Robert Van Ness
Robert Van Ness
  • Видео 109
  • Просмотров 36 108

Видео

Longstsreet - Elizabeth Varon Interview
Просмотров 1148 месяцев назад
In which Dr. Varon and I discuss her newest book.
Did Edgar Allen Poe Visit Alexandria?
Просмотров 279 месяцев назад
In which the Alexandria Historical Society's Scott Vierick discusses the enduring legend of Poe's Alexandria visit.
Robert E. Lee on Leadership - H.W. Crocker III Interview
Просмотров 22211 месяцев назад
In which historican H.W. Crocker discusses Robert E. Lee's leadership legacy.
First Families of Virginia - The Carters, Part 3
Просмотров 550Год назад
In which we look at the Carters after Robert "King"Carter, including other Carter lines that bring us Country Music and the 39th President of the United States.
Virginia's Important Ghost Stories - Dr. Alena Pirok Interview
Просмотров 197Год назад
In which Dr. Alena Pirok discusses Ghost Stories' importance to Colonial Williamsburg and Virginia's history.
Colonial Virginia's War Against Piracy - Jeremy Moss Interview
Просмотров 1602 года назад
In which Jeremy Moss discusses his new book - Colonial Virginia's War Against Piracy: The Governor and the Buccaneer.
The Encyclopedia of Confederate Generals - Dr. Samuel Mitcham, Jr. Interview
Просмотров 2982 года назад
In which I interview Dr. Samuel Mitcham about his new book The Encyclopedia of Confederate Generals.
First Families of Virginia - The Wormeleys
Просмотров 3682 года назад
In which the Wormeley family is outlined from their earliest days as Norman Conquerors to their important time in Virginia.
First Families of Virginia - The Armisteads
Просмотров 5862 года назад
In which I discuss the Armisteads and their important connections to Virginia's history.
First Families of Virginia - The Nelsons
Просмотров 4742 года назад
In which the Nelson family of Virginia's founding and influence upon Virginia and the United States is discussed.
First Families of Virginia - The Parkes
Просмотров 2612 года назад
First Families of Virginia - The Parkes
First Families of Virginia - The Custises Part 2
Просмотров 6962 года назад
First Families of Virginia - The Custises Part 2
First Families of Virginia - The Custises Part 1
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.2 года назад
First Families of Virginia - The Custises Part 1
Special Halloween Episode - Evelyn Byrd's Ghost
Просмотров 1182 года назад
Special Halloween Episode - Evelyn Byrd's Ghost
The 1619 Project - Phillip Magness Interview
Просмотров 1402 года назад
The 1619 Project - Phillip Magness Interview
First Families of Virginia - The Grymes
Просмотров 3843 года назад
First Families of Virginia - The Grymes
The Lafayette Trail - Julien Icher Interview
Просмотров 1263 года назад
The Lafayette Trail - Julien Icher Interview
First Families of Virginia - The Ludwells
Просмотров 2123 года назад
First Families of Virginia - The Ludwells
First Families of Virginia - The Fitzhughs
Просмотров 7333 года назад
First Families of Virginia - The Fitzhughs
The James Madison Museum of Orange County Heritage
Просмотров 1103 года назад
The James Madison Museum of Orange County Heritage
First Families of Virginia - The Taliaferros
Просмотров 3,6 тыс.3 года назад
First Families of Virginia - The Taliaferros
First Families of Virginia - The Randolphs
Просмотров 3,7 тыс.3 года назад
First Families of Virginia - The Randolphs
Special Halloween Episode - Haunted Tuckahoe with Jessica Stith
Просмотров 1123 года назад
Special Halloween Episode - Haunted Tuckahoe with Jessica Stith

Комментарии

  • @scronx
    @scronx 22 дня назад

    It was extremely rare back then for a female to be called Sarah. So it seems unlikely in Miss Grimes' case unless there was some Jewish ancestry hidden away. This FFVer (my name is a list of ingredients) is enjoying your series. Appreciate in particular the respect with which you cover your subject -- increasingly rare these days. Have you covered the Wallers by chance? (Hopefully without giving credence to the Roots yarn.) I have happy memories of first encountering the Taliaferro name in the Ware Church graveyard while bopping around Gloucester with my parents about 1960 -- was a small boy but already passionate about the state, the history, everything. I was and am also mad about reed organs, and there was a terrific variety of them in the many local antique shops. My grandmother authored 'My Dearest Polly' and 'John Norton and Sons: Merchants of London and Virginia'.

