True 1958 Bing Crosby reading it I believe, mostly Just watched it after determining I had to within Halloween time in a country that doesn't celebrate Halloween. Connection to childhood
I used to be scared upon reading the story a bit as a teenager but seeing how thrilling yet interesting and entertaining it is. I finally got used to it. And I still am to this very day. And I'm a hug fan of monsters and mythology. Especially the Headless Horseman himself.
I remember as a kid my 2nd grade teacher reading the story. If filled me fright, wonderment, and Imagination. It will be something I hold onto from my youth for the rest of my days
I was one of those teachers in the school system in Florida, telling this story in the elementary school I worked at when I was young. I loved how the kids were obsessed with it.
@@beverlypena4803 Thank you for being one of those teachers! I can only imagine how many students lives you have touched, and they will carry those things with them their whole life.
What this piece didn't cover is the fact that most of the characters in the story are actual real people that are buried in the cemetery and when Irving visited the area as a younger child he based his characters off of the people's names on the tombstones.
The really neat thing is the Headless Horseman supposedly having once been a Hessian soldier who’s head got blown off by a cannonball is entirely true. He died fighting in the Battle of White Plains during the Revolutionary War and was buried in an unmarked grave. His death was so instantaneous his body was still twitching while his comrades carried him away from the battlefield. Grim, isn’t it? 🎃
I passed by Sleepy Hollow on the way to summer day camp at YMCA in Tarrytown for many childhood years. In late teens I knew destiny would take me far away for decades so I visited driving myself and i think girlfriend. Alone. In the evening. Quiet. Before it was made marketable. It was definitely noisy with sounds and gave an eerie feeling that i could sense someone could create a story. I don’t fear. But enjoyed the moment to take with me each time I watch something about the Headless Horseman...
Been a long time since hearing this story. Forgot a little bit of it. This is one of my favorite Halloween stories from childhood. You guys did a great job telling this story💙
Another Headless Horseman haunts the Eastern Plains of Montana. This one is said to be the soul of a soldier in the US Army. He was in the 7th Cavalry Regiment. It is said he died during the Battle of the Little Bighorn in 1876. His head was severed by a flying Tomahawk. Some legends say this is the specter of George Custer himself.
I was on vacation NYC from the UK a few years back, took the train up to Tarrytown (Sleepy Hollow) for the day, had a fantastic time exploring, I’d highly recommend it.
Hey. I went to Sleepy Hollow a few days ago for Halloween, and called this vacation "The Fright of the Century." These people took pictures of me in my Headless Horseman costume. And I was popular out there.
Thank you for the video. An addition though to the creation of 'The Legend of Sleepy Hollow' by Washington Irving, that many don't know about is that he in fact wrote it in the Five Ways area of my hometown, Birmingham, England, in the style of a fictious American tourist and chronicler to the country, in his collection, "The Sketch-Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent." (published serially in England and America 1819 - 20), who nostalgically retells amongst his explorations of England, tales of the Upper Hudson Valley in New York, including the ones about Sleepy Hollow, as well as Rip Van Winkle of the Catskills mountains. As well as a German horror story, 'The Spectre Bridegroom' while in Birmingham, Irving in this character of Crayon also writes a series of Christmas stories, involving a visit to a place called 'Bracebridge Hall', based on the real Aston Hall there, where the old medieval traditions of Yule are resurrected, and these stories MAY have influenced Charles Dickens decades later to write his own 'A Christmas Carol'!!
