Forgotten Abraham Lincoln

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  • Опубликовано: 7 авг 2022
  • While there are so many reasons to remember Abraham Lincoln as the sixteenth president, he was more than a president, he was a singular personality, one of the most unique of the 45 men who have led the nation.
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    This is original content based on research by The History Guy. Images in the Public Domain are carefully selected and provide illustration. As very few images of the actual event are available in the Public Domain, images of similar objects and events are used for illustration.
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    All events are portrayed in historical context and for educational purposes. No images or content are primarily intended to shock and disgust. Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Non censuram.
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    The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered is the place to find short snippets of forgotten history from five to fifteen minutes long. If you like history too, this is the channel for you.
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    Script by Lorri Weeks
    #history #thehistoryguy #AbeLincoln

Комментарии • 746

  • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
    @TheHistoryGuyChannel  Год назад +177

    Some have questioned the final comment about Lincoln being the most unique of the 45 men who have served as President. While there have been 46 presidencies, there have only been 45 different men who served as president. This is owing to the non-consecutive administrations of Grover Cleveland.

    • @GREATLORDPOOH
      @GREATLORDPOOH Год назад +6

      I'm going to pretend you didn't say that lol

    • @thomasdupee1440
      @thomasdupee1440 Год назад +11

      I thought that there would be comments about that, but I understood.

    • @russcrawford3310
      @russcrawford3310 Год назад +7

      We had eight different men serve as President under the Articles of Confederation

    • @steveshoemaker6347
      @steveshoemaker6347 Год назад +4

      THANK THG🎀......Shoe🇺🇸

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  Год назад +29

      @@russcrawford3310 not Presidents of the United States, but presidents of congress assembled.
      ruclips.net/video/5Cy2Oob5ZfQ/видео.html

  • @narrowhousevideos
    @narrowhousevideos Год назад +34

    Quick note, Lincoln was born in Hardin County, Kentucky AT THE TIME. If you are looking for the site today, it is in LaRue County, KY. Hardin County's border was moved and the new County of LaRue was created in 1843.

    • @ukulelemikeleii
      @ukulelemikeleii 10 месяцев назад +2

      When I was in ROTC, training at fort Knox Kentucky, we visited Lincoln's grandmother's grave, which is located way back in the woods on that military installation. I believe she met her fate at the hands of the Cherokee, back in the 1790s if I'm not mistaken? Be that as it may, it was pretty cool to visit something very few people would ever get the chance to see...

  • @ralphmills7322
    @ralphmills7322 Год назад +51

    One of the recordings Maine humorist Joe Perham made in his career was the "Wit and Wisdom of Abraham Lincoln". One segment I enjoyed was supposedly set during the Lincoln/Douglas debates when Douglas mentions Lincoln sold liquor for a living. Lincoln's rebuttal was yes for a while he operated a general store that sold dry goods, hardware, tobacco, foodstuffs, etc and yes indeed liquor and Mr. Douglas was one of my very best customers!

    • @fokkerd3red618
      @fokkerd3red618 Год назад +1

      That's a good one.

    • @lelandframe1029
      @lelandframe1029 Год назад +1

      Great comeback, Abe!

    • @neilpemberton5523
      @neilpemberton5523 Год назад +3

      Douglas indeed was a heavy drinker, who campaigned so hard in the 1860 election he was dead within a year.

  • @DuckReach432
    @DuckReach432 Год назад +106

    Imagine suffering a fractured skull as a child in1819, then rallying back and recovering. To the point where he was winning wrestling matches only a few years later. He must have had enormous natural resilience, physically and mentally.

    • @d.e.b.b5788
      @d.e.b.b5788 Год назад +16

      You might be surprised at how many people fracture bones and never know it. I work in an e.r., and we routinely see people who come in for injuries, and we spot evidence of previous fractures that they weren't aware of, including skull fractures. The bone doesn't have to be completely cracked through from one end to another to be fractured. A fracture is a crack in the bone, not necessarily completely broken.

    • @scotcoon1186
      @scotcoon1186 Год назад +14

      Didn't have much choice back then.
      Get tough, or don't get at all.

    • @eloiseharbeson2483
      @eloiseharbeson2483 Год назад +8

      I suffered a traumatic brain injury in 1969. I still deal with its effects.

    • @lelandframe1029
      @lelandframe1029 Год назад +6

      I've heard that a doctor who attended Lincoln after he was shot and moved across the street to the boarding house remarked, "A lesser man would be dead already!"

    • @justme_gb
      @justme_gb Год назад +5

      As recent as 50 years ago, Americans were mostly tough and resilient.

  • @DucNguyen-bd5ir
    @DucNguyen-bd5ir Год назад +68

    I find this deeper look into the man, not just the titles he held, made an already respected and loved person even more endearing. Thank you.

    • @dixiestrong
      @dixiestrong Год назад

      Duc Nguyen Racist tyrant!!

    • @lynnwood7205
      @lynnwood7205 Год назад

      Nguyen Phuoc Bao Duc, who I did know, would have said the same.

  • @richardmourdock2719
    @richardmourdock2719 Год назад +116

    Would enjoy an episode on Lincoln's use of language. Clearly, the most lyrical and scholarly in the use of words.... and ironically, from a guy who never spent a day of his life in what we could consider a formal school setting. Self-educated by reading what he called the three B's. The Bible, The Blackstone Law Journals and "The Bard".... Shakespeare. Remarkable.

