Seminoles - Native Americans Who Never Surrendered

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  • Опубликовано: 20 мар 2021
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    Kings and Generals' historical animated documentary series on the history of the Native American Civilizations continues with a video on the Seminoles - the Native American tribe that never fully surrendered to the American government, despite three Seminole Wars between the United States and the tribes which emerged from the Creeks. The video will focus on the history and culture of the Seminoles, the wars against the USA and one of their leaders - Osceola.
    Tecumseh and Native American Resistance: • Tecumseh and the Nativ...
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    The video was made by Yağız Bozan and Murat Can Yağbasan, while the script was researched and written by Leo Stone. This video was narrated by Officially Devin ( / @offydgg & ruclips.net/channel/UC79s....
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    Production Music courtesy of EpidemicSound
    #Documentary #NativeAmericans #Seminoles

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @KingsandGenerals
    @KingsandGenerals  3 года назад +232

    Play World of Tanks for free here: tanks.ly/388EIdz

    • @saratmodugu4000
      @saratmodugu4000 3 года назад +14

      What about african empires like Waggadu, Sosso, Gao, Mali, Songhai caliphate, kanem bornu, agisymba, Garamantes and their vassals (agisymba, Ger (niger river, etc), and great fulani

    • @imperatorsverige1806
      @imperatorsverige1806 3 года назад +1

      Hey, I would really like a video about the Great Northern War or China's Tang dynasty. Great Channel, thanks for your great content!!

    • @eli-bk2mi
      @eli-bk2mi 3 года назад +2

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    • @nate4003
      @nate4003 3 года назад +8

      sim-men-nole

    • @jameskowanko7574
      @jameskowanko7574 3 года назад +14

      Dudes how the fuck did you accept the narrator here mispronuncing the titular fucking tribe? Reupload this video with fixed narration please

  • @jannestiemes4328
    @jannestiemes4328 3 года назад +5248

    So the Seminoles were apparently crazy enough to not surrender to an overwhelming force and they hunted alligators? I think we might have found the original Florida men.

    • @nedisahonkey
      @nedisahonkey 3 года назад +124

      Haha good one

    • @kylepessell1350
      @kylepessell1350 3 года назад +305

      Umm. Yeah? I mean they were literally some of the earliest inhabitants of Florida.

    • @rodrigoibanezcastrillo2783
      @rodrigoibanezcastrillo2783 3 года назад +299

      The spanish generals says that the natives of Florida are the most fearless and strong of the entire continent.

    • @jackhandma1011
      @jackhandma1011 3 года назад +70

      I see a man of culture.

    • @paleozoey
      @paleozoey 3 года назад +142

      the original florida men were the calusa. they had an entire settled civilization based around fishing and barely any agriculture. they fiercely resisted spanish incursion and iirc they killed ponce de leon. they unfortunately died out mostly of disease and the remainder were christianized and moved to cuba as florida was taken over by the british

  • @mystaniceguy
    @mystaniceguy 3 года назад +2206

    I’m a Florida native and I’ve never heard Seminole pronounced “Semin-Ollie” pretty sure it’s Seminole.

    • @MoctezumasRevenge1
      @MoctezumasRevenge1 3 года назад +103

      the name was given to them by the Spanish, that's why it's pronounced different than what you hear on TV.

    • @pitchforksdragon1252
      @pitchforksdragon1252 3 года назад +91

      I mean, like guacamole, you are both saying it wrong. Not seminol or Seminol-e "Seminol-aye"

    • @brettsteele7027
      @brettsteele7027 3 года назад +62

      I was going g to say the same thing. My dad was good friends with the Ocseola's. He shrimped with the Chief in Miami. They actually did surrender, but it wasn't until 1952. And it was under a flag of truce, while Chief Ocseola (the grandfarher) was in a South Carolina prison. Sad.

    • @BADDUDE_CORNPOP
      @BADDUDE_CORNPOP 3 года назад +24

      That's what I was thinking every time he said it

    • @johnbland1585
      @johnbland1585 3 года назад +14

      @@brettsteele7027 dates are wrong 1952??

  • @sarahoceanhart8145
    @sarahoceanhart8145 Год назад +96

    I once met a Seminole named Paul who was living in Colorado. He invited my sister and I into his off grid home for the evening. He had long red hair and big blue eyes. He sang to us, plus he had some of the most beautiful art pieces that were made from copper and stained glass. He was extremely talented artistically, so much so that he had written and sold out a musical. He was also really very kind. He told us that he didn't like being around people much but that we were always welcome back. We had such a nice time. I don't know Paul's last name and we were in such a remote part of Colorado that I could never find my way back to his house. He had such beautiful energy, he's one person I wish I could find so I could listen to him sing and admire his art again.

    • @grimble4564
      @grimble4564 Год назад +9

      @@alzheimerjoebiden4266 most people who are legally recognized as natives nowadays have some percentage of European or African DNA. I personally know people who are close to full-blood Cherokee but they have telling features like light colored eyes or hair. It's tragically rare to find people who are full native nowadays. It's sort of what happens when one culture colonizes another and the colonized are forced to assimilate or die.

    • @johnpeck5268
      @johnpeck5268 Год назад +3

      @@grimble4564 Purt nigh everyone got here before Columbus! View a galley of old faces & you
      will find a familiar one with a different comp[exion, perhaps.

    • @bigmad5653
      @bigmad5653 7 месяцев назад

      Paul was a $5 Indian

    • @Theshadowboxcollective
      @Theshadowboxcollective 7 месяцев назад +3

      I knew a guy named Paul, he used to be my plumber, he went prematurely bald and moved to Pittsburgh last summer. He also had a bladder problem and a bad infection on his toes.

    • @blkindians7974
      @blkindians7974 2 месяца назад

      ​@@grimble4564I'm sorry but you guys don't know what the original native Americans people look like, if you want to see damn near full blood indians you see them everyday, those are the folks you call black and/or African Americans.. they have 80% or more aboriginal blood in their veins, all these other people are just thieves to our culture....

  • @judith4505
    @judith4505 Год назад +18

    I also remembered Florida State trying to charge the Seminoles a rental tax.The case came to an end when Chief Billie told them ok, but the turnpike goes through our land, we will just build a toll booth. That was the end of the case . This was in Broward County Florida. Love Chief Billie

  • @Talosbug
    @Talosbug 3 года назад +1382

    Growing up in Florida, it’s crazy how many famous Indian names are incorporated into everyday life

    • @jamaaldaynitelong8367
      @jamaaldaynitelong8367 3 года назад +45

      Same here in North Carolina.

    • @user-db7vy8sf2h
      @user-db7vy8sf2h 3 года назад +123

      The same happens in all Americas

    • @javierrivera9824
      @javierrivera9824 3 года назад +61

      @@user-db7vy8sf2h yeah but in Florida it’s like every day stuff like In every day conversation

    • @Hideyoshi1991
      @Hideyoshi1991 3 года назад +43

      @U *Actual name of Tribe or sometimes American Indian(especially around reservations)

    • @sleepyboi8060
      @sleepyboi8060 3 года назад +44

      Same thing as wisco most our city names are native words/places. Muskego, Ashwabenon, Menominee, Milwaukee, Mukwanago, etc....

  • @C.R.W
    @C.R.W 3 года назад +1847

    Me at the 8 second mark.... He's going to say Seminoley the whole video.

    • @travisc3928
      @travisc3928 3 года назад +144

      Give the guy a break 🤣🤣🤣 He's obviously not from these parts lol Just let it ride...

    • @travisc3928
      @travisc3928 3 года назад +101

      It was a good piece regardless... and a good break from endless procession of videos on Rome. :::stab::: I'm just kidding these guys have plenty variety, absolutley love their work.

    • @talscorner3696
      @talscorner3696 3 года назад +13

      Welcome to the party, friend xD

    • @williamthefloridano
      @williamthefloridano 3 года назад +93

      He’s been narrating the Hellenes and Romans too long

    • @travisc3928
      @travisc3928 3 года назад +12

      @@williamthefloridano they have variety but as you're stating the overwhelming majority are such.

