Get MagellanTV here: try.magellantv.com/MEGAPROJECTS & get an exclusive offer extended to our viewers: an extra month FREE. MagellanTV is a new kind of streaming service run by filmmakers with 3,000 documentaries! Check out our personal recommendation and MagellanTV’s exclusive playlists: www.magellantv.com/explore/history
You do realize that "Central America" is a sub-region of North America, right? Also, yes, you can discover something that is known to others or already exists - so long as you didn't know about it, you've discovered it. Ideas for other shows: Roman aqueducts, Atlantic convoys of the Second World War, American naval production of WWII (naval strategy _is_ build strategy), US WWII tank factories (building a factory to build the parts for the factory that will build the tanks), and Brigham Young's settlements throughout Western America and Canada. And for kicks and giggles, you could do one on what it cost the British Empire to build one of their First Rate warships (price, percentage of GDP, labor, and material).
As a Brit I find it fascinating learning about American history (although this is closely intertwined with our own history, this was never taught to me in school).
Oh, BTW, I have a friend from Suffolk who visits me occasionally with 2 young sons. I was talking about the 4th of July when the youngest one asked what that was. His mom answered “it is like ‘Bonfire Night’”. I about choked. The 2 things couldn’t be more different!!!!
I grew up in the area and have tour Historic Jamestowne. What is really crazy is seeing the replicas of the ships that crossed the ocean. I was in the USN and it can be rough in a warship, but something under a hundred feet, hat off people hat off.
@Charles Yuditsky That's indeed tiny. There's regular sails across the Atlantic and Pacific, but those boats are usually at least 30 foot. The main issue is storing enough supplies. Water takes up a lot of storage, and while you can use reverse osmosis to generate freshwater it'd be foolish to trust that on long voyages - and it uses a lot of electricity, necessitating solar, batteries or a generator, which in turn use space too.
Might I suggest the Rideau Canal as a future MP? Built in 1826. Pre-railroad era dams and locks built through the Canadian wilderness by hard labour and Scottish stone masons. 6 years, 200km, about 1000 dead. Engineering marvel of the 19th century. It's still there. It still works to this day. The town at the furthest reach of it was declared the Capital of Canada by Queen Victoria. It remains so today. - - - Bloddy excellent work on these vids! You and your team are amazing!
House on the Rock in Wisconsin would make a great subject for a video. Depending on how you look at it, a Megaproject, Sideproject, or maybe on Geographics? It's a fascinating place!
@@Lady_Chalk The person who writes the scripts for Buisness Blaze. He is also locked in the basement only to write them... Though he is fine, he has some internet and a typewriter :p
It's always immensely interesting to see a comparison of Jamestown and Plymouth. Jamestown had slaves by the 1630s (1619 was indentured servants, which is a very important difference) while Plymouth flat out banned slavery and arrested a ship full of slavers. Jamestown starved and resorted to cannibalism. Plymouth did not, and instead was provided for by the natives, who were their close allies and friends all the way up to King Philip's War (which was natives and Plymouth vs other natives). It's very interesting to see the difference in the two because Jamestown was founded out of a desire for money, while Plymouth was founded out of a desire to follow God and escape persecution. It's a very interesting contrast.
I live about 30 minutes from James town and take my family there probably 4 or 5 times in the summer. It’s really nice to walk around and just enjoy the day there. You can see the remade colonies and replicas of all three ships that you can walk around on.
@@MotoHikes unless they want to talk about the canals, levees and land reclamation that was meant to make way for expansion of the farms and population around Okeechobee. That was a major undertaking.
You mentioned the Massacre of 1622, but I'm bummed you didn't mention the Massacre of 1644. Around 500 settlers were killed, including my 9th great-grandparents Godfrey and Mary Ragsdale, who had come to Virginia Colony from England in 1640. Most Ragsdales in the United States are descended from their son, Godfrey Jr, who was was a baby at the time and was one of the few who was spared.
Seen the Sky three part mini-series. Excellent You have to respect this settlement The church awarded the Americas to the Spanish and Portuguese. Yet the English carved out USA and Canada respect 🙌
Megaproject idea - "The Incredible Life of Danny... so far!" Parts 1 to 6 Once you finally get sick of his repeated escape attempts and put him down, then it can become a Biography
This brought back memories of my 4th grade Virginia History class where we studied all this. I guess I was 10 years old or so. We later took a class trip to Jamestown and Williamsburg the same (school) year. Now, I live about five miles or so from Henricus, the second permanent English settlement in what would become Virginia.