    • @eliotreader8220
      @eliotreader8220 Год назад +4

      I didn't know that he was interested in Shakespeare. was Abraham a popluar first name in the 1930s.
      I have just been to see the new Rail children film the young lad in it is called Ab after Ab Lincoln

    • @richardmourdock2719
      @richardmourdock2719 Год назад +16

      @@eliotreader8220 He was named after his grandfather. That he so often quoted the Bible.. but he was never a member of a church and was once described as an open "scoffer" of religion, Christianity in particular. He is actually known to have quoted Shakespeare a few times in cabinet meetings. His very sophisticated, mostly eastern cabinet members thought him a bit of a rough wilderness rogue. But such moments caused them to think he indeed, had some depth. Told some shockingly dirty jokes too. I wouldn't have used the term "eccentric" to describe him as the H.G. did, but he was.. different. And, if Mary had agreed to move to Oregon, we likely would not have known of him.

    • @dixiestrong
      @dixiestrong Год назад

      @Richard Mourdock he was a atheist!

    • @richardmourdock2719
      @richardmourdock2719 Год назад +11

      @@dixiestrong I'll agree there is ambiguity. His long-time law partner and Mary Todd Lincoln hated each other and seldom agreed on anything, but both said after his death he was not particularly religious, Mary more specifically saying he was not a Christian. However, after the death of their first son, both Mary and Abraham Lincoln seemed to experience a bit of faith though later they both took part in seances in the White House which certainly runs against most current thoughts of religious faith. But too, it was Lincoln himself who cited his own education as being founded on The Bible. He certainly quoted it often both publicly and privately... but is that an expression of religious faith? Not necessarily. Atheism? Not that either. My personal belief is there were many times he wanted to believe and other times he doubted. Perhaps even uttering the prayer from the Book of Mark, "I believe, but forgive my unbelief."

    • @imsohandsome
      @imsohandsome Год назад

      @@richardmourdock2719 well yeah that seems plausible. He might believe in God but not that of the church. Church is kind of extreme back then

  • @shafferjoe1962
    @shafferjoe1962 Год назад +55

    Just when you think you know a man. Along comes THG to fill in the gaps of a great man's life. Thank you sir and God bless you brother

    • @abrahamlincoln9758
      @abrahamlincoln9758 Год назад +7

      People only ever want to talk to me about my "vampire slayer" days. How refreshing to hear someone interested in non-fiction.

    • @mrkitty777
      @mrkitty777 Год назад

      Surprised a republican helping end of slavery 🤔

    • @davidhollenshead4892
      @davidhollenshead4892 Год назад

      ​@@abrahamlincoln9758 Thanks for being the best US President. However, you really should have charged the slave owners, slave traders, and slave masters for their many Felonies. After all, Kidnapping, Rape, Murder, Castration, Torture, etc. were all Capital Crimes in the South. So after a brief trial, they should have faced the gallows and America would have avoided the continued damage by Sociopathic White Nationalists...

  • @1977Yakko
    @1977Yakko Год назад +34

    The movie Lincoln starring Daniel Day Lewis probably shows Lincoln in a more eccentric manner than most other movies.
    That said, it ranks as one of my favorite Civil War Era movies.

    • @abrahamlincoln9758
      @abrahamlincoln9758 Год назад +11

      "Come out you old rat!"

    • @neilpemberton5523
      @neilpemberton5523 Год назад +13

      Lincoln was eccentric, and used it to his advantage. His habit of telling a seemingly unrelated story out of the blue prepared a room for what he really wanted to say. The movie shows it several times.

    • @lelandframe1029
      @lelandframe1029 Год назад +2

      The TV miniseries "Gore Vidal's Lincoln" starring Sam Waterston as Lincoln also shows him in a more human light.

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 Год назад +1

      Lewis only lacks his physical strength. It is said that Lincoln chopped his own wood for the fire and that he showed his strength by extending out out at arms length and shoulder high. the double blade ax he was using. This when he was near fifty years old. But Lews is sure captures the voice. described by many observers but not used by previous actors who portrayed him. Henry Fonda simulated Lincoln’s shambling gait.

    • @1977Yakko
      @1977Yakko Год назад

      @@stephen-ng I love that documentary. 😀

  • @dirtcop11
    @dirtcop11 Год назад +89

    I have visited many of the historic sites relating to Lincoln. There are a few in Western Illinois that barely get mentioned. The Lincoln- Douglas Debate that took place in Quincy, Illinois is among them. I have visited New Salem, his home in Springfield, and his tomb, also in Springfield. I hope he remains high in the minds of Americans

    • @j.leeedwards2780
      @j.leeedwards2780 Год назад +3

      I live in Western Illinois. There is also a Lincoln-Douglas debate site in Galesburg. I used to be an interpreter at New Salem.

    • @daviddoolin8701
      @daviddoolin8701 Год назад +6

      I live in Lincoln, Illinois - the only town named for and christened by Lincoln himself in 1853 before he became famous :-)

    • @cynthiabeckenbaugh5189
      @cynthiabeckenbaugh5189 11 месяцев назад +1

      In Lewistown, Mifflin County, Pennsylvania. We have a soldier and sailors monument in the center of town. With a brick from Lincoln's tomb. When he called for soldiers, before the civil war, our fathers and sons, were the first to Washington DC.

