Around and About New Jersey: The Lenape Indians

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • John Kraft, the curator and guide of the Lenape Indian Village at Waterloo, explains how archaeologists learn about the past by digging in the ground and carefully studying the objects they find.
    Scientists think that the ancestors of the Lenape Indians* migrated across a land bridge from Asia about 15,000 years ago. They gradually spread throughout North and South America, arriving in what we now call New Jersey about 12,000 years ago.
    Over the centuries, these ancestors of the Lenape began to cultivate crops and live in villages along riverbanks.
    We accompany Kraft through the reconstructed Lenape Village, learning how the Lenape built their houses, which were called wigwams, and how the men hunted and fished while the women grew vegetables, cooked meals, and raised children. Kraft explains that the way of life of the Lenape changed drastically when European traders began to arrive seeking furs. The Indians exchanged furs for brass pots, iron tools and cloth. They also caught diseases such as smallpox and measles from the newcomers. As furs became harder to find, the Lenape sold their land and moved west.
    Today, most of their descendants live in Oklahoma, Wisconsin, and Ontario, Canada. The legacy of the Lenape includes such foods as corn, squash, beans, and many place names.
    In this program we use the terms Native Americans and Indians
    interchangeably. Many descendants of the Lenape today refer to themselves as Indians.
    For a teachers guide go to:
    www.state.nj.u...

Комментарии • 185

  • @ordyhorizonrivieredunord712
    @ordyhorizonrivieredunord712 4 года назад +80

    "When they first arrived, they had the Bible and we had the land. They said to us: close your eyes and pray.
    So we closed our eyes and prayed. When we opened our eyes, we had the Bible and they had the land.
    "。 ----- A tribal chieftain ".

    • @benmew1100
      @benmew1100 3 года назад +1

      Desmond tutu said that as well

    • @lambrosk3790
      @lambrosk3790 2 года назад +4

      “First the missionaries then the military.”

  • @klesification
    @klesification 5 лет назад +42

    Such a cheerful way to talk about genocide.

    • @wrestlingfan-yq1wh
      @wrestlingfan-yq1wh 5 лет назад

      klesification LOL so true

    • @rw8185
      @rw8185 5 лет назад +3

      They are not talking about genocide. I suggest you suggest nobody is allowed to talk about natives without making it about genocide. Not sure how much of teacher you are.

    • @rw8185
      @rw8185 Год назад

      @@sinhurtzeveryone9770 you saying that as a Lenape doesnt exactly increase your credibility. Getting cancer doesnt mean I am a cancer expert.

    • @mrcorpsman123
      @mrcorpsman123 Год назад +4

      I think this video was probably directed towards younger audiences lol they probably didn't want it to be so macabre

    • @Simonjose7258
      @Simonjose7258 Год назад +1

      😅 OMG

  • @JudgeJulieLit
    @JudgeJulieLit 3 года назад +28

    "Yantacaw," "Weequahic," "Watsesson," "Hoboken," "Weehauken," "Acquackanonk," "Passaic," "Pasquack," "Hohokus," "Secaucus, "Hopatcong" and "Netcong." And east of the lower Hudson River, Lenni Lenapes lived in "Manahatta."

    • @heavenonearth1161
      @heavenonearth1161 3 года назад

      Elmwood park

    • @dennisprehn5702
      @dennisprehn5702 2 года назад +1

      Piscataway

    • @JudgeJulieLit
      @JudgeJulieLit 2 года назад +1

      @@dennisprehn5702 And "Hackensack," and in the "Ramapough" mountains, and by the "Muskenetcong" river.

  • @jediwarrior9347
    @jediwarrior9347 6 лет назад +4

    Don't white people realize that their story about how Native Americans came from Asia to the Americas is in stark conflict with the Native tribe's story of their origin? I'm so sick and disgusted with that crossing the Bering Strait bullshit story. But what REALLY pisses me off the most is how many Native Americans accept that bs story as true while at the same time holding on to their origin story from time immemorial and continue to pass down the story of their origin to their children in their traditional folklore while at the same time teaching their children to believe as true what the white man teaches them in schools.

    • @Kopie0830
      @Kopie0830 4 года назад +1

      History is written by the victors, sadly.

