Man Born in 1846 Talks About the 1860s and Fighting in the Civil War - Enhanced Audio

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июл 2022
  • Julius Franklin Howell (January 17, 1846 - June 19, 1948) joined the Confederate Army when he was 16. After surviving a few battles, he eventually found himself in a Union prison camp at Point Lookout, Maryland. In 1947, at the age of 101, Howell made this recording at the Library of Congress.
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    Pictures were colorized and enhanced using AI optimization software. For the audio, I remastered it using noise gate, compression, loudness normalization, EQ and a Limiter.
    This video is made for educational purposes for fair use under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976.
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Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @Lifeinthe1800s
    @Lifeinthe1800s  8 месяцев назад +75

    Lifeinthe1800s is not monetized. To help keep the channel going, please consider supporting it on patreon.com/Lifeinthe1800s or www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=K9FRYU2E9LTU8
    Thank you.

    • @christianweatherbroadcasti3491
      @christianweatherbroadcasti3491 7 месяцев назад +3

      Repent and trust in Jesus. He's the only way. We deserve Hell because we've sinned. Lied, lusted stolen, etc. But God sent his son to die on the cross and rise out of the grave. We can receive forgiveness from Jesus. Repent and put your trust in him.
      John 3:16
      Romans 3:23❤😊❤❤

    • @James-kv6kb
      @James-kv6kb 6 месяцев назад +2

      First time the Australians fought alongside Americans and every war ever since

    • @MatthewB-Kornafel-xv6oi
      @MatthewB-Kornafel-xv6oi 4 месяца назад

      What about the millions of orphans that arrived by trains ? After the reset ?

    • @felixculpa4192
      @felixculpa4192 4 месяца назад +1

      Why not monetize? It's another source of funds for your work, right? If it's political and/or social disagreements with Google/RUclips I definitely understand that....

    • @user-gx2yy1df6f
      @user-gx2yy1df6f 3 месяца назад

      Today a person could say in all truth, "my father met Thomas Jefferson ", the 3rd president of the U.S. Jefferson died in 1826, if a newborn was laid in his arms and introduced then in 1926 that newborn would be 100 years old, and if we can agree that it's possible for a 100 year old man to father a child then that child born around 1927 would be around 98 years old today and make the statement. just an illustration of how young our country really is.

  • @seandelap8587
    @seandelap8587 Год назад +7874

    Its incredible how he mentions the 50s and you realise he's talking about the 1850s and we are hearing him speaking on RUclips in 2022.

    • @grantsmythe8625
      @grantsmythe8625 Год назад +212

      Yes, we're he living here today, he wouldn't even know how to turn on a light switch. It's amazing how things change but how humans remain the same.

    • @digitalfootballer9032
      @digitalfootballer9032 Год назад +196

      @@grantsmythe8625 That was always my grandfather's signature line..."times change, but people don't". So true.

    • @grantsmythe8625
      @grantsmythe8625 Год назад +208

      @@digitalfootballer9032 Yes, we have the same emotions, the same temptations, the same fears, the same joys and sorrows today that men and women have had since time began. I really do appreciate modern technology, conveniences and medicine, especially at 69 years of age but I do wonder if people in the past weren't better as people than we are today....in terms of character and honor and integrity and decency.

    • @stog9821
      @stog9821 Год назад +131

      @@grantsmythe8625 as this was recorded in1947 I’d guess he’d learnt to turn on a light switch and possibly even a radio. I wonder if he ever learnt to drive.

    • @majorpayne608
      @majorpayne608 Год назад +97

      The first "quick break" electric light switch was invented in 1884. Well within his life span.

  • @danielanthony8373
    @danielanthony8373 Год назад +206

    It's amazing I'm hearing a voice of a man born in 1846 that fought in the Civil War on my phone in 2023 in Melbourne Australia

    • @carolynrussell4215
      @carolynrussell4215 3 месяца назад +3

      My great great grand daddies fought in the civil war. One for the north, the other for south.

    • @777dragonborn
      @777dragonborn 2 месяца назад

      It's shows how much more liberty there's was in independent states before the federal union engulfed them. Now today we pay local state and federal taxes . It's better to be a undocumented illegal migrant Than a American citizen . Thats how bad taxation is.

    • @gregorymanson1015
      @gregorymanson1015 Месяц назад +1

      I know its mindblowing

    • @Felipe-mg1pw
      @Felipe-mg1pw Месяц назад +1

      As somebody from New Earth, Mars I can confirm in 2601

    • @letmebereal
      @letmebereal Месяц назад

      Where's Australia??

  • @tillik1004
    @tillik1004 10 месяцев назад +249

    You can hear in this man's accent how the English accent morphed into the American Southern accent. His accent is closer to the English accent than the speakers of today, still recognizable even as English.

    • @coburna5
      @coburna5 3 месяца назад +13

      I thought that very same thing in other civil war interviews.

    • @jginther1981
      @jginther1981 3 месяца назад +7

      Speed a southern accent up and it sounds very English. You can hear this mans southern on words that have R or end in ER.

    • @lornaharrington1885
      @lornaharrington1885 3 месяца назад

      😂

    • @jchastain789
      @jchastain789 2 месяца назад +6

      I sped the video to 2x sounds like a dude from the south I know. Lol I'm in nc

    • @IveJustHadAPiss
      @IveJustHadAPiss 2 месяца назад +13

      I'm not sure this comment is particularly accurate .19th Century English accents were heavily rhotic, and not dissimilar to the accents one might hear in a series like _John Adams._ They eventually lost their rhoticity over the duration of the century, and - of course - the Southern accent was also widely influenced by Scottish and Irish brogues which never lost their "hard r".
      You also have to take into account the natural evolution of this man's accent over the course of time. He may have sounded slightly different during the height of the war. Accents generally don't shift much during the course of a lifetime, but they can (and do) adapt to geographical and cultural changes.
      To me, it sounds like he'd adopted many of the nuances of the _Eastern Standard_ accent used by the likes of Edison, McKinley and Teddy Roosevelt, which might be on account of his class background or status he assumed after the civil war.

  • @atrainradio929
    @atrainradio929 Год назад +1215

    He was born in 1846, only 70 years ago was the US founded in 1776. And 200 years after his birth we’re listening to his voice. Quite possibly the most amazing audio ever recorded.

    • @barnsleyman32
      @barnsleyman32 Год назад +44

      there's a recording on youtube of pt barnum's voice, who was born in 1810. crazy

    • @patriciavicari7002
      @patriciavicari7002 11 месяцев назад +15

      Nearly 200 years

    • @xxyyzz8464
      @xxyyzz8464 11 месяцев назад +37

      @@patriciavicari7002 Commenter could be a time traveler from 2046.

    • @SStupendous
      @SStupendous 10 месяцев назад +15

      @@xxyyzz8464 Dislike when people round like that, almost purposely makes stuff sound more distant. So WW2 was well over 100 years ago, and Gen Z born in the mid 1990s would be over 50 years old if this man was born 200 years ago.

    • @virginiaspeciale8641
      @virginiaspeciale8641 9 месяцев назад +27

      There is also a man who witnessed the assasination of Abraham Lincoln on RUclips.

  • @chadinmich1
    @chadinmich1 Год назад +2582

    This guy was extremely coherent at 101 years old. This is so cool to hear him speak all these years later.

    • @tomasparkington4400
      @tomasparkington4400 Год назад +168

      His mind is so clear
      because he is not exposed to all the toxicity of today.

    • @banjiman9869
      @banjiman9869 Год назад

      Yep now they pump us with chemicals and metals. Now we suffer even more health wise. These men ate fresh deer hearts raw hunting, and ate the freshest produce and meats you could imagine. All natural and original. Were mutants now, and now people wanna implement transhumanist agendas to further skew our nature.

    • @ortho-g9826
      @ortho-g9826 Год назад +87

      101 and unvaccinated! I wonder hmmm....

    • @SuperDrLisa
      @SuperDrLisa Год назад +30

      I can't remember what I had for breakfast!

    • @markbelot3350
      @markbelot3350 Год назад +125

      @@ortho-g9826 That's what you get out of this? It's time to retire your tinfoil hat.

  • @diegowhite9689
    @diegowhite9689 Год назад +1761

    And this is exactly why it is so important that the youth listen and talk to our elderly. Once they are gone, part of our history dies. This is priceless!!

    • @bradleyniven7942
      @bradleyniven7942 Год назад

      Its also exactly why you shouldn't trust someone just because they are ederly. His guilty conscious and others like him created a false narrative to justify their actions that people spew still today. "States rights"

    • @brianb7869
      @brianb7869 Год назад +30

      I like how he recollects the fact he wasn't it in any large battle, 'fortunately, or maybe unfortunately' with a slight chuckle.

    • @theredboneking
      @theredboneking Год назад

      It was never about freeing the slaves. Lincoln made it clear that he didn’t give a shite about them. The North was losing until they switched to the inhuman scorched earth policy. Bigger population, bigger government, means bigger theft. Mark Skidmore conducted a independent audit of the USA and found $90 trillion stolen that congress never approved.

    • @Syphon05
      @Syphon05 Год назад +55

      One of my biggest regrets, not asking my great grandparents, and grandparents more questions about their lives.

    • @beautruex7012
      @beautruex7012 Год назад +12

      I built a Time Machine! Makes talking to folks of the past or future, much easier!

  • @sherila4834
    @sherila4834 Год назад +448

    My grandfather was born in 1898 in Baltimore MD, where he lived his entire life till he passed in 1983, at the age of 85. His vocal mannerisms, especially in the pauses between phrases and emphases of words, were very much the same as this Civil War veteran. (My grandfather was conscripted into the army for WWI but the war ended soon after he was issued a uniform.) He was a quiet man but had learned public speaking during high school & college (he graduated from Johns Hopkins in 1920). When he spoke in front of others, his cadences were much the same as this man. I wonder if public speaking was a skill this amazing 101 yr old learned also. Their accents are also similar. Maryland was a slave state too, south of Mason-Dixon. But my grandfather's voice lost its oomph after a mild stroke in his early 80s. I just can't imagine how this man who grew up during the horse & buggy era, without electricity & indoor plumbing, who was wounded & imprisoned during that cataclysmic war & who lived to see the industrial revolution, the rise of automobiles & skyscrapers, vaudeville, radio, silent films, sound films, the Great Depression, 2 world wars, the time of an Atomic bomb and the start of the Cold War could speak with such clarity, spirit, thoughtfulness, & energy. We are so lucky to hear him. This is one of those rare moments when the internet feels like a profound gift to humanity.