    • @fuckcensorship69
      @fuckcensorship69 19 дней назад

      Imagine visiting a dictator's home place

  • @loretta_3843
    @loretta_3843 Год назад +15

    I've always appreciated how he could use words so well. Either comedic or serious.

  • @johnfun3394
    @johnfun3394 3 месяца назад +4

    History was always my favorite in school, somethings never change.

  • @matthewpoplawski8740
    @matthewpoplawski8740 Год назад +52

    A sad day for us history buffs.
    Historian and author David McCullough passed away today at age 89.
    I have several of his books,and ,have NEVER been disappointed with he wrote(After reading the book THE PATHWAY BETWEEN THE SEAS, I learned more about the building and history of the Panama Canal than I ever did in school).
    I believe that I have of the few remaining hardback copies of his biography of Harry Truman (these days, one can find a copy in only paperback).😪😪😪😪

    • @scottklocke891
      @scottklocke891 Год назад

      😪😪

    • @debraperez7171
      @debraperez7171 Год назад +3

      And his voice as a narrator!

    • @JoseMorales-lw5nt
      @JoseMorales-lw5nt Год назад +4

      And here's to the man who made John Adams such an intriguing figure that HBO aired an incredible miniseries based on his book. Mr. McCullough, may we meet some distant day...

    • @johnschuh8616
      @johnschuh8616 Год назад +2

      And a great speaker.

    • @fokkerd3red618
      @fokkerd3red618 Год назад +2

      Thanks for mentioning that, I didn't know he passed.

  • @marsspacex6065
    @marsspacex6065 Год назад +33

    Man Lincolns second inaugural speech is an amazing about forgiveness and reconciliation.

    • @abrahamlincoln9758
      @abrahamlincoln9758 Год назад +12

      And resolve:
      "Yet, if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword as was said three thousand years ago so still it must be said 'the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether."

  • @richardmattingly7000
    @richardmattingly7000 Год назад +30

    Lincoln's father was often at odds with his son's love of learning -books since he saw little value in them since he was practically illiterate because what was important wasn't the abstract but day to day knowledge. Fortunately it was his Stepmother Sara who was widower herself that encouraged his interests and he adored her for it never failing to call her mother instead of Mrs Lincoln. Indeed she was well known for her sense of humour and regarded the gangly young boy then man as her own son along with the three she brought with her into the home. Telling him jokingly that he had to keep his hair clean since it might touch the ceiling he and some friends put some footprints on and got after him she was chuckling at the stunt they pulled. Upon his leaving for being sworn in as Pres. Sara Lincoln feared she'd never see him again believing someone would take his life and was grief stricken when it came true knowing it wasnt just worry on her part. Without his stepmother the Lincoln we know from history likely would never if been more than yoeman framer or craftsman since it was her encouragement of learning and getting what she could to that end built his mind as much as the authors he read...

    • @kieraethan
      @kieraethan Год назад +2

      Thank you for including these also little-known facts about Lincoln's life! She was a gift to him, and he a gift to her.

  • @stevebailey325
    @stevebailey325 Год назад +153

    I shake my head in sadness at how far we have fallen from this man. There are no leaders, no statesman, no one with the wit and wisdom of this, in my opinion, greatest president and just a good man.

    • @joesterling4299
      @joesterling4299 Год назад +24

      It seems we have to look toward Ukraine these days to find such men. Perhaps trial by fire is required to forge great leaders, and there's precious little of that around here.

    • @vince1638
      @vince1638 Год назад

      @@joesterling4299 You don't know shit about Zelinsky. You've been fed media B.S. and are swallowing it wholesale. Ukraine was known as one of the worlds most corrupt countries only 2 years ago. You are extremely naive if you think much has changed in that period of time. We have NO idea where the billions of U.S. $ has landed in that toilet of a country.

    • @Weshopwizard
      @Weshopwizard Год назад

      @@joesterling4299 REALLY?!? Ukrainian Nazi sympathizers?!

    • @catofthecastle1681
      @catofthecastle1681 Год назад +1

      I do agree but it’s hard to come forward from the pack in this confusing days, when such impossible standards are used for comparison. Lincoln didn’t look like such a God when he was a young man at the time either! We need to use common sense and critical thinking skills to find good men instead of depending upon camera and news outlets to tell us flash in the pan sound bytes and memes to guide our votes! Lincoln had many bad personal quirks that would have disqualified his votes right now in our political climate! And those qualities nearly cost him the office even then!

    • @honeysucklecat
      @honeysucklecat Год назад

      It’s sad how the GOP has become the party of greed, deceit, hate, and OBEDIENCE to trump, the man so weak and cowardly he can’t admit he lost.

  • @WildWestGal
    @WildWestGal Год назад +12

    Well, now I know where his migraines originated. Between the fracture, probable brain bleed, and the whiplash when his head got thrown back from the impact, even today with our therapies and drugs, that kind of injury has a very lasting impact. And chronic migraines, or any chronic pain, always lead to "melancholia."