    • @tommybball595
      @tommybball595 6 месяцев назад

      So was the Treaty of Easton forced upon the Lenape? Genuinely curious

  • @goodkarma8197
    @goodkarma8197 4 года назад +9

    "and learn about the first New Jersiens" :[

  • @Skyhors3
    @Skyhors3 3 года назад +22

    I grew up at Lake Hopatcong.
    For most of 5th grade (1954-55) we had a substitute teacher, his name was Mr. Eckler.
    He taught us the basic 5th grade stuff, but much of the time he talked about the Lenape. He had boxes of artifacts - like a pickup truck full, which he said he found mostly at Great Meadows. Over the school year, he read to us from "Dickon Among the Indians." He told me of a Lenape village (not saying where) which normally is underwater except for the times when the lake is lowered. I've been there many times, photographed circles of fire-blackened stones, found flint chips around the base of a rock where someone sat and made tools.
    I found a perfect grooved stone axe head at Hopatcong state park, when I was 11.
    Waterloo. I camped many times at Allamuchy Boy Scout camp, an easy walk to Waterloo. We would launch our canoes there.
    There was much talk about a fur trader - entrepreneur from the canal era, named "Frenchie." There used to be old stone houses and a long brick smoke tunnel around the scout camp, attributed to "Frenchie"and his fur and other businesses.
    I went there as a teenager several times. There were more remnants of the Morris Canal then than now.
    I haven't lived in N.J. for more than 50 years, but I'm still hooked on Lenape history and culture.

    • @cibida1
      @cibida1 3 года назад +4

      Thanks for sharing

    • @joshuasnore3600
      @joshuasnore3600 2 года назад

      Would you be willing to share the location of the lake offline? I am writing a book on the Lenape and original Dutch settlers and would love to scuba dive on the site and map it. I have a background in marine archaeology and would never disturb the site.

    • @Skyhors3
      @Skyhors3 2 года назад +1

      @@joshuasnore3600
      Well, I said it was Lake Hopatcong.
      The Morris-Sussex County line runs through the middle of it.
      The exact location of the village can be easily learned from the Hopatcong Historical Society. Their museum is at Hopatcong State Park. There are diagrams, maps, artifacts.
      It originally was called "Pechquakock,"
      later called "Aroucun."
      Ther's not much left to see, there used to be post-mold circles of wigwams, but there was a major boatyard close by, and that stuff got washed away by prop-wash, etc.
      The lake is lowered 5' every 5 years. - used to be 6' every 4 years, and more was visible.
      The lake is normally 11' above it's original level
      People have been picking up artifacts there for 250 years.

  • @kikataye6293
    @kikataye6293 7 месяцев назад +2

    I am a descendant of this tribe. Currently a turtle clan tribal member

  • @MrPmw0317
    @MrPmw0317 6 лет назад +12

    I am a decedent of the Lenape. I was born in Wilmington.,Del. This gives lots of info. I’m trying to learn. My family consisted of CheifAttakulakula, Dragging Canoe and NancyWard.

    • @tyjamison
      @tyjamison 5 лет назад

      Paul Williams nativeamericansofdelawarestate.com/FamilyHistories/OthnielMurray_bc1730/index.htm

    • @Kopie0830
      @Kopie0830 4 года назад

      Wow! Great to know there are still Lenape people around.

    • @dustyschwartz1576
      @dustyschwartz1576 2 года назад +5

      Those you mentioned are Cherokee

    • @thickbrianq
      @thickbrianq Год назад +2

      You are not Lenape and all the people you named are Cherokee!

    • @KingTwinTv
      @KingTwinTv Год назад

      Chief tammend and Nancy ward is my 7th grand mom and Chief Powhatan is my 15th grand father his daughter Pocahontas is my grand aunt

  • @thomasdurantestudent294
    @thomasdurantestudent294 4 года назад +8

    I dont know if i like this, but it definatly is intresting

    • @Hustle_n_motivate44
      @Hustle_n_motivate44 3 года назад

      Why are you defiant? It’s not good to be argumentative this is a nice informational video no need to be angry buddy

  • @dhooter
    @dhooter Год назад +3

    Straight out of the late 80's early 90's lol

  • @bg9217
    @bg9217 4 года назад +10

    I wish South Jersey had this type of village to visit. We had many Lenape here too. Like Manahawkin, land of good corn. Wow I didn't know they mentioned Manahawkin in the video till I got to the end. Tuckerton NJ down rt. 9 had an Indian burial mound. They place clam shells to make the mound. Its really cool to look at it.