    • @SammyAmy-un8bi
      @SammyAmy-un8bi 11 месяцев назад +26

      His accent sounds much closer to British English people than Americans do now. It's fascinating how mannerisms and ways of speaking not to mention behaviour and culture, have diverged. This is without thinking about all the technological changes he saw and we have seen since. Fascinating!

    • @GregMillerVideos
      @GregMillerVideos 11 месяцев назад +15

      @@SammyAmy-un8bi ...almost like what they call a 'mid-atlantic' accent.

    • @mjrose
      @mjrose 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@GregMillerVideos The ccc

    • @MasterBlasterSr
      @MasterBlasterSr 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@GregMillerVideos it is the same in Shenandoah today

    • @erisgh0sted961
      @erisgh0sted961 8 месяцев назад

      The internet has always been a profound gift. It's the whole worlds knowledge made accessible to everyone. Unfortunately there's also a wealth of lies, porn, and garbage.
      My generation were the first to have access to it. We are able to parse the gold, from the garbage easily. Every generation before us, are susceptible to all the lies. They'll believe anything with 40 likes on Facebook. The ones that came after us, susceptible to all the garbage. They'll spend every waking minute watching porn, mindless, senseless prank videos, and garbage. In betwixt lay all the knowledge, and wisdom of the ages.

  • @freyalw326
    @freyalw326 10 месяцев назад +46

    I just researched this man and his father was born in 1797 and his grandfather was born in 1750. Mad. That's 270 years and we're listening to the grandson of a man born in the 1750s. A bit like John Tyler's grandsons.

  • @consco3667
    @consco3667 Год назад +2246

    As a teenager I shared a hospital room with a WW1 vet. He was credited with shooting down a German plane. He was a machine gunner. I was 15. He was 81. That was 1976. I am 61 now. He was a fascinating guy

    • @benjo33
      @benjo33 Год назад +79

      Incredible story sir, remarkable to hear such things, when we seem so detached from history. We’re not the far apart in truth.

    • @Dr.Madd138
      @Dr.Madd138 Год назад +87

      I had the honor to meet a WW2 vet that drove a landing craft on D-Day, he told me it was truly a come to God moment watching the 8mm rounds fly overhead while his craft became a meat grinder. He told me he’d be more than happy to do it all over again for this country.

    • @benjo33
      @benjo33 Год назад +88

      @@Dr.Madd138 a generation above the rest, men who believed in America. I wish we had the same patriotism today

    • @alanwright7819
      @alanwright7819 Год назад +32

      One of my uncles fought in WW I. I never had much opportunity to talk with him about it, so I still have no idea what he did, but I do know that he earned a couple of medals.
      As a child, I was always told that he didn’t like to talk about it.

    • @finddeniro
      @finddeniro Год назад +36

      I met several WW1 veterans..
      Early 1960s ..a Spanish America war Veteran..dying..
      He want to show the charter of Arm to young boys..to be remembered..

  • @RedcoatsReturn
    @RedcoatsReturn Год назад +2030

    Incredible! 😲 The voice of a man who experienced the American Civil War, WWI, WWII and all the great changes in 100 years. A time machine in one man!

    • @jeffhester1443
      @jeffhester1443 Год назад +49

      Astonishing. Imagine if we could hear a witness of the revolution and declaration of independence.

    • @ramongonzalez2112
      @ramongonzalez2112 Год назад +10

      Hopefully there’s video of this man describing these events; truly incredible.👏

    • @Jack-th9zg
      @Jack-th9zg Год назад +69

      When he went to war the fastest vehicle was a steam powered locomotive, traveling about 35 mph. When he died we had jet planes and nuclear bombs.

    • @g.davidlawrence8471
      @g.davidlawrence8471 Год назад +17

      @@Jack-th9zg And today, I have experienced the personal computer, and cell phone...
      Among other things...

    • @g.davidlawrence8471
      @g.davidlawrence8471 Год назад +15

      Yes... "Have you ever sat down with an old man, and let him speak his mind?"...

  • @aragorn1780
    @aragorn1780 Год назад +36

    what's really interesting to me is the accent... you can tell there's the beginnings of an Appalachian/Southern drawl, yet there's also an element of Englishness/Transatlantic, like you can clearly hear the transition where the American accents became more distinct from British English (keep in mind I'm a language/linguistics major so this strikes me particularly xD)

    • @godsdj7316
      @godsdj7316 Год назад +1

      I love that. ^^

    • @stephenmani8495
      @stephenmani8495 Месяц назад +1

      Absolutely. Fascinating to hear that. It gives the goosebumps to hear live how new accents evolve! Beats anything you can read in a book.

    • @MarkKelly-rc6pg
      @MarkKelly-rc6pg Месяц назад +3

      As an Englishman I was struck by how English this gentleman sounded; to be precise a south of England accent.

  • @user-yp6in8nl9z
    @user-yp6in8nl9z 7 месяцев назад +70

    to think this man lived through the civil war and both world wars is incredible.

  • @philipswain4122
    @philipswain4122 Год назад +863

    The diction and clarity of speech is astonishing. No filler words. Utterly poetic

    • @Lar308
      @Lar308 Год назад +5

      He's probably reading from a teleprompter.

    • @ThePolypam
      @ThePolypam Год назад +64

      ​@@Lar308 in 1947? 😂

    • @thepervertedmonk2353
      @thepervertedmonk2353 Год назад +6

      @@Lar308 whew.. 😅😅

    • @squeakybiki7821
      @squeakybiki7821 Год назад +27

      "Uh" is a filler word. He is utilizing them.

    • @notonyourlife7939
      @notonyourlife7939 Год назад +37

      ​@@squeakybiki7821 And there it is... there's always one. Congratulations, you're it. 🤣👍

  • @tacfoley4443
    @tacfoley4443 Год назад +897

    In 1897, my grandmother, then seven years old, got a 'birthday hug' from a man who had been a drummer boy at the Battle of Waterloo, in 1815. Although badly injured, he'd survived the night after the battle kept warm in the arms of his own father, and thereafter, passed down the memory of those safe arms to anybody who would listen. My grandmother passed on the hug to her daughter - when she turned seven - and she, in turn, passed it on to me. I've passed it on to my daughter, and she did the same to her daughter...

    • @alexanderwhite1171
      @alexanderwhite1171 Год назад +19

      So cool

    • @jesusissalvation74
      @jesusissalvation74 Год назад +54

      My grandfather was born 1892 he fought in WW1 he had a piece of metal shrapnel in the back of his head they couldn't surgery to get it out. He passed in 1968 still metal shrapnel in his head he had a lot of problems with his head. Miss him and loved him very much.

    • @nicholasmartin297
      @nicholasmartin297 Год назад +23

      Incredible story! It’s one thing to see records of births and deaths on paper, but what you described is real, living history. Thank you.

    • @nerifterafrnam4682
      @nerifterafrnam4682 Год назад +25

      Pass the hugs y´all

    • @rickclark4112
      @rickclark4112 Год назад +8

      That's simply great....

  • @susanbiggs5505
    @susanbiggs5505 4 месяца назад +45

    What an amazing man. My dad is a WWII vet. He is 97, and one of the 7/10s of 1 percent of US WWII vets still living. My dad is still so sharp like this man. Every day with him is a gift. I try to visit him and hang out several times a week.

    • @CatsClaw44
      @CatsClaw44 3 месяца назад +3

      I don't know of he is an amazing man and gift. He fought for the Confederate army and fought to maintain slavery.

    • @YoMomsDaBombDotCom
      @YoMomsDaBombDotCom 3 месяца назад

      @@CatsClaw44just like not every German fought ww2 to kill Jews, not every confederate fought for slavery. War is much more complicated than a single focus issue. Obviously, it went the way it was meant to go, but to demonize the man isn’t really necessary.

    • @tylernaturalist6437
      @tylernaturalist6437 3 месяца назад +1

      @@CatsClaw44 1) she’s talking primarily about her WW2 veteran father 2) the man speaking in the interview speaks of how blessed he was to have raised his children in a society that no longer practiced slavery, and that he was but a child when he was recruited to fight.
      Simpleton 😂

    • @matthewblack111
      @matthewblack111 2 месяца назад +1

      Please take some time to record his history. You never know if 150 years from now it'll be worthwhile to others.

    • @riobabic8960
      @riobabic8960 2 месяца назад +1

      I remember just a few years ago when just a handful of ww1 vets were left !

  • @yeedbottomtext7563
    @yeedbottomtext7563 22 дня назад +5

    This is such an unfathomably valuable firsthand account of that time

  • @TheOpinionator450
    @TheOpinionator450 Год назад +1193

    Poor guy lived through the Civil War, WWI, AND WWII. He deserves an eternity of peace

    • @rostam79
      @rostam79 Год назад +30

      Yes, but in the USA...so only the civil war was important for him. My grand grandfather was in ww1 and ww2 soldier in the german army

    • @saabsk5955
      @saabsk5955 Год назад +8

      Kelly where you from the south?

    • @jamesrogers4674
      @jamesrogers4674 Год назад +5

      Probably not ww2.

    • @sc2win
      @sc2win Год назад +36

      And the Great Depression.

    • @laurajaneluvsbeauty9596
      @laurajaneluvsbeauty9596 Год назад +24

      The world wars are also very important to us here in the US. I had family in both

  • @johnnyy5327
    @johnnyy5327 Год назад +879

    Never in my 21 years of life I’d ever thought I’d be able to listen to this man talk about something that happened over a 160 years ago

    • @chaplainmattsanders4884
      @chaplainmattsanders4884 Год назад +48

      Me, too…in my nearly 60 years! Cool that a young adult like yourself has the interest in something like this. Compliments!