Thank you for this video and the one on Geographics! I’m visiting Jamestown tomorrow and am happy to have the info needed to fully understand and appreciate the land.
What do you mean? Eventually, Europeans would've had it one way or the other and while some details might've been different, America would've still largely been the same European civilization it is today.
Again Disney threw out all history books when they sat down and wrote the script for Pocahontas. For example, George Percy was apparently changed into Percy, the spoiled Pug who belonged to Radcliffe. Also, the settlers were depicted as rugged men of adventure.
I was able to trace 1 ancestor back to Jamestown, VA. A John Deihl. I also traced a few ancestors back to the 1st American Rebellion, called The Bacon's Rebellion.
Hello , I’m watching your videos since you where on the previous channel, I’m Norbert a young man with a company, PrintToys, I’m writing a comment because I believe that my company is a Megaproject, what makes me to say that it is the capability of young director to think that my company is going to build ecosystems! :))
I still have a set of 5 books (with accompanying cassette tapes) called “My Fun with Reading”; each book has 3 stories (copyright 1973). The story of Tom Savage is the 1st one in Book 5.
Contrary to most people's belief, the Spanish at Saint Augustine were NOT the first European colony north of Mexico. French Huguenots started Fort Caroline in what is now Jacksonville, Florida on June 22, 1564, more than a year before the founding of St. Augustine. So why is Fort Caroline and the French forgotten? Because the whole purpose of St. Augustine was to give the Spanish a base from which to destroy the French colony -- which they did in September of 1565.
Hi Simon. As usual another interesting video. Thank you. But.....What happened to today's Business Blaze episode? I got a notification for it (but not this video. Odd.) but when I tried to watch it, it was labelled as "private". The title was: " Cashing in on Conspiracy Theories". Sounds interesting.
Tbh the only way I could see Roanoke disappear that quickly with no trace is if their ship sank on the way back to england or they got marooned somewhere.
I don't want to downplay Lief Erickson as doing that 1000 years ago is pretty awesome, but it is more trivia than a turning point in history. The Vikings were never on North America for more than a couple years and nothing ever came of it. Yeah Columbus wasn't the first European, but his expedition did permanently connect the Americas with the rest of the world.
I agree. The Vikings might have discovered America but they probably thought it was just another big island like Greenland and likely any European who randomly heard about it thought the same. Columbus proved there was something there and it didn’t take very long for people to realize there was a whole lot of something there.
I'm stationed in Virginia got to ride my motorcycle over to the Jamestown site made for an awesome day just walking around this historically rich place
I watched this as a companion to what I am reading in my US history class. One of my assignments is to read through a paper written on The Starving Time in Jamestown. Apparently, the claims of cannibalism are highly disputed with supporting narratives from both sides of that story.
My paternal 12th great grandfather landed in Jamestown in 1619.... He was killed in an Indian attack in 1642.... I've always been fascinated with this subject.
Simon, your video on the Salisbury Cathederal was awesome. But have you heard of the Salt Lake Temple in Utah? It was built by pioneer refugees in the middle of an inhospitable desert over 40 years in the mid 1800s. Once it was even buried completely underground! Currently, the foundation is being updated to make it more earthquake resistant. Check it out!
Highly recommend going to the settlement if you are nearby. The College of William and Mary still has working excavations there and it's well taken care of. Williamsburg is close by and is even better preserved, and you can even spend the night in historic Williamsburg providing you are willing to dress for the period.
he usually uploads mega projects on mondays wednedays and fridays. he usuallu uploads on side projests on tuesdays thursdays and saturdays. thats how i know what day it is
FYI, The lady Elizabeth Dare of the Roanoke colony was the first to give birth in the new world. Her daughter Virginia is well documented. Just because the colony disappeared doesn't change this fact.
Suggested video: Ripple Rock. Not sure if that would qualify as a megaproject, or geographics, but to quote wikipedia "The explosion was noted as one of the largest non-nuclear planned explosions on record" But a video about obliterating an underwater mountain seems like a good watch.
LOVE FROM CANADA! Rideau Canal and river system for MEGA PROJECTS! Francis "Peggy" Pegahmagabow for Biographics! Who doesnt love a great war sniper and this guy is the best of the best! Vote Canada!