The problem here is, the finicky schoolmaster who posed himself as an enlightened man of letters & an esteemed scholar was, at the same time, a gold-digging moocher only in love with Katrina Van Tassel more for her wealthy inheritance than her physical beauty, which Ichabod knew would likely fade with time, because it was made abundantly clear that all he really cared about was acquiring Katrina's hand in marriage purely so he could eventually acquire old Baltus Van Tassel's fortune for himself. To be fair, none of the characters in THE LEGEND are really 100% likeable. Ichabod's strongest rival for Katrina's affections was the town's braggadocios blacksmith Abraham Van Brunt, rather appropriately nicknamed Brom Bones (this was due to his prodigious strength & seemingly unmatched skill on horseback [sans a certain galloping ghoul, of course]). Brom was described as a burly & boisterous fellow who loved embellishing frightful stories (recall his supposed encounter challenging the prevailing specter to a race & Brom making the outlandish claim that he could've beaten the resident ghost had the cranium-challenged Hessian astride his demonic steed not suddenly disappeared in a flash of fire just as they neared the famous bridge that the Headless Horseman cannot cross), pulling pranks (such as rearranging everything in the schoolhouse, which caused Ichabod to think that some malevolent otherworldly force was at work) & administering practical jokes (such as having a scruffy dog howl during one of Ichabod's singing lessons, causing the ladyfolk of the town to faint due to mistaking the howling dog for Ichabod, who prided himself on a lot of his abilities, including his singing & dancing), but Brom's also got an intense jealous streak about him when he feels himself outmatched by the posturing pedagogue. Just as Ichabod & Brom are two polarizing figures each vying for her hand, the lady fair of the story, Katrina Van Tassel -- the rich heiress of/only child to old Baltus Van Tassel, the wealthiest farmer in the region -- is no less troublesome than they are, because she intentionally stirred the embers of the smoldering rivalry between her two remaining suitors (Ichabod & Brom had each driven the rest of the men who otherwise pined for Katrina away, either by eloquence [from Ichabod] or by sheer intimidation [from Brom]), since she loved Ichabod's way with words & dancing, yet she may have become aware of the schoolmaster's more selfish motivations for wanting to marry her, which is why she ultimately rejected him & wound up marrying Brom at the end of the story following Ichabod's mysterious disappearance, since it was heavily implied that Katrina was only leading a smitten Ichabod on strictly to make Brom jealous.
😮 that was cool to view, I want to visit ❤👍 “With a Hip Hip, an a Clippity Clap, He’s out looking for a Head To Chop?! So Don’t go out figuring Out a Plan, You Can’t Reason With a HEADLESSSS MANNNN!” Disney’s Ichabod and Mr.Toad)
Funny story, I went there with my family in 2004 just days before Halloween and no one in town knew anything about the story or characters. All of this has built up since. On our trip we stumbled on Washington Irving's home and went there but I couldn't believe they cared more that a Rockefeller had built his mansion there than the story that made the town famous.
I think some people in the town may have been playing a joke on your family as tourists. For one thing, as they point out in the clip, the town formerly changed its name to Sleepy Hollow in 1996 to better appeal to tourists, who had been going there long before that. Although yes, tourism has since increased, to claim "no one" had even heard of the story is silly. My own mother used to run a travel agency that sent buses of tourists to Sleepy Hollow every year well before 2004.
@@grannyweatherwax8005 Well, I was there days before Halloween and there was NOTHING there referencing the story. We talked to several people and they only pushed the Rockefeller house. It sounds like it's different today but that was my experience then. The only thing I could find in the town referencing the story was a Headless Horseman magnet.
The Horseman Bridge highlighted here in this video is not the actual bridge. The actual bridge has now been paved over and runs in front of the cemetery. The one shown here is just a copy of what it may have looked like.
there are more than a few of the older films that i think are enjoyable but i am always hoping for a new definitive film version. i despise everything Tim Burton has even made and do not understand why people love his films so much.
Have you seen the Canadian version with Brent Carver and Rachelle LeFevre? Just my opinion but I think it runs closest to the short story. They pad it out a bit to make a full length movie. But from the casting to the costumes and setting, it seems most authentic to the tone of the original.
I can't believe he just said he can't think 🤔 of a more iconic character yeah I think 🤔 you better look West of the state of New York in a spot called the Midwest a place called Illinois my home state we have the most iconic Halloween 🎃 character of all time Michael Myers 🪓🪓🪓
I just love the Disney version. Stunning animation, great songs, and Bing Crosby not taking himself too seriously as the narrator.
Disney made it famous.
True
1958
Bing Crosby reading it I believe, mostly
Just watched it after determining I had to within Halloween time in a country that doesn't celebrate Halloween. Connection to childhood
I used to be scared upon reading the story a bit as a teenager but seeing how thrilling yet interesting and entertaining it is. I finally got used to it. And I still am to this very day. And I'm a hug fan of monsters and mythology. Especially the Headless Horseman himself.
I remember as a kid my 2nd grade teacher reading the story. If filled me fright, wonderment, and Imagination. It will be something I hold onto from my youth for the rest of my days
I was one of those teachers in the school system in Florida, telling this story in the elementary school I worked at when I was young. I loved how the kids were obsessed with it.
@@beverlypena4803 Thank you for being one of those teachers! I can only imagine how many students lives you have touched, and they will carry those things with them their whole life.
I love anything that has to do with The legend of Sleepy Hollow! 🌕🎃🍂
I even loved the television series “Sleepy Hollow” it was really good too
Yes me too👍🏽
My sun love it
same!!
What this piece didn't cover is the fact that most of the characters in the story are actual real people that are buried in the cemetery and when Irving visited the area as a younger child he based his characters off of the people's names on the tombstones.
