South Carolina’s Lost One Hundred Years - The Story of Santa Elena

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  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024
  • William S. “Bill” Davies, Jr. explains that most courses in US history skip the first 100 plus years and neglect to tell the story of Santa Elena, the first European capital in what would become the United States. This is the story of those lost years of our history.

Комментарии • 6

  • @MichaelTreadwell-jo9bi
    @MichaelTreadwell-jo9bi 17 дней назад

    Fascinating presentation from a genuine historian. He is telling us about history that is not taught in schools. It was a different but interesting narrative. I am from Connecticut but I have an interest in South Carolina loyalists during the American Revolution.

  • @feistyoldgal8257
    @feistyoldgal8257 3 года назад +1

    Very interesting presentation! I had no idea of this history of SC. My maternal family goes back in SC to the late 1600's, mainly in the Georgetown/Goose Creek area. Gabriel Marion, father of Francis Marion, is my 7th great-grandfather.

  • @samsites3657
    @samsites3657 Год назад

    Thank-You!

  • @michaeljohnson293
    @michaeljohnson293 3 года назад

    This was superb. I had at best, an inkling of the French and Spanish excursions into what is now South Carolina. I was not even close to understanding the facts. Thank you so much for this.

  • @RonaldWilliams-t3g
    @RonaldWilliams-t3g 26 дней назад

    I’m African American with 2% Mayan indigenous dna from Georgia my ancestry born and raised in Jacksonville Florida I’ve been doing research trying to find out could this be one percent from my mother side in Belize and one percent from my dad side says Yucatan both my parents from Jacksonville Florida your presentation was so great wants I started listening couldn’t stop you cleared up so much I have to have a video of this today is 9/23/2024 at 10 o’clock thank you so much.

  • @nesbittgregory
    @nesbittgregory Год назад

    Thank you , for an honest and genuine presentation of our history. South Carolina has a lot of history, unfortunately, I would guess that it is underground, hidden away under a golf course, or National park..basically places where it is not easy to just start digging or exploring freely. The tunnels under the state house, one exit to the river, another pops out under the old CCI prison. The insane asylum on Bull Street ? Many questions arise and the main stream media as well as the well known publishers of our school books, seem to give similar answers and I know it's never the truth or only a tiny sliver of truth they provide. What was in our past that "they" want hidden ? Most South Carolinian's that I know, including myself, are not fond of liars or thieves. ~ hence one might say our history has been stolen or hidden.