The REAL Black Cowboys from "The Harder They Fall'

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  • Опубликовано: 19 янв 2025

Комментарии • 460

  • @kristykuhlenbeck9439
    @kristykuhlenbeck9439 Год назад +100

    The love of my life was black cowboy. He did horse stunts for many movies such as Buffalo Soldiers. He is no longer with us, he was run down by a bull. He had been shot, worked as a livestock inspector, etc. He was 20 years older and had so many great stories. He was a real cowboy and a real man, a dying breed. Man I miss him, boy could he dance! The good 'ol days.

    • @hayden6056
      @hayden6056 Год назад +6

      Oh the days of women who loved masculine men. They see scars when my shirt comes off. Oh my god , who hurt you?
      Shit girl , I didn't catch their name just their blade 😂
      Apparently the term play stupid games win stupid prizes isn't an in depth enough story anymore.

    • @DamiGill-bv1fo
      @DamiGill-bv1fo Год назад

      Black play the black cowboy movie 1:23

  • @thewho2482
    @thewho2482 Год назад +23

    Mr. Reeves is the Real Lone Ranger. His story is amazing.

  • @erin19030
    @erin19030 Год назад +42

    I went to school with a strong athletic black student who was tops in all the sports. I call him Jim. Jimmy’s goal in life was to be a cowboy. He was an acedemic student tips in all his classes and gained a 4 scholarship to-a prestigious eastern college. Jim did graduate, but followed his desire to be a cowboy. To this day Jim is a top rodeo star, owns his own ranch and raises horses. I was very fortunate to have known him. He was always a friend in deed. Jim was someone to emulate fir his love of education, works and achievements. Jim Brooks if you are still out their I do remember you fondly and was proud to have been a friend and fellow student at BHS.

  • @kimt4565
    @kimt4565 Год назад +21

    Awesome video. So well made and narrated. Great photos too . My great-grandfather was in the 9th or the 10th calvary. He was a Buffalo Soldier. Alexander McPherson. After his service in the calvary, he and his family lived in Mexico for many years. And he worked on a large Ranchero tending to and breaking horses. He came back to the U.S. and settled in Mesa Arizona. They were the first black family in Mesa. In the eighty's or early ninety's, They put a plaque of Alexander up on the outside wall of the Post office and had a little ceremony for my grandma and her sister my great -aunt Angie. I was so glad that my grandma got to see and experience that.

    • @seanwright8786
      @seanwright8786 Год назад +4

      That's awesome sister. Salute to your great grandfather

    • @landaps
      @landaps Год назад

      You do know that only 5% of Black people came from transatlantic slave trade. The 95% were here & called Indians. Remember explorers thought they were in India. What native Americans look like east Indians? None. East Indians are dark like Black people with a variety of hair textures

  • @MateoGambino-rd7wo
    @MateoGambino-rd7wo Год назад +28

    I'm in love with the lifestyle of cowboys it was so harsh at times

    • @robertbailey-fu2bx
      @robertbailey-fu2bx Год назад

      Me too…I class myself as a modern day cowboy drifting here n there, love it

  • @tasoftail
    @tasoftail Год назад +11

    Love it! Black history never told. Thank you for sharing!!

  • @thepeoplecouldfly3859
    @thepeoplecouldfly3859 Год назад +27

    I found the comparison to the movie quite interesting. I like that you told the story plus used live film, art, and photos.
    So often some people will just assume the movie is fact.
    This is very engaging, you made this so interesting I want to know more about our ancestors in the " wild west" and our black cowboys in todays time of American History. I also want to visit where their monument and statues stand. What a double treat at the end.
    Thank you so much.

    • @a.leemorrisjr.9255
      @a.leemorrisjr.9255 Год назад +1

      Not all black people went north or east, many went west, especially after that hellish "War Between The States." Not only were there black soldiers & cowboys, but outlaws, gunfighters, even lawmen as well. Many tales remain to be told of that now long gone era. Contrary to what tv & movies showed me as a youngster, my point is WE WERE THERE!

    • @Madasin_Paine
      @Madasin_Paine Год назад +1

      You got that right.
      It's an impressive welcomed style and substance. Comparing and contrasting most welcomed, too!