  • @julierobertson148
    @julierobertson148 Год назад +70

    I was born and raised in Miami. My dad made sure we understood Seminole origins (slavery included)and their heroic history. Hearing the name pronounced as 4 syllables made me clench my teeth but I'm so glad the tribe is finally being recognized for their unique place in history. Too bad others didn't find a defensible refuge where whites couldn't exploit/destroy who they were.

    • @JemimaNta
      @JemimaNta 10 месяцев назад +2

      What is the correct pronunciation?

    • @MarcillaSmith
      @MarcillaSmith 8 месяцев назад +7

      @@JemimaNta The anglicized version is SEHM-ih-noal (Seminole County, Seminole State College, etc.). However, the video - whether intentional or not - pronounces it more as one would in the MIccosukkee language - Sehm-ih-NOAL-ee. In fact, one of the three Seminole nations in Florida goes by "The Original Council of the Miccosukkee-Simanolee Nation."

    • @JemimaNta
      @JemimaNta 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@MarcillaSmith thank you

    • @michaelpalmatier3256
      @michaelpalmatier3256 4 месяца назад +3

      As another Seminole Descendant, I agree

    • @lilpinakeit4190
      @lilpinakeit4190 24 дня назад

      They had to go to Mexico to get away even then the whites were still chasing them, on to them

  • @bronzesnake7004
    @bronzesnake7004 2 года назад +11

    The "e" is silent, it's "sem-in-ol". Another great, informative video. This channel is at the top of my list among a few other similar channels which are all excellent sources of military history. I also appreciate the effort to explain the politics from both sides of these historical clashes as well the smaller details which many other sources rarely include such as the importance of resources for the war effort which was critical for success on any battlefield.
    A good comander understood the importance of carefully selecting the route toward a field of battle, and the ability to protect baggage trains and lines of communication, as quite often a battle field could be several miles/kilometers wide.
    Ceasar's success as a tactician would not have been possible had he not been an absolute master at procuring food and other essential resources, not only for his soldiers, but also for thd horses and elephants and any other brasts of burden. An example of a detail most never even consider when we're enjoying these awesome videos is the need for, and extremely important aspect of all these ancient battles is blacksmiths. Without blacksmiths, and steel you won't last very long!
    Horses need constant care, a hobbled horse very quickly becomes a meal on four legs, and you can't have cavalry if your horses are in your belly!
    Blacksmiths were an absolut necessity for making and repairing armour, as well as many, many other mundane aspects of daily life. Anything that required steel was made by blacksmiths, nails for building seigeworks etc.
    I guess I really appreciate this channel because it rises above most other channels which focus on battles only and leave out all these really essential, and extremely interesting details.
    Thank you!
    Jack Von Bronzesnake
    Keswick (Lake Simcoe) Ontario Canada

  • @mikhailmaimoonahoward
    @mikhailmaimoonahoward 3 года назад +1329

    The Seminole natives of the Jaguar Clan helped my family escape from slavery.We intermarried and still keep a lot of the same traditions today majority of my family still lives in Sanford Florida Keeping both are native African in Seminole traditions alive

    • @silkiethegoat171
      @silkiethegoat171 3 года назад +64

      that is so cool

    • @stevenlight5006
      @stevenlight5006 3 года назад +18

      That's nice.

    • @mikhailmaimoonahoward
      @mikhailmaimoonahoward 2 года назад +9

      @al red dog really? I love Mexico which area are they mostly found?

    • @im8285
      @im8285 2 года назад +12

      @mikhail Maimoona Howard I would love to visit your family, I’m from the Miccosukee/Seminole Panther clan from south florida

    • @WillieSandersIII
      @WillieSandersIII 2 года назад +13

      Bless your spirit. You're in gods favor. You're DNA survived the "parasitic draw".
      Edit: parasitic draw in this sense is the drainage of original culture and life from the "progression of humanity". The displacement of land and resources. And the fact that it's all being used by people without a good way to restore it.

  • @abcdef27669
    @abcdef27669 3 года назад +1153

    "We are losing terrain for those damn americans, chief! What we must do?!"
    "So we gonna beat them in their own terms... We will become businessmen!"

    • @antorseax9492
      @antorseax9492 3 года назад +7

      *losing

    • @crimsonnva2599
      @crimsonnva2599 3 года назад +46

      And it worked

    • @renel8964
      @renel8964 3 года назад +23

      And casino owners 👍🏽

    • @brandonatchison4769
      @brandonatchison4769 3 года назад +44

      Capitalism always wins 👍

    • @PopeSixtusVI
      @PopeSixtusVI 3 года назад +47

      Ding ding ding ding ding, we have a winner! (They figured it out)
      The smart Indian tribes are negotiating with energy companies to build pipelines straight through the middle of their territory; and securing contracts to be the only ones allowed to guard them. Do you know how much a private security contractor makes?

  • @kirkford7968
    @kirkford7968 2 года назад +35

    Being Cherokee myself i can honestly and proudly say that it would be most wonderful to have this blood flowing through my veins also. Nothing but love and respect for these people and their ways 💯💖🙏

    • @dilloncypress814
      @dilloncypress814 Год назад +3

      Every morning I wake up I thank my ancestors for the sacrifice they made so I can sit here I'm from the SEMINOLE TRIBE OF FLORIDA BIG CYPRESS

  • @Noah-nk1qm
    @Noah-nk1qm 2 года назад +1

    Great video, haven’t learned anything about the seminoles since my 6th grade state history class, keep it up

  • @johnrockefeller6893
    @johnrockefeller6893 3 года назад +802

    I didn’t expect hard rock making a camio in this episode

    • @comradeskeever1336
      @comradeskeever1336 3 года назад +55

      Legit thought that was going to be the sponsor of this video.

    • @miamidolphinsfan
      @miamidolphinsfan 3 года назад +18

      each member of the Seminole nation gets check for over $100,000 according to my friend Mike Osceola, a former Chiefs son

    • @Autobotmatt428
      @Autobotmatt428 3 года назад +5

      I first thought it was an advertisement

    • @brianmirras8590
      @brianmirras8590 3 года назад +3

      I live in Tampa and noles were banking renting the name then decided to buy the name being they had only full casino rights in fl

    • @sankarchaya
      @sankarchaya 3 года назад +1

      if you lived in tampa you might not, I was wondering why the local seminole reservation is literally the hard rock cafe

  • @mrhanekoma86
    @mrhanekoma86 3 года назад +1041

    I’m a Shawnee Native and I grew up in Oklahoma where many of us ended up. We are still here, that’s why I know the Seminole and I feel like being pedantic and saying that when they say their tribe name it ryhmes with “hole” not “holy” almost like “seminal”

    • @mrhanekoma86
      @mrhanekoma86 3 года назад +118

      That being said. I adore this content. I absolutely love these stories being told.
      As a Shawnee, your work on Tecumseh and his brother taught me things about my own history which I did not know. For that I can’t thank you enough 🙏

    • @vociferating
      @vociferating 3 года назад +77

      I agree. The content was great but hearing that mispronunciation was jarring every time.

    • @Eli-xg6fj
      @Eli-xg6fj 3 года назад +16

      Well not everyone speaks English the same way what's important is comprehending the words and understanding what he means to say.

    • @justinrobertson5493
      @justinrobertson5493 3 года назад +24

      They definitely messed up on the pronunciation. I live in Tallahassee where FSU is and the Seminole tribe is represented. Never heard it pronounced this way.

    • @xXxSkyViperxXx
      @xXxSkyViperxXx 3 года назад +17

      this channel does have a history of mispronouncing a lot of names...

  • @paleamigo8575
    @paleamigo8575 2 года назад

    Outstanding video with great information! Thank you!👍

  • @historywarriors2434
    @historywarriors2434 2 года назад

    A truly awesome video! Great to see!

  • @austinirwin2868
    @austinirwin2868 3 года назад +446

    Thank you, being a native of Florida many of our roads, cities, and counties are named after these native people but the history of them is rarely taught. It's awesome to learn the back story of this beautiful land.

    • @billhanna2148
      @billhanna2148 3 года назад +15

      And it's criminal and genocidal foundation

    • @jozzieokes3422
      @jozzieokes3422 3 года назад +1

      @@billhanna2148 are u from Florida?