    • @davids8449
      @davids8449 11 месяцев назад +12

      I am 251 years old today and can remember the event as if it was yesterday......I never thought I would live long enough to see the end of the IKEA furniture sale we use to refer to the sale as the matchstick sale

    • @hourglasstarot3717
      @hourglasstarot3717 11 месяцев назад +4

      Well sad enough it had a lot to do with slavery. This boy probably couldn’t even imagine a life without slaves. How sad that his parents were the same. Freedom from slavery was not even important enough to discuss. - never really expected to happen Not even noteworthy. So sad this stuff. Death for nothing. And that’s why we are hear now. To learn our lessons.

    • @diggerpete9334
      @diggerpete9334 11 месяцев назад +4

      The recording is much later. He was old by then.

    • @SR-iy4gg
      @SR-iy4gg 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@diggerpete9334 Obviously, it wasn't recorded in the 1860s! The person didn't say that. He said, " talk about something that happened over a 160 years ago."

  • @cindyjones3216
    @cindyjones3216 11 месяцев назад +84

    He was 101 years old when this was recorded! Absolutely amazing!

    • @tommas2674
      @tommas2674 4 месяца назад +6

      fewer vaccines people lived longer.

    • @salar1586
      @salar1586 4 месяца назад +2

      @@tommas2674 exactly, 2024 newborns gotta take 40 now or more.

    • @salar1586
      @salar1586 4 месяца назад

      @@tommas2674 Its very simple, Its Not Natural, why do people fall for it we are sheep we deserve to ☠. Survival of the fittest

    • @tommas2674
      @tommas2674 4 месяца назад

      ​@@salar1586 yes. cold virus mutate too fast to make a vac so every year people are pressed to put more in themselves. Dr. Salk vaccine for polio worked thank God because it didn't mutate or mutate fast. My dog a little died from I believe his 16th rabies vac, at 16 the day of his shot he picked out his clothes and we did zoomies and ran around outside, then went for the "vaccine" that night it was all down hill>>>> Who needs it after so many and not outside on ones own even but that and "fixing" animals is guaranteed money for vets,...lobbyist,...too like big corps, pharma...

    • @mf--
      @mf-- 4 месяца назад +9

      ​@@tommas2674 That ignores the millions dying from polio, terberculous, etc. The smallpox vaccice came to the US in the 1840s saving millions.

  • @richardhall206
    @richardhall206 8 месяцев назад +69

    What an extraordinary treat to hear this. Thank you. Any one else notice how different his accent is to modern American? So much closer to British, specifically English, pronunciation than is the case. More emphasis on last vowels and precise annunciation of consonants.

    • @Ickie71
      @Ickie71 6 месяцев назад +5

      After all is said and done most of you all hail from the British,as it was British settlers that settled in America long before America was created.

    • @richardhall206
      @richardhall206 6 месяцев назад +5

      @@Ickie71 Of course, but this recording concerns events 200 years after British colonization started and recorded only 1 or 2 generations before 'talkies' started where distinct American accents are discernible.

    • @residentzero
      @residentzero 6 месяцев назад

      Thanks God he doesn't have that heavy southern "drawl" accent which is strange. He sounds intelligible

    • @GreetingsandSalutations4007
      @GreetingsandSalutations4007 5 месяцев назад +12

      @@residentzerothat’s a very regionalist and bigoted statement. Accents develop regionally and all are legitimate.

    • @nutterbuttergutter
      @nutterbuttergutter 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@Ickie71 the bulk of European Americans are german in descent.

  • @merlepatterson
    @merlepatterson Год назад +369

    Imagine this man served in the Civil War and then lived to witness the creation of the automobile, the airplane, WWI and WWII and then after the end of WWII he gave this interview on an electronic recording machine which used electric power which was also invented long after he was born.

    • @joeblog2672
      @joeblog2672 Год назад +5

      Who said the transistor era of the 50's till now has seen the most excitement?

    • @user-wi9hv2pb2q
      @user-wi9hv2pb2q Год назад +19

      Anyone from the 1800s lived through the greatest upheavals in history, especially if they made it to the 1950s. When he was born Native Americans in some areas would still be living in the stone age and most of the world lived the same as they had for since the middle ages. He saw the birth of the atomic age and the anthropocene. Who knows what we may see in the future?

    • @Elvis_Pond5
      @Elvis_Pond5 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@user-wi9hv2pb2q
      Inflation 😆

    • @joes5192
      @joes5192 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@user-wi9hv2pb2q the birth of Humans as interplanetary beings for one

    • @SStupendous
      @SStupendous 10 месяцев назад +4

      -Invented only a decade after the war he fought in, to. Go back 20 years before the US Civil War and 20 years after, the 1840s and 1880s. HUGE technological difference. Go back 50 and even larger, a century and even larger. It seems there was more change then in technology than now.

  • @JS45678
    @JS45678 Год назад +733

    Never in my entire 50+ years of existence would I ever have guessed to actually hear a real human being who lived through the Civil War…It suddenly became more than something I learned back in school…It became horribly REAL. A battle that saw Americans fight fellow Americans to the death. Wow!
    Respect to the person who posted this; Thank You! 🙏♥️

    • @beautruex7012
      @beautruex7012 Год назад +1

      We need a civil war nowadays!

    • @tonyaharmon1383
      @tonyaharmon1383 Год назад +7

      @John Smith
      Your Comment, Your Shock & Your Amazement Have Really Mystified & Horrified Me!
      I'm Sincerely Wondering If You Sir Are You From These United States Of America? Because Myself, I Am A 58 yr old Disabled Grandma.
      So We Are Of A Similar Age.
      I'm Actually Stumped &
      Need To Figure This Out....
      1. Never Thought You'd Hear From Someone Who Lived Through The Civil War?
      Did You Never Hear Readings Of Actual Civil War Soldier's Letters To Their Families?
      Read Any Of The Overwhelming Number Of Biographies Written By or About These War Soldiers?
      Read Any True History Stories?
      Heard, Read About Or Visited The Internment Camps of The "Prisoners Of War" Taken From & Kept In Custody By Both Sides?
      Are You Aware of The Numbers Of Soldiers Who Fought In The Civil War?
      Do You Realize That Not Only The Actual Soldiers But Their Parents, Siblings, Spouses, Children & Extended Families Alive At That Time, They ALL Survived The Civil War?
      Do You Realize That Any Book, Article Or News Papers Written For A Long Time After The Civil War, Were ALL Written By Survivors Of The
      Civil War?
      You Said "It Suddenly Became More Than Something You Learned Back In School...."
      It BECAME Horribly REAL?
      These MANY Civil War Battles Went On For Numerous YEARS, Through Some of The Hardest Winters & While Most of Those Soldiers Were Traveling On Foot, Underclothed, Sick & Undernourished!
      SO MUCH MORE THAN JUST ONE BATTLE!
      You Seem Amazed That Americans Were Fighting Fellow Americans To DEATH!
      Then You Comment "WOW!"
      Are You Not Aware This War Was Known As "The War Of Brother Against Brother"?
      In An Extremely High Number of Cases, Those Very Brothers Shot & Fought
      Literally FACE To FACE!
      Some Then Holding The Brother He Had Just Killed!
      I Have A Few Questions For You:
      1. Are You Really In Your 50's As I Am?
      2. Are You From America?
      3. If Yes To Both, What Kind Of Bad History Teacher Did You Have At School?
      4. What About Family & Local History?
      I Just Don't Get You, How & What You Said In Your Comment!
      You See, I Love History! I'm From A Family With Many Military Members Over The Generations.
      I Was Raised To Believe That If We Don't Remember Our History, We Are Bound To Repeat It!
      My Father Was Not Only A Military Officer for 24 Years But Also A Military War Hero!
      I Had Wonderful History Teachers Too!
      As A Parent I Went Above & Beyond What the Schools Were Teaching My Children, Due To The Constantly Changing "Standards of Learning"! So I Made Sure My Children Knew, Understood & Respected Their History.
      To Me, That's How All Children Should Be Taught.
      Maybe Once You've Read My Reaction To Your Comment & My Questions, You Will Understand What I Mean!
      This & Every War Are Extremely Serious & Painful!
      Maybe You Just Chose Words Which Generalized The Subject Matter You Wrote About.
      Anyway, Have A Safe
      & Happy Holiday Season & A Good
      New Year!!

    • @JS45678
      @JS45678 Год назад +21

      @@tonyaharmon1383 I meant no disrespect by my posted comment. I am, indeed, a United States citizen and highly educated in sciences and mathematics (not history).
      My comment was meant to convey my genuine surprise (shock) to hear a recording from a real person who actually lived so long ago describing details of the era compared to reading about the Civil War in a history book.
      In conclusion, this audio recording put a real human “face” (voice) on what were merely events and famous dates documented in a history book I had to memorize as a child.
      Again, I meant no disrespect and apologize, in advance, if my post felt that way to you. 🇺🇸🙂🇺🇸

    • @tonyaharmon1383
      @tonyaharmon1383 Год назад +6

      I'm Thankful This Was Posted Too!!

    • @JS45678
      @JS45678 Год назад +5

      @@tonyaharmon1383 Me too! 🇺🇸😃🇺🇸

  • @Dreadnought16
    @Dreadnought16 9 месяцев назад +14

    He was obviously a very intelligent man. Fascinating hearing him speak with such detail. I wish my mind was as sharp as his!!

  • @rhonda8231
    @rhonda8231 11 месяцев назад +81

    I do hope that history teachers play these in their classes. It is so important to know your history, and what better way than to hear it from someone who was there. I feel like I found a rare gem on youtube.

    • @chiarac3833
      @chiarac3833 10 месяцев назад +4

      You should see the holographic interviews with Holocaust survivors. Preserving these stories forever is a wonderful gift to the future.

    • @rhonda8231
      @rhonda8231 9 месяцев назад

      @@chiarac3833 where can you see that? I have never heard about it, I would love to see it.