    • @POWER2DAGODZ
      @POWER2DAGODZ Год назад

      Don't Forget The Philly Cowboys

  • @jessicamcdaniels2337
    @jessicamcdaniels2337 Год назад +193

    Interesting how practically all of them had American Indian ancestry or were connected to American Indian culture is some capacity. Very interesting.

    • @Only1TwoVs
      @Only1TwoVs Год назад +21

      Well who else we gone mate with back then

    • @jessicamcdaniels2337
      @jessicamcdaniels2337 Год назад +52

      @@Only1TwoVs That’s besides the point. The point is, that a lot of us Black folks do in fact have Native Ancestry yet hardly any of us reap any benefits from it

    • @robertdore9592
      @robertdore9592 Год назад

      @@Only1TwoVs A good point, however there are just as many white women impregnated by black men. The potency and forbidden nature of the dark fruit was too much for some women to resist.

    • @robertdore9592
      @robertdore9592 Год назад +6

      @@jessicamcdaniels2337 Benefits?

    • @dannypilot634
      @dannypilot634 Год назад +20

      Because the Indian where you you think they erase your history for no reason dis rabbit hole gets deeper than anyone will imagine just no a lot of people benefit off own people not now who they really are and dats big fact

  • @Nolia3
    @Nolia3 Год назад +37

    The production of the harder they fall did a great job 👏🏾 with matching the depiction of the characters they almost look alike ❤❤❤

    • @lr8719
      @lr8719 Год назад +2

      Ummmm...Not STAGE COACH MARY!! They did her wrong... they should have just made that character her own person and left Mary her own character

    • @Jay-uc8rm
      @Jay-uc8rm Год назад

      No they didn’t. Stop

    • @daquan7868
      @daquan7868 Год назад +1

      Mary Fields was about 6 feet and big as hell

  • @ivycurtis34
    @ivycurtis34 Год назад +8

    wow thank you for this info i will spread this info and your site to every one who will listen

  • @Madasin_Paine
    @Madasin_Paine Год назад +6

    An extraordinary accomplishment, this production, in total!
    Bravo!
    Keep this team together moving forward.
    History is alive!
    It's how things ended up where We The People are NOW and LATER, maybe, maybe not.

  • @knotzed
    @knotzed Год назад +18

    Most "cow BOYS" were black the white men were called cattle men. Hence the derogatory "BOY"

  • @avonbellamy205
    @avonbellamy205 Год назад +3

    Brother, I want to thank you for this very comprehensive documentation of some very well-known and little known but not often understood, black cowboys and western heroes. According to historical records, Bass Reeves used to give out silver dollars to those who aided him in his arrests and the horse he rode, was a gray stallion.

  • @kaleahcollins4567
    @kaleahcollins4567 Год назад +16

    According to post office folklore the motto of the post office actually came from Mary because it didn't matter rain sleet snow or hail nothing stopped her from delivering the mail.

    • @SmokeyTreats
      @SmokeyTreats Год назад

      Not to detract from the mighty stagecoach Mary Fields Montana mail delivery, but the original saying was spoken about 2500 years ago by the Greek historian, Herodotus, referring to the Persian 9 day mail delivery system that the much later Pony Express used in their 10 day delivery system from St. Joseph MO to Sacramento Cali.
      The reason it has become identified with the U.S.P.S. is because, back in 1896-97, when the New York City General Post Office was being designed, Mitchell Kendal, an employee for the architectural firm, McKim, Mead and White, came up with the idea of engraving Herodotus’ saying all around the outside of the building.

    • @a.leemorrisjr.9255
      @a.leemorrisjr.9255 Год назад

      Nor Banditos either. Her pistols, rifle, & shotgun saw to that! They let her be! There is@least 1 recorded instance of an attempted robbery, but they fled empty handed. Her tough reputation was well known in the territory & she was backed/supported by those who counted on her to get the mail thru'. She NEVER disappointed them.

    • @kaleahcollins4567
      @kaleahcollins4567 Год назад

      @@SmokeyTreats was this the same Herodotus who described the ancient Egyptians as Black?

  • @roygreen304
    @roygreen304 Год назад +5

    Thanks, i went too the Black cowboy Museum in Rosenberg Tx it was nice.

  • @Hapshetsut28
    @Hapshetsut28 Год назад +11

    Thank you for this great broadcast.✊🏾✊🏾✊🏾

  • @scottmcdonald4571
    @scottmcdonald4571 Год назад +16

    You got to love Mary's character ...Her life would make a good western ...