    • @jamesyates4836
      @jamesyates4836 3 года назад +1

      @@billhanna2148 not criminal. Maybe genocidal

    • @sauron7839
      @sauron7839 3 года назад +14

      @@billhanna2148 unfortunately this is the way of the world. All we can do is try to be better as individuals. No use re-litigating the past every time it's mentioned.

    • @billhanna2148
      @billhanna2148 3 года назад +4

      @@sauron7839 cool 😎 handle 👍 but I'm not trying to litigate squat just keeping it real and in the context...🤔 and btw it's so RELEVANT today too

  • @Shinbusan
    @Shinbusan 3 года назад +949

    As a Polish citizen I never heard Seminole story or how black men were finding their place in the indian territory. Awesome piece of history. I would gladly here more stories about Native Americans. Thanks!

    • @ChonnyD
      @ChonnyD 3 года назад +38

      Look up Tecumseh on this same channel! Really good series

    • @xocolatl3682
      @xocolatl3682 3 года назад +92

      It happened here too in Louisiana. More slaves from Haiti were brought to New Orleans in 1803 and we staged a revolt with the choctaws in 1803. We later became free people of color. We’re the creoles.

    • @tylercooper1551
      @tylercooper1551 3 года назад +51

      @@xocolatl3682 I've read that many an ex slave became land owners in Louisiana even before slavery was banned. Hearing stories like that always make me smile because they fought the system and won

    • @michael198427
      @michael198427 3 года назад +28

      Many of the tribes are blacks look it up not the pictures they show my great great grandmother in my mothers side is cherokee and my fathers side is creek

    • @Tareltonlives
      @Tareltonlives 3 года назад +34

      Bit of trivia: when the Miami warchief Little Turtle sued for peace, he ran into Tadeusz Koscuiszko in Philadelphia. The weary old fighters were effectively in exile from their homelands, but had great respect for each other. Little Turtle gave him a tomahawk pipe, and Koscuiszko gave him a pair of pistols for use on "the first man who ever comes to subjugate you"

  • @AirgunAlley
    @AirgunAlley Год назад +1

    Wondeful video!! 👏🏼

  • @lejitthewastelandprince8550
    @lejitthewastelandprince8550 2 года назад +4

    Loved this! True history of the Americas.

  • @jamrocks101
    @jamrocks101 3 года назад +376

    And those 100 Seminoles that remained in South FL became the Miccosukee tribe and have their own reservation today. They inhabited what is the Tamiami Trail and set up shop and home along the trail that runs East from Miami, West to Naples. The Miccosukke’s are one of many different tribes that make up the Seminole nation.
    I’m a native of FL, from Miami. Absolutely brilliant video!

    • @nikomineyv9927
      @nikomineyv9927 3 года назад +12

      The seminole and miccosukee are separate tribe's with distinct languages.

    • @MarcillaSmith
      @MarcillaSmith 3 года назад +9

      It's so good to see someone comment with a little deeper knowledge! If I may underline what you're saying here, and as I understand it:
      - There are three "federally recognized tribes" of Seminoles. The largest is in Oklahoma. Then there is the Seminole Tribe of Florida (mentioned in the video as the 4,000 who own the casinos), and there is also - as you mention - the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida (400 members?).
      - Additionally, there is yet another group known as "Council of the Original Miccosukee Simanolee Nation" which numbers about 100, and are the - and I mean this in the best way - absolute most stubborn holdouts of the lot! They refuse millions of dollars the US government has already awarded them, because they will give NO quarter. As far as they're concerned, Big Cypress National Preserve's >1,000 square miles are theirs for the US Park Service to defend for them to continue to enjoy. They refuse to develop a written language because it's not part of their oral tradition.
      Born in Gainesville, graduated in Tallahassee, at one time assigned to the armory in Brooksville, but mostly I'm just one of the side attractions around Orlando, currently on tour in Raleigh, NC

    • @johnbland1585
      @johnbland1585 3 года назад

      @@nikomineyv9927 yep,lol.

    • @johnbland1585
      @johnbland1585 3 года назад +4

      They didnt just become Miccosukee, they always were.

    • @0711boomer
      @0711boomer 3 года назад +11

      Miccosukees are different tribe Seminoles and they mixed there language together. I can speak a little of Miccosukee language but more fluent of Seminole/Creek language

  • @simonphoenix3789
    @simonphoenix3789 3 года назад +370

    I have a tough time listening to any history of Native Americans. It starts out so good and gets so damn depressing towards the end.

    • @CedarHunt
      @CedarHunt 3 года назад +10

      The ending is the best part, the good guys win and America grows, bringing civilization with it.

    • @bb_bex
      @bb_bex 3 года назад +117

      @@CedarHunt You have to be joking. The colonizers are the "good guys"? The people who committed genocide? Are you really trying to justify the largest genocide in human history? Check your morals.

    • @GeneralLuigiTBC
      @GeneralLuigiTBC 3 года назад +47

      It hurts, but that's exactly why these kinds of stories need to be heard. I'm an American who loves his country, but that love must not blind me to my home's dark past. If I were to deny or ignore the misdeeds of my predecessors, then I wouldn't so much love the United States as a fictional version thereof. Knowing the truth does not make me hate the United States or ashamed to be an American. My idea of patriotism is a love of one's country that motivates one to make it better; learning about and acknowledging the less respectable parts of our past so that we may make things right is thus patriotic in my eyes.

    • @aegystierone8505
      @aegystierone8505 3 года назад +10

      Yeah but remember that Native tribes have been slaughtering each other long before the white men arrived. If you want to see how USA is like without white people just look at Central America now, their people longing to come to the USA.

    • @LordBandit200
      @LordBandit200 3 года назад +1

      I know, it really hurts.

  • @elijahjohnson601
    @elijahjohnson601 2 года назад

    Thank you for this video!

  • @jasontheflyingfarrierhays
    @jasontheflyingfarrierhays 2 года назад +43

    As a former combat Infantryman, my hat is off to those who fought and died bravely defending against federal aggression. 🙏⚡️

    • @stefanpigford2620
      @stefanpigford2620 Год назад +2

      👍💯

    • @ChrisJohnson-gz1vl
      @ChrisJohnson-gz1vl Год назад +3

      Against truly impossible odds.
      Broken treaties abounds from a government supposingly representing the land of the brave and free.
      I thank warriors everywhere resisting unjustified occupation.

    • @EmptyMan000
      @EmptyMan000 10 месяцев назад

      Ironic since you basically served in the Army that historically WAS that federal aggression. Honestly what a disgraceful soldier you are. Can't even be loyal to your own side.

    • @EmptyMan000
      @EmptyMan000 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@ChrisJohnson-gz1vl Don't pretend you care about them. You feed off the spoils of that unjustified occupation every day.

    • @josephdavis1704
      @josephdavis1704 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@EmptyMan000No he doesn't. You're delusional.

  • @fn2s145
    @fn2s145 3 года назад +374

    I grew up roaming the swamps of central Florida. Its an incredible experience to be able to run thr same swamps they did.

    • @MrUtuber29
      @MrUtuber29 3 года назад +9

      Leave their land then,pls.

    • @Mendrawza24
      @Mendrawza24 3 года назад +23

      @@MrUtuber29 b8

    • @MrLoobu
      @MrLoobu 3 года назад +2

      Great their gone is what your saying.

    • @wiiretime3704
      @wiiretime3704 3 года назад +2

      Loved wondering around the seams looking for listening trees the ones with those eat shaped seed pouches.

    • @mrhanekoma86
      @mrhanekoma86 3 года назад +9

      We still here. We’re all in Oklahoma now. Trail of tears cleared us out of Florida.

  • @jasonboney9389
    @jasonboney9389 3 года назад +706

    As a Native American I enjoy when you make a video of our people’s.

    • @delaval7767
      @delaval7767 3 года назад +15

      Enjoy oklahoma!

    • @sudhanshusingh9497
      @sudhanshusingh9497 3 года назад +5

      Whats your real name man

    • @gertoise
      @gertoise 3 года назад +2

      Hoka!

    • @coooll56
      @coooll56 3 года назад +2

      @@delaval7767 o see the baby right there.

    • @tejas5261
      @tejas5261 3 года назад +28

      Be what they used to be. Give up the western name. I'm sure you're proud of your heritage, express it. The more you become like them, the more you'll lose your identity.