Regina's original and 2000s Big Dig cost more and way bigger than Rideau Canal. Redug out BOTH lakes and entire creek system bwahaha.! Both aren't megaprojects. 👍🤓🇨🇦
@@terryarmbruster7986 are you talking about that little lake in regina that they took down a few meters? the Rideau Canal is 202km long and was built in the 1820s... do some research before you post dumb sh*t
Something I like to point out: Columbus was not thought of as crazy for thinking the Earth was round. Aristotle knew the Earth was round. Muslims had been making globes for centuries by the time of Columbus. The only issue is that Columbus (and plenty of other scholars of the time) simply thought Japan was far closer to Europe than it is. People in Europe didn't really know how big Asia was. Columbus didn't think he was in Japan or India, he thought he was in an as-yet undiscovered (by Europeans) part of Asia.
At the Historic Jamestown Park there's still a chapel standing in the original triangle fort, and they're excavating all the other foundations of other buildings, where they've found things like bones with teeth marks. (The prevailing theory was the deceased were dug up)
My wife is a descendant of Captain Gabriel Archer, so we are now learning about Jamestown and the Starving Time, where he passed on due to injuries and starvation. Anything you can point me in the direction of would be greatly appreciated.
Wow I just read her ancestor's name while reading about my ancestor Capt Robert Adams. I'll have to go back and re read but I believe they both were captains with the East India Company.
Have always meant to take a day trip down to Jamestown, but have yet to do it. Was a school 5th grade field trip for many years, until it was my time for the trip they stopped doing it. I think because of the recession in 07-08.
3 года назад
I think the Roanoke colony went to Croatian (hence the carving) took the boats out and sank on the way there just one of dozens of shipwrecks on the seabed
My first thought was, yeah, it makes sense it’s in Megaprojects, given the level of technology and the obstacles to overcome. Also, I think Simon’s right in his post below. It was historic in that it was a foothold that once secured guaranteed the English expansion into North America. The colony could be expanded with the knowledge that a failure would be a failure of the expansion and not the colony. And any new colonies further north and south would know they had a safe haven and trading partner at most hundreds of miles away and not the thousands back to England.
So, this would be kind of controversial, and would have to come with a lot of acknowledgment like this one on the devastation colonisation and displacement caused and continues to cause to this day. But would you consider doing the first fleet and initial settlement of Australia? It’s actually very interesting for how they ‘chose’ people, basic attempts at biosecurity, the voyage itself, then a people attempting to live somewhere completely unlike anywhere they’d ever experienced, from climate to flora and fauna. Plus tensions between the government, military, convicts, and free settlers.
14:23 Man, that man not only died a horrible death, but his legacy has also been irreparably tarnished by Disney portraying him as one of the most infamous animated villains. 🐚👨🏻🔥💥💥💥⛏️⛏️🟣
Could you make a video about South Florida water. Management? Aka how they drained the Everglades that allowed for the creation of Miami Florida. I know a little bit of the history but it’s impressive how they did it in the early 1900s
Hello Simon please can you do a mega projects on the RNLI and also one on one 9f there most arduous rescues the Forrest Hall rescue of 1899 look it up you'll be amazed
This is like a refresher course for me. If I tell anyone anything about history then I get called crazy. I live in GA. When I was a kid everyone knew and loved history here. Georgia's mado was, " those who forget history are doomed to repeat it". What happened to my state? I think it's an effort to keep a kind of slavery going. Someone needs to do a sixty minutes on GA. Things are super weird here and I can't really figure out why from the inside. Does anyone have an objective view of why my states' inhabitants are...the way they are?
Georgia is nothing but stolen Cherokee land. The Supreme Court even ruled in their favor but Andrew Jackson had his little jihad with the Indian removal act and thus today you learn you profit from ceasing of indigenous lands.
it would have been a mega project to establish a new colony but unfortunately they were thinking too small and all the earlier settlers perished for the lack of proper planning. Good tell Simon
The very little known life story of Helena Valero, the 12 year old girl who was, after having been shot in the stomach with a curare tipped arrow captured by Yanomami Indians in the Upper Rio Negro of Brasil and suffered 25 hellish years to escape, is one of the most incredible survival stories of the 20th century as well as the greatest insights into the fascinating but often violent world and mindset of these surviving 'pre stone-age' peoples. Helena's autobiography as told to Ettore Biocca and is titled 'Yanoama : the Narrative of a White Girl Kidnapped by Amazonian Indians' translated by Dennis Rhodes, is an important story that needs to be more widely told and certainly worthy of a segment.
