Best of: Forgotten Women

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 1 янв 2025

Комментарии • 163

  • @BLuddenify
    @BLuddenify Год назад +6

    Thank you History Guy, for not being yet another historian to attempt to write women out of history. Thank you for undoing some of the wrongs the predominantly male historians by remembering woman in history!!! As an amateur historian I embarrassed to admit I have never heard of Marie Marvingt, again great job.

  • @kiasax2
    @kiasax2 Год назад +39

    Virginia Hall is a hero and I've known about her since the mid 1970s. As I was in a pipeline for intelligence work.
    Unfortunately I was unable to stay in that MOS as the need for snipers overwhelmed the US military back then and my best friend and I were both put into the sniper school.
    I did eventually find my way into intelligence work. By then, Virginia Hall was legendary amongst the intel crowd. I was taught about her, along with every person in the field.
    Virginia Hall was a hero for the ages.

  • @RetiredSailor60
    @RetiredSailor60 Год назад +20

    Good Wednesday morning History Guy and everyone watching....

  • @williambabbitt7602
    @williambabbitt7602 Год назад +18

    You are one of the kindest gentleness stories ever met. You would allow the facts to speak for themselves and put the best construction on everything. I admire you for that I was raised to be that way too. Sometimes it’s hard to do that, but worth the effort.

  • @dannileigh6426
    @dannileigh6426 Год назад +10

    I am in awe and joy at these people, and the wonderous, beautiful, charmed and compassionate lives they lived, and the lessons they each left us all. Thank them, and thank you!

  • @markpaul-ym5wg
    @markpaul-ym5wg Год назад +9

    You are one of a kind HISTORY GUY.Thank you for being,YOU.😊😊😊

  • @beckybanta126
    @beckybanta126 Год назад +14

    Hank you that these women & their lives & history are not forgotten. I am in awe!😊

  • @monicacall7532
    @monicacall7532 Год назад +5

    Bravo History Guy! Please give us more stories about forgotten (or mostly forgotten) women who made wonderful and important contributions to humankind. These women’s stories deserve to be regularly taught to school children as well as adults to remind them of what women over the ages have done and continue to do to push manmade boundaries and topple manmade beliefs about their capabilities, intellect and particular talents.

  • @hardlyb
    @hardlyb Год назад +7

    I'm exhausted just hearing about her accomplishments.

  • @joannnelson9847
    @joannnelson9847 Год назад +5

    Thank u for such a memorable vid!!!! Long live our heros!!!!

  • @wiretamer5710
    @wiretamer5710 Год назад +3

    Thank you so much for this episode: it is truely inspirational.

  • @beverly3397
    @beverly3397 Год назад +4

    This wonderful History Guy video's should be shown in all schools! 😀🏆🏅👑

  • @joelbrown3479
    @joelbrown3479 Год назад +3

    Another BRILLIANT collection of... History
    Thanks 😎😎😎

  • @juliebarnett9812
    @juliebarnett9812 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you.

  • @laara1426
    @laara1426 10 месяцев назад +1

    Luv your work and storytelling ! 😮

  • @chriskenney4377
    @chriskenney4377 Год назад +3

    history guy: You never cease to amaze. THANK YOU!

  • @lloydknighten5071
    @lloydknighten5071 Год назад +10

    History Guy, I sure hope that they make a movie about Virginia Hall and Marie Marvgt. They would be great.

  • @theemmjay5130
    @theemmjay5130 8 месяцев назад +2

    As a computer buff, I was already familiar with Ada Lovelace (in fact, I realized who her segment was about before you even said her name), but as an aviation buff with a particular interest in the pioneering women in that field, I don't know that I'd heard of Marie Marvingt. Glad to know of her, as she does, indeed, deserve to be remembered. Speaking of women who deserve to be remembered, have you done a video on Admiral Grace Hopper?

  • @Syl-Vee
    @Syl-Vee Год назад +3

    Well presented and much needed. Thank You!

  • @candyflair7946
    @candyflair7946 Год назад +2

    I really enjoyed this one.

  • @cpklapper
    @cpklapper 5 месяцев назад +1

    Have you done a video on Anne Hutchinson? My ancestor, Phillip Sherman, participated in her Bible studies and was banished from Massachusetts Bay colony as a result, as was Hutchinson and the other participants.

  • @colonelkilling2425
    @colonelkilling2425 Год назад +4

    Wow! Mind blown!!
    Great video!