  • @jamescarter5042
    @jamescarter5042 Год назад +24

    Some Historians did not tell that 1 out of every 3 cowboys were either black or indian.

    • @henryhill1876
      @henryhill1876 Год назад +2

      Yeah they will never tell anyone u have 2 research life your self

    • @31terikennedy
      @31terikennedy Год назад +2

      Black or Mexican.

    • @rosemontano8705
      @rosemontano8705 10 месяцев назад

      Mexicans were the first cowboys in america since 1500s when there was no white or black man in americs just indians and mexicans? Did you blacks know that mexicans are native american halfbred indian?

  • @OfiLL_Clothings
    @OfiLL_Clothings 2 года назад +35

    Should be doing alot of movies about the African American Cowboy

    • @robertdore9592
      @robertdore9592 Год назад

      As long as the don't f$uck things up with cast members such as these.

    • @henryhill1876
      @henryhill1876 Год назад

      Exactly ppl

  • @adriantorres3221
    @adriantorres3221 Год назад +12

    Loved this movie!!! Why wasnt it promoted more? Not many have seen it despite the amazing actoers. So many great black cowboys we never hear about and bass reeves was just about one of the most bad ass people to ever live and was the inspiration for the lone ranger. We need these stories to be told and taight to out youth.

  • @Slipthejab152
    @Slipthejab152 Год назад +3

    Great Content

  • @ova9thouson445
    @ova9thouson445 Год назад +5

    bro i got to tell you. please never stop posting my g i’ve learned so much and it’s opened me up to start diving deeper into your topics to understand our people and culture even more. your content is unique, as non biased as possible, educational while being entertaining ✊🏽 had to sub and TO notifications and will be sharing you got my full support ✊🏽

  • @Steviesstoriess
    @Steviesstoriess Год назад +6

    Great educational documentary of just some of the very interesting and great black men in those days.

  • @eddeewhat5553
    @eddeewhat5553 Год назад +3

    Excellent video. Think I’m going to go watch Hateful 8

  • @Tsadie1
    @Tsadie1 Год назад +2

    I appreciate your selection of historical archives. In addition, I enjoy your energetic narrations.

  • @tonitigrrxo2765
    @tonitigrrxo2765 Год назад +5

    Great clip. Can you do William Henderson Foote if you haven't already?? ❤

  • @emgotvhistorywarfareclub
    @emgotvhistorywarfareclub 2 года назад +3

    Thanks!

  • @pabloantoniomendozamartine6046
    @pabloantoniomendozamartine6046 5 месяцев назад +1

    If they ever release a third Red Dead Redemption game they should make a new story and with protagonists based on these real life cowboys.
    I think it would be very interesting to have a game that explores this side of the wild west that tends to be forgotten both in the media and in history.

  • @robertvose7310
    @robertvose7310 Год назад

    Tons of black cowboys! Early on the cattle drives a majority of the cowboys were black folk and Indians. Awesome US cowboy/western history...

  • @p.burley4533
    @p.burley4533 Год назад +11

    Great essay.
    There would be no Lone Ranger were it not for Bass Reeves. His genius is only one small bit yet great part of our rich, American Freedmen history. It’s too bad that many skip over this to “go back to Africa.” It’s all good but our American, post-Emancipation ancestors made unbelievable strides.

    • @klu753
      @klu753 Год назад

      well go back then, da fuq you waiting on!

  • @yolandalindsay8368
    @yolandalindsay8368 Год назад +1

    "Well Done" & Informative.

  • @a.leemorrisjr.9255
    @a.leemorrisjr.9255 Год назад +4

    Nat Love, also known as "Deadwood Dick' was never an outlaw. Rufus Buck was. Like "Cherokee Bill" Goldsby, Buck & his crew terrorized what was then OK territory.

  • @CowboyMuse405
    @CowboyMuse405 Год назад +4

    It's all about the work you putting in your life that is within you you're self to live that life and it's still going on till this day

  • @RonnieM90
    @RonnieM90 Год назад

    A limited series based on the life of Reeves entitled Lawmen: Bass Reeves began airing on Paramount+ on November 5, 2023. It also aired on CBS.

  • @melclark8500
    @melclark8500 Год назад

    All praise and all glory to the Most High blessed be he very informative keep up the great work shalom.