Suggestion if you haven’t already done it. Wright Patterson AFB. It’s long been rumored to be the “real Area 51” and has a sordid past. Love your stuff!✌🏻
Good video, interesting presentation. Can you do one on New Orleans, acquired through Jefferson Admin purchase of Louisiana (2/3 of then U.S. 18o3, from Napoleonic France but had been settled by the French earlier during 1682-1718.
Get MagellanTV here: try.magellantv.com/MEGAPROJECTS & get an exclusive offer extended to our viewers: an extra month FREE.
MagellanTV is a new kind of streaming service run by filmmakers with 3,000 documentaries! Check out our personal recommendation and MagellanTV’s exclusive playlists: www.magellantv.com/explore/history
Please make a video about Bar Lev Line, costing around $300 million in 1973.
You should do a show on Charleston, SC USA and Denmark Vessey! I’m a big fan of all your channels!
Europeans had no clue that oysters were around and the settlers didn’t know much about what is easily harvested the good old hunter gatherer way.
You do realize that "Central America" is a sub-region of North America, right? Also, yes, you can discover something that is known to others or already exists - so long as you didn't know about it, you've discovered it.
Ideas for other shows: Roman aqueducts, Atlantic convoys of the Second World War, American naval production of WWII (naval strategy _is_ build strategy), US WWII tank factories (building a factory to build the parts for the factory that will build the tanks), and Brigham Young's settlements throughout Western America and Canada. And for kicks and giggles, you could do one on what it cost the British Empire to build one of their First Rate warships (price, percentage of GDP, labor, and material).
Simon I have been asking for a video about the Noord/Zuid-Lijn in Amsterdam for a month now
As a Brit I find it fascinating learning about American history (although this is closely intertwined with our own history, this was never taught to me in school).
I understand. I am an American by my ancestry shows I am 64% English and 32% French with a little Dutch, Dane and Norwegian thrown in.
Oh, BTW, I have a friend from Suffolk who visits me occasionally with 2 young sons. I was talking about the 4th of July when the youngest one asked what that was. His mom answered “it is like ‘Bonfire Night’”. I about choked. The 2 things couldn’t be more different!!!!
Just finished this video to find out The History Guy just uploaded a video on the USS Jamestown. Never can get bored with these two channels
History guy's great.
Agree love them both
I grew up in the area and have tour Historic Jamestowne. What is really crazy is seeing the replicas of the ships that crossed the ocean. I was in the USN and it can be rough in a warship, but something under a hundred feet, hat off people hat off.
@Charles Yuditsky That's indeed tiny. There's regular sails across the Atlantic and Pacific, but those boats are usually at least 30 foot. The main issue is storing enough supplies. Water takes up a lot of storage, and while you can use reverse osmosis to generate freshwater it'd be foolish to trust that on long voyages - and it uses a lot of electricity, necessitating solar, batteries or a generator, which in turn use space too.
Might I suggest the Rideau Canal as a future MP? Built in 1826. Pre-railroad era dams and locks built through the Canadian wilderness by hard labour and Scottish stone masons. 6 years, 200km, about 1000 dead. Engineering marvel of the 19th century. It's still there. It still works to this day. The town at the furthest reach of it was declared the Capital of Canada by Queen Victoria. It remains so today. - - - Bloddy excellent work on these vids! You and your team are amazing!
House on the Rock in Wisconsin would make a great subject for a video. Depending on how you look at it, a Megaproject, Sideproject, or maybe on Geographics? It's a fascinating place!
Love that place. The great hoarder alex Jordan
We need a mega projects of the basement that holds Danny.
More of a side project but I'm down, I'd watch it
Who’s Danny? Is he one of the channel crew?
@@Lady_Chalk business blaze
And Biographic on Danny
@@Lady_Chalk The person who writes the scripts for Buisness Blaze. He is also locked in the basement only to write them... Though he is fine, he has some internet and a typewriter :p
Excellent irony with the Magellan ad. Well done, Sir.
;)
It's always immensely interesting to see a comparison of Jamestown and Plymouth. Jamestown had slaves by the 1630s (1619 was indentured servants, which is a very important difference) while Plymouth flat out banned slavery and arrested a ship full of slavers.