    • @SAMEntalhealth
      @SAMEntalhealth 3 года назад +2

      You guys have all the exciting stuff. I mean where I'm at too but the Pines was called the Land of the Dragon, which is ironic thinking the Jersey Devil. But they had the water panther, the sea serpent monster, and even the Mesingwe which kind of resembles a sasquatch for us, remember not all was myth, just Mythunderstood ;-) Mythinterpreted lol

    • @SAMEntalhealth
      @SAMEntalhealth 3 года назад +1

      Even though Jersey is colonized not every ounce of it has been unearthed

    • @SAMEntalhealth
      @SAMEntalhealth 3 года назад +1

      Squankum by me is Land where Evil Spirits Dwell

    • @JudgeJulieLit
      @JudgeJulieLit 2 года назад

      If "Manahawkin," I suppose "Manalapan" too is Lenape.

    • @Skybloom99
      @Skybloom99 5 месяцев назад

      You are correct. The HS football mascot was also the “Braves”, a Lenape warrior man. My dad was the coach, and mom is Lenape so it always felt cosmic to see my ancestor on my jacket. But then as I got older I realized how disrespectful it was, and how ppl used to mimic yells and calls at the games. These are sacred things, not for outsiders to play with.

  • @asokasundari1246
    @asokasundari1246 5 лет назад +14

    I just got “hired” to be a part of the Turkey Clan at Churchville Nature Center!!! Cannot wait to learn all about the Lenape. I was born in NJ myself 😊🙏💜🔆 thank you for your knowledge and love!

  • @kaytrout3836
    @kaytrout3836 3 года назад +6

    I’m right up the street from Waterloo. Thank you for this channel. It’s becoming more and more difficult to find this type of local information

  • @CenturionCaneCorso
    @CenturionCaneCorso 7 лет назад +32

    The Lenape are still around they are mostly in South Jersey. You can go to their pow wows across New Jersey in the summertime.

    • @MegaMich42
      @MegaMich42 7 лет назад +1

      hectela I having a pow wow on November 30

    • @CenturionCaneCorso
      @CenturionCaneCorso 7 лет назад

      MegaMich42 where and time?

    • @MegaMich42
      @MegaMich42 7 лет назад +1

      I went in a long house on my field trip

    • @MarshaBaldwin24
      @MarshaBaldwin24 6 лет назад +2

      Hey, thank you for your comment. Do you know of any sources via web that I can find that will talk about these modern day pow wows and current Lenape in Nj?

    • @CenturionCaneCorso
      @CenturionCaneCorso 6 лет назад +1

      Jefferson Konah yea go here www.crazycrow.com/site/new-jersey-pow-wow/
      Hope it helps

  • @Jeanette-gw9qy
    @Jeanette-gw9qy Месяц назад +1

    The people should be called by their Nation and Tribal names OR CLANS,they are not Indians .!!! INDIANS ARE FROM INDIA...

  • @marathongman9281
    @marathongman9281 2 года назад +4

    I became interested in the Lenape people because Lenape LN intersects with Apollo Drive in Old Forge PA. Also Lenape LN leads to Seneca Dr, Cherokee Dr, Apache Dr. The Susquehanna River is a short walk away. I discovered the remnants of a teepee made of what appears to be white birch trees. At the time I thought it might be a boy scout project because I'm not sure how long dead white birch trees last. I hope to be able to find it again. I have a general idea. I know people still find arrow heads along the Lackawanna River which flows into The Susquehanna River I plan on looking into some more about The Lenape people.

    • @7kye7
      @7kye7 2 года назад +1

      Look up Ras Ben

  • @jamespuglisi5525
    @jamespuglisi5525 2 года назад +1

    my great great grandfather John Nelson Margeson Jr. 1889-1953 Oral history from a Margeson cousin (the grandson of John Margeson) states that he recalls a lot of Lenape Indians being at his grandfather John's funeral. i hope to meet a lenape one day if this is true.