  • @timmylee41
    @timmylee41 Год назад +9

    My father was a American history buff. Centered often on the Civil War. We never seemed to relate on many...if any subjects, looking back a lot of that was on me. After Dad passed some years ago, I found myself reading some of his books and can see where his passion on the subject came from.
    It's been 14 years since his passing and I've acquired a thirst for that knowledge...I've visited several civil war battlefields, read General Grants memoirs. (My apologies for the long winded post).
    I admire the connection Grant and Lincoln formed. And have always thought what a great tragedy that our country was cheated of Lincoln's
    profound wit and compassion during reconstruction. I've often given thought to how different this country could have rebounded from all that killing.
    Would love to hear your thoughts on the subject....or anyone else's for that matter

  • @JEBavido
    @JEBavido Год назад +83

    You mention his melancholy but didn’t mention that he once said he dread to be left alone in a room with a pen knife! Poor man! Also, you mentioned his love of animals but not that he had to be very forcefully restrained from running into the White House stables when it caught fire and tragically several horses died, particularly his son’s little pony. But then, I think you just need a much longer video to cover everything that has caught my attention concerning Lincoln. 🙂

    • @PH_INFO_101
      @PH_INFO_101 Год назад +3

      J.E. B. , The Title of this video is "Forgotten Abraham Lincoln", not "Well Known Facts about Abraham Lincoln".
      But then, I think you just need to produce your own video to cover everything that has caught your attention concerning Lincoln. 🙂

    • @scottkoenig6326
      @scottkoenig6326 Год назад +1

      Hello JEB. This History Guy is great but he cannot include every tidbit and still fit his pieces into 16-minute time frames. I understand your point though but we will not nitpick The History Guy. Savvy? THANKS!

  • @jmmoore3865
    @jmmoore3865 Год назад +13

    Two other events: his duel, with longswords, I think, and the narrow miss at assassination as he rode along alone late one night, and bullet through his hat.

    • @abrahamlincoln9758
      @abrahamlincoln9758 Год назад +2

      I prefer to tell the marksman that he hit his target perfectly.

  • @-jeff-
    @-jeff- Год назад +6

    TY THG for showing us the Lincoln most didn't know about. And shows us; for want of horseshoe a future president was saved. An unshod hoof is a club. A shod hoof is an iron mace. I know from painful experience.

  • @Imperiused
    @Imperiused Год назад +9

    One of the things I lament is that many of the little stories that he told have been lost to time. By all accounts his stories were often pretty funny. I wish we had a compendium of sorts that could let us summon his phantom from the past.

    • @tomjustis7237
      @tomjustis7237 Год назад +1

      "The Wit and Wisdom of Abraham Lincoln". Ah, if only that book actually existed. It would indeed be a great read!

    • @Imperiused
      @Imperiused Год назад

      @@tomjustis7237 I actually own that book! I'm just lamenting on what we've lost.

    • @stevebainbridge310
      @stevebainbridge310 Год назад

      What a great program. Patriotic and full of interesting detail!!

  • @swinedance
    @swinedance Год назад +14

    Lincoln was an amazing guy. In more than one way he shaped the nation. When I moved to Texas almost forty years ago, it was the only state to celebrate Juneteenth. People had to explain its reason for being to me. Now its a national holiday. I enjoyed your post a few months ago about the founding fathers that culminated with the fact that three of them had died on July 4th, which go me to thinking about important dates. One that I think you could do a magnificent job of profiling is February 12, 1809. It is by fa, the most important date of the eighteenth century. Both Lincoln and Charles Darwin were born on that day.

  • @bruceme101
    @bruceme101 Год назад +8

    I thought I knew Lincoln fairly well, but after watching this I felt everything I knew was from wiki or Ken Burns, I love how you dig deeper and connect the nuances that shaped the man. Keep at it!

  • @rabbi120348
    @rabbi120348 Год назад +24

    Lincoln was born in a log cabin that he built with his own hands.

    • @abrahamlincoln9758
      @abrahamlincoln9758 Год назад +6

      I had planned to visit the Virgin Islands, but I preferred them not have to cjange the name.

    • @michaelratliff9449
      @michaelratliff9449 Год назад +3

      So he built it with his own hands ..Before he was born?..Wow..even before his birth ...are you a flat earth society member by any chance?...

    • @rabbi120348
      @rabbi120348 Год назад +13

      @@michaelratliff9449 It's an old joke. We know that the earth isn't flat because if it were, cats would already have pushed everything over the edge.

    • @michaelratliff9449
      @michaelratliff9449 Год назад +3

      @@rabbi120348 My Siamese cat gave you her middle paw after she read your reply ...lol...her world is about 2000 ft square, ...all she's ever known...

    • @rhuephus
      @rhuephus Год назад

      my oh my .. ha ha ... miracles never cease !!! Wonder how many caught that ????

  • @stevedietrich8936
    @stevedietrich8936 Год назад +21

    George Washington is also in the wrestling Hall of Fame. There are stories of a middle aged GW defeating soldier after soldier, one after another, in wrestling matches.

    • @abrahamlincoln9758
      @abrahamlincoln9758 Год назад +4

      Is this a challenge?

    • @datadavis
      @datadavis Год назад +1

      A challenger has appeared

    • @keithmussey9635
      @keithmussey9635 Год назад +4

      I can imagine a rambunctious TR joining the fun.

