Whitney Plantation: Beautiful and Beastly

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  • Опубликовано: 5 мар 2022
  • Whitney presents history in an unvarnished manner. The property is quite popular; but on this particular day, it seemed almost abandoned. I was able to wander around the property on a weekday with very few people around. The beauty and the horror resonated like a church bell on a winter's. day. Everything just seemed clearer.

Комментарии • 48

  • @lesha673
    @lesha673 2 года назад +20

    I visited The Whitney Plantation some years ago. It was evocative, as it created an overwhelming feelings of pain, hurt and injustice. However this plantation was also beautiful, powerful and necessary...Being there told my heart stories of our people a story many people of color, most of us are unable to learn or trace.

  • @misskitty2133
    @misskitty2133 2 года назад +14

    Lovely tour. The big plantation houses in the south do invoke romance a la ‘gone with the wind’ but one must realize that most harbored horrible secrets..of enslaved HUMAN BEINGS toiling in the unbearably hot sun. Which I can relate to as I hate summer heat, can’t imagine what they endured. Beatings, rape, families torn apart. The hopelessness of being a slave. It really boggles my mind.

  • @reneecollins6931
    @reneecollins6931 2 года назад +8

    Thank you so much for this. The information you provided through your commentary was so interesting! I'm a white woman, living in Colorado, but a serious history buff and I've always wondered what slave life was like before the Civil War. I've read the Slave Narratives but SEEING the places and the environment really pulls it all together. It's a beautiful property with a horrifying history. You taught me a lot today. Thank you.

  • @ninam6206
    @ninam6206 2 дня назад

    Just watched this , beautifully done. I’m from New Zealand and never heard of this Plantation until reading about it, then came looking for more information. Been to the States twice but never to the Southern States.

  • @TheJourneyofGeminiandNoble
    @TheJourneyofGeminiandNoble 2 года назад +9

    Thank you Dr. B for sharing. I am going to head that way this fall. My ancestors came from a plantation in Avoyelles, LA. Years before when I would visit I would always get an eerie feeling. I understand now, I may have felt their suffering. I will comeback, and attempt to identify where we came from. Love the videos, and the commentary.

  • @dreamdisturber
    @dreamdisturber 2 месяца назад

    You’re so good at this. Great commentary. I’m starting at Whitney next week as a historical interpreter and remember you have a video from here so I came to check it out.

  • @tristanbhampton444
    @tristanbhampton444 Год назад +3

    I just discovered your channel. It's so awesome! Thank you for all the great content.

  • @lindawalton2906
    @lindawalton2906 2 года назад +5

    My friends and I completed this amazing tour a few years ago. So Aw inspiring. The guide was wonderful and knowledgeable.

  • @Cutter-jx3xj
    @Cutter-jx3xj 2 года назад +5

    I have been sensitive my entire life. I'm 63 now and I have NEVER considered it a blessing. I have seen, things, heard things and felt things for as long as I can remember. Some buildings I go in, I can't stay in I get physically ill. Headaches, light headed, stomach pain. Depends on the place, property, building, even burial grounds. I love history, I always have but every single place affects me differently.

    • @sharonsavage337
      @sharonsavage337 Год назад

      I'm the same way I know people think I'm strange but I know this is real.

    • @sionapink1560
      @sionapink1560 9 месяцев назад

      Your an empath dear with clairsentient abilities. I am also gifted as well it’s not a bad thing. You must learn to have healthy coping skills to live a healthy life.

  • @geraldfer
    @geraldfer 2 года назад +4

    Thank you for this Sir!! I will make a trip from Alabama to see this place for myself...and...reflect

  • @artqueen691
    @artqueen691 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this video. I have been wanting to visit !

    • @billboudreaux1
      @billboudreaux1  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you! You should visit Louisiana. It’s a great place.

  • @robertrockwell7581
    @robertrockwell7581 2 года назад +3

    God bless DR B . stay safe.

  • @franriddiough2228
    @franriddiough2228 2 года назад +2

    Great video. Thanks a lot for sharing.

  • @storieswithgrandma1068
    @storieswithgrandma1068 2 года назад +1

    I have been to many plantations this was my favorite.

  • @user-sx9rx5of1c
    @user-sx9rx5of1c 3 месяца назад

    Heartbreaking history of how horrible people can be in the treatment others.

  • @firecracker3911
    @firecracker3911 2 года назад

    Very thought provoking. Thanks

  • @susanwilliams1958
    @susanwilliams1958 2 года назад +1

    TY I grew up in the Midwest. I had no idea! How the enslaved people suffered.😢

  • @1aikane
    @1aikane 2 года назад

    Fantastic! Thanks so much for the great tour.

  • @vickietaylor2850
    @vickietaylor2850 26 дней назад

    They didn’t put the sugar cane stalks in the pots! They squeezed the juice out with a stone and mules .

  • @guineveregruntle6746
    @guineveregruntle6746 Год назад

    You need to read Vestiges of Grandeur regarding the various plantations along the River Road in Louisiana. A lot of French architecture (not antebellum). A lot of pigeonniers found on the properties.

    • @billboudreaux1
      @billboudreaux1  Год назад

      Thank you for your suggestion. I’ll check it out!!

  • @autumnleaf.
    @autumnleaf. 2 года назад +1

    It looks like the house in a Mel Gibson movie (the Patriot).

  • @angelwings2265
    @angelwings2265 2 года назад +3

    Sound quality is horrid. Which is bad, cause it is pretty certain this was good video to hear

    • @billboudreaux1
      @billboudreaux1  2 года назад +1

      Unfortunately, I forgot my microphone so I had to use what I had. It was disappointing (and windy) and I thought about coming back, but it was a beautiful day and there were so few people--which was nice. Thanks for sharing!

    • @angelwings2265
      @angelwings2265 2 года назад

      Ty Dr B, for explaining. I would have really enjoyed hearing what you had to say.

  • @consumerdebtchitchat
    @consumerdebtchitchat 2 года назад +7

    I would use the word historic before I would use the word beautiful where people were enslaved from birth to death under whips and lashes.

  • @JohnSmith-uo8yu
    @JohnSmith-uo8yu 2 года назад +2

    That is French architecture

    • @billboudreaux1
      @billboudreaux1  2 года назад

      May I ask, which particular features allows allows you to identify as French? Thanks!!

    • @JohnSmith-uo8yu
      @JohnSmith-uo8yu 2 года назад +2

      The double pen gabled structures using milled wood beams and front porches are just as one would find in French colonies in the tropics. French code dictated the size and blueprints to use to maximize comfort and efficiency in the colonies. The architecture certainly did not originate from the bantu

    • @charlesburns6166
      @charlesburns6166 2 года назад

      The Antioch Baptist Church has a little Gothic Revival going on too.

    • @JohnSmith-uo8yu
      @JohnSmith-uo8yu 2 года назад

      @@charlesburns6166 but you probably would be surprised to learn about what has happened to the price of tea in china

    • @charlesburns6166
      @charlesburns6166 2 года назад

      @@JohnSmith-uo8yu It's currently around an unsurprising $5.00 for 4lbs of China Black Tea.

  • @xtrmetvboxllc5520
    @xtrmetvboxllc5520 Год назад +1

    THANK YOU (RUclips)