  • @jackturner2258
    @jackturner2258 8 лет назад +5

    Thanks! I have a test on this tommorow 🤓😎😀👍🏼

  • @thesun9710
    @thesun9710 Год назад +1

    1000s of villages, all wiped out, then a recreated village was made to show how they lived? That’s sad and embarrassing to the world.. respectfully. 🙏🏽

  • @benkirbyy
    @benkirbyy 4 года назад +7

    1:01 “wutterloo”

  • @CPanddubs
    @CPanddubs 3 года назад +1

    So cool

  • @darkangel1724
    @darkangel1724 6 лет назад +17

    Good to see propaganda still going strong even today.Tell the version of history from the conqueror rather than the conquered.

    • @jasonpalacios1363
      @jasonpalacios1363 5 лет назад +5

      Like you SJW turds believing that the Natives were a peaceful people before the Whites came.

    • @americanwarrior9090
      @americanwarrior9090 4 года назад

      @@jasonpalacios1363 The Natives Weren't A Peaceful People But The Europeans Weren't Peaceful Themselves. None Of The Europeans Or Natives Were Truly Peaceful Really.

  • @onemanteam7891
    @onemanteam7891 3 года назад +3

    I found a hatchet head rock from the Lenape natives. In Mays landing next to the winding river or “ great egg harbor river”. Thought of digging it up more but never did

  • @Jeanette-gw9qy
    @Jeanette-gw9qy Месяц назад +1

    There are still Lenni Lenape people Living in Southern New Jersey..I met some in years past at Pow Wow in Pennsylvania

    • @Jeanette-gw9qy
      @Jeanette-gw9qy Месяц назад

      The Lenape name for NJ was ...Shie ich bie

  • @DanTheman6004
    @DanTheman6004 8 лет назад +10

    Red cloth robes, metals and natural glass were a rare prestige object before Europeans but were known to natives before Europeans.

    • @lamak0925
      @lamak0925 4 года назад +3

      This is a perfect example of how the use indoctrination and call it education. It's so disrespectful how the people are referred to as Indians. She clearly knows she should be using Native American, she said it in the beginning. And I'm upset that he's walking around with the costume on ment to be native clothes. They could have dressed and mannequin.

    • @joshuasnore3600
      @joshuasnore3600 2 года назад

      @@lamak0925 agreed. But it does ride both sides.

    • @romaskincare9138
      @romaskincare9138 2 года назад

      @@lamak0925 Saying American Indian is not disrespectful at all.
      Of course the country India is in Asia, but these American Indians have used those words for 600 years and have adopted it as theirs. If you visit any of the Reservations, you will see that the majority of them prefer to be called American Indian.
      The term "Native American" came from the US government in 1970. This was so they could further erase them and not have to honor historical treaties that were written between the US government and "American Indians."
      The word Indigenous is from university professors who want to virtue signal. Which is why many young people prefer the word Indigenous.
      But "Indigenous" also erases their identity and history. Anything can be "Indigenous" to an area, such as animals and plants, it just means something that occurs in an area naturally. There is much more to their identity other than just being Indigenous.
      The most respectful way to refer to someone is by how they want to referred. And many of them say American Indian. There's no need for people to try to take that away from them too.

  • @koolkeithultra1715
    @koolkeithultra1715 5 лет назад +2

    If you wanna know the truth about the Lenape Indians check out Turtle Gang on youtube get the real knowledge

  • @MegaMich42
    @MegaMich42 7 лет назад +1

    I went here for a school field trip and now I am doing a project.

  • @vicortiz9322
    @vicortiz9322 4 года назад +6

    You still disrespect these people by calling them Indians hundreds years later

  • @lamak0925
    @lamak0925 4 года назад +3

    It's crazy how she knows it's inappropriate to call the people Indian yet she keeps doing it. She said Native American in the beginning but insist throughout the rest of the video to refer to them as Indians.

