The most amazing person that hardly anyone has heard of.

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  • Опубликовано: 5 фев 2025

Комментарии • 274

  • @billthom19
    @billthom19 Год назад +213

    My uncle, Ray Revor, was blind since age 1 month. His father wanted him to be independent and not be treated as "handicapped" so the family offered him assistance only until he became acquainted with the situation. Ray owned his own business, employed 6 sighted employees, was the leader of a popular band (the 3 blind mice), canned his own pickles, was a master carpenter, tested blind equipment like watches and talking books, beat me at checkers, always knew when someone cheated at cards, married a gorgeous nurse, and on and on. You don't need partial sight, blind people can be amazing! He was the most amazing person I've ever met. Never underestimate anyone.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +27

      This is really inspiring. Thanks for sharing this. I completely agree about not underestimating people.

    • @kurtsteiner8384
      @kurtsteiner8384 Год назад +4

      Amazing if you loose a sense the other ones compensate for that loss.

    • @josefinajaime4550
      @josefinajaime4550 Год назад +1

      ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤thanks

    • @christopherhook6789
      @christopherhook6789 Год назад +2

      What a life! , worthy of making into a fascinating film...

    • @KatholikoPharorah
      @KatholikoPharorah Год назад

      Amazing he's apart of my England family the American John Metcalfe is my 7th great grandfather. Michael Metcalf was one of Rev sons who went to America.

  • @Marcus_from_OZ
    @Marcus_from_OZ Год назад +43

    Pretty damn impressive by any measure.

  • @garybrockwell2031
    @garybrockwell2031 Год назад +3

    Another Great Britain 🇬🇧💯 worthy of a great movie💪🎬
    Thanks for telling his tail🧐🤔 regards from LONDON 😍🇬🇧🙏💯

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      Thanks! If someone with the resorces and ability that I certainly don't have produces a movie. I'll go and see it.

  • @susandymock769
    @susandymock769 Год назад +7

    I've heard of him because I went to a primary school in the fifties that taught children about important figures in the past.

  • @CraigerAce
    @CraigerAce Год назад +7

    Except for the part about him impregnating a woman and subsequently abandoning her and his child, (in my opinion a most shameful thing) I enjoyed learning about this man. Peace. Out.

  • @robertnewell5057
    @robertnewell5057 Год назад +16

    A great video with loads of content and no padding.

  • @PercussusResurgo
    @PercussusResurgo Год назад +18

    That was one heck of a life story. What a guy!

  • @rustledjammies8769
    @rustledjammies8769 Год назад +2

    I've heard of Metcalf and had an idea who you were referring to at the start, as in the blind guy who "discovered" a method of building roads across bogs. He was a remarkable chap and I agree is largely unknown. I know him because he is mentioned in a helpfile in the video game Empire: Total War. Also I think he might have been mentioned on an episode of QI also because I seem to recall seeing something comedic many years ago where he was mentioned.

  • @michaelarchangel1163
    @michaelarchangel1163 Год назад +28

    I've known of him since inheriting my late brother Paul's illustrated historical book in 1961, when Paul, then nine years of age died of a brain tumour. My ma used to read to me from it at bedtime. She's still going, aged one hundred.

    • @devogrant2817
      @devogrant2817 Год назад +7

      Bless her 🥰

    • @alvindimes4729
      @alvindimes4729 Год назад +7

      That is amazing, sad about your brother though.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +1

      Thanks for sharing this. Sorry about your brother. Good luck to your Ma!

  • @steadynumber1
    @steadynumber1 Год назад +36

    John Metcalfe would be a worthy subject for a film. It would be well received I imagine.

  • @heartofoak45
    @heartofoak45 Год назад +5

    What an incredible man and a Yorkshireman to boot.

  • @Qingeaton
    @Qingeaton Год назад +48

    The older I get, I find that the most famous of people are often equaled or bested by someone who I'd not heard of. RUclips contributors point this out very well, with stories like this, and current young athletes or musicians doing incredible things while being little known. Thanks for taking the time to pt this together.