Jamestown starved and resorted to cannibalism. Plymouth did not, and instead was provided for by the natives, who were their close allies and friends all the way up to King Philip's War (which was natives and Plymouth vs other natives).
It's very interesting to see the difference in the two because Jamestown was founded out of a desire for money, while Plymouth was founded out of a desire to follow God and escape persecution.
It's a very interesting contrast.
I live about 30 minutes from James town and take my family there probably 4 or 5 times in the summer. It’s really nice to walk around and just enjoy the day there. You can see the remade colonies and replicas of all three ships that you can walk around on.
Do a mega project on Lake Okeechobee and the Everglades!
Those would be better on the Geographics channel
Not necessarily, there was alot of work done there. So flip a coin
@@MotoHikes unless they want to talk about the canals, levees and land reclamation that was meant to make way for expansion of the farms and population around Okeechobee. That was a major undertaking.
Lol what? No one cares about that cesspit
Thats natural tho, better suited for geographics.
I first read it as "The Establishment of Jonestown" and thought this is going to be REALLY interesing....maybe that could be a "side project"?
I keep mistaking this town with psycho Jim Jones' Jonestown.
Tbh liveing in the modern day Uk feels pretty much the same as to what I imagine liveing in jonestown did.
@@milton1969able ...Really? XD
I was thinking 'Ehh what, that odd-bod, preacher ghoul!? Ahh good, it's not him!' [breathes out]
No, you don’t
same, currently writing a paper on it and I was like ?? He wants us to write about THAT? gonna be a dark paper but okay
You mentioned the Massacre of 1622, but I'm bummed you didn't mention the Massacre of 1644. Around 500 settlers were killed, including my 9th great-grandparents Godfrey and Mary Ragsdale, who had come to Virginia Colony from England in 1640. Most Ragsdales in the United States are descended from their son, Godfrey Jr, who was was a baby at the time and was one of the few who was spared.
Want a cookie nigga?
The fate of invaders
Death
fascinating
@@omaryousifkamal4290we still won. Cry for me.
@@loganstroganoff1284he's crying on the trail of tears like his natives
1:10 - Chapter 1 - The 1st foreign visitors
2:25 - Chapter 2 - The roanoke colony
5:00 - Mid roll ads
6:20 - Chapter 3 - The london company
7:50 - Chapter 4 - Jamestown
8:55 - Chapter 5 - A harsh reality
10:55 - Chapter 6 - Resupply
12:10 - Chapter 7 - The starving time
14:50 - Chapter 8 - Fortunes improve
17:00 - Chapter 9 - Bacon rebellion
- Chapter 10 -
W dude helps for my school studys
My grandfather,John Rolfe, (yes, that John Rolfe), was killed during the massacre of 1622. His son, Thomas, is my ninth great grandfather.
As a descendant of Governor William Bradford of the Pilgrims, videos about the early English colonists in America fascinates me. Love it!
Seen the Sky three part mini-series. Excellent
You have to respect this settlement
The church awarded the Americas to the Spanish and Portuguese.
Yet the English carved out USA and Canada
respect 🙌
Megaproject idea - "The Incredible Life of Danny... so far!" Parts 1 to 6
Once you finally get sick of his repeated escape attempts and put him down, then it can become a Biography
I honestly read this as Jonestown initially... Now I'm kind of disappointed. 😅
This brought back memories of my 4th grade Virginia History class where we studied all this. I guess I was 10 years old or so. We later took a class trip to Jamestown and Williamsburg the same (school) year. Now, I live about five miles or so from Henricus, the second permanent English settlement in what would become Virginia.
Only 4th grade? We went literally every year until like 6th grade
@@tailorforeman7082 Yea. In the 5th grade we did Richmond. 6th went to Norfolk to the Navy base and air station. 7th went to DC.
Thank you for this video and the one on Geographics! I’m visiting Jamestown tomorrow and am happy to have the info needed to fully understand and appreciate the land.
Can we have a video about the Noord/Zuid-Lijn in Amsterdam? I have been asking this for a month
@Charles Yuditsky The Zuiderzee polders are very interesting too! But it’s not what I meant
@Charles Yuditsky No, Amsterdam’s new subway line, the construction went on for 15 years and a lot of things went wrong during construction
An incredible piece of history, people don’t know how close America came to simply never being created or colonized by someone else
What do you mean? Eventually, Europeans would've had it one way or the other and while some details might've been different, America would've still largely been the same European civilization it is today.