  • @michaelmcgee8543
    @michaelmcgee8543 Год назад +3

    Thanks for the history.

  • @kelleymorris6541
    @kelleymorris6541 Год назад +7

    Yes very interesting. I don't know why but for some crazy reason I'm absolutely drawn to black history and Black culture it's so very interesting and fascinating. I completely hate that the world was denied truth about so much. Black outlaw cowboys oh yeah that's hott ❤ thank you so much for this post

    • @arlenebyrd6553
      @arlenebyrd6553 Год назад

      Really! Why is it so crazy that your drawn to black history and black culture.

  • @MarvinResper
    @MarvinResper Год назад +1

    Thanks for that beautiful information nice

  • @nevamind68t23
    @nevamind68t23 Год назад +3

    Fascinating, thank you 🙏🏾 🤎

    • @heatherfulmore3412
      @heatherfulmore3412 Год назад

      I know that there is a reasonbwhy I am seeing this video. My first impression really was a good sum up of what I was seeing last year.

  • @bjmccann1
    @bjmccann1 Год назад

    This is the first that I've heard of this movie. I guess I know what I'll be watching tonight.

  • @ResutoVictor35
    @ResutoVictor35 Год назад +6

    Nat Love had multiple children from native Mexican women also in his cowboy days he loved women and was in Mexico for many years my granddad would say in his story’s he died at 105 I wonder what happened with all his offspring ???? no one talks about this!!!! I wouldn’t even know where to find this information 😵‍💫😵‍💫😵‍💫😵‍💫

    • @lisal29
      @lisal29 Год назад +2

      Wow, didn't know this part. Lol. I am his great (3) granddaughter. I learn about him from my grandfather when I was very young. 😊

  • @bethelightbringer8004
    @bethelightbringer8004 Год назад +11

    They needed to have Leslie Jones play the character of Stage Coach Mary. Idk how they missed that opportunity. I wonder if she even auditioned for it. Personally I believe she would of been perfect for the role.

    • @patriceclarke
      @patriceclarke Год назад +1

      I thought the same thing.

    • @a.leemorrisjr.9255
      @a.leemorrisjr.9255 Год назад

      The "real" Stage Coach Mary had a heart of gold, but make no mistake. She could drink, smoke, chew, cuss, fight, & shoot with the best of them! In one recorded instance an angry patron had argued with her over a laundry bill. The man pulled a pistol & shot her. Enraged, Mary pulled her own & SHOT HIM BACK! Only the town sheriff's intervention stopped the fight before it became a homicide. I believe Mary would've killed him if it had become a full tilt shoot out.

    • @a.leemorrisjr.9255
      @a.leemorrisjr.9255 Год назад

      The film may've made for good "Hollyweird" entertainment, but was hardly a factual portrayal of these persons anymore than was "Posse" or the brilliant "Butch Cassidy" was with Newman & Redford. Old timers who claimed to have known them back then said Newman's portrayal of Cassidy was "pretty close."

  • @biancabarbie13
    @biancabarbie13 Год назад +6

    Thank you 💯

  • @CopperHueCollectionsChippewa
    @CopperHueCollectionsChippewa Год назад +2

    The problem is they didn’t call themselves cowboys. They used another word that I don’t remember and it’s interesting I can’t even find it on Google. The yt man is the one that started using that term.

  • @Skydiggz
    @Skydiggz 8 месяцев назад

    Loved this

  • @matthewmann8969
    @matthewmann8969 Год назад +5

    Yeah there where Black Cowboys, Hispanic Cowboys, White Cowboys, Ashkenazi Jewish Cowboys, And even Native American Cowboys.

  • @VincentBeville
    @VincentBeville Год назад +7

    Was that Bass Reeves (bottom left) in that picture with all those Marshalls?

  • @djwritestoomuch
    @djwritestoomuch Год назад +3

    It's cool that it's a black cowboy movie but I grew up near where all these things happened and was excited to see a movie about these folks... unfortunately that's not at all what this movie was. It came off as an exploitation film more than anything and it was definitely nowhere near the truth. Furthest thing from it. Same thing with that Bass Reeves movie. They really screwed that one up. So many good stories that would've been good enough on their own but apparently it's impossible for anyone to make a historically accurate movie... even when the truth is way better than the fiction they still muck it up

  • @teashea1
    @teashea1 Год назад

    nice video well done

  • @MrKevinEaddy
    @MrKevinEaddy Год назад +1

    Funny how my Dad tells me “We arent supposed to be Farming” and “We aint supposed to do that” or “We aint supposed to be there”… He still wont come to my Ranch. And ive been raising Livestock for 15+ years

  • @earthadavis6881
    @earthadavis6881 Год назад +1

    I love it but I can't find the Blu ray

  • @ErickMuzone
    @ErickMuzone Год назад +1

    I don’t know how this ended up in my algorithm, but it is fucking dope.