  • @darinjames3313
    @darinjames3313 2 года назад +1

    This is some of the best news i think i ve ever heard.....im usually the last know though....so no biggie....ROCK n ROLL SEMINOLES!!!!.....this made my year.....thank you

  • @shawnmccormick6381
    @shawnmccormick6381 2 года назад +1

    I'm from New Hampshire but I drove by that Hard Rock Cafe last year. I went for the Space X launch. There is something wild about all the people who live there, but I just wanted to see all the plants and animals. Finally tried surfing as an adult. Great video.

  • @preplok3648
    @preplok3648 3 года назад +619

    Other than a few mispronunciations, I fucking love this as a Seminole. Seeing our history represented so well

    • @bradymayfield7969
      @bradymayfield7969 2 года назад +46

      It drove me crazy to hear Seminole, Micanopy and Chief Osceola pronounced wrong but somehow got Withlacoochee right.

    • @KimberlyWard-Evans717
      @KimberlyWard-Evans717 2 года назад +16

      How wonderful. I’ve only lived in Florida for 16 years. My son went to school here. He didn’t learn any of this despite the fact that he did a report on Andrew Jackson. He learned about “the Trail of Tears”; but never about the true Seminole. Blessings to you.

    • @altha2008
      @altha2008 2 года назад +1

      well least there was few mispronunciation in the video they did not have to show how uneducated person who made the video was by using a curse word

    • @PirateBooty68
      @PirateBooty68 2 года назад +17

      @Skip Mickmack don't you have klan meeting to be at?

    • @nordscan9043
      @nordscan9043 2 года назад

      @Denis Ashby You mean like the ancient Egyptians.

  • @HOPROPHETA
    @HOPROPHETA 3 года назад +316

    My people fought with the British, won many battles but eventually had to capitulate and were forcefully deported. Our group still speaks the language and my relative graduated West Point many years ago. Garinagu Nuguya!

    • @bilalyusuf6144
      @bilalyusuf6144 3 года назад +18

      I really wish the native americans a good rest of history!

    • @noneexistent2781
      @noneexistent2781 3 года назад +6

      The seminole were HALF BLACK

    • @ryankiesow1418
      @ryankiesow1418 3 года назад +13

      @@noneexistent2781 half? How do you know DNA from African slaves made up 50 percent of all members of the Seminole tribe

    • @magikurp2
      @magikurp2 3 года назад +24

      @@noneexistent2781 "were"? They still exist, and although all kinds of mixed people exists today all of the Seminoles are definitely not half African American

    • @chrisdonahue
      @chrisdonahue 3 года назад

      gg

  • @CarlosDiaz-kr6oh
    @CarlosDiaz-kr6oh Год назад

    This was a great video!

  • @msp420
    @msp420 2 года назад +1

    from Seminole Elementary in Miami....much love and respect for this.

  • @JoshuaBenitezNewOrleans
    @JoshuaBenitezNewOrleans 3 года назад +238

    I’m from New Orleans and I love seeing The Mississippian Peoples represented!!! Their spirit and energy still lives here. No doubt about it

    • @JoshuaBenitezNewOrleans
      @JoshuaBenitezNewOrleans 3 года назад +26

      Also, I hope everyone can now realize how much a peace of shit Andrew Jackson was

    • @soggybiscuitz5985
      @soggybiscuitz5985 3 года назад +3

      @@JoshuaBenitezNewOrleans Greatest karma is that he’s now in the face of the $20 bill

    • @chrisbass6060
      @chrisbass6060 3 года назад +2

      Most badass we've ever had for president

    • @lordski1981
      @lordski1981 3 года назад +6

      @@chrisbass6060 I believe that you may have forgotten about one Theodore Roosevelt....

    • @thirdeffect
      @thirdeffect Год назад

      💪🏽

  • @LostCommunication1
    @LostCommunication1 3 года назад +490

    Chief Osceola is the National hero figure of many generational Floridians.

    • @johnphillips2396
      @johnphillips2396 3 года назад +10

      But Billy Tiger brought the tribe into prosperity.

    • @floriduhman9520
      @floriduhman9520 3 года назад +14

      There is also a Billy Bowlegs festival every year in Ft. Walton Beach.

    • @0711boomer
      @0711boomer 3 года назад +6

      Billy Bowlegs and Chief wild Cat my great great great Grandpa's. We're 2 of the big National hero of the war. Osceola was too cause of stabbing the peace treating and killing his best friend who wanted to sign the peace treaty.

    • @PandaForceTwo
      @PandaForceTwo 3 года назад +5

      Went to Osceola elementary in volusia county Florida. We sung the national anthem in school so I gotta agree with lostcommunication1

    • @ryanrodriguez7911
      @ryanrodriguez7911 3 года назад +2

      @@johnphillips2396 yes sir

  • @Bawlzmcgruff
    @Bawlzmcgruff 2 года назад +5

    I've been to okmulgee Indian grounds in Macon Georgia I grew up around there. There is so much hidden history that we have either covered up or ignored in this area.. great to see someone paying attention to a great nation that we know almost nothing about

    • @brucemorrison2132
      @brucemorrison2132 2 года назад +1

      I'm from Macon as well, but unfortunately my family moved to the West Coat when I was only 7. So, lucky you, my friend !

    • @yungfrogleg
      @yungfrogleg 11 месяцев назад

      Amen brother, imma GA boy myself, got native ancestry, It pisses me off so bad how they cover our beautiful southern/native/american history up and purposefully tell us not even half the stories. Native American cultures should be foremost on this land, we have so much to learn and gain from following in our indigenous relatives footsteps

  • @jacksongagne8639
    @jacksongagne8639 4 месяца назад

    Fascinating stuff. I hardly knew any of this before!

  • @johnlouisgood
    @johnlouisgood 3 года назад +201

    Sem-in-ol the "e" is silent.

    • @jamaaldaynitelong8367
      @jamaaldaynitelong8367 3 года назад +22

      😂 Facts...I don't think he's American so we gotta give him a pass.

    • @rebelcities8200
      @rebelcities8200 3 года назад +10

      Mate he absolutely butchers English pronunciation as well. He gets so many places names in England wrong, and even kings and famous figures. Just wild. I think it is actually a bot and not a human as clearly the K and G team do not ever correct him.
      You should see the comments on anything where he has to Derby.

    • @railrunner01
      @railrunner01 3 года назад +6

      Also: Osceola: I believe the C is silent, therefore no K sound.

    • @jamaaldaynitelong8367
      @jamaaldaynitelong8367 3 года назад +3

      @@railrunner01 Right...he can't be American like he's never seen a Florida St football game in his life😁

    • @TheWesterlyWarlock
      @TheWesterlyWarlock 3 года назад +5

      @@rebelcities8200 Damnit. Now that you said you think it's a bot, I can't unhear it. This is totally a custom AI.

  • @Akabari100
    @Akabari100 3 года назад +61

    Kings and Generals- thanks so much for having this series on the Native American struggles. I found this to be overlooked when I was in school. Learning about Tecumseh was a real treat.

  • @deborahherrin3214
    @deborahherrin3214 2 года назад +2

    They sound like amazing people! I hope to meet them all.

  • @student_of_life9656
    @student_of_life9656 Год назад

    Thanks for the information.

  • @camrendavis6650
    @camrendavis6650 3 года назад +109

    MY ANCESTORS!!! thank you so much for finally making a video on the unconquered.

  • @eedwardgrey2
    @eedwardgrey2 3 года назад +67

    21:46" ...they adopted a new policy that basically amounted to 'Whatever man' ". Wasn't expecting that one

    • @foleymcfoley9720
      @foleymcfoley9720 3 года назад +8

      jackson: "get off ma lawn"
      buchanan: "whatever, man"

  • @humphreycamel3024
    @humphreycamel3024 2 года назад

    Seeing this video made me very happy as a half Seminole person it makes me happy getting Seminole history out there

  • @stevelawrie9115
    @stevelawrie9115 2 года назад +1

    An amazing story of a brave and strong people.

  • @stasylumbassist1
    @stasylumbassist1 3 года назад +168

    Love how Kings&Generals is showing love to my Native people's. My tribal affiliation is Navajo, but Native American Warrior Culture still burns bright in the U.S. Military.