  • @أفلاكالأفكار
    @أفلاكالأفكار Год назад +1

    Absolutely incredible and inspiring story, thank you for sharing

  • @Galileosays
    @Galileosays Год назад +8

    Incredible noteworthy story. His lost of sight made him a great visionair.

  • @Lou.B
    @Lou.B Год назад +2

    Excellent! Thank You!

  • @oxfordpictionary
    @oxfordpictionary 4 месяца назад +1

    You’re right! I had not heard of him. Glad I watched this video!

  • @KatholikoPharorah
    @KatholikoPharorah Год назад +1

    Great to know he's one of my England cousins! Currently writing a book on my family!

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      This is really interesting. good luck with the book.

  • @hannashahina8727
    @hannashahina8727 Год назад +33

    Loved it so much! Thank you. This is probably one of my favourite videos so far ❤

  • @andreaatkinson2251
    @andreaatkinson2251 Год назад +1

    Grew up in Knaresborough. Live a couple of miles away from Knaresborough town centre now. They taught us about Blind Jack in infant school.

  • @nickrider5220
    @nickrider5220 Год назад +2

    What an inspiring person ! Thank you for bringing him to everyone's notice 👍

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      Thanks for watching. This is a compelling hobby for me.

  • @njm57
    @njm57 Год назад +4

    What an inspirational man.

  • @simontaylor2319
    @simontaylor2319 Год назад +1

    Fascinating, thanks

  • @markhughes7927
    @markhughes7927 Год назад +5

    Yes - what a guy!

  • @msamour
    @msamour Год назад +19

    That is an amazing story about an incredible man! Thank you for sharing. I'm looking at my own accomplishments (or lack thereof), And I'm realizing I don't have much to show for my 43 years of existence. 😅

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +7

      I feel the same way when I look at my 63 years! 😅

    • @Derek0846
      @Derek0846 Год назад +3

      I felt like you when I was in my late thirties. I was really feeling bad about it when one day I saw a sign in a shop window. It read, "It is never too late to become the man you might have been." That really woke my spirit up. I am 76 now and still going. Google Longfellow's "A Psalm of Life" and start there.

    • @kougerat5388
      @kougerat5388 Год назад

      @@Derek0846 Thanks for sharing those words, perfect timing for me at the moment.
      Food for thought for sure !

    • @jaimiemadden590
      @jaimiemadden590 Год назад +2

      Humility before honour
      Is one of your virtues
      Have a wonderful rest of your life

  • @royfearn4345
    @royfearn4345 Год назад +3

    Being a keen transport enthusiast, I heard of Blind Jack in my pre-teens. A real inspiration!

  • @richardmoss5934
    @richardmoss5934 Год назад +1

    I remember the name from History class at school circa 1967!!

  • @ceec5741
    @ceec5741 Год назад +1

    Thanks so much for sharing this story. It was amazing to hear about this man

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      Thanks for watching. I enjoy researching amazing, little-known people.

  • @dingolovethrob
    @dingolovethrob Год назад +2

    what a great man, and what an enjoyable video. liked and subscribed.

  • @chrisruss9861
    @chrisruss9861 Год назад +5

    Great story. I had never heard of this guy. He must have had a compelling personality.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      Yes. Imagine meeting him. What questions would you ask?

    • @chrisruss9861
      @chrisruss9861 Год назад

      @@warmbrucuriosity I know legally blind people who can get a lot done with seeing a tiny bit of light contrast.
      I would ask could he see a little bit and how did he use his other senses to compensate and did he have a loyal assistant.
      He clearly had a top brain and physical fitness so there must be a lot to his story.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +1

      @@chrisruss9861 There is a lot more to his story including his career as a recruiter for the army but I had to draw the line somewhere. I have noticed that very few people want to watch a video of this type for longer than ten minutes.
      The purpose of these videos is to stimulate interest in little-known people and subjects.
      Two blind people I know told me that, apart from touch, the quality of the sound and how they perceive it, tells them a lot about their surroundings. They both found it difficult to explain it to a sighted person. They asked me to imagine explaining a colour to a totally blind person.
      I found no records of a specific assistant but, in an age when lots of people had servants, it's possible. He also might have had some sight. Many blind people do.