  • @AbuAmatullahAlAmriki
    @AbuAmatullahAlAmriki Год назад +1

    My favorite period of history. Perfect video!

  • @hubes96
    @hubes96 Год назад +3

    Ohhhh dang! I was so looking fwd to listening to this podcast. I saw this movie and the characters were really interesting. But the audio of this podcast is garbage and i cant hear or understand what he is saying🤷 so mad im sure this podcast is awesome

    • @whyulook424
      @whyulook424 Год назад

      Click on the upper right hand corner to turn on closed captioning. Read it instead. If it progresses too quickly, use the little in the same corner to access the drop-down menu. Look for playback speed and slow it down.

  • @jimmytwotimes2758
    @jimmytwotimes2758 Год назад +3

    Actually Blacks were Cowboys ,see the term "Boy"
    Whites were called Cowhands.

  • @a.leemorrisjr.9255
    @a.leemorrisjr.9255 Год назад +4

    Willie Kinnard was actually a full U.S. Marshall of Colorado mining town Yank Hill. Very unusual for his era. Several men tried him during his time there, they all came out 2nd best.

  • @joychakravorty2380
    @joychakravorty2380 Год назад

    Being Indian, I was ignorant about Black Cow Boys.They were just workers, who worked hard in Bad West. History was just what powerful tell us forcefully.

  • @SarcasticOne4407
    @SarcasticOne4407 Год назад +4

    I just found out from my father a few months ago that I'm related to Nat Love which is so very cool❤

    • @robertbailey-fu2bx
      @robertbailey-fu2bx Год назад

      So that means you’re related to faizpn love(Big worm)

    • @lisal29
      @lisal29 Год назад

      Hey cuz. Nat love is actually my great.... grandfather. Learned from my grandfather when I was young. I always been interesting in learning about him 😊

  • @irvinyounger1499
    @irvinyounger1499 Год назад +3

    I enjoy watching the battle at Little Big Horn.. that's what happens to thieves

  • @dianebooker8216
    @dianebooker8216 Год назад

    Thank you good video

  • @lanacampbell-moore6686
    @lanacampbell-moore6686 3 года назад +2

    Thank you!😊

  • @willardhuff8400
    @willardhuff8400 Год назад +1

    Why is there no subscribe button?

  • @a.leemorrisjr.9255
    @a.leemorrisjr.9255 Год назад +10

    Yes, Cherokee Bill, Rufus Buck, Bass Reeves, Deadwood Dick', Mary Fields, Isom Dart, Willie Kinnard, & Bill Pickett ( to name only a few) were real.

    • @bphlatsax75
      @bphlatsax75 Год назад

      Yes! I loved the Bass Reeves story and can't wait until a movie comes out! He is said to be the inspiration for The Lone Ranger. Just from the stories I've heard and read about him, there should be a series based on him. 😉😉

    • @a.leemorrisjr.9255
      @a.leemorrisjr.9255 Год назад +1

      @@bphlatsax75 Art Burton's "Red, Black, & Deadly" provides very good account of native & black outlaws/lawmen of early OK territory. Bass served as deputy marshall under Judge I.C. "Hanging Judge" Parker. The racism & politics of the era prevented Reeves from being a "full" marshall. Still, he was helluva man who never failed to get his man, dead or alive. He's been called the blackman's answer to the likes of the Earp & Masterson brothers. I'd love to see a historically correct feature film made of his life & time.

    • @bphlatsax75
      @bphlatsax75 Год назад

      @A. Lee Morris Jr. they were in talks of doing a movie on Bass Reeves a couple years ago (just before Rona May came), haven't heard anything more. He was a crafty sucker too! 😉😉

    • @RonnieM90
      @RonnieM90 Год назад

      ​@@bphlatsax75A limited series based on the life of Reeves entitled Lawmen: Bass Reeves began airing on Paramount+ on November 5, 2023. It also aired on CBS.