@@weedmastersrit wouldn’t it would be a completely different nation with a completely different history
@@arthurhughes-watts1180 not really, different but still from the same mold
Again Disney threw out all history books when they sat down and wrote the script for Pocahontas. For example, George Percy was apparently changed into Percy, the spoiled Pug who belonged to Radcliffe. Also, the settlers were depicted as rugged men of adventure.
What else would've you had them depict the settlers as?
Do you watch Disney stories for their historical accuracy?
Damn, some of this would make a great netflix series or something.
I was able to trace 1 ancestor back to Jamestown, VA. A John Deihl. I also traced a few ancestors back to the 1st American Rebellion, called The Bacon's Rebellion.
I’m a direct descendant of Thomas Hansford. I’m sure I have many cousins out there.
I'd love to see a MegaProject on the Good Friday Agreement.
It cannot be underestimated just how mega an undertaking this was
Hello , I’m watching your videos since you where on the previous channel, I’m Norbert a young man with a company, PrintToys, I’m writing a comment because I believe that my company is a Megaproject, what makes me to say that it is the capability of young director to think that my company is going to build ecosystems! :))
I have visited the Three Gorges Dam in China. I think most of the viewers of this channel would enjoy a video about this dam.
5:37 Irony not lost on me. Landed on that spot while fast-forwarding the ad.
Great Video, thx Simon
I still have a set of 5 books (with accompanying cassette tapes) called “My Fun with Reading”; each book has 3 stories (copyright 1973). The story of Tom Savage is the 1st one in Book 5.
Suggestion for video: ”Göta kanal” a canal in Sweden which goes from one side of the country to the other.(190km)
Well now I hope it is eventually. I have so many questions but so little time to do my own research.
Contrary to most people's belief, the Spanish at Saint Augustine were NOT the first European colony north of Mexico. French Huguenots started Fort Caroline in what is now Jacksonville, Florida on June 22, 1564, more than a year before the founding of St. Augustine. So why is Fort Caroline and the French forgotten? Because the whole purpose of St. Augustine was to give the Spanish a base from which to destroy the French colony -- which they did in September of 1565.
Excellent video, Simon. Cheers -- W
Hi Simon. As usual another interesting video. Thank you. But.....What happened to today's Business Blaze episode? I got a notification for it (but not this video. Odd.) but when I tried to watch it, it was labelled as "private". The title was: " Cashing in on Conspiracy Theories". Sounds interesting.
There was no audio on the BB video. I imagine they'll repost when it's fixed :)
Tbh the only way I could see Roanoke disappear that quickly with no trace is if their ship sank on the way back to england or they got marooned somewhere.
I don't want to downplay Lief Erickson as doing that 1000 years ago is pretty awesome, but it is more trivia than a turning point in history. The Vikings were never on North America for more than a couple years and nothing ever came of it. Yeah Columbus wasn't the first European, but his expedition did permanently connect the Americas with the rest of the world.
I agree. The Vikings might have discovered America but they probably thought it was just another big island like Greenland and likely any European who randomly heard about it thought the same. Columbus proved there was something there and it didn’t take very long for people to realize there was a whole lot of something there.
I'm stationed in Virginia got to ride my motorcycle over to the Jamestown site made for an awesome day just walking around this historically rich place
Québec city's citadel and fortification would make a great mega project!
Please make a video about Bar Lev Line, costing around $300 million in 1973.
What is the Bar Lev Line?
A military defensive line.
The PLO had a line too
Not a megaprojects. Be only a cpl of billion in 2021 money. Way bigger costlier defensive lines in world.
I am related to the Tatums, Lee, & Burchett families who were early. Tatum came aboutc1619 as a fairly young man
Ok Simon. THIS is your best ad transition 👏
I live next to Jamestown, used to be a cool place to visit but now they want to charge like $80 per person for a day pass. Absolute tipoff.
I watched this as a companion to what I am reading in my US history class. One of my assignments is to read through a paper written on The Starving Time in Jamestown. Apparently, the claims of cannibalism are highly disputed with supporting narratives from both sides of that story.
Great job, thank you.
My paternal 12th great grandfather landed in Jamestown in 1619.... He was killed in an Indian attack in 1642.... I've always been fascinated with this subject.