    • @fjb3544
      @fjb3544 9 месяцев назад

      History teachers? What’s that? And if there is any left they certainly aren’t going to play the part about the war not being over slavery

    • @chrisboyd168
      @chrisboyd168 3 месяца назад +1

      States rights? Please.

    • @rhonda8231
      @rhonda8231 3 месяца назад

      ​@@chrisboyd168 No I am Canadian

  • @talentlessproductions819
    @talentlessproductions819 Год назад +1399

    Holy shit, he was 101 years old when he recorded this, and speaks more cognitively then some people I've met.

    • @susan2310
      @susan2310 Год назад

      Better than Biden born 100 years later.

    • @andrewgonzalez4230
      @andrewgonzalez4230 Год назад +268

      Speaks more cognitively than the current POTUS.

    • @josewong5412
      @josewong5412 Год назад +59

      @@andrewgonzalez4230 lol... You beat me to it!

    • @silasmarner7586
      @silasmarner7586 Год назад +62

      Cornpop dog pony soldier Biden comes to mind

    • @ryanshepard1838
      @ryanshepard1838 Год назад +22

      YA LIKE FJB😂!!!!

  • @stovepipe9er
    @stovepipe9er Год назад +409

    It’s really something to hear a recording from 1947 from a 100+ year old civil war veteran.

    • @jasonsphinx8461
      @jasonsphinx8461 Год назад +1

      ~

    • @bamaraiderable
      @bamaraiderable Год назад +21

      This is real history; not a stale textbook, but life and experience.

    • @2pugman
      @2pugman 10 месяцев назад +1

      My great uncle 1847 to 1947 was in the 1st NJ Cavalry. We have film of him doing his sword drill practice in 1946.

    • @tommas2674
      @tommas2674 9 месяцев назад

      there are many on here earlier than that, an ex "slave" of Jefferson Davis, who loved Davis. ... and much more.

    • @tommas2674
      @tommas2674 9 месяцев назад

      it would not have done the north any good to let out that the south wanted to secede due to gross unfair taxation.

  • @Braveheartman123
    @Braveheartman123 4 месяца назад +9

    This is a priceless recording that gives us so much insight into - and very important information about what the Civil War was fought for….NOT over slavery, but to preserve the rights of the individual States to govern themselves.
    I was close to my great-grandfather when I was a young boy. He was born in 1888 and passed in 1977. He was born in Connecticut but lived most of his life in Southwestern Massachusetts. He had an accent and referred to himself as a “swamp yankee.” He said things like “by and by” a lot and I loved spending time with him.

  • @hcellix
    @hcellix Год назад +29

    I find it incredibly emotional because My family lost two brothers on the same day. I do remember that as a child there were a few people that were over 100 that were born around that time. It's amazing how much has changed in just a 150 years. I know change is happening so fast that people are having problems finding a hold on something to grab on to. I am 66 and it has changed so much just in the last 25 years. Scary...but hopeful...we as a species can adapt but we need to find ways to slow down and enjoy life with our love ones.

  • @Tellemore
    @Tellemore Год назад +1198

    What an honour to hear this gentleman speak. My own grandfather was born in 1857 in Tipperary, Ireland and he died the day after Christmas 1957. He was considered too old to enlist for WWI and even too old for the Boer War in !899 in South Africa. When my late father was born in 1913 my grandfather was already 56 and my grandmother was (1870) 43 years old by then. She died on July 13, 1971 just short of her 102nd birthday (today is the anniversary of her passing. Imagine having seen the transformation of society from sailing ships, pony & trap, steam engines to motor cars, jumbo jets and men walking on the moon!

    • @59Alaskan
      @59Alaskan Год назад +28

      Wow, impressive!! True about living all that time to be in the "future".. but, may I ask how old YOU are..??

    • @scottpreston5074
      @scottpreston5074 Год назад +12

      The changes now are even more insanely fast.someday we will be reminiscing in a hologram and people will be saying"they actually spoke that way before time travel."

    • @karlabritfeld7104
      @karlabritfeld7104 Год назад +21

      You got some good genes on your family. My grandparents were also born in the 1850s. From Scotland and Germany.

    • @hdn4nd
      @hdn4nd Год назад +10

      You are going to live a long time.

    • @ancesthntr
      @ancesthntr Год назад +37

      My great grandfather in Russia had a cousin who was born in 1873. The guy served in WW1, which started when he was 41. Come the German invasion of the USSR in 1941, he volunteered. As bad off as they were, they said, “Go home, grandpa, we don’t need you.” He insisted, and because he knew how to drive and shoot, they used him to drive around some general. One day, while driving across a bridge, the Luftwaffe shot it out from under them…at which point this 68-year-old man swam across the river with the non-swimmer general in tow.
      On a separate note, I remember sitting in our living room as a kid with my grandfather, born in 1901, when Neil Armstrong set foot on the Moon. He told me of seeing the first planes in Russia as a kid of my age (in 1969). I cannot imagine what was going through his mind - having grown up with horses and carts , and living to see men on the Moon.

  • @Jose-kx5xu
    @Jose-kx5xu Год назад +859

    Never thought I'd be able to hear the voice of a Confederate veteran. This is treasure.

    • @therealivydawg
      @therealivydawg Год назад +78

      Voice of a traitor.

    • @arthurroberts9462
      @arthurroberts9462 Год назад

      @@therealivydawg a traitor to who? His State or yours, or are you uneducated and indoctrinated enough to believe that there was such a thing as an American military?

    • @historyman0569
      @historyman0569 Год назад +43

      @@therealivydawg So is the United States.

    • @nathanv4320
      @nathanv4320 Год назад +5

      @@therealivydawg 😢

    • @williamjones2596
      @williamjones2596 Год назад +97

      @@therealivydawg Just because someone no longer wants to be part of an organization does not make them a traitor to that organization. The country was very young, and many of the Confederates thought they were the ones who were more in keeping with the spirit of the American Revolution. Would you also say those soldiers were traitors? Unlikely. And “I think they’re all a bunch of racist meanies” can’t be the standard for what makes a traitor.

  • @kczbluesman
    @kczbluesman Год назад +25

    Nice job remastering the audio. Really appreciate you doing this. This is truly a gem, and the last 2 minutes contain so much wisdom from that 101 year old Civil War veteran.

    • @DorenesFoodPrepResource
      @DorenesFoodPrepResource 3 месяца назад +1

      True, especially about State's rights. We are seeing that currently aren't we?

  • @andrewgraulich6602
    @andrewgraulich6602 24 дня назад +3

    This type of historical evidence is invaluable and powerfully compelling---thank you for sharing it.

  • @buckrepublican8782
    @buckrepublican8782 Год назад +518

    I remember at 6 years old I talked to an old man, 102 years old, who was sitting on a courthouse bench in Bolivar, Mo. He was with others and they were referred to at the time as the "spit and whittle" club. He was the oldest there and was a drummer boy in the Civil War, saying he was just a little older than I was. Two other men confirmed his participation as their fathers had known him during the time, all being from Polk County, Mo. They were Confederates in an area that divided the local population on both sides. From battles he saw he described the smoke and gun fire and would just say men died, most of his stories were about fetching horses, supplies and helping the cooks. He talked about there being no food, having to hunt and forage and how sick they were.. He carried with him a Confederate pin that had been attached to his drum. That was 1955, he made quite an impression.

    • @belle16117
      @belle16117 Год назад +20

      That is incredible!

    • @richard6133
      @richard6133 Год назад +37

      I had a similar experience, but with a WWI aviator. Invaluable. I just wish I could have been old enough to realize to pay better attention.

    • @JS-wp4gs
      @JS-wp4gs Год назад +6

      Thats an interesting story considering it couldn't have happened. in 1955 there was a grand total of one surviving civil war veteran left and he was union

    • @syrenasketches6902
      @syrenasketches6902 Год назад +39

      @@JS-wp4gs he said he was a Drummer boy in the war, not a soldier.

    • @lindak1768
      @lindak1768 Год назад +17

      I’m a little younger than you. My Grandparents lived in Bolivar Mo. I remember the old men sitting on the benches and window sills around the square. A lot of them whittled. Lol Lots of fond memories of Bolivar and my relatives. Most of them buried there in Greenwood Cemetery. I went to a horrible dentist there on the square, that was not a good memory and I’ve been paying for that for years with bad teeth. Jack Hacker was his name and he lived up to it!

  • @noelleagape8684
    @noelleagape8684 Год назад +407

    Wow! It's amazing hearing the voice of someone who actually experienced the Civil War!

  • @theyumyums
    @theyumyums Год назад +10

    What a fascinating account of the time from someone who was there. I'm from England and it's interesting to hear how the accent is not that far removed from an English one and you can get a sense of how the difference developed. Also interesting to hear the word "furlough" used which nobody in the 21st century had any idea of until the Covid pandemic !.

  • @rogerwoodhouse7945
    @rogerwoodhouse7945 Год назад +7

    What a well spoken gentleman and intelligent.His English is excellent.

  • @handymurray
    @handymurray Год назад +433

    This is pure gold. His first hand recollections are priceless. It's fascinating to hear the strong English and Irish accents in his speech patterns.

    • @edwardburroughs1489
      @edwardburroughs1489 Год назад +37

      I just hear an American accent - albeit an old fashioned done - but I'm English so we must hear differently.

    • @theredboneking
      @theredboneking Год назад +5

      Assuming this is real, the civil war was never about freeing the slaves. If it was recorded in the late 40s, Black people still had separate entrances in many northern establishments. The South was still a nightmare for African Americans in the 40s. I highly doubt this is legitimate.

    • @henryofskalitz2228
      @henryofskalitz2228 Год назад +36

      This is actually the old English accent before everyone wanted to become royals

    • @theredboneking
      @theredboneking Год назад

      @Dirk Diggler In the 40s, you were a thousand times more likely to hear a Caucasian openly discussing how Black people shouldn’t hold any positions of power. Even actor John Wayne said as much. Lincoln himself said African Americans are not equal, and should never be equal to White people. Heavy weight champion Jack Johnson was denied entry into the Empress Hotel, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada in the early 1900’s. Yet we are led to believe a Caucasian being recorded, telling us he was the champion of freeing African American slaves, when it wouldn’t be popular to do so.
      I don’t buy it for one bit.
      Sweet Home Alabama - “I hope Neil Young will remember, a Southern Man don’t need him around anyhow”.
      ☝️When was that written ☝️

    • @Bella-fz9fy
      @Bella-fz9fy Год назад +28

      His accent sounds half the time English and half American.When he said “cavalry” it sounded so English😂

  • @TheBassgoddess
    @TheBassgoddess Год назад +376

    “We never counted distances or time…” What an amazing story from someone who was a soldier in the Civil War !!