Would love the idea of actually being immortalized in a book like this, fictional or not
Charles dickens did this too
The really neat thing is the Headless Horseman supposedly having once been a Hessian soldier who’s head got blown off by a cannonball is entirely true. He died fighting in the Battle of White Plains during the Revolutionary War and was buried in an unmarked grave. His death was so instantaneous his body was still twitching while his comrades carried him away from the battlefield. Grim, isn’t it? 🎃
Yes that’s very true my friend
I passed by Sleepy Hollow on the way to summer day camp at YMCA in Tarrytown for many childhood years. In late teens I knew destiny would take me far away for decades so I visited driving myself and i think girlfriend. Alone. In the evening. Quiet. Before it was made marketable. It was definitely noisy with sounds and gave an eerie feeling that i could sense someone could create a story. I don’t fear. But enjoyed the moment to take with me each time I watch something about the Headless Horseman...
Been a long time since hearing this story. Forgot a little bit of it. This is one of my favorite Halloween stories from childhood. You guys did a great job telling this story💙
Always remember it from the Disney cartoon. Was born in Yonkers & my Pop pop loved to tell us all those Dutch tales of the Hudson Valley
Another Headless Horseman haunts the Eastern Plains of Montana. This one is said to be the soul of a soldier in the US Army. He was in the 7th Cavalry Regiment. It is said he died during the Battle of the Little Bighorn in 1876. His head was severed by a flying Tomahawk. Some legends say this is the specter of George Custer himself.
I was on vacation NYC from the UK a few years back, took the train up to Tarrytown (Sleepy Hollow) for the day, had a fantastic time exploring, I’d highly recommend it.
Hey. I went to Sleepy Hollow a few days ago for Halloween, and called this vacation
"The Fright of the Century." These people took pictures of me in my Headless Horseman costume. And I was popular out there.
A classic The legend of Sleepy Hollow ❤
Thank you for the video.
An addition though to the creation of 'The Legend of Sleepy Hollow' by Washington Irving, that many don't know about is that he in fact wrote it in the Five Ways area of my hometown, Birmingham, England, in the style of a fictious American tourist and chronicler to the country, in his collection, "The Sketch-Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent." (published serially in England and America 1819 - 20), who nostalgically retells amongst his explorations of England, tales of the Upper Hudson Valley in New York, including the ones about Sleepy Hollow, as well as Rip Van Winkle of the Catskills mountains. As well as a German horror story, 'The Spectre Bridegroom' while in Birmingham, Irving in this character of Crayon also writes a series of Christmas stories, involving a visit to a place called 'Bracebridge Hall', based on the real Aston Hall there, where the old medieval traditions of Yule are resurrected, and these stories MAY have influenced Charles Dickens decades later to write his own 'A Christmas Carol'!!
Yeah I love the 1949 version of the legend of sleepy Hollow
I love when I go to Connecticut I pass by sleepy hollow
I have a huge crush on Ichabod Crane. He's the reason Halloween is my favorite season!
The problem here is, the finicky schoolmaster who posed himself as an enlightened man of letters & an esteemed scholar was, at the same time, a gold-digging moocher only in love with Katrina Van Tassel more for her wealthy inheritance than her physical beauty, which Ichabod knew would likely fade with time, because it was made abundantly clear that all he really cared about was acquiring Katrina's hand in marriage purely so he could eventually acquire old Baltus Van Tassel's fortune for himself.
To be fair, none of the characters in THE LEGEND are really 100% likeable.
Ichabod's strongest rival for Katrina's affections was the town's braggadocios blacksmith Abraham Van Brunt, rather appropriately nicknamed Brom Bones (this was due to his prodigious strength & seemingly unmatched skill on horseback [sans a certain galloping ghoul, of course]). Brom was described as a burly & boisterous fellow who loved embellishing frightful stories (recall his supposed encounter challenging the prevailing specter to a race & Brom making the outlandish claim that he could've beaten the resident ghost had the cranium-challenged Hessian astride his demonic steed not suddenly disappeared in a flash of fire just as they neared the famous bridge that the Headless Horseman cannot cross), pulling pranks (such as rearranging everything in the schoolhouse, which caused Ichabod to think that some malevolent otherworldly force was at work) & administering practical jokes (such as having a scruffy dog howl during one of Ichabod's singing lessons, causing the ladyfolk of the town to faint due to mistaking the howling dog for Ichabod, who prided himself on a lot of his abilities, including his singing & dancing), but Brom's also got an intense jealous streak about him when he feels himself outmatched by the posturing pedagogue.