Although I'm from the US, I love narrowboating. With 30,000+ boats going on Great Britain's canals any chance of a video on it?
Simon, Londinium would be great! Roman London. It was quite an ambitious project like a lot of Rome's colonial cities.
Good video 👍
Simon, your video on the Salisbury Cathederal was awesome. But have you heard of the Salt Lake Temple in Utah? It was built by pioneer refugees in the middle of an inhospitable desert over 40 years in the mid 1800s. Once it was even buried completely underground! Currently, the foundation is being updated to make it more earthquake resistant. Check it out!
Highly recommend going to the settlement if you are nearby. The College of William and Mary still has working excavations there and it's well taken care of. Williamsburg is close by and is even better preserved, and you can even spend the night in historic Williamsburg providing you are willing to dress for the period.
*Me wondering what day of the week it is and seeing Simon upload a new vid*
This isn't narrowing anything down ...
he usually uploads mega projects on mondays wednedays and fridays. he usuallu uploads on side projests on tuesdays thursdays and saturdays. thats how i know what day it is
FYI, The lady Elizabeth Dare of the Roanoke colony was the first to give birth in the new world. Her daughter Virginia is well documented. Just because the colony disappeared doesn't change this fact.
Suggested video: Ripple Rock. Not sure if that would qualify as a megaproject, or geographics, but to quote wikipedia "The explosion was noted as one of the largest non-nuclear planned explosions on record" But a video about obliterating an underwater mountain seems like a good watch.
LOVE FROM CANADA! Rideau Canal and river system for MEGA PROJECTS! Francis "Peggy" Pegahmagabow for Biographics! Who doesnt love a great war sniper and this guy is the best of the best! Vote Canada!
Regina's original and 2000s Big Dig cost more and way bigger than Rideau Canal. Redug out BOTH lakes and entire creek system bwahaha.! Both aren't megaprojects. 👍🤓🇨🇦
@@terryarmbruster7986 are you talking about that little lake in regina that they took down a few meters? the Rideau Canal is 202km long and was built in the 1820s... do some research before you post dumb sh*t
Nothing more ironic than an ad that says “nothing more annoying than your content being interrupted by ads”. . .
Something I like to point out: Columbus was not thought of as crazy for thinking the Earth was round. Aristotle knew the Earth was round. Muslims had been making globes for centuries by the time of Columbus. The only issue is that Columbus (and plenty of other scholars of the time) simply thought Japan was far closer to Europe than it is. People in Europe didn't really know how big Asia was. Columbus didn't think he was in Japan or India, he thought he was in an as-yet undiscovered (by Europeans) part of Asia.
Would be cool to see a video on the Confederation Bridge in Canada
I was doing my homework but this video is really well made! :D
My ancestor was on one of the resupply ships. They crashed on Bermuda and got stuck. 😕
He was hardcore.
At the Historic Jamestown Park there's still a chapel standing in the original triangle fort, and they're excavating all the other foundations of other buildings, where they've found things like bones with teeth marks. (The prevailing theory was the deceased were dug up)
My wife is a descendant of Captain Gabriel Archer, so we are now learning about Jamestown and the Starving Time, where he passed on due to injuries and starvation. Anything you can point me in the direction of would be greatly appreciated.
Wow I just read her ancestor's name while reading about my ancestor Capt Robert Adams. I'll have to go back and re read but I believe they both were captains with the East India Company.
For side projects, do something in this same geographic area, the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel
Have always meant to take a day trip down to Jamestown, but have yet to do it. Was a school 5th grade field trip for many years, until it was my time for the trip they stopped doing it. I think because of the recession in 07-08.
I think the Roanoke colony went to Croatian (hence the carving) took the boats out and sank on the way there just one of dozens of shipwrecks on the seabed
Roanoke is a spooky incident.....
"Nothing is worse than good content interrupted by ads" He says while interrupting decent content with ads
A fascinating part of the history.
Why is this considered a Mega Project and not a side project? Seems like the whole venture was half hearted until much later.
It feels big somehow. Important in history somehow.
My first thought was, yeah, it makes sense it’s in Megaprojects, given the level of technology and the obstacles to overcome. Also, I think Simon’s right in his post below. It was historic in that it was a foothold that once secured guaranteed the English expansion into North America. The colony could be expanded with the knowledge that a failure would be a failure of the expansion and not the colony. And any new colonies further north and south would know they had a safe haven and trading partner at most hundreds of miles away and not the thousands back to England.