  • @curlew-3592
    @curlew-3592 Год назад +8

    I’ve heard of him, I used to work at Knaresborough Castle and I’m a Metcalfe! 😂😂😂🤣

  • @valrodgers8889
    @valrodgers8889 Год назад +1

    I read a book about him many years ago. Wonderful book.🇦🇺

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      If you remember the name of the book, please let me know. I only scratched the surface with Jack's life. Thanks for commenting.

    • @valrodgers8889
      @valrodgers8889 Год назад

      I think it was called "Blind Man of Knaresborough"

  • @MJ1919
    @MJ1919 Год назад +1

    Thank you. Incredibly interesting and inspiring 👏 😊❤

  • @francisebbecke2727
    @francisebbecke2727 Год назад +5

    He didn't let things keep him down!

  • @tothefield3623
    @tothefield3623 Год назад +3

    Really enjoyed that video, very informative!

  • @notsosilentmajority1
    @notsosilentmajority1 Год назад +5

    Whether "Blind Jack" had partial sight or perhaps, had an assistant on some of his excursions is irrelevant. We must realize just how remarkable these feats were for anyone in the 18th. century, let alone for a handicapped man. Figuring out a way to build over marshes and similar terrain, shows us just how intelligent this man truly was. Thank you for the education on someone I almost certainly would never heard of otherwise. Well done.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      Thanks for your comment. This is something I love doing.

  • @LindelVestito
    @LindelVestito 4 месяца назад

    As a blind bus driver, and also an astronaut, I appreciate this enlightening information.

  • @franksullivan1873
    @franksullivan1873 Год назад +1

    Great story.

  • @jonlowing7907
    @jonlowing7907 Год назад +4

    Let's not forget that the horses weren't blind and would been the 'cruise control' of their day!

  • @1st1anarkissed
    @1st1anarkissed Год назад +34

    not to take away from the truly impressiveness of this man, I want to remind people that blind people aren't necessarily unsighted. They may indeed be getting something from their eyes. areas of bright and dark, or shadows in fog, or even coloured blobs they can analyze. Or even that they can see if they hold a thing close enough. This makes the story imaginable, anyway, but as you say, maybe he worked with zero vision.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +9

      I agree and as I said, this may be the case. Whatever the truth, I was amazed that he is hardly known outside Yorkshire.

  • @worldorthoorthopaedicsurge6147
    @worldorthoorthopaedicsurge6147 Год назад +2

    A remarkable story. Thank for putting it on RUclips

  • @nickystripe3303
    @nickystripe3303 Год назад

    Thank you for putting up this story. I have been blind all my life and I am a retired special education teacher. Disabled people are not taught their own history because they really aren’t considered to have any. Notable figures such as Helen Keller, Ray Charles, and Stevie Wonder are put up to us as role models. Now I am in no way saying that they are not, but they become their own stereotypes and the general public doesn’t think blind people can do anything except teach other blind people or perform music. “If you can see it, you can be it” has become a popular saying, but even when those of us in the blind community know about other examples of people in different occupations, the general public does not. Instead, the public is presented with the image of blind people always needing help, usually being helpless, and only being successful at a very few low paying occupations or as the few who attain rare celebrity status which is unattainable for the rest of us. Thank you for doing what you can to change the public perception of what blind people have done and can do. I am going to be sharing the story so that other people can see it. Even so, I am sure that under employment and job discrimination will still continue. Yes, some people might say this is a very cynical viewpoint, but for us it is reality.

  • @cristinaaltobelli4860
    @cristinaaltobelli4860 Год назад +2

    That was really interesting and informative...what a fascinating individual! Cx

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      Thanks. Yes, an amazing man. There are more on the way.

  • @robertmccully2792
    @robertmccully2792 Год назад

    His parents did good, paying for him to learn the violin at young age. Real confidence booster .

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      I agree. They helped him make the most of the cards he had been dealt.