  • @HenT8991
    @HenT8991 28 дней назад

    I just found your channel and love the content. The unfiltered opinions and comments of your guests are immensely satisfying and informative to me. It's helping me shape and refine my own views on the American civil war and its' characters. To offer a minor critique to the scholar here, I am increasingly finding the value of monuments and statues worthwhile. I think some public display that is easily accessible (museums too obviously) offer a layman's waypoint or foundation stone in learning and understanding human history. The need for tactile evidence is universal to all people. From the Jews marking the crossing into Canaan, to even the statue of Lee formerly in Richmond. From a religious perspective as a Christian myself I understand General Lee's sentiments on his distaste to be immortalized through statues and etc as somewhat vain and fleeting in comparison to the eternity that lies within Christ, I do think such physical markers offer a point on where to begin in learning a out American history.

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 25 дней назад

      Hi, thank you so much for your very kind words! The War is such a complex topic, with widely varying viewpoints, and approaches to those viewpoints. It's simply not a simple topic to be sure. Many attempt to boil it all down, which, to a point I understand. In so doing, however, I think context and deeply felt issues are lost, which in turn hurts the study on all sides. I took agree that there is value to the monuments and statues. Drawing from my above comment about context, such scholars as Dr. Varon, in my opinion often don't dig into the documentation/records about said monuments - who built them, why, how.... Who attended the monument's unveiling festivals.... I'm glad you mentioned your Christian viewpoint, because this is personally one area I too wrestle with. I see statues/monuments as valuable historical objects, but I also struggle with God's commandment to not make any graven images. I wish I could say that I've come to a conclusion, but I haven't, other than that many of the men "immortalized" in stone and bronze would be very much so against such creations. Thus, it seems we're in agreement about approaching such works of art at the moment. That is to say, that I'm not so sure I agree with Dr. Varon's assessment. Again, thank you for your kind words, as well as your listening to my podcast! God Bless.

  • @charityhawks9890
    @charityhawks9890 Месяц назад

    I've just started researching my roots, so I find this intriguing. My mother was a Boling, and it appears that these are our ancestors. Thank you for the added information

  • @alexbrewer993
    @alexbrewer993 Месяц назад

    I’m sure this guys has “a lot of black friends”

  • @alexbrewer993
    @alexbrewer993 Месяц назад

    Oh right, I love when someone with a deep drawl explains that the Civil War wasn’t about slavery 🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄

  • @kellykellerstein-meatchamb5361
    @kellykellerstein-meatchamb5361 Месяц назад

    SW Ontario Canada Burwells

  • @sonicallycorrect
    @sonicallycorrect Месяц назад

    Robert "King" Carter is my Great Grandfather via Gentleman "Jim" Robinson... My father's , father's father... I'm also related to the real Robert E. Lee. Not the whitewashed guy they show in the "his story" books. I have the true story!!

  • @MM-jn2mr
    @MM-jn2mr 2 месяца назад

    Love your work. Thank you for introducing this little known but very important aspect to the shaping of Virginia.

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 2 месяца назад

      Thank you for your kind words!

  • @Pippi-uo5sm
    @Pippi-uo5sm 2 месяца назад

    I'm so happy to find your channel, I'm descended from the Carters

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 2 месяца назад

      Thank you for your kind words!

  • @YOURMATD
    @YOURMATD 2 месяца назад

    Randolph married my ancestor, Elizabeth Beverly

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 2 месяца назад

      Both are very important names!

  • @artandminisbyvilma8116
    @artandminisbyvilma8116 3 месяца назад

    This is very interesting! Thank you for this video.