    • @riconui5227
      @riconui5227 Год назад +1

      I can't imagine a rank and file soldier making an effort to defeat their commander in a wrestling match. Make it look like it's legit, but lose anyway to avoid the consequences. Like throwing a golf match with your boss because you can.

    • @nickbloom6861
      @nickbloom6861 Год назад

      Now I want to get a time machine, grab every former president and host a presidential wrestling match.

  • @RobertRAbell
    @RobertRAbell Год назад +15

    Thank you History Guy. Appreciate all y’all do to bring us the Real History. All day long Yahoo

  • @michaelsadams524
    @michaelsadams524 Год назад +4

    Thank You History Guy! For me personally, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln are tied at the top of my list. Both before, and most importantly after their presidencies, they have had, and continue to have a profound impact on Our Great Nation. Their impact continues to this day.

  • @MarianneKat
    @MarianneKat Год назад +4

    My husband and our children are distant relatives. The more I learn about Abe the more I see these traits in my family. And yes, my family is both tall (6' dtr, 6'1 twin boys, and the most mini me for my husband is our older son at 6'7) and quirky.

  • @w.m.woodward2833
    @w.m.woodward2833 Год назад +12

    A great collection of tidbits of information on our 16th president, and I learned a few things that were enlightening of the man and the myth around him. They actually help fill in a few gaps in my understanding of who he was and what he was like. 👍

  • @lizj5740
    @lizj5740 Год назад +3

    Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln, by Pulitzer Prize-winning American historian Doris Kearns Goodwin, is an excellent tribute to Lincoln's ability to bring together people who were natural political enemies.

  • @LynnCrain-MySexySaturday
    @LynnCrain-MySexySaturday Год назад +7

    While I love Lincoln and everything he did for this country, I do think that you need to include the bad with the good. I recently listened to a TED talk about indigenous history and how whites have tried to make them invisible. I was surprised in his talk that he mentioned an event done by President Lincoln and looked it up myself to confirm. On December 26, 1862, just one week before he signed the Emancipation Proclamation, he put to death 38 Dakota warriors from the Dakota uprising. Granted, he pardoned 265 out of 303 but still, he was somewhat lacking in empathy for the native plight but more so for the Negro plight. This brought me back to the talk I listened to and how it is true that the victors write history thus making the indigenous history and people invisible to the rest of us. I went to an Indian school for my MFA and know that their history is worth remembering too. Just saying.

    • @tomjustis7237
      @tomjustis7237 Год назад

      I have to respectfully disagree, Lynn. After the "Dakota Uprising", Lincoln took it upon himself to declare that the uprising was part of the "Civil War", even though it wasn't, but that small falsehood was still just enough to place it at least partially under his authority. That "stretching of the truth" (Yeah, "Honest Abe" lied!) is what allowed him to grant pardons for the 265 who were saved. As to the remaining 38, Lincoln did NOT put them to death. It was the state and territorial governments that enforced the death penalties for the 38 in accordance with, rightly or wrongly, the local laws of the day. Keep in mind that in those days state governments were far more autonomous than they are today and the federal government had less power than today. Lincoln did everything he could to save as many as he could. He should not be blamed for the 38 he couldn't save, but remembered for the 265 he did save. BTW, I'm what would have been derogatively known as a "half breed" in the 1800's, and am very proud of my Cherokee heritage, so I am NOT giving the "pale faced" (another derogatory term) point of view. Have a great day!

    • @maureendevries1904
      @maureendevries1904 Год назад

      Definitely. A stain on democracy and the legacy of Abraham Lincoln.

  • @davidnoseworthy4540
    @davidnoseworthy4540 Год назад +5

    This was a very interesting episode Lance, thank you. I have always had much respect for President Lincoln, his values and what he stood for. President Lincoln was an exemplary Humanitarian. North American history, and the building of two nations, is taught in Canadian schools. The only Canadian politician to have met President Lincoln, was Alexander Galt, Minister of Finance for the what was the British Colony of Upper and Lower Canada, now known as the provinces of Ontario and Quebec

  • @glrider100
    @glrider100 Год назад +6

    Thank-you so much for this. So many times, a historical figure's brightest moments blind us to the more subtle hues that made them more than the first line of their biographies. I find it is the subtleties of a person's life that truly shape them. I hope you continue this as a series. There are so many historical figures, not just presidents, though presidents alone could keep you going for months, that are worthy of remembrance.

    • @kieraethan
      @kieraethan Год назад

      Yes! One of the most-forgotten and worst Presidents, Franklin Pierce, has a poignant & deeply sad life story. He deserves to be remembered, because we are all damaged by the tragedies & poor choices we make, even in the most powerful job in the land.

  • @kejola1969
    @kejola1969 Год назад +7

    This was nothing short of outstanding THG!!! Thank you very much!

  • @SteveRiches
    @SteveRiches Год назад +8

    Thankyou. Another great episode.
    Did you know that Abraham Lincoln has a connection to Manchester, England? We have a statue and a square named after him. And a copy of a letter he sent to the working people of Manchester while he was in office.

    • @Guitcad1
      @Guitcad1 Год назад

      A good man to honor.

    • @rays7437
      @rays7437 Год назад +1

      I didn't know that! Thanks.