    • @MrManfly
      @MrManfly Год назад +17

      It's so cool, in 2022, to actually HEAR from someone in who lived back then instead of just reading about it or just seeing photos !!

    • @russellking9762
      @russellking9762 Год назад +23

      exactly…i was watching a documentary about Niger in Africa where a woman was asked her age..she had no idea..even of what the current day of the week or year it is…explaining it was totally irrelevant to her everyday life…which consisted of the day to day struggle to gather food and water for her family

    • @reviewguy3024
      @reviewguy3024 Год назад +8

      I also noted his admission of his youth in relation to not fully comprehending important political issues.

    • @NYC1927
      @NYC1927 Год назад

      Yes! I caught that part too! If ONLY we could live like that today.

  • @tiffanyi5645
    @tiffanyi5645 Год назад +203

    This old man that I’m listening to fought in the civil war as a Confederate Soldier. I’m hearing the voice of a 19th century man giving priceless testimony of such an important historical moment. As a black Puerto Rican woman in NYC, I can’t explain how incredibly complex this is for me lol

    • @tyca659
      @tyca659 Год назад +12

      History is so complex. So glad you have an interest!

    • @Jayson8888
      @Jayson8888 Год назад +29

      I don't see what being black has to do with this but it's cool you actually care about history.

    • @marlenebulger6822
      @marlenebulger6822 Год назад +8

      Yeah, from VA and chooses the side of the traitors. Sad, but very interesting.

    • @tyca659
      @tyca659 Год назад +6

      @@marlenebulger6822 how so?

    • @xomox5316
      @xomox5316 Год назад +42

      @@Jayson8888 you dont see what being black has to do with it, ok... lets take a moment, Jewish folks view stories of WWII Germany identify as such say they are jewish. Its the same as my view on stories about communists as my family was landowning Christian farmers and mass murdered by communist. So you have an example of race, religion/race and political/religious victims you dont see why each victim might identify as the target group of the genocide/oppression?

  • @johnreed8336
    @johnreed8336 Год назад +12

    Amazed at this gentleman's accent. Yes he's an American from ' the South ' but so many of his words are sounded as if he were from the UK . Always wondered over time how the American accent evolved from an English one . This gentleman is in transitional stage between the two .
    I was greatly pleased at his assessment of why the South fought the civil war but i feel many today would want to disprove his statement. Very interesting to hear how he brought up his children to disrespect the tradition of slavery even though he faught and was wounded in those troubled times .
    Much respect .

    • @davieh6
      @davieh6 4 месяца назад +1

      Yes that's exactly what I thought. He sounds northern English with a slight southern US drawl. Very interesting!

    • @mssha1980
      @mssha1980 4 месяца назад +1

      Well he also mentions that it’s his opinion and what he fought for. There was also lots of rewritten history that went on after reconstruction ended. If it was states right, why didn’t they free the slaves before the war?

    • @amonoceros
      @amonoceros 3 месяца назад

      @@mssha1980 And why is it so hard for them to specify which rights they thought was worth going to war over, if not slavery?

    • @Kurio71
      @Kurio71 3 месяца назад

      @@mssha1980 The plantation owners were the power brokers, the average man was a pawn

    • @armandogonzales1365
      @armandogonzales1365 14 дней назад

      The Hell with people and what they think this person is an icon this is what he beleived and held himself to his convictions so anyone who berates him can kick rocks

  • @tarasmithskitchen2614
    @tarasmithskitchen2614 Год назад +326

    I remember talking to my great grandmother, who was born in 1880, and the amazing stories she would tell. She outlived 7 husband's, and was 40 before penicillin was a thing. I feel privileged to have known her, she passed away in 1987.

    • @seth1704
      @seth1704 Год назад

      Boy, who would want to marry her? she's the black widow. If I was #7, I would have had cold feet.

    • @theredboneking
      @theredboneking Год назад +12

      Tara, that’s my Irish wife’s name as well. My grandfather was born in the late 1800s as well. He served in WW1 and like many soldiers, he refused to talk about it. He lived through the Great Depression and said that people in the 70s wouldn’t be as charitable if it happened then. I cringe to think what will happen when the famine hits.

    • @TheErik249
      @TheErik249 Год назад +20

      She outlived SEVEN husband's.
      How did these men pass away?

    • @tarasmithskitchen2614
      @tarasmithskitchen2614 Год назад +37

      @@TheErik249 wars, illness, ect. Most were when she was older. She even got married again in her 90s, and the last was in her 100s to a young fella in his 90s... she, like my grandmother, was married at 12, raising kids at 14, and had a bunch of kids, in a time when all that was normal. My great grandfather died of tb a decade before we really had any treatment for it. Vaccinations were not really a thing, rudimentary, other than sharing smallpox scabs, i think there were 1 or 2, but nothing like today....Times were different. She wasn't a black widow, she just had a really long life, and kept getting married. She worked until she was 106, and died at 107. She was awesome!

    • @seth1704
      @seth1704 Год назад +22

      @@tarasmithskitchen2614 Tara I think it's neat how you posted your comment four months ago, and now within the last day, you've had four comments to start this thread. I was not trying to insult you, or your now deceased grandmother, by calling her a black widow, I apologize for this. I was just in awe that a woman could be married seven times with out a divorce being one of them. There should be more women like your grandma in this world, and if there were, I am sure this world would be a better place!

  • @michaelplanchunas3693
    @michaelplanchunas3693 Год назад +461

    When I was growing up in the 1950s, we had several elderly neighbors whom I knew about, but that was all of my interest in them. My loss. Our next-door neighbors were two retired schoolteachers who never married. Decades later I found out the eldest lived to be 103, dying in 1977, the younger dying at 97. All the history they saw, and I wasn't interested. But their next-door neighbors were an elderly couple who were personal friends with the Wright Brothers. The wife had accompanied them in 1903 to Kill Devil Hills in N C that fateful week as an assistant. Close cousins of mine saw many photos of the brothers with the couple in their home. We are the losers when we don't allow the elderly to tell their stories. So much eyewitness history gone forever.

    • @jb47vintage
      @jb47vintage Год назад +21

      I've done the same. History was sitting right in front of me.

    • @claudiabottom4086
      @claudiabottom4086 Год назад +15

      I love listening to older people and their stories I always did

    • @lindaanthony7890
      @lindaanthony7890 Год назад +10

      As a very young child, I loved listening to my Grandmother (born 1898) tell me stories about her early life and stories about my Grandfather (born 1887). As a very young child, I had no real concept of time, but still found the history exciting and I could listen to her all day.

    • @Britspence381
      @Britspence381 Год назад +8

      I know what you're saying, you just don't think of the value of their knowledge and experiences when you are young. My parents died when I was in my early 20's and there are so many things I wished I had talked with them about. Dad was a U.S. sailor in WWII, South Pacific, but I didn't have much interest in the War then and didn't ask him about his experiences. Mom once told me all of the places her family had lived in the rural South during the Depression, wish I had written that info down. What a loss.

    • @HolahkuTaigiTWFormosanDiplomat
      @HolahkuTaigiTWFormosanDiplomat Год назад +3

      @@Britspence381 We can still tell ours, the future is there.

  • @pamelanadel3787
    @pamelanadel3787 Год назад +9

    Wow. What can you type to top that! What a historian. He still had his mental faculties to record this. Thank you for your service. ❤️🙏🏻✝️🇺🇸

  • @Theseus9-cl7ol
    @Theseus9-cl7ol 4 месяца назад +6

    He said they fought for State's Rights, not slavery.

  • @HalkerVeil
    @HalkerVeil Год назад +95

    It's not until you get old when you realize how short a year really is. And how recent his time was.

  • @hinkapuss3675
    @hinkapuss3675 Год назад +284

    As a kid in the early 1950's I went with my Dad to an Independence Day parade in a nearby town In Maryland. WWII was barely over and many of the heroes of that war were marching, in uniform, in the parade. WWI vets, now old men got to ride in beautiful restored antique cars. And the oldest vet was in an elegant carriage pulled by a team of black horses. I remember like it was yesterday, my Dad leaning down to tell me excitedly, "That's the last surviving CIvil War veteran! As a boy, just your age, he ran away to fight in the war. He is over 100 years old."

    • @phantomlord5707
      @phantomlord5707 Год назад +25

      that’s awesome! and now 70 years later WWII vets are reaching that point 😔

    • @josephclift3662
      @josephclift3662 Год назад +15

      Thanks for sharing this precious memory

    • @beepbop6697
      @beepbop6697 Год назад +11

      ​@@phantomlord5707 only 167,000 WW2 vets alive as of 2022.

    • @mirandahotspring4019
      @mirandahotspring4019 Год назад +5

      @@beepbop6697 They would all be 95 or more by now!

    • @hinkapuss3675
      @hinkapuss3675 Год назад +3

      @@josephclift3662 You are most welcome!

  • @ethanfoster4949
    @ethanfoster4949 Год назад +8

    These old audio interviews are like looking through a time machine its incredible this was amazing. Great work!

  • @NeffyCat
    @NeffyCat 11 месяцев назад +5

    That was absolutely amazing to hear his perspective about the Civil War! I really appreciate your sharing this with us! Thank you so much, friend.Watched in full! I loved the pictures too.

  • @joelashdod7712
    @joelashdod7712 Год назад +122

    When I was a child in Brooklyn in the 1950’s and 60’s, an elderly doctor lived on my street, I used to walk his dogs and he took me to see his horse. He had quite a history, and at age 16 he rode up San Juan Hill with Teddy Roosevelt, left the Army and trained as a doctor. Reentered the Army in 1910 and was a military doctor in four wars, in Mexico, WW1, WW2 and Korea. He had a great love of animals and I believe he was the model for Colonel Potter in the tv series Mash.