  • @deetrvl4life875
    @deetrvl4life875 Год назад +7

    I have infinite respect to you for this video. Your passion and admiration for these women is so clearly obvious and shows. It brought tears to my eyes in several places. Thank you for bringing these women and their accomplishments TO LIFE! Thank you! ❤💌

  • @dannileigh6426
    @dannileigh6426 Год назад +2

    just as there are things to be done, there are also things we must remember. thank you for continuing your life's challenge to remind us all of the people and events that must not be forgotten.

  • @flashwashington2735
    @flashwashington2735 Год назад +2

    Very good throughly and thoroughly enjoyed. Thanks .

  • @JJW77
    @JJW77 Год назад +6

    During WW2 my father worked on British merchant marine convoys supplying war materials to England. During 2 separate trips the ships were torpedoed by German submarines. He and some of his other comrades were picked up from their life raft by another ship (twice). After escaping death 2 times this way, father decided to jump ship in New York. However by coercion he was inducted into the US Army April, 1943 or get sent back to Hong Kong. Father served in Al Levy's unit the 288th (Chinese regiment) Field Artillery Observation Battalion under General Patton. You being a historian, could you tell my large family about the plight of unit 288th during WW2? Thanks from a history guy fan and subscriber.

  • @dereksimpson7959
    @dereksimpson7959 Год назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @loditx7706
    @loditx7706 Год назад +17

    What a woman! What a life. She had what the French called “Je ne sais quoi” and “sang froid,” and both, apparently, in abundance. I hope they do make such a movie, she didn’t waste her life and we all need to learn about her and not waste her memory.

  • @deetee6339
    @deetee6339 6 месяцев назад

    The 15 minutes presented on Virginia Hall is captivating, interesting and compelling to the extent that I don't need to sit through a 3 hour, overly-acted movie about her. Loved 'Mrs. Earp' and I need to watch the last 3.

  • @petuniasevan
    @petuniasevan Год назад +3

    8:45 There's that mention of "Lucky" Baldwin again. Hoping you do a story on him; as a Southern California native who loved and loves the history of the Los Angeles area, I grew up on stories of why his name and the names of people he interacted with are plastered all over the LA basin.
    I really appreciate the stories of forgotten women..... and all the history you bring to life, Lance. Thank you.

  • @bethwyland7693
    @bethwyland7693 Год назад +48

    I like to share another forgotten woman: Mary Seacole. Sometimes called the black Florence Nightingale. You won't regret aquainting yourself with this strong, compassionate woman.

    • @thickwristmcfist3399
      @thickwristmcfist3399 Год назад

      Thanks, but no thanks. Im not interested in ANYBODY who needs their skin color to gain credibility or popularity. Racists will be racist, and they always make it part of the conversation. Always.

    • @marie_h1104
      @marie_h1104 Год назад +3

      Mary Seacole needs to be remembered; she was remarkable!

    • @boobyhatch7897
      @boobyhatch7897 Год назад +2

      History Debunked has her as no hero at all
      Please check out his take
      Don’t believe these dumb diversity sagas
      Hello from SanDiego

    • @drpepperr
      @drpepperr Год назад

      I loved Helen Rappaport's book about Seacole.

    • @drpepperr
      @drpepperr Год назад

      ​@boobyhatch7897 I believe you are dead wrong and cannot support your claim with fact

  • @-jeff-
    @-jeff- Год назад +24

    People of such distinction deserve to be remembered. No matter their sex.

    • @thickwristmcfist3399
      @thickwristmcfist3399 Год назад +1

      Doesn't matter; Still had sex.

    • @WouldntULikeToKnow.
      @WouldntULikeToKnow. Год назад +5

      It's nice to have women singled out, though, because so much of what they've done has been erased from history or never recorded in the first place.

    • @elainebmack
      @elainebmack Год назад +5

      This is true, but women have been sidelined and ignored throughout history, hence the necessity of stories like these.

    • @philgiglio7922
      @philgiglio7922 Год назад +1

      ​@@elainebmack...it is called his story not her story

    • @barbrishaw6883
      @barbrishaw6883 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@philgiglio7922 how witty! And I believe you would be called a troll. Slink away, troll, slink away.

  • @robertcope9494
    @robertcope9494 Год назад +5

    Wyatt Earp and Josephine are now buried in Colma, California. There is a large monument marker for them.

  • @tools6106
    @tools6106 3 месяца назад +1

    A good story, remembered from my youth.