  • @carriekernel2273
    @carriekernel2273 5 лет назад +9

    What do you think when I say BS

    • @markpierce5892
      @markpierce5892 4 года назад

      Id say you're likely right but im curious to know what you do because i have my opinion as well

    • @markpierce5892
      @markpierce5892 4 года назад +2

      We are native indigenous not indians

  • @genevajohnson3579
    @genevajohnson3579 Год назад

    Where still here

  • @mimosa27
    @mimosa27 8 лет назад +21

    Nice info but there is no heart and soul here.

    • @rw8185
      @rw8185 5 лет назад +4

      So I suppose we'd better never try and teach kids about Indians. Better pretend like they didnt exist.

    • @SkepticalMantisCHANNEL10
      @SkepticalMantisCHANNEL10 4 года назад +6

      @@rw8185 they should actually talk to Native Americans and let them speak for themselves.

    • @rw8185
      @rw8185 4 года назад

      @@SkepticalMantisCHANNEL10 one thing doesnt contradict the other

  • @user-rr3jj5kc6c
    @user-rr3jj5kc6c 6 лет назад +1

    Love it

  • @UTubeGlennAR
    @UTubeGlennAR 6 лет назад

    Vary interesting, thank you....

  • @colombianflag717
    @colombianflag717 6 лет назад +2

    i loved this type of videos.. thanks for sharing the video.

  • @SAMEntalhealth
    @SAMEntalhealth 3 года назад +1

    Nobody talks about the Mesingwe :(

  • @MrPmw0317
    @MrPmw0317 6 лет назад +10

    I’m a descendant of the Lenape,then they became the Algonquin and finally becoming Cherokees.

    • @patriciademekpe404
      @patriciademekpe404 6 лет назад +4

      Paul Williams I read the Cherokee were Iroquoi, originally, not Algonquin.

    • @theresajohnson4639
      @theresajohnson4639 5 лет назад +7

      I am Lenape, my group were never considered anything but Lenape. I am from an Ontario reservation

    • @Skyhors3
      @Skyhors3 3 года назад +2

      Wrong

  • @MelenaSoleil
    @MelenaSoleil 4 года назад +5

    ....this video is making me angry 😐... but, I guess that's my fault. Something told me it would piss me off but I clicked anyway 🤷🏾‍♀️

    • @tricial865
      @tricial865 2 года назад +1

      liberal

    • @MelenaSoleil
      @MelenaSoleil 2 года назад

      @@tricial865 🤨 huh lol how? And I don't subscribe to any political party...

  • @giselaferrer9311
    @giselaferrer9311 10 месяцев назад

    Did they really move out???? Tell the true story!

  • @joeytru
    @joeytru 8 дней назад

    The lies being told to children is sick

  • @ThePukka24
    @ThePukka24 4 года назад +1

    Thank you so much for this video

  • @samueljh3
    @samueljh3 9 месяцев назад

    12:33 I live in Macungie, located in PA, which means "Bear Swamp" in Lenape.
    Thank you for this video. I admire how Native Americans were in tune with nature. Sad that the culture was wiped out.

  • @lorihaun9956
    @lorihaun9956 Месяц назад

    Not everyone crossed the bering land bridge. Some came in ships.
    I am a descendant of the Munsee nation. Wolf clan. They lived in Pennsylvania, NY, NJ, Massachusetts and Connecticut.
    They were forced out not by choice!

    • @UmQasaann
      @UmQasaann 6 дней назад +1

      Indigenous people were in the Americas 25,000 years

  • @sayari8537
    @sayari8537 8 лет назад +4

    with this I got a A+++++++ I love it

    • @MegaMich42
      @MegaMich42 7 лет назад

      sup cupcake I am still working on my project

    • @MegaMich42
      @MegaMich42 7 лет назад

      I went into a long house

  • @melanieflores13mf
    @melanieflores13mf 3 года назад +6

    they're not INDIAN, they're native American. Indians is the name Christopher Columbus gave to them because he was lost and thought he was in INDIA.