  • @jimreilly917
    @jimreilly917 Год назад +1

    HG…thanks for peeling the legend from the MAN. Lincoln wasn’t the Apotheosis of his memorial in DC. He was a small time country attorney and sometime soldier who turned his interests, passions and gifts…to the service of his nation at a time of grave need. But was just…an HONEST country lawyer, who held onto that honesty through life. A hard life.

  • @DalekSec4
    @DalekSec4 Год назад +7

    Great video,Great podcast, Great work. Greetings from the 🇬🇧

  • @JeremiahsFiles
    @JeremiahsFiles Год назад +3

    Lincoln & Franklin D. Roosevelt are my two favorite presidents.

  • @thedudegrowsfood284
    @thedudegrowsfood284 Год назад +13

    Thank you for this fascinating tour of Lincoln's life!

  • @davelafferty605
    @davelafferty605 Год назад +3

    Sir: I've been watching your channel for some time now, and I just wanted to say how much I enjoy your storytelling. Please keep doing what you're doing!

  • @chrisdominguez7485
    @chrisdominguez7485 Год назад +3

    As always - thank you for your work and presentations that satisfy initial curiosity and then often stimulate desires to learn more! Your enthusiastic style is personally motivating to expand my perspective of the human story. I would have loved to have you as a professor in my history studies!

  • @russwoodward8251
    @russwoodward8251 Год назад +2

    So we went full bore into a civil war with a president that had been kicked in the head. God bless America and thank you again for the research and great presentation.

  • @JoeHarkinsHimself
    @JoeHarkinsHimself Год назад +6

    I'm hoping you will tell the story of the saving of Lincoln's son from being crushed under a suddenly moving train at the embarcation point in Jersey City. It's history worth repeating.

  • @kurtb2522
    @kurtb2522 Год назад

    One can't grow up in Illinois without learning about Lincoln. Many of the stories are real knee slappers. Thank you, Lance, for another excellent memory.

  • @williamjones3462
    @williamjones3462 Год назад +3

    I read a book 'The Unknown Lincoln' By Dale Carnegie. Written in the '20's, He traveled to Illinois and interviewed people still alive who remembered the Lincoln family. It detailed the brutally hard life he endured. A good read. I highly recommend it
    Also watch the RUclips video 'The Lincoln Mallet'.

  • @whiterabbit-wo7hw
    @whiterabbit-wo7hw Год назад +1

    Thank you Lance for this very intriguing tidbit of Abraham Lincoln. He has always been one of my favorite presidents.
    There were things that I never expected of him to be so involved with.
    The pattened that he got was indeed very interesting.
    Thank you again from a fellow Missourian.

  • @kimberlypatton9634
    @kimberlypatton9634 Год назад +3

    I do love your videos! SO fact packed and well done! I've been subbed and a fan for quite a few years now!

  • @JesseOaks-ef9xn
    @JesseOaks-ef9xn 12 дней назад

    Lincoln's New Salem is a must see for anyone visiting Central Illinois. I have been there several times and was impressed by the town.

  • @jimpalmer1969
    @jimpalmer1969 Год назад +3

    This has been one of the best History Guy stories. Thank You

  • @constipatedinsincity4424
    @constipatedinsincity4424 Год назад +34

    I can say one thing about Abraham Lincoln of all the nick names Lou the Toe Groza ,Wilt the Stilt,The Galloping Ghost 👻, The Nigerian Nightmare,The Ironhorse,Dick The Bruiser Afliss, the American Dream, Rasputin the Mad Monk,Michael The Porpoise Felts . Finally Honest Abe is really a big shadow to hide in . But to be known as honest there could be worse things to be known as!

  • @stevesomers7366
    @stevesomers7366 Год назад +1

    Thank you for your presentation on Lincoln. I learned several new things about him. He is one of the greatest presidents of our country, no doubt. I wonder if you have read the five volume story on The Life of George Washington released in 1804 by our fourth chief justice of the Supreme Court, John Marshall? It really moved me in many ways. First, in how many instances throughout our nations early history that our democracy was held by the actions of a singular person or coincidental event. Second, by the unwavering dedication and unselfish contributions of George Washington. It's a spectacular work that chronicles our history over 200 years, beginning from the early 1600s. It gave me a whole new appreciation for "our great experiment" and for the single person who saw it through. If you have not read it, I cannot recommend it more highly.

  • @michaeldelvecchio41
    @michaeldelvecchio41 Год назад +6

    I hope that you will expound on Benjamin Lincoln in a future episode. He must, after all, have a history worth remembering since whole counties were named after him!!!

    • @BookieCrook
      @BookieCrook Год назад +1

      I live in Lincoln County, GA. Benjamin Lincoln was a hero during the Revolutionary War. He was a pretty fascinating man.

  • @CaroleAKAQueenTurtleGmaMa1936
    @CaroleAKAQueenTurtleGmaMa1936 11 месяцев назад

    A THOUSAND & MORE "likes" for this one! I very much enjoy everything you post, this one even more than usual. You're awesome History Guy!!

  • @ralphhuebner4350
    @ralphhuebner4350 Год назад

    You have a very pleasing way of telling a story. Thanks very much.

  • @johnwinter9722
    @johnwinter9722 4 месяца назад +1

    Great episode! Thank you. Whets my appetite for more of the hidden gems of this great man.