  • @Boatperson
    @Boatperson Год назад +1

    Brilliant series!! Thank you!! Even though I knew of some of these women, your story telling is “riveting!”
    Another brilliant woman was the Late Prince Philip’s mother. What a life she lived!!! 😮

  • @Valkyrie11609
    @Valkyrie11609 Год назад +4

    Please consider doing a video of early american female lighthouse keepers. Id suggest starting with Juliet Nichols. There are lots of other examples!

  • @giselematthews7949
    @giselematthews7949 Год назад +6

    I'm getting addicted to this channel. Love histoire.

  • @mimig474
    @mimig474 Месяц назад

    I just found THG & im smitten. Time to binge watch ❤

  • @Doctor_Al
    @Doctor_Al Месяц назад

    Wow. All great stories. Marie Marvingt, though, may be the best of all. Definitely on my saved list.

  • @kevinvilmont6061
    @kevinvilmont6061 8 месяцев назад +1

    The history guy rules!

  • @grimreaper6557
    @grimreaper6557 Год назад +6

    Absolutely Wonderful series about wonderful women who made a lasting mark in History ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @TheRealBrook1968
    @TheRealBrook1968 Год назад +64

    Jeez! Thanks for reminding me. I left my wife at the grocery store!

  • @beerdrinker6452
    @beerdrinker6452 Год назад +4

    Truly History that deserves to be Remembered. Thank you.

  • @debbralehrman5957
    @debbralehrman5957 Месяц назад

    Thanks👏🏼

  • @typacsk
    @typacsk 5 месяцев назад

    42:01 "And the dates easily wore away in circulation."
    I can vouch for this. I randomly got handed a buffalo nickel in my change at a store recently -- in good condition I could have sold it for $20 to $200, but with no date it's worth about 20 cents.

    • @typacsk
      @typacsk 5 месяцев назад

      50:28 "...with the intention of crossing the North Sea from France to England -- something several people had died attempting."
      Me: Really, how did they die?
      "At takeoff, a rope pulled the balloon to the side, dumping some of the precious hydrogen that kept it afloat."
      Me: Ah.

  • @philgiglio7922
    @philgiglio7922 Год назад +1

    The Distinguished Service Cross is the second highest award for valor that the US awards!!!

  • @sbh3461
    @sbh3461 4 месяца назад +1

    My brother was brought back to the USA from Germany by air ambulance with wounded men coming home for Vietnam. He was hit by a car, my dad came to us in Germany from Vietnam in one peace. The army brought us all back together.

  • @theobserver9131
    @theobserver9131 Год назад +4

    I had never heard of Virginia Hall before. Wow! What an amazing person!!! I wish I had known her. It's insane that she isn't (more) famous! Movies about her are sure to be very popular.... I can't believe they don't already exist.

    • @user-vm5ud4xw6n
      @user-vm5ud4xw6n Год назад

      What sctress can you name who would be willing to do all that stuff ? The paycheck for such a movie would be astronomical considering you would need several stunt women . It’s a wonder the History Guy was able to get all her accomplishments mentioned in the 15 min time span.

  • @48William
    @48William Год назад

    Great videos as always

  • @brianstokowski5731
    @brianstokowski5731 Год назад +1

    I like the title ..couldn't help myself. Different days now. Lol women have made themselves easy to forget

  • @johnbartlett7000
    @johnbartlett7000 Год назад +4

    Truly one of my favorite episodes

  • @bobhsohi704
    @bobhsohi704 Год назад +2

    That was most interesting

  • @elijahhodges4405
    @elijahhodges4405 Год назад +4

    My great-grandmother Sarah Ann Johnson was born in 1847 and died in 1929. She was a year older and lived a year longer than Wyatt Earp.

  • @kevinvilmont6061
    @kevinvilmont6061 8 месяцев назад +1

    The fiancé of danger. What an amazing person.

  • @johnmoran4469
    @johnmoran4469 Месяц назад

    Wow.
    God bless Virginia Hall.

  • @amandakuyuate2972
    @amandakuyuate2972 Год назад +2

    I used to live in Lovelace Gardens where Augusta and her husband had their houae and estate - Surbiton, Surrey,

  • @rafaelgelpi2718
    @rafaelgelpi2718 9 месяцев назад +1

    WOW!!!

  • @Ripplin
    @Ripplin Год назад +6

    Babe Didrikson Zaharias deserves a video! ;)

    • @SteveMoser
      @SteveMoser Год назад +1

      Indeed. She was a giant and a lot of people forgot about her.