    • @romaskincare9138
      @romaskincare9138 2 года назад +1

      The most respectful way to refer to someone is by how they want to be referred.
      If you visit any of the Reservations, you will see that the majority of them prefer to be called American Indian.
      .
      Of course they know Columbus was a colonizer, but ancestors have been calling themselves "American Indians" for 500 years and have adopted it as theirs.
      .
      The term "Native American" came from the US government in 1970. This was so they could further erase them and not have to honor historical treaties that were written between the US government and "American Indians."
      .
      Also, the word Indigenous is from university professors who want to virtue signal. Which is why many young people prefer the word Indigenous.
      But "Indigenous" also erases their identity and history. Anything can be "Indigenous" to an area, such as animals and plants, because that just means "something that occurs in an area naturally". There is much more to their identity other than just being Indigenous.
      .
      Saying American Indian is not disrespectful at all, many of them say they prefer American Indian. After losing millions of people and their land, people shouldn't try to take that away from them too.
      .
      One more thing, Columbus couldn't have thought he was in India. In the 1400s the country that is now called "India" was called Hindustan at that time.
      And the people were called Bharata. They were also colonized and similarly their colonizers called them "Indian" too.

    • @thickbrianq
      @thickbrianq 2 года назад +2

      Indian comes from "in-Dios", meaning of god.

  • @winros
    @winros 6 месяцев назад

    Jack Cresson?

  • @rebekahwilson7703
    @rebekahwilson7703 Год назад

    The Ice Age happened after the flood because of all the changes due to the flood. So, there were people around during the Ice Age.🤦‍♀️

  • @tutuw8386
    @tutuw8386 3 года назад +1

    This is so cool!

  • @harveycedar5809
    @harveycedar5809 2 года назад

    there is Delaware Cometary north of DeSoto, KS on the e. side of highway K-2 south of the Kansas River. on the other shore is supposed to be the community of "Lenapi" per DeLorme's Gazetteer although only 2 houses remain and one has a tree growing through the roof

  • @harrythomasgross6903
    @harrythomasgross6903 2 года назад

    Thank you for your post. Lenape arrowheads and old artifacts from revolutionary war are all over the mountains of the Kittatinney Ridge of Sussex County and valley. I was raised up there in the 60s and 70s. Back in the day when there were more cows than people. Solitude and peace.

  • @laylaconni
    @laylaconni 6 лет назад +3

    I have Lenni Lanape in me .

    • @josephseraile6698
      @josephseraile6698 5 лет назад

      @@michaelcampbell8315
      Lol

    • @roscoep.coltraine6344
      @roscoep.coltraine6344 4 года назад

      I see Nobody ever taught you 2 manners

    • @Hustle_n_motivate44
      @Hustle_n_motivate44 3 года назад +1

      @@roscoep.coltraine6344 I see nobody taught you how to spell the word “two”.

    • @roscoep.coltraine6344
      @roscoep.coltraine6344 3 года назад

      @@Hustle_n_motivate44 Probably the same person that never taught you how to spell the word twenty. 💩🦃

  • @cheleftb
    @cheleftb Год назад

    👀

  • @colleengorman6283
    @colleengorman6283 2 года назад

    Bigfoot picture at 1:48 when she asks, “who were the Lenape?”

  • @b.i.f357
    @b.i.f357 3 года назад

    I went to a museum in NJ or up state NY not sure if this was it but I still remember how beautiful it was and they gave us wooden flutes too.

  • @colleengorman6307
    @colleengorman6307 Год назад

    Is that a sasquatch hiding behind a mask at 1:48?

  • @nonanimeprofilepic
    @nonanimeprofilepic 5 лет назад +1

    what yr was this made in?

  • @ariannypena4328
    @ariannypena4328 6 лет назад +2

    I learn this in 2nd grade

    • @beep67-z7l
      @beep67-z7l 5 лет назад +2

      tf im in 4th and im learning

    • @bye1828
      @bye1828 5 лет назад +1

      I learn this in 4th grade I still remember when I’m just an olddddd grandmaaaa I’m not really a grandma uwu