  • @jeangenie5807
    @jeangenie5807 Год назад +1

    Very interesting. Thank you. A 4x great aunt on my maternal lines became blind and deaf by the age of 14, but when she was about 60 became the first editor of a quarterly magazine for the new National Deaf and Blind Helpers League. She was able to type letters, but sometimes didn't always gauge the end of the paper and platter correctly, but was able to catch up on the next line. Clearly a clever lady who didn't allow her disability to hold her back.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      She sounds like another example of an inspiring person.

  • @RockNTile1977
    @RockNTile1977 Год назад

    Well done! Fascinating perspective. Truly an indication that we are designed to “fill the earth and subdue it.” Maybe someday we will be able to truly understand and enjoy fully this amazing Planet we are given.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      Thanks for your comment! I try to produce a video once a week. Work permitting.

  • @catherinealbion6955
    @catherinealbion6955 Год назад +1

    Good story, thanks.

  • @grahamhanks906
    @grahamhanks906 Год назад +3

    as soon as I read the title I knew it was going to be Blind Jack! such an amazing human being and so many wonderful achievements to his name!

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      I think you are the first to have guessed! I could have included some of his other achievements and will probably return to Blind Jack in the future.

  • @sbcinema
    @sbcinema Год назад

    this man is a real inspiration

  • @philipdove6987
    @philipdove6987 Год назад +5

    A thing often forgotten about a horse and cart is that the "engine" can think and act on it's own initiative the horse would usually take the line of least resistance and as long as it didn't decide this was to stand still or graze, steering was only necessary if there was a choice of routes or a turning.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      True but the reason that horses became the first railway locomotives was that pulling a cart on any road of the time was very hard. Rails gave little resistance and when it was possible to have horses pull canal barges, the resistance was minimal.

    • @philipdove6987
      @philipdove6987 Год назад +1

      @@warmbrucuriosity Yes you are correct, but if you read about people who worked with a horse and cart or just horses there are many anecdotes of the horse knowing the route and not needing direction, and almost legless drunks being put on their horse and the horse finding the way. What Blind Jack did was still very remarkable.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +1

      @@philipdove6987 I can confirm what you are saying from my own experience of riding horses.

    • @kevinjohnlancaster8333
      @kevinjohnlancaster8333 Год назад

      @@philipdove6987 Such a story is that of a journey of a stage coach on the road from Sedbergh to Kirkby Stephen with Robert Foster the famous Quaker within. For some reason the driver dismounted at the Cross Keys Inn and went in to the pub. However when he came out the horses had set off again. A long story but the fear was the coach would overturn but in fact those following up found no disaster but the coach pulled up at the King's Arms in Kirkby Stephen. The clients were standing around baffled as to what had happened to the driver ! True story and both pubs still exist but only the second serves alcohol.

  • @camelotenglishtuition6394
    @camelotenglishtuition6394 Год назад

    Fascinating video. I'll be sure to add his achievements to my classes. Thank you!

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +1

      I'm glad you liked it and found it useful. Please check out the others. Also, there are more in the pipeline.

    • @camelotenglishtuition6394
      @camelotenglishtuition6394 Год назад

      @@warmbrucuriosity yeah I was having a look through.. great choices.. I'd love some about the shipbuilding history of the UK..

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +1

      @@camelotenglishtuition6394 That's a really interesting idea. I am planning a mini-series about William Armstrong, the Newcastle industrialist. I visited Newcastle recently. He was into all sorts of things and, being from that area, that included shipbuilding.

    • @camelotenglishtuition6394
      @camelotenglishtuition6394 Год назад +1

      @warmbru curiosity fantastic! What a great choice! I do really enjoy learning about these lesser well-known figures.

  • @kennethfish2916
    @kennethfish2916 Год назад +2

    Hi,
    Thank you for this wonderful video. Jack Metcalf’s story is the telling of a miracle of human courage. As you said I did learn of Macadam and Telford at school. I grew up on the edge of Chat Moss so I learned of Stephenson’s exploits too. I spent many hours train spotting by the Manchester to Liverpool line.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      Thanks for your message. I'm hoping to stimulate interest in some lesser-known great people. More are coming.