    • @rcgunner7086
      @rcgunner7086 3 года назад +11

      Yup, you see some Native American symbology in many units' insignia. My favorite is the 45th Infantry Division- the Thunderbird Division.

    • @cefb8923
      @cefb8923 3 года назад +7

      You see it in sports too, that's why I never got the whole changing the name, PC, bs. When you have a indian chieftain as your mascot it's saying you're a great warrior, you're fearless, fierce etc.

    • @a.m928
      @a.m928 2 года назад

      @@cefb8923 well changing the names of bases namee after traitors is just common sense

    • @AdamFuller50
      @AdamFuller50 2 года назад

      @@a.m928 Secession is legal, the real traitors are not who you think they are

    • @a.m928
      @a.m928 2 года назад +3

      @@AdamFuller50 so your a supporter of slavery then ? The Confederate and all those affiliated were traitors who ambushed and attacled the US army

  • @mbodi1
    @mbodi1 3 года назад +39

    I cannot express enough gratitude for your accounts of historical events and people all over the world. Keep up the good work man!

  • @kendenton6061
    @kendenton6061 2 года назад

    I was born in Fort Walton Beach, Florida and went to many Billy Bowlegs parades. I never understood the connection until this video but I seem to remember Billy Bowlegs was portrayed as some sort of pirate. It was just a fun family day at the parade. Thanks for the walk into the history lesson of those days and the memories of my childhood.

  • @charlesbullghost5491
    @charlesbullghost5491 2 года назад +5

    The Seminoles remind of crazy horse and sittingbull. There all the greatest warriors to ever emerge on the battle field of victory!

  • @williamthefloridano
    @williamthefloridano 3 года назад +77

    My family has been in Florida since at least the 1830s. In that time, they lived alongside the Seminole peoples enough for my great-grandfather and grandfather to be welcomed to hunt on their reservations in the Everglades. Our family has always had a great respect for them.

    • @RJT80
      @RJT80 3 года назад +18

      It's not known real well at all but through much of the 16th and 17th centuries Natives were well respected. In publications they were seen as noble. In Washington DC they traveled openly and met with the founders who considered them friends. The problem was really when settlers kept creeping along the wide open plains and eventually, and at first unknowingly, entered the world of the plains tribes. That brought a lot of high profile, intense acts of violence against young settlers on their own land. Even then there were periods of peace stretching decades where nothing happened. But that truly ended when a young settler family was raped, tortured and killed by plains Indians in grusome detail. The young mother was raped in front of her young children and vice versa before being butchered alive. Overnight the dime store novels shifted to the Cowboys vs Indians trope and politicians in Washington DC couldn't really calm the storm that would come. Even then, the roughly 300 years of the Indian Wars was far less one sided than most believe. The bow and arrow was a superior weapon to the early rifles and sidearms. By the time repeating rifles and the Walker Colt arrived on the scene the French had been trading them to the tribes. So the Texas Rangers and the US Army thought rhey had a massive advantage and were quite shocked to see the Comanche and other tribes and bands field the same force multipliers they did at the exact same time.
      In reality it was the Spanish who killed off 90% of the Native Americans. The US just never found a way to keep a lasting peace with them. A few generals wanted them eradicated but they didn't have their commissions for long. The US never had a policy of genocide. It was simply a story of unfortunate acts on both sides that kept driving the violence.

    • @wutelgiwithagun8832
      @wutelgiwithagun8832 3 года назад +1

      @@RJT80 was this necessary >.>

    • @303TAG303
      @303TAG303 3 года назад

      @@comradekenobi6908 lmao

    • @mr.osamabingaming2633
      @mr.osamabingaming2633 3 года назад

      @@wutelgiwithagun8832 I think so

  • @aaronm8143
    @aaronm8143 3 года назад +46

    The Seminole’s are the pride of Florida. Favorite part of Florida history is going over the native Floridian History. It’s very rich here, but a lot of people don’t know that.

  • @x4x4offroad87
    @x4x4offroad87 2 года назад

    Man that was great I love the history I was wondering about the song roll roll Seminole wind and now I know where that comes from Love it

  • @kahfre3694
    @kahfre3694 2 года назад +1

    The most awesome story ever in American history. Lived in SW Florida for 10 yrs

  • @austin1470
    @austin1470 3 года назад +311

    I love that Florida State University use the Seminoles as their mascot and the Seminole Tribe of Florida sanction it

    • @alexscott821
      @alexscott821 3 года назад +54

      If I understand the arrangement correctly, the Florida Seminoles tribe is paid royalties for the university's use of the name.

    • @professorfleX420
      @professorfleX420 3 года назад +66

      And that is how you honor a Native American tribe not steal their name and leave em out of everything. Seminoles were proud warriors.

    • @WmJared
      @WmJared 3 года назад +27

      @@alexscott821 That's not exactly true. They pay a very small subset of Seminoles, and the Seminole Nation is not okay with it. They made a shady af deal with people who did not have the ability to sign the name away, and they give a mere pittance of what they could.

    • @mrhanekoma86
      @mrhanekoma86 3 года назад +9

      Man, the mascot of the high school in the town south of me are known as the Tecumseh Savages...

    • @bricklanzo1484
      @bricklanzo1484 3 года назад +9

      @@mrhanekoma86 I don't know where the hell you live, but my town canceled a name of a school because it was called dixie. A land that is still referred to as such to this day. They canceled the name of the school because of the "racist heritage" but I don't understand that because it was the past and the place that I live in didn't even support the south during the civil war. That is like canceling the name of England because of the horrible stuff that England did. I have no idea how you live by a high school that has Tecumseh Savages as their mascot if they canceled the name of Dixie State University for representing slave owners.

  • @Samevistan
    @Samevistan 11 месяцев назад +2

    Absolutely remarkable. They never left their land. Makes complete sense why hurricanes never destroy the area. Their magic has merit through the sacrifice they’ve made through immeasurable odds.

  • @Amagayle-vd6si
    @Amagayle-vd6si Год назад +2

    Seminole Wind by John Anderson is a great song!!
    My grandma’s side of the family were Seminole.. she and her brother were named after Chief Osceola.
    I remember being a kid and my mama telling me about how they were the last and only tribe not to surrender to the government.
    I also remember her telling me how they lived close to the river and in swamplands to evade the government.

    • @petebondurant58
      @petebondurant58 Год назад

      I named my dog after the Indian chief from F-Troop. He got run over by a dump truck.

    • @matimus100
      @matimus100 11 месяцев назад

      It's natives in a America !

  • @Sumit-Sh
    @Sumit-Sh 3 года назад +279

    As an Indian (East) I wish our namesake American Indians good health, prosperity and more power to you.

    • @steviepigford2356
      @steviepigford2356 3 года назад +6

      ✝️💙

    • @justinnamuco9096
      @justinnamuco9096 3 года назад +8

      It helps to call them Amerindians

    • @Tsumami__
      @Tsumami__ 3 года назад +15

      @@justinnamuco9096 technically, both native Americans and people from the indian subcontinent are both genetically asiatic.

    • @noticemesenpai69
      @noticemesenpai69 3 года назад +4

      @@Tsumami__ many of the seminoles were escaped slaves

    • @aboriginalamericantruths9644
      @aboriginalamericantruths9644 3 года назад +10

      You're Hindustan/Bharat not Indian. Your Asian people were brought to the Americas via the Manila Galleon as slaves of the Spanish. "India" needs to stay out American business beginning with maintaining their own national identity instead of engaging in commercial fraud.

  • @blueturtle06
    @blueturtle06 3 года назад +48

    As a member of the Leech Lake band of Ojibwe, I do enjoy and appreciate your content the wars Natives have fought. I can not wait till you finally do one on my own tribe. Till then I will devour all your content as I have been doing, great work.

