AUNTY IN LAW SPEEKING TO HER NURSE SISTER

  • @maryannraley
    @maryannraley 7 месяцев назад

    Hate to be picky, but the Kitchener stitch is a way of closing the toe of a sock rather than the heel. It's a grafting technique that closes the toe without a seam. (I'm actually knitting a sock as I listen.) Very interesting subject, I'm fascinated by how much society has changed in the last 100 years.

    • @margarethastings3332
      @margarethastings3332 5 месяцев назад

      👍

    • @sheilal3172
      @sheilal3172 5 месяцев назад

      Actually, there is a pattern wherein the heel is joined with Kitchener stitch. I was surprised too, and I plan, if I can locate the directions, to try the pattern. Best wishes.

    • @margarethastings3332
      @margarethastings3332 5 месяцев назад

      @@sheilal3172 I’ve never heard of that and would be interested to know more. There are certainly many ways to turn a heel. However, from a historical point of view the Kitchener stitch was named after Lord Kitchener, the British Secretary of State for War, who prompted the invention of the technique specifically to prevent chafing of the toes.

    • @maryannraley
      @maryannraley 5 месяцев назад

      @@sheilal3172 Thanks, but I hate the Kitchener stitch so much I learned to knit toe up socks to avoid it. LOL Might be interesting, but don't put yourself out.

  • @melvinkelly1604
    @melvinkelly1604 8 месяцев назад

    You’re guessing about him.

  • @petekambe3279
    @petekambe3279 8 месяцев назад

    I am curious where you get the figure of 50,000? that seems a bit high to me, as it means 1/4 or so spent considerable time in Japan or 1/3 of nisei.

  • @josmileygirltube
    @josmileygirltube 8 месяцев назад

    My 4x Gandmother was denied a pension once her husband passed in 1890 even though her husband was documented as serving.

  • @SmallsGang_773
    @SmallsGang_773 8 месяцев назад

    We need pictures

  • @kellicoffman8440
    @kellicoffman8440 8 месяцев назад

    If you can knit 🧶 and purl an afghan you are a knitter the rest is just variations on the two stitches

  • @kellicoffman8440
    @kellicoffman8440 8 месяцев назад

    Sitting here knitting 🧶 as I listen to the podcast I am totally fascinated by the history of knitting 🧶 and the war time knitters

  • @treystone9464
    @treystone9464 9 месяцев назад

    2:52 There are accounts of 20 people seeing or touching the golden plates, including Emma Smith. 11 signed they saw and touched the plates, 3 signed they saw the Angel Moroni and the plates. Respected men, prosecutors, wealthy businessmen and skeptics, some who angrily left Joseph's church, yet swore on their deathbeds they saw the plates. Read primary accounts.

  • @treystone9464
    @treystone9464 9 месяцев назад

    7:40 Joseph as Mayor was lawfully ordered to shutdown a newspaper as a public nuisance. Govenor Ford's charge of treason was a legal farce to hold Smith as Ford was complicit in the political assassination of the presidential candidate Joseph Smith. Ford thought Joseph would interfere with the election of the Kentuckian Henry Clay. He "disbanded" the Warsaw Militia, sending the Warsaw Militia to assassinate Joseph. The Carthage Grays, the jailers expected them had guns loaded with blanks. Joseph Smith was killed by evil men in high places for the sake of power. Joseph was the victor of countless false charges proving he was a far better man than those charging him.

  • @treystone9464
    @treystone9464 9 месяцев назад

    6:39 Why plop a confusing D&C 132 verse where much of the context of the verse about Emma is only known to Emma, Joseph Smith, and the Lord? It seems to be about her own marriage, about remaining faithful, etc. You injected that it's about plural marriage. The chapter speaks about marriage in general. The word "destroyed" in verse 41 is applied those who violate their covenants, so it means they will be separated from God. Though I don't suppose it is beyond repentance to become not destroyed again. But Emma was faithful, so I don't think we'll ever know what would have happened. Your desire to unsettle people creates more questions than it informs. Get better sources.

  • @treystone9464
    @treystone9464 9 месяцев назад

    2:52 False - 20 People saw or held the Gold Plates: Only anti-Mormons sources keep saying Joseph didn't let anyone see the plates, but he did. Eight saw and hefted the plates. Three others both saw the plates, touched them and saw the angel Moroni himself, all 3, all at the same time. There were technically 20 witnesses of the plates' physical existence, including Emma Smith and even non-Mormon Josiah Stowell saw them. The witnesses were among the most respected men of their community, they were skeptics, and even when they had no love for Joseph or his church, not one of them ever retracted their testimony of seeing the plates, the angel, and that Joseph really translated them, no matter how much they might have hated Joseph, even David Whitmer on his deathbed affirmed that as a fact.

  • @nm9266
    @nm9266 9 месяцев назад

    I knew Gordon and Charlie in their latter years of their lives. They were great friends of my grandmother and Charlie was always the star of the show, where I remember Gordon, he was rather low key and often could be quite grumpy.

    • @nm9266
      @nm9266 9 месяцев назад

      All of his work was very autobiographical and a lot of characters (including my grandmother) were real people. She hated when he described her by writing about the “bells of her bottom”….

    • @nm9266
      @nm9266 9 месяцев назад

      One little fun fact. Lignou Street (Hydra) was first called donkey shit lane by Gordon and Charles and is still referred to by its nickname by most people.

  • @carolynrabbani6469
    @carolynrabbani6469 10 месяцев назад

  • @lizjones81
    @lizjones81 10 месяцев назад

    The moment I realized I wasn’t Polish…I was an American came when I went to a liquor store in Crestwood, gave them my id to buy booze, and based off my last name (Kowalski) they started speaking to me in Polish and I had NO CLUE what they were saying. lol I told them to back it up. Hahaha

    • @kellancarney810
      @kellancarney810 3 месяца назад

      Analysis?... (I really hope you get that joke)

  • @sherylmorris9646
    @sherylmorris9646 10 месяцев назад

    👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @juliashearer7842
    @juliashearer7842 10 месяцев назад

    What a story!

  • @spencerlane2871
    @spencerlane2871 11 месяцев назад

    "Historians would disagree with that interpretation of the 2nd amendment."---says the guy who doesn't cite any historians.

  • @gabrielehanne580
    @gabrielehanne580 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you. That was really interesting .......

  • @Eikaiwaniki
    @Eikaiwaniki 11 месяцев назад

    Why would I want to hear more debate on the second amendment when you summed it up perfectly. "Shall not be infringed"

  • @anngillebrand857
    @anngillebrand857 11 месяцев назад

    I have a second ww housekeeping book with receipies for cooking with rationing ie.meatless,eggless, sugarless,etc.recycling used garments into other clothing..as fabric for civlians became less available...and from all services ...patterns of all needed knitwear. It defines by its content to what extent the home front was essential. Keep up the great work of looking at all those forgotten bits of history...esp. women s contributions..signed zsuzsika fom my friends place

  • @joanfalldine1402
    @joanfalldine1402 11 месяцев назад

    My husband was on the TWA airliner. He was 22 years old.

  • @fabfrith
    @fabfrith 11 месяцев назад

    Not so much history. Ongoing.

  • @dariusvbryant.
    @dariusvbryant. Год назад

    A very remarkable lady, despite her circumstances."

  • @soroarhossain3417
    @soroarhossain3417 Год назад

    nice