  • @dstorm7752
    @dstorm7752 Год назад +221

    Fabulous that somebody had the brainpower to get this gentleman on audiotape in 1947

    • @cuebj
      @cuebj Год назад +10

      In early days of tape recording, even before, with acetates, there was a lot of recording of folk memories, songs, stories now in various archives and digitally enhanced

    • @richardcarpenter158
      @richardcarpenter158 Год назад

      I have a photograph on my wall of my great grandmother holding my sister on her lap. My great grandmother's father was in the 12th Virginia Infantry CSA. My sister is named after Robert E. Lee.

    • @itsnerfornothing7554
      @itsnerfornothing7554 Год назад

      ​@@richardcarpenter158 traitors all

  • @mandybentley2641
    @mandybentley2641 Год назад +15

    Thank you for making and sharing these videos. They bring joy to my historical heart. It is amazing that we can see pictures of him and hear him speak all these years later. You are preserving our country’s history and that’s awesome! God bless you.

  • @romine777
    @romine777 Год назад +6

    I am amazed that this gentleman has such a sharp memory and is so articulate. Thank you for posting!

  • @stevefaure415
    @stevefaure415 Год назад +627

    Now this is a real treasure. Whoever had the good idea to start making historical recordings like this should really be honored. Amazing the old American accent too, it's not just the choice of words but the way he pronounces them, it's actually very different from how we speak now.

    • @grumpyglyn1065
      @grumpyglyn1065 Год назад +74

      I agree. I am from the UK , and it struck me how similar is his speech to my Great Great Uncle, who I remember from the 1970s. He was in his late 90s at the time, so would have been born just after your Civil War. If I heard this gentleman speak today I think that I would quite confused by his accent, it sounds much closer to a British accent , than modern American does.

    • @niklase5901
      @niklase5901 Год назад +18

      He sounds very British to me. Did he with his family emigrate from England perhaps?

    • @claudiabottom4086
      @claudiabottom4086 Год назад +10

      Yes I noticed that dialect.

    • @maid4thelamb85
      @maid4thelamb85 Год назад +74

      I have lived in southeastern Virginia most of my life. He sounds very much like some older people I knew back in the 1980s. We call it the "old Virginian accent". It is remarkably similar.

    • @souta95
      @souta95 Год назад +17

      My grandpa had a somewhat similar accent, though he was much younger (born in 1925). That being said, his ancestors came from Ireland to Spotsylvania, VA in the early 1800's then ended up in Southwest Michigan in the 1830's, where many of us still are today.

  • @PPISAFETY
    @PPISAFETY Год назад +68

    I grew up in Richmond, Virginia, and in the early 1980's I made my way through college as a paramedic. We received many calls for service to a stately old building that looked like a smaller version of the White House, known to us as the Confederate Home For Ladies. This was actually called the Home For Needy Confederate Women. It was essentially a nursing home established for the widows, sisters, and daughters of men who had served in the Confederate Army and Navy. By the time I started going there for work, all that was left were essentially women who had been the much younger post-war brides, sisters, and daughters of older Confederate veterans.
    Some of the ladies were still quite lucid, and often lonely. I visited there off duty several times just to talk to some of them. While none were old enough to remember the actual Civil War, they told amazing stories of their lives in its aftermath with their husbands and fathers. I wish I had thought to record some of the conversations with them. The Commonwealth of Virginia paid for their care until the last one died, and the place was closed in 2008.

    • @jancoley9051
      @jancoley9051 Год назад +3

      That is fascinating. So good a place of refuge and help existed and for so long. That is what you call good people. I am sure they appreciated your visits. Recordings would have been nice, at least you have your memories, their stories.
      In my city we have an organization called
      "Daughter's of the Confederate"
      They do many services, donations, and help in various supportive ways in Mobile, AL
      Thanks for sharing.

    • @sarahflanagan9345
      @sarahflanagan9345 Год назад +1

      These women were treated better than the slaves their husbands and fathers wanted to keep enslaved.

    • @carlafward2744
      @carlafward2744 Год назад +5

      There was a novel by Allan Gurganus which came out in 1989, called The Oldest Confederate Widow Tells All. I got it as a birthday gift from my mother. It's quite good, told in the voice of a woman who was married off while a teenager to a middle aged Confederate veteran. She tells his story from her recollections of what he used to talk about, and describes the society of the day, and brings it up to the present day (1989, I guess). She touches on race and racial history a lot, and marvels at what has changed, and what has remained the same.
      I wish you'd recorded your conversations, too!

    • @jgrysiak6566
      @jgrysiak6566 Год назад +1

      Dud anybody talk about Richmond being burned to the ground?

    • @wolfeinhorn4661
      @wolfeinhorn4661 Год назад +1

      Amazing. Thank you so very much for sharing !

  • @workingtheworld68
    @workingtheworld68 Год назад +5

    My great-great grandfather was also born in 1846. Joined 70th Indiana volunteers in 1862 at age of 16. Spent almost a year in hospital in Tennessee after contracting measles, then rejoined his regiment in time to participate with Sherman's march. Was wounded at battle of Resaca GA in 1864 and after recovery was transferred to Veterans Reserve Corps as mounted orderly. Was in DC at time of Lincoln's assignation and marched in the Grand Review of the Armies parade in May of 1965. Retired to his farm in Indiana for remainder of his life.

  • @tomb5396
    @tomb5396 7 месяцев назад

    Just incredible how clear/concise this man was.
    Love these videos

  • @BELCAN57
    @BELCAN57 Год назад +110

    What a well spoken man.

    • @markwood3389
      @markwood3389 Год назад +1

      Well spoken or extremely deluded. It’s still interesting.

    • @tomwiggins1225
      @tomwiggins1225 Год назад +9

      Well, spoken, period.

    • @rotunda57
      @rotunda57 Год назад +2

      Very well spoken bless him

    • @Johnny-ip4mk
      @Johnny-ip4mk Год назад +2

      @@markwood3389 Deluded? What part didn’t you understand? I think you’re the one that’s having a hard time understanding what the man said.

    • @markwood3389
      @markwood3389 Год назад

      @@Johnny-ip4mk I was talking about the Lost Cause. He was a Confederate soldier, fighting for slavery, and against the U.S. government. After the war, the Lost Cause was the way they rationalized it.

  • @cashkitty3472
    @cashkitty3472 Год назад +34

    When you compare how he talks with a lot of people today you realise even with limited education he still speaks better than most living today.

    • @JC-em4tx
      @JC-em4tx Год назад

      Perhaps today, we are indoctrinated more than we are educated

    • @hillbilly4christ638
      @hillbilly4christ638 Год назад +1

      You can thank your educational "system" for that.

    • @johnrawls8668
      @johnrawls8668 Год назад

      Dat right.

  • @2serveand2protect
    @2serveand2protect 10 месяцев назад +20

    Regardless of political sympathies and/or allegiances anyone might have nowaday - those voices from the past - recorded and preserved - have an ENORMOUS historical value. Big thanks for posting this.

  • @lilithrogers5204
    @lilithrogers5204 Год назад +2

    What an amazing life and memories this fellow has....thank you for sharing.

  • @papamartino
    @papamartino Год назад +144

    Linguistically, this is priceless. It is an account of the great accent shift that occurred in North America. Although the accent has clearly shifted to modern southern English, you can still hear the distinct British pronunciation, especially with final [i] sound, ex. Cavalry.

    • @dennisrichardsrichards8352
      @dennisrichardsrichards8352 Год назад +6

      Interesting Luc. I'm going to read more about the accent shift you spoke about above. Thank you.

    • @richardsfault1
      @richardsfault1 Год назад +3

      The accent reminds me a bit of some Canadian accents I've heard.

    • @abubaseet
      @abubaseet Год назад +2

      @@richardsfault1 I think the English accent from the 18th century has got to be the common denominator.

    • @karekarenz7683
      @karekarenz7683 Год назад +8

      Yes, you can definitely hear the British pronunciation --- a couple of words I picked up that didn't having the American rolling "r" sound ---- "remem-ba" and "bor-da" --- but he does have the flat "a" sound in most of his words, as in "he-f" not "har-f" for "half". His pronunciation of "school" was also interesting. He says it in the way most Australian's do today "sch-ooool".

    • @AlbertH99
      @AlbertH99 Год назад +1

      He died on my first birthday!

  • @patriciadecicco8809
    @patriciadecicco8809 11 месяцев назад +4

    This was sooo well done! Thank you so much for making it! I'm sure there was considerable effort on your end to make it so authentic, yet so audible as well. What an amazing account. And I've often said, if you grew up with slavery, you wouldn't have truly understood how evil it was, bc of your "conditioning ".

  • @acebasinnation88888
    @acebasinnation88888 Год назад +4

    Beyond amazing human being, thanks truly and dearly

  • @b.a.d.2086
    @b.a.d.2086 Год назад +264

    My grandparents who raised me were born in 1898 and 1900. My grandfathers father was a detective on the early Union Pacific Railroad and my grandmothers mother saw 5 of her sons fight in the Civil War for the North, losing one. She nursed people after the Allegheny Arsenal exploded. My mother in law, a nurse, skipped the entire 20th century on her headstone! I was born in 1944 before D Day and have pictures of me sitting on the floor with my grandfather looking at the headlines announcing the end of WWII. Grandma went from horse and buggy to an airline trip around the world with me. She passed in 1998 age 98. They were amazing people!

    • @lash3630
      @lash3630 Год назад +4

      They called them gum shoes.most were cruel to hobos.some beat them to death.gumshoes,well hells only half full,union Pacific,figures.

    • @vieskow9544
      @vieskow9544 Год назад +1

      Remarkable

    • @Hanzey1966
      @Hanzey1966 Год назад +1

      @@lash3630 Interesting . . . We use to call Cops/ Detective"'s on ,,Sluipers,, (Dutch Slang) wich freely translated means ,,Sneakers'' , due to creeping/sneaking up on people without making any sound by footsteps.