    • @RavenFeathers90
      @RavenFeathers90 3 года назад +2

      Hello! I'm a member Bad River Band of Ojibwe! Nice to see a shout-out from Native friends/relatives! I'm mostly white, but I do share ancestry on my grandfathers side. He grew up on the res and told me stories how the nuns at his boarding school would hit him with a ruler when he tried to write with his left hand. But I hear that's a common experience with lots of elders who were taught in christian schools. I haven't visited the relatives up in Odanah in over 10 years. I live in Madison and don't drive so getting up to northern WI is a challenge. I wish I grew up near my tribe because I feel like I didn't get the full family/cultural experience. So yeah I've been in soul searching contemplation for the past several years on who I am and what my identity is. I wanted to reclaim and relearn Ojibwe culture, but have always been very self conscious about my white skin.

  • @Cali415
    @Cali415 2 года назад

    Wow super interesting!!!!

  • @chrisdjernaes9658
    @chrisdjernaes9658 2 года назад +21

    Thanks for summarizing a vary dark time in American History. This story was and continues to be repeated all over the world in the Clash of Civilizations.

    • @kimwalter8753
      @kimwalter8753 2 года назад +3

      Hopefully with the right amount of good minded, good hearted people, God's servants, and light workers, America and the world can be usherd into the light. The light of The Most High and Christ.

    • @davidlenz9902
      @davidlenz9902 2 года назад

      Why do people make silly statements like this? Lol. Are you going back to Europe then? To right the wrongs of this "dark time" in history? Are you going to donate to native American tribes? Didn't think so. Enough with the silly, pointless and childish emotional reactions, and enjoy history for what it is.. HISTORY.

    • @ronswanson2088
      @ronswanson2088 Год назад

      I don’t think the current Italians feel the negative effects of the battle of Allia as significantly as the families of the Natives who were forced on the trail of tears who’s family can still recount stories of what occurred. Can you be shocked that different people have different perspectives? Your idea of History is a lot more real for some than others.

    • @marcrolle4601
      @marcrolle4601 Год назад

      You mean summarize an absolute amazing chapter in American history, right?

    • @EmptyMan000
      @EmptyMan000 10 месяцев назад

      @@kimwalter8753 Keep hoping because that's not going to happen because that's not why America exists. It is one nation among several, it's not it's job to preach to the world and usher anyone into the light.

  • @michaelknight5732
    @michaelknight5732 3 года назад +28

    Love your doing a video about the Seminoles. I'm a Florida boy born and raised and love my state's history hope y'all do more.

    • @mikemodugno5879
      @mikemodugno5879 3 года назад +1

      True

    • @mikefrost6646
      @mikefrost6646 3 года назад +1

      As a Floridian and St. Augustine being one of my favorite places to visit. When I visited Savannah and saw all of the British buildings I just kept muttering fucking colonizers. I’m also 50% Irish, so I might be slightly biased😂

  • @colbywilliams8549
    @colbywilliams8549 2 года назад +181

    Overall I loved this video. A couple things did stick with me though and bothered me. From what I read in “Florida Exiles” a book written contemporaneously with the Seminole wars, Osceola killed Thompson after Thompson stole and enslaved his wife. Not a lack of character. Also to say the army turned to “harassing” women and children, when in reality they attacked villages and held the survivors hostage to force warriors into submission, is too soft. Other than that, as a Floridian archaeologist, I can’t tell you how much I enjoyed seeing this part of history be told. And the inclusion of the African American aspect was great, it is a story often left out. Thank you, I hope I don’t offend with my comments.

    • @randylahey345
      @randylahey345 2 года назад +8

      That's part of the issue with covering history, we can never trust the opposing narratives. It's part of our human nature to side with our own. However, we can at least get the jist of the story and somewhat how things came to be as they are. I've always found ancient Greek history to be my favorite, yet the sources themselves often question the validity of the stories they tell. I find that especially ironic considering that Native American history is known for tall-tales due to their history predominately carrying on verbally. Of course this was beyond that point, just an observation. Human history is essentially just a frustratingly childish game of telephone. I'm certainly not questioning your knowledge on the subject, I have little knowledge of FL at all other than it's a humid peninsula, haha. Best wishes friend.

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 2 года назад +5

      As a Native Floridian, and an Archaeological surveyor myself, I have to ask. Have you ever visited Silver Springs? The main spring head forms a small lake, and is the exact place where Osceola was betrayed and captured by the Army. A large bromze statue sits on the site today, in honor of the man. The Glass Bottom Boats are each named after a Seminole cheiftain, including Cheif Osceola and Cheif Yalaha. The history of the Seminole and Ft. King are major focal points of the boat tours. I worked there for many years, and actually cut my teeth as a surveyor on the Ft. King archaeological dig there.

    • @colbywilliams8549
      @colbywilliams8549 2 года назад +4

      I went to silver springs once on a school field trip but I was too young to know this history. Considering what you’ve mentioned I’d really like to go back and see the statue! Awesome to hear about your experience with Ft. King. I grew up down the road from the original path that now is part of 301, but I didn’t know the history until I got older. It’s truly all around us.

    • @davidlenz9902
      @davidlenz9902 2 года назад

      You offended me. Now apologize.

    • @symbaian
      @symbaian Год назад

      Colby Williams if you are a Floridian archeologist i have an artifact id like you to look at and see if you can identify it.

  • @Sunnyrezzychild
    @Sunnyrezzychild Год назад +9

    Man just hearing the war-cries of our people fighting for our land and ways of life, it gives me goosebumps. Makes me sad n angry n proud all at the same time, it’s kinda hard to explain. We are still here✊🏽

    • @petebondurant58
      @petebondurant58 Год назад

      EVERYONE is still EVERYWHERE.

    • @seanmikaeel90s50
      @seanmikaeel90s50 Год назад

      @@petebondurant58 LOL don't downplay this guy just like the other side not the down play you everybody has a part to play in this history

  • @abovedacloudz9315
    @abovedacloudz9315 Год назад

    This is some Amazing history right here

  • @joaopedrogameiro1408
    @joaopedrogameiro1408 3 года назад +80

    Growing up in central Fl most of our country’s and roads are named after all these tribes and peoples but the history was never taught. Really glad you guys made a video of it!

    • @admontblanc
      @admontblanc 3 года назад +9

      The history was taught, just not in your time as current institutional powers don't like certain aspects of it.

    • @Sigmanovar
      @Sigmanovar 3 года назад +4

      @@admontblanc yea the uprising and rebellion

    • @tiptoe38
      @tiptoe38 3 года назад +2

      The history is not pretty

    • @Sigmanovar
      @Sigmanovar 3 года назад +1

      @@tiptoe38 extremely violent, honestly alot of,war, battles,clan fighting and genocide.

    • @TheEnigmaticBM39
      @TheEnigmaticBM39 3 года назад +3

      Many people are trying to stop certain history from being taught in school.

  • @rildraug
    @rildraug 3 года назад +98

    Eastern Band of the Cherokee avoided the Trail of Tears. Keep it up!

    • @josephstorm6093
      @josephstorm6093 2 года назад +2

      But only if they gave up their Tsalgi citizenship. There's always more to these stories than most know.

    • @rildraug
      @rildraug 2 года назад +1

      @@josephstorm6093 didn't know that, Wadoh.

  • @HeartCocoCloud
    @HeartCocoCloud 2 года назад

    Heard there last standoff was at wekiwa springs love my Seminoles thank you for being strong

  • @E.I.D.369
    @E.I.D.369 2 года назад

    Nice, nice, nice...very nice docu!

  • @LeoWarrior14
    @LeoWarrior14 3 года назад +571

    The lesson here is, if you've been put in charge of forcefully deporting an entire people from their homeland, maybe don't give their chieftain a rifle.

    • @Ksd99
      @Ksd99 3 года назад +3

      It’s ten hours because of Patreon btw (I think)

    • @newvocabulary
      @newvocabulary 3 года назад +42

      Which is why the government works tirelessly to strip us of our 2nd amendment rights.

    • @mikeyikeygamer2489
      @mikeyikeygamer2489 3 года назад +69

      @@newvocabulary that’s not a good comparison💀... they were fighting to keep their ancestral homelands and way of life from outsiders, gun laws in most states are fairly loose and no one is trying to take your land and way of life

    • @cr-jj1nr
      @cr-jj1nr 3 года назад +20

      @@newvocabulary when they actually decide to do that it wont be hard at all for them you brainwashed zombie

    • @Crusader-ct1qv
      @Crusader-ct1qv 3 года назад +11

      @@newvocabulary
      Based.