  • @jokaman03
    @jokaman03 Год назад

    This was a great video. I'm assuming Regina King's character Treacherous Trudy isn't real?

  • @renegadestarot5312
    @renegadestarot5312 Год назад +1

    I know you meant well but the term is indigenous or their repective tribe. Not Native Americans or Indian. The Indigenous never used terms "Native American or Indian" which are white people terms

  • @bassman4983
    @bassman4983 Год назад +3

    I’m confused because I thought that being called a cowboy back then was a derogatory, demeaning term, belittling black men,making all cowboys black and cowhands or ranch hands white. Now that cowboy sounds cool everyone wants to be called a cowboy and retroactively blanket the term on everyone of that era. When Hollywood took on making westerns, I believe they normalized the term cowboy as being white. If I’m wrong I’m wrong. Please clarify if I am wrong.

  • @lennyjohnson9331
    @lennyjohnson9331 Год назад +4

    I thought these guys were from the gap band ? Cuz u know u have to get up Early to get the worm

  • @Ulove619
    @Ulove619 Год назад +3

    My Family… GRATITUDES FOR TELLING HIS STORY.. much love my bro.. too bad the movie didn’t tell the real story. It would have been way better than the fake movie.

    • @lisal29
      @lisal29 Год назад

      I said the same thing, I actually glad my great.... grandfather is getting to be😊 know. Love it.

  • @DCJNewsMedia
    @DCJNewsMedia Год назад +3

    Many black Americans are ancestors of Native Americans, Native European Americans, and American Africans.
    But, many white Americans have the same make-up blood, culture, nationality, and color.
    Very few people are truly African Americans, and the supper majority are white, who migrated to Americans.
    Your place of birth determines your nationality...so if you are born in America, that is the 1st nationality
    I.E. if your ancestors were from Africa, you are American African. If your ancestors are European, you are American European, etc.
    However, if you are an American Indian you can claim either way you choose.
    Native American Indian, American
    Or
    American Native American Indian
    So if you're black and your ancestors were from Africa and American, but you were born here, you're American African unless you are Native American Indian.
    Then you can be American or Indian 1st, but African is last.
    Same with white people in like circumstances
    And the same for Mexican- Brown people.
    All the principles always remain the same.
    I am Native American - Native American Indian- American European and may be of other nationalities.. I know many of my ancestors, but some still not know.
    I am proud of everything I know I am. I will be proud of anything I discover now and in the future.
    People are people.
    I think all people should advocate for each other. And celibate our differences in culture, nationality, color, and religion. Borders and language
    and the like.
    Just be who you are. Be happy with who you are.

  • @floridagator1765
    @floridagator1765 Год назад +4

    Stagecoach Mary looks JUST like Zazie Beetz 🤔

  • @gailpippin9761
    @gailpippin9761 Год назад +1

    Fascinating!

  • @forensicaccountant259
    @forensicaccountant259 Год назад +2

    Not a proponent of rape under ANY circumstance.

  • @CeciliaLinden
    @CeciliaLinden 9 месяцев назад +1

    The original cowboys were the black men. The white men were called "cowhands".

    • @richardmontonio1486
      @richardmontonio1486 7 месяцев назад

      In 1868 all black slaves were released from slavery, Your black ancestors went out looking for work and went into Texas where there were cowboy = cowhand jobs . These were low paying jobs that didn't pay well. Many unemployed freed black men took these jobs that only whites and Mexicans did. White and Mexican cow hands = cowboys taught black men how to handle horses and to drive steer to market. Black Americans were the last Americans in America to be cowboys = cowhands. Once black slaves were released from slavery in 1868 then were they considered American citizens. Mexicans were American citizens after the Mexican and American war in 1830. Mexicans taught white men to ride horses and drive steer to the market. Mexican cowboys were called vaqueros they were taught how to ride horses from the 1500s by the spainards the fathers of Mexicans.

    • @bigcoop3717
      @bigcoop3717 4 месяца назад

      @@richardmontonio1486 Go back to the Caucasus Mountains

  • @RobertSmith-gc7mf
    @RobertSmith-gc7mf Год назад +2

    It was most likely they had Indian blood in them, and some were black and the Goverment did care and did them anyway they wanted to!