  • @donbarr9487
    @donbarr9487 Год назад +4

    This is a great series, but maybe you could update the set with a chapter on Hertha Aryton, the first woman elected to the IEE (1899) and a Fellow of the Royal Society (1902)?

  • @keithkearns93
    @keithkearns93 Год назад +4

    I wonder if this incredible woman influenced Rev John Flynn to create the Royal Flying Doctor service in outback Australia .

  • @debbybridge7064
    @debbybridge7064 7 месяцев назад

    Awesome women!!!

  • @graciel3725
    @graciel3725 10 месяцев назад

    Margaret, wow! As an aircraft mechanic, I salute her!

  • @83jbbentley
    @83jbbentley Год назад +2

    I love this channel but I can’t figure out the guitar rift playing in the credits. It sounds so familiar..please help

  • @user-vm5ud4xw6n
    @user-vm5ud4xw6n Год назад

    It’s difficult to remember something you never knew in the first place.

  • @eileenkite6725
    @eileenkite6725 7 дней назад

    Love how he moved the half-dollar across his fingers l9l 🎉🎉🎉

  • @johnson9953
    @johnson9953 8 месяцев назад

    Damn did you just explained the life of almost all of us. Working and sitting at home. Everything is nice if you have money.

  • @philgiglio7922
    @philgiglio7922 Год назад +2

    Its fitting that the first female governor was elected to the first state to allow women to vote

  • @tannerwilson4843
    @tannerwilson4843 Год назад +2

    If your ever looking for topics that are somewhat off the radar. Could you do an event like the 1904 St. Louis Summer Olympics. The first modern Olympics to ever take place in the USA.
    Recently heard that one of the biggest history museums in Missouri is planning an exhibit next year to celebrate the 120th Anniversary of the 1904 Summer Olympics.

  • @stevemcgee6394
    @stevemcgee6394 Год назад +2

    Odd to see Earp's grave in SSF.

  • @johnnymac1580
    @johnnymac1580 Год назад

    Not bad ⚡️

  • @VeiledDancer
    @VeiledDancer Год назад +1

    Virginia Hall was an adventurous woman! There’s already a movie about her and another woman collaborator ❤. don’t recall the movie name though 😊

  • @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt
    @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt Год назад +1

    thanks

  • @loditx7706
    @loditx7706 Год назад +3

    Yes, so what about and who cares about this and that? They stayed together through it all, with commitment and heart and I envy them, as I have never managed to do that. I also envy their adventures. Obviously they had dedicated friends who loved them and I also envy them that. She lived 15 years without him. She must have been terribly lonely, but what memories to take out for company when alone, but with him still.

  • @bodan1196
    @bodan1196 Год назад +1

    Another amazing french lady is Valerie André.

  • @hoodoo2001
    @hoodoo2001 Год назад

    I just discovered Mabel Walker Willebrandt, the First Lady of Law, US Attorney General 1921-1929

  • @hancehanson4000
    @hancehanson4000 2 месяца назад

    It's Cuthbert...

  • @robertgiles9124
    @robertgiles9124 Год назад +1

    Erp is buried in the Jewish cemetery, Hills of Eternity Memorial Park in Colma, ten miles South of San Francisco. People keep stealing his headstone. Erp was not Jewush but Josephine claimed to be.
    Colma is the only Necropolis in the US with over 16 cemeteries. I have books on the BLURB publishing site about two of the cemeteries in Colma.

    • @lynnfisher3037
      @lynnfisher3037 Год назад

      Thank you HG for another thought-provoking video. Would request that you consider doing a video on my ancestor John Alfred Brashear. He became a world- famous telescope lens maker and pioneer in the field of astronomy. He is credited with many inventions, none of which he patented, instead freely sharing his creations with anyone interested. He could have been immensely wealthy but as a pious Christian man this was not important to him. He was born in 1840 in the small Monongahela River town of Brownsville Pa and had a very limited formal education. He was however a natural mechanical genius and after moving to Pittsburgh became a millwright in several of the many steel mills located there. He was so good that he became a highly trusted master mechanic. Despite working 12+hours everyday he made time every night to work on his childhood dream of making his own telescope as he had had a romance with astronomy since about the age of eight after his grandfather secured him a 'paid' look through the small hand-made telescope of an itinerate star gazer who travelled to their small town. John and his wife worked for two years to complete their first lens, only to have him drop it in the shop one night. He wanted understandably to quit at that point but his wife Phoebe, who worked with him every night in their little shop, encouraged him to start again. After finishing the second lens he met someone I'm sure you have heard of, Samuel Langley, who at the time was head of the Allegheny Observatory in Allegheny Pa. Langley agreed to see the lens, and when John arrived on an early summer evening he saw two men talking near the entrance of the observatory. One was Samuel Langley, the other was William Thaw, president of the Pennsylvania R.R.
      Thaw, BTW was the father of Harry Thaw who married Evelyn Nesbit and murdered Stanford White in Madison Sq. Garden.
      I will stop here as I don't wish to write a book. Lol
      At any rate, if you are interested I can share excellent resource material on John Brashear's life and work. He was so beloved that all of Pittsburgh referred to him as Uncle John. When he died in 1920 he was greatly missed by famous astronomers as well the many common folk who he always had time for.
      Keep up the great and much needed service you have been performing for all of us.