  • @famfamfam5782
    @famfamfam5782 3 месяца назад

    I’m looking forward to hearing this as my dad sent me an article by this writer that said one of the dumbest things I have ever heard (no exaggeration, I actually all alone said out loud “no way!” As I read the crazy dumb statement)and I’m always interested to hear idiots with an education speak. Im also prepared if said idiotic statement was a one off-I shall find out

  • @hobertlee7598
    @hobertlee7598 3 месяца назад

    I am Lee Descendent,,,.My Dad Used to Look up our ancestors

  • @michealferrell1677
    @michealferrell1677 3 месяца назад

    My great grandfather was Captain Hubbard Hubert Ferrell who died in 1676 while defending the Virginia colony during Bacons Rebellion. He was shot in the stomach at Kings Creek . He was a soldier in Berkeleys army. How can I find out more about him ? He is supposed to be buried in westmoreland va ? His wife was Dorothy Drew Farrell whose gravesite is in St Paul’s Norfolk Va . She passed in 1673 , the oldest stone in the yard . I’d like to know more about them .

    • @michealferrell1677
      @michealferrell1677 3 месяца назад

      I should also mention that Hubert Ferrell was on the Bacon list of people to apprehend.

    • @michealferrell1677
      @michealferrell1677 3 месяца назад

      Also I should mention that Hubert Ferrell came over with his parents from Ireland, county Longford / Meath in 1658 . Brian his father was born in 1625 and Hubert was born in 1645 . Interesting that Cromwell died that same year . I wonder if they were indentured servants? Brian and his wife both died in Jamestown 1663 , what could have happened that year for both to die ?

  • @josiecarter-zieglar5864
    @josiecarter-zieglar5864 3 месяца назад

    My great Aunt was a Taliaferro! I am part of this family and very proud. I loved her dearly.

  • @michealferrell1677
    @michealferrell1677 4 месяца назад

    My grandfather Hubbard Hubert Ferrell (1645-1676) was an officer in Berkeleys army . Died at Bacons House 1676 . He was an Irish man born in Co Longford Ireland. I’m attempting to understand how he came to be in that army and the political and military situation in that day .

  • @12degreesnowman11
    @12degreesnowman11 4 месяца назад

    2000 acre land grant, Governors land

  • @12degreesnowman11
    @12degreesnowman11 4 месяца назад

    I needed this because I’m writing an essay. I’ll have to go look for sources

  • @parler8698
    @parler8698 4 месяца назад

    It's interesting to know that all cultures have held slaves at one point or another.

  • @martzheart
    @martzheart 4 месяца назад

    Nice work! 😊 I just found your podcast. Wondering if you are creating an episode on my Ancient Planter ancestors, Cecily Jordan Ferrar of Jordan’s Journey plantation and daughter Temperance Bailey who married Richard Cocke. I see you’ve presented Cecily and Samuel Jordan. It would be my many generations of Cockes who heavily influenced the Colonial history. Temperance and Richard Cocke are listed as one of Colonial Virginia’s progenitor families. I’m a direct descendant through 6 generations until Ann Cocke married a Cheek and daughtered out. You and I have to be cousins! 😊

  • @billelrod1779
    @billelrod1779 4 месяца назад

    Really enjoying your podcasts! My wife is a tour guide at Berkeley. Sharing this with her and the staff.

  • @OrestesSword
    @OrestesSword 5 месяцев назад

    Good friends with descendants of Nancy Toliver (b. 1785).

  • @jwh335
    @jwh335 6 месяцев назад

    I’d be curious about what you found about the Harrison origin story. I haven’t heard anything of Viking royalty but I do find Harrison’s mainly in Danish settlements. In the end, we’re as American as you can be, not even having an origin story in England.

    • @jimmydean9457
      @jimmydean9457 6 месяцев назад

      Bertram Fitz De Haute is a very great ancestor from 1100 we took the Harrison last name when we finally settled in Britain. After leaving the Isle of man.

    • @user-do3fp1zu4x
      @user-do3fp1zu4x 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@jimmydean9457 I feel like I've seen that name when looking back but around Thomas Harrison, Lord Mayor of York, things get a bit more iffy with dates and locations and pretty much everything. So I've seen it go back to De Haute, but I'm not positive that it's correct. In addition, there are a lot of forgeries when it comes to De Haute from what I've read, so a lot of it can't be believed. Curious where you got your information? edit: realizing I'm posting from a different account, sorry about that.