    • @oggjoshua
      @oggjoshua Год назад +1

      You're saying your mother in law was born in the 1800s and died in the 2000s?

    • @Hanzey1966
      @Hanzey1966 Год назад +3

      @@oggjoshua That could be true , If i.e. born in 1899 and passed in 2001. I mean there are certainly people becoming 102 Years of age.

  • @rachelcody3355
    @rachelcody3355 Год назад +82

    what amazes me is I am sitting here in the year 2022, listening to the recollection of an old man, recorded 20 plus years before I was born about a war that happened over 160 years ago and through this technology it's as if I am sitting in the room with him listing. God bless and thank you.

    • @NYC1927
      @NYC1927 Год назад +5

      Totally! Born in the late 60s here as well and to hear him talk about a war that took place 100+ years before we were born is a total trip!

    • @squidy4082
      @squidy4082 Год назад +2

      It’s beyond me

  • @MaryRosebud
    @MaryRosebud 10 месяцев назад +6

    His manner of speaking is so much like my grandmother’s. Some of the phrases he uses are the same as the phrases she used. My grandmother’s parents were children during the Civil War. They remembered hiding silverware down the well, and putting the pigs in the creek. I miss my grandmother. She was the world to me. There will always be wars and people will always live through them the best they can. But a grandmother is eternal, since she goes to Heaven.

  • @dawndellarocco2362
    @dawndellarocco2362 11 месяцев назад +2

    How interesting and informative. Imagine this man who at 101 had such a great memory and a lot of courage to talk about his experience in the Civil War. A lot of men can't even talk about their war days. What a great storyteller and an interesting story and life that he led. God bless you for serving and fighting for our country. I love the old photos as well.

  • @smudgey1kenobey
    @smudgey1kenobey Год назад +66

    This guy is great! My grandmother saw the last of the covered wagons cross the Kansas prairie AND the first man walk on the moon in her lifetime.

    • @Nick94MI
      @Nick94MI Год назад +9

      That's some major change to see in a lifetime!

    • @JokerFace090
      @JokerFace090 9 месяцев назад +2

      Thats cool. I still remember seeing the last 56k modem and the first rich dude go to space.

    • @p1randymarsh618
      @p1randymarsh618 8 месяцев назад +3

      Nobody’s walked on the moon

    • @Arete37
      @Arete37 6 месяцев назад +2

      My mother is 102 and her family owned a Model T Ford. These days she is still texting daily and buying stuff on Amazon.

  • @Administrator_O-5
    @Administrator_O-5 5 месяцев назад +2

    I am 47 born 1976. I heard some kid ask his mom in the store "what was is like living in the mid to late 1900s?". I used to think my parents were so lame for thinking that everything was so much better when they were kids. I find myself saying the exact same thing today!

  • @Falkriim
    @Falkriim 7 месяцев назад

    Incredible audio, thank you for posting this.

  • @gregorsmith
    @gregorsmith Год назад +87

    You can still hear a ting of an English accent mixed in his voice. It’s crazy how it has evolved in America depending on where you go like the Irish accent morphing into a Boston accent. I know I’m off topic but I find languages amazing. This must of been right around when voice recording was invented. The clarity is amazing.

    • @Voltomess
      @Voltomess Год назад +3

      what amaze me most is not an accent but overall languages on earth I wonder why every part of the world invented his own language

    • @roderickreilly9666
      @roderickreilly9666 Год назад +2

      If it was recorded when he was 101, it would have been recorded in 1947, year i was born.

    • @roderickreilly9666
      @roderickreilly9666 Год назад +2

      The accent is revealing. Not what I'd consider a southern accent, but I'd be wrong. I've heard similar accents from other southerners of the same period.

    • @rriveter9927
      @rriveter9927 Год назад +1

      There are many music recordings and from the 1920's, and earlier than that. Talking movies around his time also.

    • @robertcottam9000
      @robertcottam9000 Год назад +1

      That thought occurred to me as well - about the English accent I mean. Tiny bit of West Wales, too, I think.

  • @coltonwarner7886
    @coltonwarner7886 Год назад +70

    “We didn’t count distances or time in those days”
    I don’t know why that hit me so hard but it does.

    • @Sillysoft
      @Sillysoft Год назад

      Both used to keep people busy and unaware what the government is doing

    • @automan1591
      @automan1591 Год назад +5

      Yep that struck a note with me too.
      It may not be practical but somehow it feels comforting.. and vaguely familiar..

    • @svachalek
      @svachalek Год назад +11

      “In the state of Virginia. I didn’t know about states before that time.” Mind blown!

    • @gr8tbigtreehugger
      @gr8tbigtreehugger Год назад +4

      Without a time piece, it's hard to set a baseline for distance i.e. 'six hours from here' as time is a factor in determining speed ('3 miles per hour.') Travel estimations are more likely "the better part of a day" kind of thing.

    • @abumohandes4487
      @abumohandes4487 Год назад

      @@automan1591 Sounds like Africa today.

  • @nothingtosuccess
    @nothingtosuccess Год назад +1

    Thank you for the video and amazing glimpse into the past.

  • @LANEZZ-jv5ok
    @LANEZZ-jv5ok 8 дней назад

    Incredible. Im glad this interview exist. R. I. P.

  • @louisskulnik7390
    @louisskulnik7390 Год назад +167

    Wow he sounds so strong for a 101 year old man. He sounded like he had another decade in him.

    • @NorEEzta
      @NorEEzta Год назад +20

      @@Jj-gi2uv 50x more testosterone, too.

    • @theredboneking
      @theredboneking Год назад +8

      No aluminum filled chem trails either.

    • @Emily-fo2xo
      @Emily-fo2xo Год назад

      still alive !

    • @trey7772
      @trey7772 13 дней назад

      @Theredboneking That is not a thing. 🤦‍♂️

  • @ImSpun13
    @ImSpun13 Год назад +130

    The quality of this recording is phenomenal! So glad this was preserved and is now available for everyone forever. What a gift to mankind!

    • @rcpmac
      @rcpmac Год назад +2

      It was enhanced. You should read the blurb

  • @dougmacrae1878
    @dougmacrae1878 11 месяцев назад +2

    Listening to this in Arlington Virginia on June 8, 2023

  • @TuedaysChild72
    @TuedaysChild72 3 месяца назад

    This is amazing! And i love hearing how speech was at that time, not just accent, but mannerisms and word choices, so interesting!

  • @Donovan_Walker
    @Donovan_Walker Год назад +222

    “We didn’t keep track of distance or time, in those days.” That’s awesome. This world would be a great deal better off if we didn’t worry about such things nowadays.

    • @richardarrington5992
      @richardarrington5992 Год назад +11

      I picked up on that too. That really shows such a different perspective of that era.

    • @fanatamon
      @fanatamon Год назад

      So much cruisier.

    • @ericpadilla2454
      @ericpadilla2454 Год назад +9

      No it wouldnt

    • @cz2165
      @cz2165 Год назад +12

      Um… he didn’t worry about time because slaves did all the hard work.

    • @AntQuick1102
      @AntQuick1102 Год назад +6

      Lol distance and time are overrated?

  • @cropcircler
    @cropcircler Год назад +153

    What a fabulous storyteller and what a fabulous voice. Listening to him is like taking a time machine back to a long gone past.

  • @user-oi4tj4pp8q
    @user-oi4tj4pp8q 9 месяцев назад +1

    I love this as someone who has always been interested in history. My family have two recordings one of my Grandfather telling of his boyhood memories and one of his mother telling of her early memories.
    Myself I was born in the 1970s and spent quite a lot of time around people who had fought in ww2 and my grandfathers voice still recalls similar memories of people who fought in the American civil war. My great gran tells of how she went west with her parents in a ultimately failed attempt at being settlers.
    I think doing recordings of your old folk is a very nice thing to do both for your future generations but also so that the elders can revisit their early memories that have faded with the loss of the people in those memories.

  • @shawnmcculley2995
    @shawnmcculley2995 Год назад +4

    Just AMAZING to hear the voice of someone who was born in 1846!!!! One of my gr.gr.grandfathers was born in 1846. He died in 1929. Would've loved to have heard his stories.

  • @gretchent7750
    @gretchent7750 Год назад +172

    Thank you for posting this gift! My Grandfather was born 20 years after Lincoln was shot. My Dad was born in 1927 and played cornet in high school in a small Wisconsin town. He played taps for all the fallen soldiers, even one from the Civil War. I don’t know why I’m sharing this…I guess I just want to share a bit of my history.

    • @trishr2081
      @trishr2081 Год назад +7

      It’s appreciated and I am very glad you shared. History is important.❤

    • @johnpastore7685
      @johnpastore7685 Год назад +4

      Very glad you did. It's positive.

    • @wolfeinhorn4661
      @wolfeinhorn4661 Год назад +3

      Thank you for sharing our history !

    • @1976mcfarlane
      @1976mcfarlane 11 месяцев назад +1

      What little town in Wisconsin? I'm on Wisconsin girl. I'm in Jefferson. I have family roots in mondovi area And iron River

    • @joniarmel7308
      @joniarmel7308 4 месяца назад +1

      Good story !

  • @rickclark4112
    @rickclark4112 Год назад +492

    This audio should be played in ALL history classes in America.... absolutely wonderfully enlightening....

    • @rcpmac
      @rcpmac Год назад +21

      It’s banned in the southern states because it brings up uncomfortable truths

    • @eddieb9930
      @eddieb9930 Год назад

      @@rcpmac Man just look at the uncomfortable truths going on today , If something don't change soon the average American will be eating hominy and crickets ! People need to go back and look at all world history and they would realize this has been the best place to live in all of history and does it have faults hell yeah plenty It's ran by humans .

    • @Ninnjette-
      @Ninnjette- Год назад +1

      @@rcpmac People are so fragile they can’t handle history anymore, that doesn’t look good for America.

    • @zvotaisvfi8678
      @zvotaisvfi8678 Год назад

      YES GREAT IDEA LETS TIE THE CHILDREN DOWN AND PUT ON A STROBE LIGHT WHILE WE DO IT TOO!!!!