  • @llucero2260
    @llucero2260 Год назад

    Not sure how your photos match your narration. I found it confusing.

  • @vamp__kamp
    @vamp__kamp Год назад

    This was dope

  • @onlyjoetee
    @onlyjoetee Год назад +4

    Cowboy was a profession like carpeted or mechanic

    • @torrianfrazier901
      @torrianfrazier901 Год назад

      That’s what we know, but they aren’t saying.

    • @corysipp4432
      @corysipp4432 Год назад +1

      Your right but it still wasn't a prized title hence why white ranchers were know as "cowpunchers" or "cowhands"

  • @nikkib7442
    @nikkib7442 Год назад +3

    Love is a Indian last name

  • @edwardmoore4964
    @edwardmoore4964 Год назад +2

    I love cowboy outlaws , I thing who I would have been .I know that my grand father wasn't nothing to lay with

  • @latoyaramnarine1772
    @latoyaramnarine1772 Год назад +3

    Bass Reeves he very famous die like king lot of important people come,

  • @heatherfulmore3412
    @heatherfulmore3412 Год назад

    I understand what people post and I try to give them their space.

  • @BlueRainjaVEVO
    @BlueRainjaVEVO Год назад

    Love the content but get a new mic my guy

  • @rodneyb7851
    @rodneyb7851 Год назад

    Very educational enjoyed the content ,I was aware that most of the winning jockeys during the 1800 and 1900 were black.

  • @sehunlimitedsonyahoward1165
    @sehunlimitedsonyahoward1165 Год назад

    Thank you

  • @t.d.w.maverick5727
    @t.d.w.maverick5727 Год назад +4

    Wow 👌 👏

  • @bphlatsax75
    @bphlatsax75 Год назад +1

    There needs to be a Cathay Williams movie! 😉😉

    • @whyulook424
      @whyulook424 Год назад +2

      Shame she was cheated out of her pension

  • @supersaiyantayt
    @supersaiyantayt Год назад +4

    Cause most of the natives were copper colored folk .....

    • @rustydogrustydog9191
      @rustydogrustydog9191 Год назад

      No they weren’t, quit trying to make native Americans black. Culture vultures.

  • @robyn3976
    @robyn3976 Год назад

    15:06 is not Cherokee Bill.

  • @Blacc_yoshi
    @Blacc_yoshi Год назад +1

    Free education about the pitbull history as well I'll sub

  • @nolanwalls9894
    @nolanwalls9894 Год назад +1

    Here we go not knowing any of these people because they make sure. Dodge city one of the biggest and famous an he looks like a native

  • @SportsonHighStandards
    @SportsonHighStandards Год назад +3

    Nat Love is my great uncle😢

  • @aaronforsythe8556
    @aaronforsythe8556 Год назад +2

    The movie felt more like blackspoitation than western film.

  • @PhyllisMLeblanc
    @PhyllisMLeblanc 10 месяцев назад

    Why is this story being told with White cowboys in background? Just curious.

  • @markrandle4368
    @markrandle4368 Год назад

    Sad that this story has to fictionalized, like this & every part of history needs to be told and taught. I'm looking forward to the Bass Reeves show coming out.

  • @nolanwalls9894
    @nolanwalls9894 Год назад +2

    Wow so nat was in dead wood but not in the t. V show!!

  • @malikhill9533
    @malikhill9533 Год назад +1

    He ain't do Trudy Smith tho I definitely wanted to know if tht Hope story was true

  • @blessedglasgow7548
    @blessedglasgow7548 Год назад

    Thx u4da tru story 🌸🍯🐝🦾🇺🇸🐉💋

  • @michaelecrews59
    @michaelecrews59 Год назад +2

    His.name.was.
    Harmon.crews..

  • @richardanderson7888
    @richardanderson7888 Год назад

    Learn to record when reading without recording your breath it's loud and annoying or find someone else to record But Thanks for informing Us of our place in history

  • @richard-zc6im
    @richard-zc6im Год назад +2

    Pretty good on will Pickett but you need to read his autobiography it tells you a little bit more like he could rope a coyote down to somebody stole his billfold when that horse kicked him in the head and the 101 Ranch was the circus and they sold it I believe Barnum & Bailey and there's more

    • @richardmontonio1486
      @richardmontonio1486 7 месяцев назад

      Lone ranger is a fake and not true character, someone made him up for television?