  • @almord9357
    @almord9357 6 месяцев назад +1

    Absolutely fascinating. Thanks again, History Guy!

  • @vice6996
    @vice6996 Год назад +12

    Lincoln was also a very adept vampire hunter and concealed this second life very well, even from his closest friends and family and for centuries from the public. There was a very good book and documentary made about it several years ago.

    • @SandfordSmythe
      @SandfordSmythe Год назад +3

      There was a story through the plantations of the South that Lincoln was coming at night to visit wth the slaves.

  • @ronaldslater4703
    @ronaldslater4703 Год назад +1

    Another great episode, History Guy!!! 👍

  • @howardjohnson2138
    @howardjohnson2138 Год назад +1

    Another Excellent Presentation - Thank you

  • @happydays2300
    @happydays2300 Год назад +20

    This is so good! My summer reading, Sir, is "Lincoln's Mothers" by Dorothy Clarke Wilson. I picked it up at a library sale for a beach book, and it's really captivated me. She mentions the tornado of 1827. Have you anything on that?

    • @richardmourdock2719
      @richardmourdock2719 Год назад +5

      Happy Days, I live but a few miles from Lincoln's Boyhood home. Have literally read hundreds of books on Lincoln and served as a speaker for the National Park Service at Lincoln Commerative events... and I've never heard of an 1827 tornado event. Doesn't mean it didn't happen of course. To what source does Ms. Wilson refer?

    • @happydays2300
      @happydays2300 Год назад +5

      @@richardmourdock2719 Looking it up. Here we are. Chapter 6 of Part Three, page 275 of the 1981edition, Doubleday/Galilee publishers. "Lincoln's Mothers," by Dorothy Clarke Wilson. It was called the Hurricane of 1827, it devastated the Buck Horn Valley of Southern Indiana, so much so that the path of the storm could be seen a half century later. Interestingly, it was foretold by the "Pigeon Creek Miracle Woman," who said there was a terrible storm coming, on a fine clear morning, because she saw, "Two little haystacks made of fog in the middle of the meadow." Oh, and though there is an extensive bibliography, she does not foot note! I am still trying to figure out which source she used. I was already working on it, for the weather research angle. If you happen to find out more about this storm, please do let me know, I was going to tell Ryan Hall, the meteorologist, about it.

  • @alldecadesplaylists1017
    @alldecadesplaylists1017 Год назад +1

    Very good episode. Thank you.

  • @Peg-ee5ei
    @Peg-ee5ei Год назад +3

    That was all very fascinating. Thank you!

  • @majorlewis928
    @majorlewis928 Год назад +4

    Hello Again it's been a while since I joined but I couldn't afford to miss out on a topic like this thank you for your comprehension dive into best of the 45 so far

  • @DavidSmith-fw6uj
    @DavidSmith-fw6uj Год назад +2

    Love from DeKalb Mississippi USA 🇺🇸

  • @WillaHerrera
    @WillaHerrera 2 месяца назад

    Thank you so much for your videos❤

  • @15743_Hertz
    @15743_Hertz Год назад +2

    He was such a beloved president that it's hard to determine where the truth ends and the apocryphal begins.

  • @jeffreykostbar9859
    @jeffreykostbar9859 Год назад +1

    wonderful bits of Lincoln history I did not know. thank you

  • @LatitudeSky
    @LatitudeSky Год назад +3

    In an interesting twist, there are professional actors who specialize in portraying Lincoln, including how he spoke. Movies often depict Lincoln with a deep, booming voice. But contemporary descriptions of his actual voice reveal Lincoln actually had a normal Midwesterner voice, probably very similar to the voice of our own THG.

  • @daviswall3319
    @daviswall3319 Год назад

    As always, well done History Dude!!

  • @Articulate99
    @Articulate99 Год назад

    Always interesting, thank you.

  • @shawnr771
    @shawnr771 Год назад +3

    Thank you for the lesson.

  • @therealzilch
    @therealzilch Год назад +11

    Abraham Lincoln is a constant inspiration.

  • @Nickfletchertheskibum
    @Nickfletchertheskibum Год назад

    The history guy rules! 😎🤘Keep on rocking history dude!

  • @allen_p
    @allen_p Год назад

    Some very interesting and little talked about history of Lincoln. Thanks for the episode.

  • @bsjeffrey
    @bsjeffrey Год назад +2

    i did a header into a bed board corner as a child, clearly this might similarly explains my comedic genius

  • @WilliamSmith-oh1gi
    @WilliamSmith-oh1gi Год назад +1

    Certainly one of the best in a great series of podcasts. I'd love to see a similar one on Grant

  • @GrinderCB
    @GrinderCB Год назад +3

    Hi History Guy, I don't usually comment on your videos, just watch and enjoy them. Two other things not usually discussed about Lincoln the President are the Homestead Act of 1862 and the Pacific Railroad Acts of 1862, both not directly related to the Civil War and which promoted westward expansion of the country. Lincoln supported both acts and you occasionally hear of a Homestead Act case happening today when someone claims unused Federal land. Might make a good video topic.

  • @edstahl9802
    @edstahl9802 9 месяцев назад

    I've read many books about Lincoln.....the History Guy revealed facts I haven't known. FANTASTIC JOB!