  • @SierraNovemberKilo
    @SierraNovemberKilo Год назад +1

    How does a blind man drive a coach - all the horses have eyes. He has ears and all the other senses that we have. Horses are well known to follow the routes they're familiar with - they'll even wait for you without being instructed.

  • @3-DtimeCosmology
    @3-DtimeCosmology Год назад +1

    Amazing!

  • @michaelsmith9714
    @michaelsmith9714 Год назад +1

    Thanks

  • @coldboogeronapaperplate6495
    @coldboogeronapaperplate6495 Год назад +2

    This was really interesting, thank you!

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +1

      I'm glad you enjoyed it. There are more on the way.

  • @moptopbaku6022
    @moptopbaku6022 Год назад

    Great video. I have learned something new from this and I look forward to watching (and Learning from) more of your work.

  • @alvindimes4729
    @alvindimes4729 Год назад +2

    Very interesting content, I'm sure that I've heard of this man in my school days, but admit that I had forgotten about him. Nice to revisit his story.😊

  • @horatiohornblower868
    @horatiohornblower868 Год назад +1

    The man was blind, yet he liked hunting and dived in a river to rescue someone? Strange blindness indeed!

  • @erniemathews5085
    @erniemathews5085 Год назад +2

    What a fascinating guy!

  • @tullochgorum6323
    @tullochgorum6323 Год назад +14

    With smallpox, total blindness was a rare complication compared to partial blindness. It's most likely that Metcalf had some limited vision. I have a friend with extremely limited vision who still manages to be remarkably independent. It's all a question of attitude, and Metcalf was clearly the kind of man who was going to make the most of what he had.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +7

      I agree. We are all dealt a hand of cards. Whatever the state of his sight, I think he played his cards very well.

    • @bostonrailfan2427
      @bostonrailfan2427 Год назад

      there was no mention of anyone helping him so he had to have had limited vision, probably something like tunnel vision or something that requires thick lenses but which wouldn’t be invented for decades if not a century or more

  • @gmanette188
    @gmanette188 Год назад +1

    Thank you

  • @trevorhart545
    @trevorhart545 Год назад +2

    I was born in the North Riding over 60 years ago and I had never heard of John Metcalfe. As a fully sighted person his achievements are obvious. Blind, amazing. This is an example of a Video where it is interesting, heart warming, informative and something that I am pleased to see that I will now understand his statue. Thank you for this.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      Thanks for watching! I really enjoy researching stories like this.

  • @MyMy-tv7fd
    @MyMy-tv7fd Год назад +5

    Metcalf had helpers who were his eyes for him, they described it and he visualised it

  • @holesmeller
    @holesmeller Год назад +3

    Great video thank you:))

  • @opabinnier
    @opabinnier Год назад

    Just wonderful.

  • @nancyM1313-Boo
    @nancyM1313-Boo 4 месяца назад +1

    Ty💝

  • @missouribattleflag328
    @missouribattleflag328 Год назад +1

    Subscribed and shared great story You know there's a gun review or Misha I think that's how you say it and he's blind and shoots guns and reviews guns and what a story making good with what you've been given

  • @JaimeWulf
    @JaimeWulf Год назад +1

    Very interesting!

  • @maroondoor
    @maroondoor Год назад

    Brilliant, thanks

  • @georgeliquor2931
    @georgeliquor2931 Год назад

    Very interesting, a man to be admired for sure, to the able bodied these kind of biographies seem impossible, bravo to this northern hero

  • @FABIOh1976
    @FABIOh1976 Год назад

    The topics of your videos are so interesting.

  • @kennethfish2916
    @kennethfish2916 Год назад +1

    Good!

  • @rogermoore-fz6qs
    @rogermoore-fz6qs Год назад +4

    Thank you for this video. More info on Blind Jack can be found as I expect you know in 'Lives of the Engineers' by Dr. Samuel Smiles.

  • @livrowland171
    @livrowland171 Год назад +1

    Very interesting video 🙂 I shared it on a family WhatsApp group and he is well-enough known for it to have suggested 'Knaresborough' when I wrote Blind Jack of... AI is everywhere now huh?! (I had heard of him because I grew up about 3 miles from Knaresborough, and my Dad ran a garage there). Very interested to hear his first go was the road between Ferrensby and Minskip - it was between my childhood home and schools so I've been up and down it several thousand times, but didn't know it had historical significance ❤

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +1

      I'm really glad you liked it and it's great to hear from a local. More videos are in the pipeline.