I'm really surprised that there aren't more large cities called London or New London in the US.
There's London, Ontario
York , New York
So, this would be kind of controversial, and would have to come with a lot of acknowledgment like this one on the devastation colonisation and displacement caused and continues to cause to this day.
But would you consider doing the first fleet and initial settlement of Australia? It’s actually very interesting for how they ‘chose’ people, basic attempts at biosecurity, the voyage itself, then a people attempting to live somewhere completely unlike anywhere they’d ever experienced, from climate to flora and fauna. Plus tensions between the government, military, convicts, and free settlers.
Simon, the way you described Percy was not what I'm conditioned to hear you say on BB. Hahaha.
14:23 Man, that man not only died a horrible death, but his legacy has also been irreparably tarnished by Disney portraying him as one of the most infamous animated villains. 🐚👨🏻🔥💥💥💥⛏️⛏️🟣
fascinating lecture
Love your content!
Please do a Megaproject video on the "Big Hole" in Kimberley and the Aswan Dam in Egypt :) Thank you.
Could you make a video about South Florida water. Management? Aka how they drained the Everglades that allowed for the creation of Miami Florida. I know a little bit of the history but it’s impressive how they did it in the early 1900s
Megaprojects idea the Plimoth Colony in Massachusetts Bay or the settling of Manhattan.
I'd love an episode on the SpaceX Starship facility and program in Texas. The first ACTIVE Megaproject to be Megaproject-ed!
Hello Simon please can you do a mega projects on the RNLI and also one on one 9f there most arduous rescues the Forrest Hall rescue of 1899 look it up you'll be amazed
I live in the area where jamestown was, can attest that its a swamp, and the summers are brutal
You gotta do the space shuttle!
I had a family member in Roanoke
This is like a refresher course for me. If I tell anyone anything about history then I get called crazy. I live in GA. When I was a kid everyone knew and loved history here. Georgia's mado was, " those who forget history are doomed to repeat it". What happened to my state? I think it's an effort to keep a kind of slavery going. Someone needs to do a sixty minutes on GA. Things are super weird here and I can't really figure out why from the inside. Does anyone have an objective view of why my states' inhabitants are...the way they are?
Georgia is nothing but stolen Cherokee land. The Supreme Court even ruled in their favor but Andrew Jackson had his little jihad with the Indian removal act and thus today you learn you profit from ceasing of indigenous lands.
more about the vikings in North America would be interesting! No Ikea adverts please!
thanks
I’ll admit, I wasnt expecting to see you here 😝
Me either! :)
I think a video on project ice worm would be pretty cool
I'm convinced this is one of the many characters played by Jonny Sins
it would have been a mega project to establish a new colony but unfortunately they were thinking too small and all the earlier settlers perished for the lack of proper planning. Good tell Simon
One of my ancestors was killed in the the fighting outside Jamestown. He was one of the first doctors to come over.
Great video
The very little known life story of Helena Valero, the 12 year old girl who was, after having been shot in the stomach with a curare tipped arrow captured by Yanomami Indians in the Upper Rio Negro of Brasil and suffered 25 hellish years to escape, is one of the most incredible survival stories of the 20th century as well as the greatest insights into the fascinating but often violent world and mindset of these surviving 'pre stone-age' peoples. Helena's autobiography as told to Ettore Biocca and is titled 'Yanoama : the Narrative of a White Girl Kidnapped by Amazonian Indians' translated by Dennis Rhodes, is an important story that needs to be more widely told and certainly worthy of a segment.
Can you do a video about project pluto and SLAM. A nuclear powerd, super sonic rocket that could deliver 26 nuces!
Mega project idea on the Tokyo flood program???
Suggestion if you haven’t already done it. Wright Patterson AFB. It’s long been rumored to be the “real Area 51” and has a sordid past. Love your stuff!✌🏻
Do a megaprojects on Tenochtitlan the Aztec capital built in the middle of a lake.
Well done, Sir. You only have a little typo in the title. (Starving)
Good video, interesting presentation.
Can you do one on New Orleans, acquired through Jefferson Admin purchase of Louisiana (2/3 of then U.S. 18o3, from Napoleonic France but had been settled by the French earlier during 1682-1718.