    • @laurajanesherman9126
      @laurajanesherman9126 Год назад +8

      My local community college which was practically on the battle of 1st battle of Manassas and the history professor refused to teach or discuss this war… take a guess what would follow in 2014-15.

  • @joshilasumman5141
    @joshilasumman5141 9 месяцев назад +1

    Just amazing to hear this audio.

  • @RodneyFreeman
    @RodneyFreeman Год назад

    This was absolutely amazing!

  • @72markmiester
    @72markmiester Год назад +74

    Wow, I can’t believe I’m hearing a man that actually fought in the civil war. Wow. To me this is incredible. This is all very significant historical evidence of our country. I find this very fascinating.

    • @user-wr2cd1wy3b
      @user-wr2cd1wy3b 6 месяцев назад

      it is seriously blowing my mind, that they managed to find someone very, very old, on a very, very new piece of technology and just by a hair, caught what is to us now, something that feels like 'relative ancient history' in permanent wave form.

  • @FrostRare
    @FrostRare Год назад +17

    I notice that all of these interviews with Civil War veterans feature men who speak with a sense of dignity, rectitude, nobility, unashamedness, eloquence, deliberateness, carefulness, sensitivity, they never say “um” or make sarcastic, self-deprecating remarks. There’s only truth and respect in their speech. Not only respect for others, but respect for themselves.

    • @jancoley9051
      @jancoley9051 Год назад

      Well said

    • @solidkreate5007
      @solidkreate5007 Год назад

      Our ancestors were not stupid people. I wish Americans would still speak this way instead of Ebonics slang mixed with retardation.

    • @juliaussery4303
      @juliaussery4303 Год назад +1

      Totally agree.

    • @FrostRare
      @FrostRare Год назад

      @@juliaussery4303 glad you do! I wish actors who play in historical films would actually reference footage from the time they’re portraying. Maybe they’d capture the compelling nuances and style of this self-expression. Instead, we get characters wearing old style costumes moving and talking like people from 2023 lol. They change their accent, but for the most part they speak in this hushed, staggered, self conscious way that in no way represents the history.

  • @teepee2759
    @teepee2759 Месяц назад

    How amazing to have this recording!! We could learn so much if we would just listen.

  • @potatosalad6699
    @potatosalad6699 9 месяцев назад +4

    So cool to hear his voice. I wish my ancestors would have been able to tell their stories like this. All I have are some diaries they wrote during the war and after.

    • @coynichols3517
      @coynichols3517 6 месяцев назад

      What you have is still pretty awesome though!

  • @JCtheROD
    @JCtheROD Год назад +441

    He doesn't sound 101 years old, he sounds more clear than most people do today.

    • @christianfreedom-seeker934
      @christianfreedom-seeker934 Год назад +7

      I know, this is why I said "he is an "old joker" you get enough of them and you get a local liars club. He was probably just a man in his 70's trying to get attention. Voice and mind were too clear to be over 100. Truth is, most folks over 100 are drooling on themselves and have lost the willpower to talk.

    • @judyholiday1794
      @judyholiday1794 Год назад +28

      @@christianfreedom-seeker934 My Gran was a nurse,and one of her clients was a man that when he died at 98 was alert and had his full thinking process just the day before.. I was only 9 or 10 but I remember him vividly describing his childhood in Holland.

    • @felixmadison5736
      @felixmadison5736 Год назад +3

      Not quite as easy to listen to as Herschel Walker.

    • @SarahK86
      @SarahK86 Год назад +1

      @@christianfreedom-seeker934 hahahah.

    • @tmckmusic8584
      @tmckmusic8584 Год назад +35

      He still has his faculties because he drank pure spring water, ate from a farm, walked every day, didn't have WiFi radiating his body, and wasn't vaccinated his whole life. Just sayin... We aren't so healthy these days.

  • @ElusiveMasquerade
    @ElusiveMasquerade Год назад +84

    An extraordinary man from an extraordinary time. If only he would have known we would be listening to his voice filtering from our phones in the distant future.

    • @Patrick3183
      @Patrick3183 Год назад +2

      He would assume someone is holding their phone receiver up to the record player so someone else can hear it down the line.

    • @mariahwhitneycelinejanetmadona
      @mariahwhitneycelinejanetmadona Год назад +1

      Extraordinary?

    • @ElusiveMasquerade
      @ElusiveMasquerade Год назад

      @@mariahwhitneycelinejanetmadona 🇳🇴

    • @mariahwhitneycelinejanetmadona
      @mariahwhitneycelinejanetmadona Год назад

      @@ElusiveMasquerade 🏁

    • @bumboclat
      @bumboclat Год назад

      the recording is from after ww2. So he has a concept of radio, phone and television. From there it's not too absurd to imagine youtube.

  • @toblakai5543
    @toblakai5543 8 месяцев назад +2

    Hes very much collected and great story teller at age of 101... mind blowing hearing living history.

  • @teamplay5847
    @teamplay5847 10 месяцев назад +12

    I am a Black American Descendant and THANK YOU FOR THIS. I'd, personally, like to hear more of these recordings that were pro and anti. Firsthand history IS FAR BETTER THAN POLITICAL AGENDA. Including Disantis' nonsense and temper tantrums.

    • @Snakedoc88
      @Snakedoc88 9 месяцев назад

      I can agree with you when you say “first hand history” I understand you’re suggesting getting the facts from the source.
      Then you spoke distastefully about the Trump supporters. The irony here, is that you can not name one crime committed, or have you heard first hand from DJT himself to discredit all that has done for humanity.
      No wars under his administration, is there any other president that can say that? Not even Obama, he was worse than Bush.

    • @MrCplChicken
      @MrCplChicken 9 месяцев назад +5

      Interesting that you singled out DeSantis. Sounds like you're beholden to "political agenda."

    • @user-di3fb6np4t
      @user-di3fb6np4t 8 месяцев назад +1

      ....Αυτό που κατά ειναι σωστό...Ναι...πολλές φορές οι εχθροί μας μπορεί να μας συμπεριφέρονται καλύτερα από τους φίλους μας...Και να έχουν δίκιο αυτοί και όχι οι φίλοι μας...ας ακούμε όλων της απόψεις...

    • @TheWhiteWolf2077
      @TheWhiteWolf2077 8 месяцев назад

      Calling out the corrupt establishment is tantrums and nonsense? We truly have failed all those who fought and died for a truly free and open society. Corporate media and politics have rotten everyone;s brain with propaganda so thick..George Orwell's 1984 is no longer fiction.

    • @randykelso4079
      @randykelso4079 Месяц назад

      Translation: What is right... Yes... Many times our enemies can treat us better than our friends... And let them and not our friends be right... Let's listen to everyone's opinions...@@user-di3fb6np4t

  • @comettamer
    @comettamer Год назад +78

    I hope to be able to recall things as clearly at 101 as this man did. Truly it brings a tear to my eye to hear these words so clearly, memories of the Civil War from a man who LIVED through it.

  • @123canadagirl
    @123canadagirl Год назад +68

    This recording is a priceless gem! What a privilege to hear his first hand account of a seminal period of our history. His story should be told in schools.

    • @michaelpollard9791
      @michaelpollard9791 Год назад +2

      My great great grandfather was a confederate soldier from Mississippi. He would be very sad to see the condition of our country today. The word HONOR has lost it's meaning since those days!

  • @MrMalformedllama
    @MrMalformedllama 6 месяцев назад +6

    This dude was born when there were still people around from the American Revolution. And there were people around as recently as a decade ago who were the CHILDREN of civil war vets (they had kids at like 75/80). All of this stuff seems so ancient but realistically it's only been a few human lives that have passed in between all these events.

  • @TropicLuv
    @TropicLuv 3 месяца назад +1

    Hearing real and true accounts from survivors of times going by has to be one of the most amazing things to listen to!

  • @chrissjoy
    @chrissjoy Год назад +161

    These videos are incredible, closest thing we have to time travel. I'm so grateful to whoever recorded these. Its crazy to think i just listened to the voice of a man, born almost 200 years ago. Its completely fascinating.

    • @sarahwinston7828
      @sarahwinston7828 Год назад +6

      There was a whole project undertaken by the government, I think, in the 1930's. They recorded stories of both Civil War veterans and people who had been born enslaved and were freed. Some were very, very old and their voices are amazing to listen to, all of them, former slave and vets, north or south. I think you can find it here on RUclips.

    • @justinsane7832
      @justinsane7832 Год назад

      @@sarahwinston7828 that would be an amazing find!

    • @texandy89
      @texandy89 Год назад +2

      Lol I was thinking that 🤣 how in the hell he came to 2022 he timed traveled lo. The history Channel always plays ancient aliens which is a joke of people high on coke and talking about aliens 😆

    • @theredboneking
      @theredboneking Год назад +1

      @@sarahwinston7828 slavery was always sugar coated. The average lifespan of a slave was 21. George Washington owned 300 slaves at a time. In his will, he gave them their freedom upon his wife’s death. Fearing for her life, Martha Washington freed every slave right away. Tells you how much loyalty she earned through decent treatment.

    • @sarahwinston7828
      @sarahwinston7828 Год назад +5

      @@theredboneking How do you know Mrtha Washington freed the slaves out of fear, versus she never believed in slavery in the first place and had no power herself, being a woman, and had no say in the matter until George died? As for the average life expectancy of slaves being 21, that was due to high infant mortality, not enslaved people suddenly dying by the age of 21. Furthermore, slaves were not exclusively Africans; the first slaves were white, usually the Irish and Scots sold out from English prisons and transported to the colonies. As well as mulattos (half white half African) and dragoons (3/4ths European, 1/4 African) slaves here in the USA, effectively white slaves with some African blood. Thomas Jefferson's children with Sally Hemmings, his deceased wife's half-sister, were in fact 87.5% white European, enslaved until they were 21 years of age and freed in his will. Slavery in the USA is not exclusively 'black', as most African Americans today have an average 25% white European ancestry but deplore their own mixed heritage.