  • @elainebmack
    @elainebmack Год назад +4

    Women's work opportunities were so limited back then since all of their "career choices" were attached to relationships with men.

  • @excrono
    @excrono Год назад

    Well shucks folks, we need a Virginia Hall biopic starring Florence Pugh right now.

  • @jp-um2fr
    @jp-um2fr Год назад

    Florence Nightingale. We all think of her as a loving, gentle lady who fought for better care of soldiers. She did, but she was definitely not a docile lady. It is recorded that if any of her nurses even appeared with her collar slightly out of place, she would come down like a ton of bricks. It's because of this fight she achieved what she did. Perhaps not the most likeable 'boss' but one that would NOT accept second best.

  • @Enolagay1945
    @Enolagay1945 10 месяцев назад

    I can still hear them Talking

  • @ImNotaRussianBot
    @ImNotaRussianBot 8 месяцев назад

    These dudes' mustaches are a thing of legend. I can't imagine the kissing.🤢🤮

  • @ianwhitehead3086
    @ianwhitehead3086 Год назад

    Here’s one :Barbara Strozzi

  • @bigsarge2085
    @bigsarge2085 Год назад +1

  • @parkerengines
    @parkerengines Год назад +2

    At least you tried to cover them, but continuing to call Ada Lovelace the first programmer (demonstrably false) dismisses her far more visionary ideas. She was Jobs when everyone tries to make her Woz.

  • @pfflyer3381
    @pfflyer3381 Год назад

    Did you have a cold doing this show?

  • @johnson9953
    @johnson9953 8 месяцев назад

    This man should be the new Walter Cronkite. Tell it like it is.

  • @constipatedinsincity4424
    @constipatedinsincity4424 Год назад +3

    She was 54 years old when this picture was taken!

  • @cherylbrooks7005
    @cherylbrooks7005 9 дней назад

    ❤😊❤

  • @thenewberrym.c.914
    @thenewberrym.c.914 Год назад +1

    Nellie, all the way.

  • @joecombs7468
    @joecombs7468 9 месяцев назад

    ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

  • @bonitahogue5938
    @bonitahogue5938 Год назад +1

    She appears to be a beautiful women

  • @ranekeisenkralle8265
    @ranekeisenkralle8265 Год назад +1

    I am quite surprised that Milunka Savic is not in this video...

  • @constipatedinsincity4424
    @constipatedinsincity4424 Год назад +2

    Back in the Saddle Again Naturally

  • @constipatedinsincity4424
    @constipatedinsincity4424 Год назад +1

    The Josephine image Kaloma is not her.I 1st thought it was Evelyn Nesbit or Virginia Pierce!

  • @jeffbangkok
    @jeffbangkok Год назад

    Good night

  • @curtismcelhaney2512
    @curtismcelhaney2512 Год назад +1

    I'd like to ask a question from the audience. Who watches this before work and who just gets up this early all the time or both?

  • @DeanStephen
    @DeanStephen Год назад

    Bernoulli - ber noo lee ???

  • @karolinaq9359
    @karolinaq9359 3 месяца назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @davea6314
    @davea6314 Год назад +8

    A foolish woman in American history I would like to forget is Sarah Palin. Palin and I are both alumni of the University of Idaho. Palin brought shame to the university with her foolish words and backwards policies...

    • @bobhsohi704
      @bobhsohi704 Год назад +1

      cold and rather nasty Sarah Palin a good woman

    • @WouldntULikeToKnow.
      @WouldntULikeToKnow. Год назад +3

      My condolences that you have to share an alma mater with her. The school should take back her degree.

    • @davea6314
      @davea6314 Год назад +4

      ​@@WouldntULikeToKnow.Agreed