  • @charleshancock152
    @charleshancock152 6 месяцев назад

    I'm a decent of the Randolph's, Lee's, Tucker's, Corbin's, Hancock's, Fitzhugh's, Carter's, Evan's, Gatewood's, and Boling's. Among others. Many of my lines go either to Colonial Virginia, North Carolina primarily but Maryland, and Massachusetts as well. My father is Monacan Indian through his mother. Obviously, Hancock's through his father. My Mother is from OBX. Her family is much harder to trace for some reason. A rare pre-colonial line on my maternal side leaves NC in the 1700s and goes back to Plymouth colony. I'm excited to uncover what history I can from her remaining ancestors. Thank you for putting this in a timeline with some context. Love the VFF series!!

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 6 месяцев назад

      I find it fascinating how interconnected many of these lines truly are, not just in VA but elsewhere. Thanks for sharing! Glad you're enjoying the series. It's been very rewarding to research them in a deeper fashion, though at times, very difficult to boil all of that research down into digestible episodes 😀

  • @charleshancock152
    @charleshancock152 7 месяцев назад

    Do the Hancock's, Phelp's, John's, Terry's and Cocke's. Their hella intertwined with Bolling's, Randolph's and Carter's in my family.

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 6 месяцев назад

      Cocke is on the list for a future episode, alas, for time/space, the others are not.

  • @tarap933
    @tarap933 7 месяцев назад

    William Henry Harrison is my 5th gg. I'm trying to confirm his son Carter Harrison. My dna line shows the linage. I'm at a crossroad on Carter Harrison, William son.What I'm running into is that when I search his daughter says Anna, but my great great great is Rebecca. Anyone have knowledge.

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 6 месяцев назад

      Anna Symmes was his wife. Then there was an Anna as his daughter that wed William Henry Harrison Taylor. Before I get going too far down a rabbit hole, there were many Anna Harrisons and a few William Henry Harrisons. Might it be possible that you've crossed into a separate branch during your research? One key source I'd recommend using is Burr Harrison's work. You can find the details of other useful resources on my shownotes page found here - vahistorypodcast.com/2020/02/22/first-families-of-virginia-the-harrisons/

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 6 месяцев назад

      heritagebooks.com/products/101-a0378

  • @DJ-wf4by
    @DJ-wf4by 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the information! Learning more everyday! Little Harry Lee has a lot of blank space for my studying about ancestry. 👍

  • @CharlesHancockCreations
    @CharlesHancockCreations 7 месяцев назад

    I have Randolph, Bolling, Cocke, Evans, Patterson, Branham, Duff and Beverley in my Virginia family history from the colonial period. Thanks for this!!

  • @jayquannjohnson2292
    @jayquannjohnson2292 7 месяцев назад

    PLEASE DO ONE ABOUT COLONEL RICHARD BLAND AND HIS SLAVES ON HIS PLANTATION AT JORDAN POINT IN HOPEWELL OFF THE JAMES RIVER

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 6 месяцев назад

      I did a very brief look at the Bland line in another episode. I'm still debating whether or not to do a more complete look at them in a stand alone episode. They were a very important family to be sure.

  • @SuperUnknownNetwork
    @SuperUnknownNetwork 7 месяцев назад

    Wisdom is found on the lips of the discerning, but a rod is for the back of one who has no sense.

  • @CokeJilesMacLeod
    @CokeJilesMacLeod 7 месяцев назад

    #MyGrandFather

  • @Sonoftherepublic44
    @Sonoftherepublic44 8 месяцев назад

    I was doing my family tree and come to find out I’m related to the Randolphs through Mary Ishim

  • @ty96960
    @ty96960 8 месяцев назад

    Hi Robert I've recently been researching into my family tree on ancestry, my names Lewis west I live in Bedfordshire in the uk, I've traced my family directly back from my father to Colonel John West, Jr. of West Point, Virginia (1632-1691) who according to my research my family was on of the families of virginia would my family in some way be connected to the videos and stories you tell on here? I've been amazed at some of the stuff I've discovered about my family