    • @binderiyaenkh7753
      @binderiyaenkh7753 4 года назад

      im in 2nd grade

    • @ariannypena4328
      @ariannypena4328 4 года назад

      Binderiya enkhamgalan I’m in 4th grade now

  • @davidbagley1783
    @davidbagley1783 4 года назад

    Ancestors
    Mom
    Grandma Iva 1919-2001
    Isaac V Wamsley Jr 1875-1930
    Isaac V Wamsley Sr 1836-1908
    Isaac Wamsley III 1798-1868
    Isaac Harvey Wamsley Jr 1778-1825
    Isaac Harvey Wamsley Sr 1735-1825
    Revolutionary War Veteran
    Leah Stout Wamsley wife 1742-1820
    Daughter of
    Dr Jonathan Stout 1704-1775
    Richard Stout 1678-1749
    John Stout 1645-1724 Middletown NJ
    Son of Richard and Penelope..
    Elizabeth Crawford Stout wife 1650-1730
    Ayshire Scotland
    Daughter of
    John Crawford 1618-1698
    12th Lord Patrick Crawford 1580-1649
    11th Lord William Crawford 1560-1644
    10th Lord Patrick Crawford 1530-1560
    7th Lord Thomas Crawford 1505-1541
    6th Lord James Crawford 1470-?
    5th Lord Robert Crawford 1435-1513
    4th Lord Archibald Crawford 1389-?
    3rd Lord Thomas Crawford 1350-1401
    2nd Lord Reginald Crawford 1317-1358
    1st Laird Reginald Crawford 1283-1358 Fought at Bannockburn 1314 along with Robert the Bruce and received Lordship for his services.
    Hugh Crawford ? -1319
    Sir Reginald Crawford of Loudon 1255-1297
    Sister Margaret married Alan Wallace, mother of Sir William Wallace

    • @Kopie0830
      @Kopie0830 4 года назад +2

      Wow!

    • @ladyaltovise2294
      @ladyaltovise2294 2 года назад

      This is MAGNIFICENT! MARVELOUS!!! I wish I could do that for my family tree. As an African American, Ive only gone as far back to 1810. Now Im researching which tribe in Africa, my people are from. I think Im thinkong maybe either Igbo or Mandinka... wish me luck.

  • @juliancain6030
    @juliancain6030 2 года назад

    I am related to wa ku su to me

  • @markpierce5892
    @markpierce5892 4 года назад

    My family

  • @pedrohernandez4887
    @pedrohernandez4887 4 года назад

    8:30 those three mannequin on top are creepy asf

  • @mr_cool69420
    @mr_cool69420 3 года назад +1

    the bus turning bruh
    what

  • @vanshnayak8883
    @vanshnayak8883 2 года назад

    2:10 is creepy

  • @vanshnayak8883
    @vanshnayak8883 2 года назад

    Oh no

  • @TeriB
    @TeriB 6 лет назад +4

    Wow this is insulting coming someone(me) that has family out of a reservation, the powhatan tribe....now

    • @rw8185
      @rw8185 5 лет назад +1

      Yeah everything is insulting to everyone these days. Get busy finding a reason to be insulted by everything said by anyone

  • @New-jersery-devils
    @New-jersery-devils 4 года назад

    I have no Idey that your taking about

  • @domsimmons7412
    @domsimmons7412 5 лет назад

    Cool

  • @bestbotreview
    @bestbotreview 5 лет назад

    WatE.R.
    Don.Key
    Muscenectcong rivah

  • @bestbotreview
    @bestbotreview 5 лет назад

    Watt er Lou

  • @misterodors
    @misterodors 7 лет назад +3

    We wuz indians.

    • @KingofgraceSARA
      @KingofgraceSARA 6 лет назад +1

      misterodors
      Shut your filthy mouth, disease spreader.

  • @Jeanette-gw9qy
    @Jeanette-gw9qy Месяц назад

    The real name is wiquam not wigwam...thats a white peoples word wigwam

  • @OsoPort
    @OsoPort Год назад

    There no longer native tribes in nj” are people still run threw our blood tho we here😢

  • @aspoits6343
    @aspoits6343 4 года назад +1

    deserves a thumbs up

  • @blouekitty8594
    @blouekitty8594 3 года назад +1

    As a descendant of the lenape this is pure bs🤦🏾‍♀️

  • @577buttfan
    @577buttfan Год назад

    I don't think they where here for more than 1000 years.If so they didn't develope much.We had trains,planes,boats,and automobiles in 200 years??

    • @nancysmith2389
      @nancysmith2389 8 месяцев назад

      😢 Maybe the Indegenous Natives way of life disturbed Nature way less than the "advanced" European cultures and that is why it was in pristine conditions.