    • @livrowland171
      @livrowland171 Год назад

      ​@@warmbrucuriosity Thanks, willl look forward to that

  • @newforestpixie5297
    @newforestpixie5297 Год назад +1

    I’ve heard of Blind Jack thanks to old Fred Major - our history teacher whom smoked like a chimney & tolerated us disinterested scamps & wankers for a Hampshire County Council secondary school in 1978 . Thanks for this 👍

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      it sounds like we were in similar classes! 🙂Thanks for watching

  • @DrRodneyMcDermott
    @DrRodneyMcDermott Год назад

    Brilliant information, brilliant vieo.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      Thanks! I'm glad you liked it.

    • @DrRodneyMcDermott
      @DrRodneyMcDermott Год назад

      @warmbrucuriosity you're welcome. I normally get my civil engineering students to research a engineer 'who made a difference. I get some brilliant information on Telford, Brunel and the fantastic Bazalgette. I must play your video in class next semester, all being.well.

  • @movingpicutres99
    @movingpicutres99 Год назад +1

    He probably had blurry or clouded vision rather than total darkness because infections like Smallpox cause scarring of the cornea. Blindness is a spectrum of visual impairments including limited field of vision and inability to focus properly.

  • @LeslieGilpinRailways
    @LeslieGilpinRailways Год назад +6

    Great story. I remember he was mentioned alongside MacAdam etc in cse history in the early 70s!

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +1

      I'm glad you enjoyed it. If you're ever in Yorkshire, I recommend a visit to Knaresborough.

    • @kevinjohnlancaster8333
      @kevinjohnlancaster8333 Год назад +1

      Yes and he was in O Level History, syllabus C "British Social and Economic History". The difference between Blind Jack and Thomas Telford and MacAdam was the latter two were engineers and businessmen who directed others to do the work. Blind Jack was much more hands on

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +1

      @@kevinjohnlancaster8333 Yes!

  • @censusgary
    @censusgary Год назад +10

    So a blind man on foot won a 200-mile race against a man in a coach with horses and a driver? That’s one of the most remarkable feats I have ever heard of.

  • @pingpong5000
    @pingpong5000 Год назад

    An impressive chap.

  • @deadalready7467
    @deadalready7467 Год назад

    TY for sharing.
    Great story I’ve never heard of. Need these tails more than ever.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      I agree! There are a lot of inspiring people in our history.

  • @amandah2490
    @amandah2490 Год назад

    Fascinating!

  • @georgewood463
    @georgewood463 Год назад

    While in college, I knew a totally blind guy named Jerry. He loved hiking, cave exploring, scuba diving, and many other sports. He walked around Michigan State University without the aid of either a cane or a guided dog. Didn't need them. He used a combination of step counting, memory, and hearing. Thanks to the wind and other sources of sound Jerry could literally hear the buildings and determine their size, location, and large recesses. Where Jerry had problems was in noisy places like busy restaurants where he would ask for a guide and very uneven surfaces like breakdown in a cave that he would crawl over while the rest of us walked. If Blind Jack could hear as well as Jerry, getting around by himself would not have been a problem.

  • @september1683
    @september1683 Год назад +1

    Very impressive. It was my joy to watch your video. John Metcalf is a person who should have streets named. Lets call him the Beethoven of street-builders :-)

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      Thanks for your comment. I enjoy making them and there more on the way. I love your suggestion, by the way. :-)

  • @glen1555
    @glen1555 Год назад +4

    I guess coming from West Yorkshire i had heard of blind Jack. He didn't build as many miles as Telford or MacAdam but they were better made.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад

      The sources I've read certainly confirm what you said.

  • @SoldierDrew
    @SoldierDrew 5 месяцев назад +1

    I met a blind man who was a Judo champion, musician, classical guitarist, whittled wood whistles, married a beautiful lady, raised children and was a fisherman.