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 8 месяцев назад

      Hi Tyrone, Yes, the West family was a major 17th century family in Virginia, and John was indeed a key member of that family. West Point was named for them, as was "West" and Shirley Hundred and Westover Plantation. The John West you mentioned descended from another John West, a huge figure in early VA, as the Wests were early governors of the colony. John was brother of the 4th Baron of De la Warr, Thomas West 3rd Baron De la Warr, Governor of VA for whom Delaware was named. The same John West you named potentially married or at least had children with Cockacoeske, Queen of the Pamunkey Tribe, who famously hid from Nathaniel Bacon during Bacon's Rebellion. This John West settled near West Point and New Kent County on land that passed into the Claiborne family after intermarriage. William Claiborne then built his plantation home Romancoke on the property. Romanocoke eventually passed into the Lee family through marriage, and Robert E. Lee's son lived there after the Civil War. It was such an interconnected place that most of Virginia's leading families passed through the area, and even stayed on site as it was part of an important crossroads leading into the York River. Anyway, that's a very brief run down to be sure, but the Wests were extremely important colony builders, who were very connected to all the leaders of the Colony, and their blood is in the veins of many "First Families of Virginia." Thanks for reaching out!

    • @ty96960
      @ty96960 8 месяцев назад

      @@rvanness thanks mate, sorry Tyrone is my friends name I am using his youtube account lol, so my names Lewis Aaron West, as I'm sure you know the west's are of British blood, I live here in Bedfordshire UK, and I am a direct blood relative of John west, I believe he is roughly my 9-10th Great grandfather, and yes I think that's correct regarding his child with the native queen as on my family tree I have links someone with the name totopotomoi

    • @ty96960
      @ty96960 8 месяцев назад

      @@rvanness has shocked me what I've discovered about my family and from what I can see they was avid breeders😂 resulting in an almost impossible family tree to follow that branches into america, I had no idea my family had such a big role is British colonial America and further on into American history

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 8 месяцев назад

      @@ty96960 yes, Cockacoeske was married to Totopotomoi (Spelled many ways btw). Totapotomoi and the Pamunkey tribe were allies of the English, but were left exposed in a 1650s battle at a place called Bloody Run in today's Richmond, VA. Totopotomoi was killed, leaving Cockacoeske a widow, who then took control of the Pamunkey nation. She was a very able, powerful leader, and well respected by the English. Interesting side note, a town north of Richmond was named in Totopotomoi's honor, and Patrick Henry lived there for a short while with his first wife. Henry's second wife was a Dandridge, who if you dig deeply enough is loosely related to the Wests as well.

  • @Davidsavage8008
    @Davidsavage8008 8 месяцев назад

    How about the Bishops that homestead on the James river in the 1600's ? 😊captain John Bishop sr. 1659.

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 8 месяцев назад

      Hi David, I haven't planned to do an episode on the Bishop family. Sorry.

    • @Davidsavage8008
      @Davidsavage8008 8 месяцев назад

      @@rvanness that's fine . many of us migrated away to N.C. , ,Tampa Flo. To Walla Walla Washington . I just moved back to Virginia . was here in 1965 as well . we Bishops get around.

  • @queenisin5821
    @queenisin5821 8 месяцев назад

    Mary Kendall 1st wife of Hancock lee actually had several children.

  • @queenisin5821
    @queenisin5821 8 месяцев назад

    As a Lee descendant I thank you. I love sharing these with my children 💙 💕 💗 ❤️

  • @wiscochic861plutochic5
    @wiscochic861plutochic5 8 месяцев назад

    Henry was my 9th great grandfather his wife was lady Alice Elizabeth eltonhead. No I am not in Virginia but many of my family still are there including my dad and grandparents. His daughter Mary Ann was my 8th great grandmother and married into talley John Daniel Talley 7th great grandfather.

  • @steveriggan8944
    @steveriggan8944 8 месяцев назад

    Interesting family profile. William Randolph’s wife, Mary Isham, was a half sister of my ancestor Katherine Royall Perrin. Members of the family also married into the Cocke, Worsham and Ligon families who were also my family.

  • @Gigihank
    @Gigihank 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you.

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 8 месяцев назад

      You're welcome!