  • @abcdef27669
    @abcdef27669 3 года назад +24

    Great video, as always!
    Another interesting fact about the runaway slaves that joined the Seminoles: In 1693, king Charles II of Spain issued a royal decree, providing sanctuary for every slave from the northern english colonies. The objective was to increase the population in Florida and at the same time undermine the labor force of english plantations.
    The royal decree was formalised in 1733 by Charles II sucessor, Phillip V. The result was the founding of Santa Teresa de Mose, the first legally sanctioned free black settlement in the Americas.

    • @matimus100
      @matimus100 11 месяцев назад

      Natives were there long before America nonsense

  • @arislopes1924
    @arislopes1924 5 месяцев назад

    I’m a Dade county local and I go out and cycle through different parts of the Everglades and I just admire the beautiful nature but also being aware of all the history and culture created in this place. One story some Miami locals know is the one of chief chekika who led a successful raid on the Indian key town part of the Florida keys and then paddled their way back into the immense river of grass into his secret hideout in a tree island that’s now located close to the Tamiami trail highway, until he way found & raided by some general from fort Dallas which is now where downtown Miami is. Out of the millions of people that call south Florida home very few know its history

  • @DuncanDimanche-sreview
    @DuncanDimanche-sreview Год назад

    well now you have an amazing scrip ! who's gonna make the movie ?

  • @terryfox4798
    @terryfox4798 3 года назад +42

    Seminole.... pronounced Sem·​i·​nole | \ ˈse-mə-ˌnōl
    The final "e" is silent. This pronunciation is not open to British interpretation.

    • @alexyoungberg5232
      @alexyoungberg5232 2 года назад +1

      The seminoleys got wiped out anyway so who gives a shit.

    • @libidinalmaterialist9470
      @libidinalmaterialist9470 2 года назад +1

      Boy do I have some news for you

    • @FrontierTradingCompany
      @FrontierTradingCompany 2 года назад +3

      I just can't take the mispronunciation. Couldn't finish the video.

    • @Jagueyes1
      @Jagueyes1 2 года назад +1

      @@FrontierTradingCompany
      Agreed. Very annoying. What a fundamental piece of information to get WRONG.. Wow!

    • @kmmediafactory
      @kmmediafactory 2 года назад

      @@Jagueyes1 give the channel some credit, they’re already doing a lot. Not saying that I like mispronunciations, it’s gets on your nerves after a while, but the video is still good.

  • @Pays2Win
    @Pays2Win 3 года назад +155

    I’d love to hear more about the relationship between the African American slaves and the native peoples. That should prove to be a very interesting topic.

    • @Spongebrain97
      @Spongebrain97 3 года назад +16

      Its interesting and really varies in that some coexisted such as with the Seminoles as well as in the north and west but there were also some tribes that did practice slavery based on race. In the Civil War for instance the tribes in the south actually mostly allied with the Confederacy because they too didn't want to give up their slaves and some even had high ranks in the Confederate Army.

    • @Pays2Win
      @Pays2Win 3 года назад +16

      @@Spongebrain97 It’s a history that should be told.

    • @tobiahrowswell2928
      @tobiahrowswell2928 2 года назад +13

      There's a similar example of this happening with escaped African Canadian slaves in Halifax and Louisburg up in Nova Scotia being sheltered by the local Mi'kmaq

    • @sheltowee8079
      @sheltowee8079 2 года назад +2

      Weird history has a decent one

    • @leoniegureghian4015
      @leoniegureghian4015 2 года назад +2

      @Tobiah Rowswell: The story I wld really like to read/hear
      Plse advise
      Tks

  • @williambailey9917
    @williambailey9917 2 года назад +50

    my great grandma walked the trail of tears, she passed well before i was born but an aunt told me the trail earned its name. she also told me the warriors knew how to talk to the alligators, when they retreated to the swamp, they could tell them to attack the soldiers.

    • @Anti_Septikum
      @Anti_Septikum Год назад +2

      Yeah the alligator thing is made up

    • @williambailey9917
      @williambailey9917 Год назад +5

      @@Anti_Septikum what i heard was from my aunt, she heard it from her grandmother who was in florida as a young girl. im going to believe them instead of you.

    • @Anti_Septikum
      @Anti_Septikum Год назад

      @@williambailey9917 try it out maybe you can go to the swamp and start patting them maybe they'll even give you a hug

    • @williambailey9917
      @williambailey9917 Год назад

      @@Anti_Septikum lions tiger elephants snakes dolphins orcas and many other wild animals have been trained to do tricks in a short period of time. if you have lived within a few feet of an killer for a hundred years or more, your pretty much dead or have learned how to co-exist but im sure thats a bit above your head. maybe if you watched popeye rub their bellys putting them to sleep you could understand.

    • @johnjohnon8767
      @johnjohnon8767 Год назад

      Some were able to get away on the trail of tears. Here in Missouri some found freedom. At least by not moving further west. No ill intended.

  • @RobertReg1
    @RobertReg1 2 года назад

    Pretty awesome vid

  • @HistoryOfRevolutions
    @HistoryOfRevolutions 3 года назад +263

    "They came with a Bible and their religion- stole our land, crushed our spirit... and now tell us we should be thankful to the 'Lord' for being saved"
    - Chief Pontiac, American Indian Chieftain

    • @yersiniapestis5237
      @yersiniapestis5237 3 года назад +13

      @پیر الکساندر خان *Abrahamic Religions

    • @billhanna2148
      @billhanna2148 3 года назад +23

      ALL "religions" are a corruption and the first corporate welfare system that does NOTHING for it's victim followers

    • @fitnetwork7350
      @fitnetwork7350 3 года назад +12

      Its sad to live in your own country as a stranger 😑😔

    • @Monke-fj2qz
      @Monke-fj2qz 3 года назад +28

      This is the opposite of what Christianity is supposed to be, sad how Americans/Europeans used religion as an excuse to justify their horrible conquests.

    • @delaval7767
      @delaval7767 3 года назад +1

      Yeah you better or we'll take you to oklahoma!

  • @MrLoobu
    @MrLoobu 3 года назад +60

    Much respect for the man whos people are gone, pushed from his home, bribed, but still has the heart to give his life and honour to kill his enemies untill the end.

    • @jboss119
      @jboss119 3 года назад +1

      Do you feel the same about the tribes that lived there before?

    • @ante5544
      @ante5544 3 года назад +1

      @@jboss119 I feel there's an insinuation there, care to explain what you mean?

    • @jboss119
      @jboss119 3 года назад +1

      @@ante5544sure.... unrealistic nostalgia.... Your turn.

    • @ante5544
      @ante5544 3 года назад

      @@jboss119 I still don't quite understand what you're digging at. The statement MrLoobu gave was one of admiration for not giving up the fight. While implicitly he's referring to the Seminole, it isn't a statement exclusive to them, and could, presumably, extend to the tribes that inhabited Florida before them

    • @CedarHunt
      @CedarHunt 3 года назад +3

      @@ante5544 His point seems to be that the Seminole were just as expansionist and militant as anyone and they conquered land, described in the video as "settling land", by killing and subjugating the people who were there before them. So the question is do the people killed by the Seminole deserve the same amount of respect being put on the Seminole for fighting the US?

  • @johnjohnon8767
    @johnjohnon8767 Год назад +1

    Met a Seminole I tulsa last year, he was alright. And proud of it too. I , my self knew this already.

  • @ThatHotToast
    @ThatHotToast Год назад

    I know seminoles and grew up around many and they are truly some of the most interesting people and the quiet ones are the fiercest

  • @Nhosto
    @Nhosto 3 года назад +50

    Note how they decried Osceola's capture, but did not release him.

    • @arkadeepmukherjee4701
      @arkadeepmukherjee4701 3 года назад +5

      That is liberalism in a nutshell

    • @SkywalkerExpress
      @SkywalkerExpress 3 года назад +3

      they cannot, after all Osceola was an enemy and must be captured anyway. But they should punish or give harsh sanction to the General who devise and execute that dirty tactic.

    • @mikefrost6646
      @mikefrost6646 3 года назад

      How about when he and his warriors starved themselves to escape Castillo De San Marcos?