  • @gavinmillar7519
    @gavinmillar7519 Год назад

    Great history!

  • @kndvolk
    @kndvolk Год назад

    Thank you for this inspiring video about a very inspirational man. It is quite amazing how mind over matter illustrates attitude over aptitude.

  • @helenbach1870
    @helenbach1870 Год назад +2

    And yet, if he could walk on modern roads, he’d be lucky to survive 20 yards, before falling into a pothole.

  • @jamesraymond1158
    @jamesraymond1158 Год назад

    Great story. I always wondered how people got around. For example, Felix Mendelsohn traveled from Germany over the Alps to Venice before there were trains. How long would that have taken? Also, what is the bike-like contraption next to his statue?

  • @robinharwood5044
    @robinharwood5044 Год назад +8

    Since there is a statue of him, it looks as though quite a few people have heard of him.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +4

      Yes, the people ok Knaresborough are very proud of him and he's quite well known in Yorkshire. In most of England and the UK he's unknown.

    • @JohnyG29
      @JohnyG29 Год назад +1

      ​@@warmbrucuriosity I live on the South Coast and I've definitely heard of him. He's quite well known to be fair.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +1

      @@JohnyG29 You are the first person I've heard from who had heard of him who isn't from Yorkshire. I think it says more about your level of historical knowledge.

    • @thomasburke2683
      @thomasburke2683 Год назад +1

      It's quite possible for a person from Yorkshire to live on the south coast.
      However we must congratulate Johnny for his knowledge and interest.

    • @robinharwood5044
      @robinharwood5044 Год назад

      @@thomasburke2683 A Yorkshireman living on the south coast? Possible, I suppose, but quite a strain to believe.

  • @PhilipThompsonCanada
    @PhilipThompsonCanada Год назад +1

    … what a great and inspiring story. There is no comparison to flakey pop culture and today’s ‘slaves to celebrity’ - including Celebrities themselves. Hats off to ‘Blind jack’, I say.

  • @judithfs
    @judithfs 7 месяцев назад

    Yes, when I was at junior school in Knaresborough (Castle Yard), we were all taught about Blind Jack and his achievements. Although they missed out the bit about getting a girl pregnant and leaving the area for a while! Well, this was back in 1970!

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  7 месяцев назад

      They always leave out the interesting stuff. History is the most underrated subject in the world. ))

  • @thomasburke2683
    @thomasburke2683 Год назад +6

    I suspect that Jack was blind more in name than condition. He may have been partially sighted, but without a guide, canine or human, he couldn't walk hundreds of miles along dirt tracks, never mind engineer roads without some vision. Funnily enough, driving a horse and cart is very plausible, once the horse was accustomed to the route, he could make his own way.

    • @warmbrucuriosity
      @warmbrucuriosity  Год назад +2

      Yes, very few blind people are 100% blind. I remember learning this when I was teaching English to blind telephone operators. As I said in the video, this is an explanation. Thanks for your comment.

  • @petroslinna
    @petroslinna 5 месяцев назад

    Fantastic channel find. I am still flabbergasted how a blind man can handle a stagecoach. Maybe he was partially blind?

  • @BritishEngineer
    @BritishEngineer Год назад +1

    3:16 a bit like todays British roads

  • @sedoff1948
    @sedoff1948 Год назад +2

    Such a pleasant video, with wonderful content and a mellifluous narration. A balm from the “less skilled” offerings on RUclips, that is, those with hyperbole, Muzak, buffoonery and material that has been beaten to death. You British are so civilized.! Well, some of you. Thank you.

  • @paull6425
    @paull6425 Год назад

    Inspirational.

  • @samgamgee7384
    @samgamgee7384 Год назад +2

    It's no mystery how he could drive between towns. The horses knew the way, and anyway , surely someone among the passengers could advise him at forks in the road if the horses could not. I'm sure the horses could remember the way. I know that leader dogs can guide their inebriated owners home while they just enjoy the walk. So I readily can believe horses have similar capabilities.

  • @puddintame7794
    @puddintame7794 Год назад +1

    Blind Jack, the British Zatoichi... but real.