  • @mommyharris1111
    @mommyharris1111 8 месяцев назад

    This is my Dads family. A lot of these people live in Alabama now. They’ve been there for hundreds of years, and they are poor is dirt! This first family has a lot of dirt. At least my Dad made it in the book. 😂

  • @Paladinhistory
    @Paladinhistory 9 месяцев назад

    Robert, thank you for this valuable interview. Currently, I am nearing the end of receiving my M.A. in American History, so this insight adds buoyancy in my historiographical research of the Antebellum and Civil War era. Interestingly, I have had this book on my bookshelf for years and have reapproached the articulation of H.W. Crocker now that I have a firmer grasp of both life experience and the historical roots of our country. Currently, I am surveying Dr. Robert Krick's statement of, "By 30 years after the Civil War had ended, by that time, the passage of time, the inroads of memory, the aging process, had that worked on the recollections of Confederate veterans. That passage of time had kind of smoothed away the sectional rancor of the war, and some of the suffering had vanished into the mists," in a lecture he delivered in 2007. The collective memory of the American Civil War is critical to understand the full political and socioeconomic impact as we reflect American history in modern times context. Having said this, I appreciate the time you have invested in this. May I please request a transcript link and proper University of Chicago style citation to use in my historical research?

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 9 месяцев назад

      Hi Christopher, Thank you for the kind words regarding a very sensitive topic in today's world. As for a transcript, that is not something I have available at this time. Would using a link to my shownotes page for this episode work for citation purposes?

    • @Paladinhistory
      @Paladinhistory 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@rvanness ​ @rvanness Hello Robert! Yes, it is proper historical form to cite directly from your RUclips page interview with historian H.W. Crocker. Just in case others have this same question with footnote reference in Chicago style: Robert Van Ness, "Robert E. Lee on Leadership-H.W. Crocker III Interview," 2023. Available from: www.youtube.com/@rvanness (accessed 7 November 2023).

  • @historyandhorseplaying7374
    @historyandhorseplaying7374 9 месяцев назад

    Enjoyed this one, as usually, especially about Robert Carter III. While reading a book on him, saw the author referenced two letters from him to my ancestors, so naturally have requested scans of the letters from Duke, who hold the collection. Can't wait to se what was being discussed, but I suspect it was business plus the fact that one of them was an early Baptist preacher in Westmoreland County might have something to do with it. Have you considered doing the Awbreys, and maybe the Boggess's? Apparently the Awbreys (not my ancestors) owned half of what is now Fairfax County, as well as chunks of Westmoreland. And the Boggess's ran their businesses.

  • @harborgurl
    @harborgurl 10 месяцев назад

    awesome interview! thank you!!

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 10 месяцев назад

      Thank you, glad you liked it!

  • @barrychandler5250
    @barrychandler5250 10 месяцев назад

    What about Moore Carter, Jimmy Carters Ancestor. Moore's brother John married Elizabeth Ball , sister of Mary Ball , George Washingtons mother?

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 10 месяцев назад

      I ever so briefly mention that Carter branch in a 3rd Carter episode. It's brief, because those Carters are not related, so far as we can tell, to King Carter and his kin.

  • @1CelloOne
    @1CelloOne 10 месяцев назад

    Major Nathaniel Thacker Burwell - 1750-1802 , descendant of the first Lewis Burwell who was married to Abigail. My fifth Grandfather.

  • @dylanlee8048
    @dylanlee8048 11 месяцев назад

    I found out yesterday that i am one of lee's descendants. I deeply appreciate this video

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 11 месяцев назад

      Thank you so much for your kind comment. I love hearing about connections to these interesting families!

  • @my3girls003
    @my3girls003 11 месяцев назад

    I am from the Taliaferro/Tolliver family, my grandma was a Tolliver.

  • @coreysmithhayes
    @coreysmithhayes 11 месяцев назад

    Did Burwell own Fairfield Plantation in Gloucester,Va

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 11 месяцев назад

      Yes, Fairfield was the main Burwell Home.

  • @historyandhorseplaying7374
    @historyandhorseplaying7374 11 месяцев назад

    Hi Robert, would you happen to still be in contact with Prof. Billings from your other video? Am working on an article and I have a couple of Virginia historical legal questions about his books, which I'd love to pick his brain about. I am at "HistoryandHorseplaying" followed by the common location starting with the "g". (I don't want to get censored here). Thanks, and keep up the great work!

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 11 месяцев назад

      I'll reply through email then 🙂

  • @VATravels
    @VATravels 11 месяцев назад

    Need to add this one to my collection 👍

    • @rvanness
      @rvanness 11 месяцев назад

      It was a very nice read. Hope you enjoy!