Just as Ichabod & Brom are two polarizing figures each vying for her hand, the lady fair of the story, Katrina Van Tassel -- the rich heiress of/only child to old Baltus Van Tassel, the wealthiest farmer in the region -- is no less troublesome than they are, because she intentionally stirred the embers of the smoldering rivalry between her two remaining suitors (Ichabod & Brom had each driven the rest of the men who otherwise pined for Katrina away, either by eloquence [from Ichabod] or by sheer intimidation [from Brom]), since she loved Ichabod's way with words & dancing, yet she may have become aware of the schoolmaster's more selfish motivations for wanting to marry her, which is why she ultimately rejected him & wound up marrying Brom at the end of the story following Ichabod's mysterious disappearance, since it was heavily implied that Katrina was only leading a smitten Ichabod on strictly to make Brom jealous.
my friend jonthan kruk the storyteller keeps me up with sightings of the headless horseman
😮 that was cool to view, I want to visit ❤👍 “With a Hip Hip, an a Clippity Clap, He’s out looking for a Head To Chop?! So Don’t go out figuring Out a Plan, You Can’t Reason With a HEADLESSSS MANNNN!” Disney’s Ichabod and Mr.Toad)
Hi my cousin lives near Sleepy hollow in the Hudson valley & loves it especially during the fall ,very magical location ,
My first American ancestor recorded the first history in Sleepy Hollow, the life of the Dutch in the colony of New Amsterdam (NY.)
Cool
I liked reading "The Devil and Tom Walker" which was also penned by Washington Irving.
Remember the After School Special with Jeff Goldblum as Ichibod Crane. ❤🎃❤🎃❤🎃❤🎃❤
My favorite version is the one in the '70s or '80s, with Jeff Goldblum.
Yes and my fav is the 1999 version
I love that one’s jeff was perfect!
The original ‘Sleepy Hollow’ as envisioned by Irving was actually in the area of the Kaaterskill Falls area of the Catskills.
fascinating ...
The headless horseman sounds like a dullahan from Irish folklore.
It's always a mystery not what it seems to be. It's always a mystery just like you and me.....
Funny story, I went there with my family in 2004 just days before Halloween and no one in town knew anything about the story or characters. All of this has built up since. On our trip we stumbled on Washington Irving's home and went there but I couldn't believe they cared more that a Rockefeller had built his mansion there than the story that made the town famous.
I think some people in the town may have been playing a joke on your family as tourists. For one thing, as they point out in the clip, the town formerly changed its name to Sleepy Hollow in 1996 to better appeal to tourists, who had been going there long before that. Although yes, tourism has since increased, to claim "no one" had even heard of the story is silly. My own mother used to run a travel agency that sent buses of tourists to Sleepy Hollow every year well before 2004.
@@grannyweatherwax8005 Well, I was there days before Halloween and there was NOTHING there referencing the story. We talked to several people and they only pushed the Rockefeller house. It sounds like it's different today but that was my experience then. The only thing I could find in the town referencing the story was a Headless Horseman magnet.
He's headless and ageless 😮
Hi from Martling (Brom Bones) descendants :)
Correct
Washington Irving version not murderous bloody and gory
The author of the legend of sleepy hollow .must had been the king of Halloween
The Horseman Bridge highlighted here in this video is not the actual bridge. The actual bridge has now been paved over and runs in front of the cemetery. The one shown here is just a copy of what it may have looked like.
Interestingly enough, Halloween is NEVER mentioned in the original story. It was actually set during the winter.
not me learning about this in class
1:41 This is only *one* of the theories.
i saw the Disney version first i also love the Tim Burton version
Me and my mom have a headess horse man figure at home ☠️💀🍂🍁🎃💖💞💗💓💝💟
there are more than a few of the older films that i think are enjoyable but i am always hoping for a new definitive film version. i despise everything Tim Burton has even made and do not understand why people love his films so much.
Have you seen the Canadian version with Brent Carver and Rachelle LeFevre? Just my opinion but I think it runs closest to the short story. They pad it out a bit to make a full length movie. But from the casting to the costumes and setting, it seems most authentic to the tone of the original.
she's outside with a mask! Never forget .
I can't believe he just said he can't think 🤔 of a more iconic character yeah I think 🤔 you better look West of the state of New York in a spot called the Midwest a place called Illinois my home state we have the most iconic Halloween 🎃 character of all time Michael Myers 🪓🪓🪓
Who is he😄
That news dude needs a better toupee.
Mr. Hairpiece doesn't know what the word Nebulus means ffs. C'mon man.
Had to do this for a school assignment😭💀
lmao what was the assignment called
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dullahan