    • @PolishBehemoth
      @PolishBehemoth 3 года назад +1

      Notice how the left cries about poor black people but refuses to help with job growth and boosting the family structure?

    • @brucemorrison2132
      @brucemorrison2132 2 года назад

      Tragic treachery !

  • @slinky6481
    @slinky6481 3 года назад +4

    These animations are reaching truly epic levels. Bravo!

  • @trentalexander-maguire7813
    @trentalexander-maguire7813 6 месяцев назад +1

    This was excellent and I’d like to see some more indigenous history videos from North America. As a Canadian, Louis Riel is a very interesting possible topic.

  • @didiervandijk9713
    @didiervandijk9713 Год назад

    Very good piece on the Seminoles

  • @omartistry
    @omartistry 3 года назад +91

    As an African American myself from Florida, I loved learning about the Seminole wars. Especially the Black Seminoles that allied with them so survive against colonialism and became the most successful slave rebellions in the united states. Proud Gullah/Geechee Afro Seminole.

    • @lordblazer
      @lordblazer 2 года назад +3

      What are the freedmen family bands in the Seminole Naiton of Florida? I'm from Oklahoma I'm a Seminole Freedman too.

    • @neptuneatlantic4883
      @neptuneatlantic4883 2 года назад +8

      We have Seminoles in Bahamas too !!! 🇧🇸 Bowleg is a popular family name.

    • @EnterAdman
      @EnterAdman 2 года назад +4

      I learned it as the Gullah War. Love our shared histories.

    • @joeypollack5651
      @joeypollack5651 2 года назад +3

      If they had not murdered Osceola ....can only imagine how much more they would have won

    • @emachine138
      @emachine138 2 года назад +2

      Afro seminole do not exist in Florida let me repeat do not, I am from south Florida I constantly visit the tribe lands and let me tell you everyone there is pure native decent not one African, I believe this is made up history of old integrated society’s by the white man changing our view of history, although African were not treated bad by natives they also did not mix with them for obvious reasons

  • @lordmonfort
    @lordmonfort 3 года назад +30

    27 years living in south Florida and many trips to the Mickosukee, and I have never heard "Seminole" pronounced like that. You think a 2 minute search would have provided the correct pronunciation...to a Floridian, this is like nails on a chalkboard.

    • @randylahey345
      @randylahey345 2 года назад +2

      He's British, give him a break. I wouldn't be able to pronounce it without watching college sports. Also, you used a population of people that grew up in the region would know how to pronounce Seminole, therefore, your proposed study is totally invalid. I'm from Illinois and have never heard anyone from IL use a 's' at the end. I've heard tons of foreigners say Illinoissss

    • @michaelrubio7070
      @michaelrubio7070 2 года назад

      No crying

    • @panko_the_plantigore5653
      @panko_the_plantigore5653 2 года назад

      I’m from Oklahoma and pronounce it Illinoi not Illinois. Though I guess we have Miami as “My-Am-A”

    • @brucemorrison2132
      @brucemorrison2132 2 года назад

      Absolutely AGREE !! (And I'm from Georgia)

  • @yogiminnick5994
    @yogiminnick5994 2 года назад

    My mother is Seminole and my father is Teslagi both Oklahoma raised, then moved to Australia where I was born and I know very little about my background so it was really cool to find this video, educational and couldn't help but feel proud

    • @chestersabajo5527
      @chestersabajo5527 Год назад

      Are there native Americans in Australia??

    • @yogiminnick5994
      @yogiminnick5994 Год назад

      I only know of 1 other family in Australia that are native American I've never met any others but I'm sure there are more here and all over the world, my father is ex army served in Iraq and Afghanistan he did RNR in Australia and loved it so much he and my mother moved here to live after his service he's retired from the army now and works for the railroad company and 1 of the men he works with is creek nation native, Australia has there own indigenous peoples we call them first nations but around the world known as Australian Aboriginal, theres not much knowledge of native American culture in Australia, many people of different backgrounds live here but the native American population is low low like I said only know of 1 other family that moved here from the states

  • @BigBackInk
    @BigBackInk 2 года назад +1

    I remember learning that Chief Osceola was doing a hunger strike and that's what lead to his decline in health. He was being held at Fort Castillo De San Marcos in St. Augustine. Of course this was when I was in elementary school going to field trips to the Fort back in the 80's and 90's.

  • @memyself8043
    @memyself8043 3 года назад +4

    This is some really great content! you never hear about this anywhere! thank you!

  • @pedrozepeda6930
    @pedrozepeda6930 3 года назад +41

    I would love to see a whole series about American Indians, war and history

    • @povertychef46
      @povertychef46 3 года назад +8

      American Indians don't really have a history of war here, though. Native Americans do. (American Indian is an Indian who moved to America).

    • @johnvallery5539
      @johnvallery5539 3 года назад +1

      It’ll probably make you hate white ppl even more just like pretty much all American history stories

    • @snoqualmiepatkanim
      @snoqualmiepatkanim 3 года назад +2

      @@povertychef46 American Indians are Indigenous to the Western Hemisphere.
      Indian Americans are Indigenous to the Eastern Hemisphere.
      The Tulalip Tribes = The United States
      Tulalip Tribe ≠ United State
      There are two (2) federal cities in the USA…
      1 is Washington D.C.
      2 is Quil Ceda Village (Tulalip Tribes)
      Anything the USA can do,
      We can do better.

    • @matimus100
      @matimus100 11 месяцев назад

      Indian's aren't American!

    • @matimus100
      @matimus100 11 месяцев назад

      @@snoqualmiepatkanim nonsense American native doesn't exist.
      It's natives in America!

  • @tramainecbaynes1364
    @tramainecbaynes1364 2 года назад

    Cool video.

  • @dodongzkieberdera9792
    @dodongzkieberdera9792 2 года назад

    Amazing

  • @SuperDiablo101
    @SuperDiablo101 2 года назад +80

    For a tribe who never surrendered to the Nation who never really lost a war is astounding I have much respect for that fighting spirit and yet little respect for the crimes against them perpetrated by our own government.

    • @hmmm3210
      @hmmm3210 2 года назад +32

      Vietnam and Afghanistan would like to have a word with you

    • @DruidicOrthodox
      @DruidicOrthodox 2 года назад +11

      We lost our asses a lot

    • @petersalinas805
      @petersalinas805 2 года назад

      They’re still doing it to other native that still exist, the goal is to turn everyone into the man with a suit
      It’s disgusting

    • @Go4Noctis
      @Go4Noctis 2 года назад +6

      How about the war of 1812?

    • @johnevergreen8019
      @johnevergreen8019 2 года назад +1

      The American Revolution had a majority of the Continental Army getting smacked around by the Brits the French were a major reason why the colonies won at all and then there’s most of the southern colonies supported the crown

  • @ManchesterSloth
    @ManchesterSloth 3 года назад +6

    I haven't even begun watching yet but THANK YOU. I live here and years ago read about the wars and think it needed telling in a big way. We take this land for granted and have trashed it and once, these people lived in a true paradise. Thanks again

  • @leoniegureghian4015
    @leoniegureghian4015 2 года назад

    BLOODY AWESOMELY GREAT 😊

  • @ruufusdeleon1264
    @ruufusdeleon1264 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @alexczop961
    @alexczop961 3 года назад +23

    Really good video more Native American history would be appreciated

  • @juananonly33
    @juananonly33 3 года назад +4

    This is fantastic. Thank you.
    The narration style is top notch, the way the narrator tells fact from established and verifiable facts mixed with the history according to those who have written it, delivering it in a way that makes telling the difference between the two easily identifiable.
    My favorite bit: Gaines led an expedition...the lands were not unknown, they were occupied and the US KNEW by whom...what Gaines led was a thinly veiled invasion.
    New subscriber.

  • @arthurmosel808
    @arthurmosel808 2 года назад +4

    As others have said, not all Seminoles actually split into two groups, one did move to the Indian Territories and one staying in the swamps of Florida. The other point of contention is the claim that the Seminoles were part of the Mound Building culture, I have never seen that claim before.

  • @crazytrain03
    @crazytrain03 6 месяцев назад +1

    My family come from the original Creek Natives that blended with the Seminoles in North Florida. My mothers family line anyways. Many many generations coming from Wakulla and Taylor County Florida.