  • @alanaadams7440
    @alanaadams7440 Год назад +2

    I think Lincoln knew why he was made President and what was coming to the nation and what he had to endure that's why he was melancholy Also loosing his children I lost my child and I will never be the same Lincoln lost two

  • @lordofelectrons4513
    @lordofelectrons4513 Год назад +2

    Lincoln also wrote some iconic speeches that said so very much in so very few words.

  • @goldenpointband
    @goldenpointband Год назад +2

    Another stellar video!

  • @gtbkts
    @gtbkts Год назад +2

    Thanks for the awesome content

  • @colewebb5569
    @colewebb5569 Год назад

    hi and good morning The History Guy and I'm getting ready now to in joy this video you've put up thank you The History Guy and you have great Monday and a great week The History Guy oh and question do you have more 1940'S and WW2 video's coming up for us :-)

  • @aberjaylopdollar1074
    @aberjaylopdollar1074 7 месяцев назад

    I might add, that no other President grew up in such a hard scrabble life. Few people today, could have survived the life he lived as a young man. His father rented him out to labor for other men, and kept the money. His great intelligence led him forward, to become a self made man of success.

  • @nathanielstorkson953
    @nathanielstorkson953 Год назад

    Best video yet. Thank you.

  • @fyrequeene
    @fyrequeene Год назад +11

    Great video, however I must be nitpick about something: Thanksgiving is celebrated on the 4th Thursday in November, not the last Thursday. This was agreed to by joint resolution of Congress and President Roosevelt in December of 1941, to being in 1942.
    I was born on November 30, and my birthday has fallen on Thursday many times, but never on Thanksgiving...

  • @tommyvanbecelaere1561
    @tommyvanbecelaere1561 Год назад +1

    I thought I caught you in a flub. The place where Lincoln was born is no longer Hardin County. Got on the Google machine to write you a blistering "you messed up" comment. I've been visiting his birthplace since I was born. Though born in Kentucky (Bowling Green) we moved shortly after. My roots are in Radcliff/E-town and most of my mother's side are still in Hardin county. Love your stuff HG, keep em coming.

  • @gregsmith1719
    @gregsmith1719 Год назад +3

    Boy, could we use him now!

  • @bavondale
    @bavondale Год назад

    very much enjoyed. thank you

  • @stevengalloway8052
    @stevengalloway8052 Год назад +1

    I find it hard to believe that Abraham Lincoln could EVER be forgotten. If any President would be remembered, it's Lincoln... 😏

  • @lauriefrazer5668
    @lauriefrazer5668 Год назад

    This was so fabulous. Thank you, thank you so much! My flat hat is off to you❤️

  • @davidkimmel4216
    @davidkimmel4216 Год назад

    Thank You so much. Really enjoyed

  • @stevegallagher687
    @stevegallagher687 Год назад +1

    Excellent as usual.

  • @georgehugh3455
    @georgehugh3455 Год назад

    Thank you for this.

  • @Mbrafford1966
    @Mbrafford1966 Год назад +2

    I named my son, Lincoln Naoyuki, Lin meaning Lake and Coln meaning Colony/city in Gaelic. My son was born in Otsu City, Japan. Lake Biwa the largest lake in Japan has made Otsu the Lake City, and I am from Lakeland, Florida. My mother being from Illinois, "The Land of Lincoln" . She also had a print of the Lincoln Memorial on her wall her entire life. I wanted to name my son Benjamin, but shortened it means toilet in Japanese. So my favorite and most noble Lincoln for my mother and other reasons and Naoyuki for his grandfather, mean straight and honest in Kanji. Thank you for your videos, We are in Japan.

    • @Mbrafford1966
      @Mbrafford1966 Год назад

      I live 5 minutes from the site of The Otsu Incident, look it up Wikipedia is pretty accurate.

    • @rhuephus
      @rhuephus Год назад

      how could a name "Benjamin" be translated as "toilet" in Japanese ??

    • @Mbrafford1966
      @Mbrafford1966 Год назад

      @@rhuephusBen-chan would be the short version for Benjamin, benjo is toilet, also ben is poo

  • @fergusmallon1337
    @fergusmallon1337 Год назад +1

    When I see pictures of Mr. Lincoln the thing that stands out most to my mind is a need for a brush and comb

    • @juneroberts5305
      @juneroberts5305 Год назад

      It may be that he didn't use any of the products available to men at that time (like Macassar Oil) to smooth down his hair, or he was one of those people whose hair can't be tamed for more than 2 seconds... 😁 My cousin has hair like that. 2 seconds after combing it he looks like he never combed his hair in 5 years.

  • @bonniesaxe9460
    @bonniesaxe9460 Год назад

    Your biographies are the best! Thank you

  • @laserbeam002
    @laserbeam002 Год назад

    THG helps me more greatly appreciate America, our history and being American. God bless America and god bless Abraham Lincoln.

  • @jjock3239
    @jjock3239 Год назад +2

    Lincoln's gift of oratory, and his presidency, were so profound, that even in my fifth grade class in Canada in 1955 , we were required to learn the Gettysburg Address. I didn't understand what it meant to your country at the time, but it made me aware that wisdom isn't the use of a lot of big words to make a point, but a few of the right words. Thanks, Abe.

  • @raydunakin
    @raydunakin Год назад

    Speaking of Lincoln, perhaps you could do an episode about the Lincoln Highway.