Civil Defense All Purpose Survival Crackers

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  • Опубликовано: 3 ноя 2020
  • There was a time when the U.S. government planned to save the population from nuclear war with 20 billion crackers. The giant tins of "Civil Defense All Purpose Survival Crackers" raise questions about food, history, and how long food lasts before it becomes history. The History Guy recalls the history of a famous item on his set.
    Eating 153 year old hardtack: • 1863 American Civil Wa...
    Eating forty year old pound cake: • Raw Video: Army Colone...
    Eating all purpose survival crackers: • Opening a tin of Survi...
    USDA page "Before you Toss Food, Wait! Check it Out! www.usda.gov/media/blog/2013/...!
    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.
    You can purchase the bow tie worn in this episode at The Tie Bar:
    www.thetiebar.com/?...
    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.
    Find The History Guy at:
    Facebook: / thehistoryguyyt
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    Please send suggestions for future episodes: Suggestions@TheHistoryGuy.net
    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.
    Subscribe for more forgotten history: / @thehistoryguychannel .
    Awesome The History Guy merchandise is available at:
    teespring.com/stores/the-hist...
    Script by THG
    #history #thehistoryguy #ushistory

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @kieranfitz
    @kieranfitz 3 года назад +657

    History guy: No ones eaten the 100 year old fruit cake.
    Steve1989 MRE: Hold my Coffee instant, type 3.

    • @danieltaylor5231
      @danieltaylor5231 3 года назад +45

      Nice!

    • @curiousentertainment3008
      @curiousentertainment3008 3 года назад +40

      @@danieltaylor5231 let’s put this out on a tray.

    • @swj719
      @swj719 3 года назад +21

      @@curiousentertainment3008 heard heard both of those in his voice. I love that Steve got a shout-out.

    • @videodistro
      @videodistro 3 года назад +22

      Type 1! Type 1! He's a fan of type 1.

    • @danieltaylor5231
      @danieltaylor5231 3 года назад +12

      @@videodistro Exactly that's why he handed him the type 3 keeping the superior type 1 for himself.

  • @papaquonis
    @papaquonis 3 года назад +142

    "Almost edible" is what I aspire to when I cook anything.

    • @tenhirankei
      @tenhirankei 3 года назад +5

      That's what I call it when I have to "eat my mistake". And learn from it!

    • @wendychavez5348
      @wendychavez5348 3 года назад +2

      Don'chaknow! I'm getting better....

  • @robw2379
    @robw2379 3 года назад +163

    "Don't eat the historical artifacts."
    -Words to live by from the History Guy

    • @richardpehtown2412
      @richardpehtown2412 3 года назад +3

      Unless you ARE an historical artifact

    • @jonathanstancil8544
      @jonathanstancil8544 3 года назад +12

      ...or Steve 1989.

    • @yalelingoz6346
      @yalelingoz6346 3 года назад +6

      I think this need to be rated alongside "Don't lick the science" by SciShow.

    • @zobblewobble1770
      @zobblewobble1770 3 года назад +5

      @@jonathanstancil8544 or Ashens

    • @daveo7481
      @daveo7481 3 года назад +5

      Me pausing mid bite upon a Ming Dynasty ceramic pottery... "Wait, what?"

  • @annwilliams2075
    @annwilliams2075 3 года назад +62

    Re fruit cake: the traditional wedding cake in the U.K. is a dense fruit cake, made with fruit and alcohol. It has a marzipan layer covered by royal icing and is usually two or three tiers high. The first tier is cut up and given to the guests, who can eat it or, in the case of unmarried guests, take it home and put it under their pillows. If it is under the pillow it is suppose to bring dreams of ones future spouse. 😊 The second tier is cut up and prices sent to those who could not come to the wedding. The third tier is wrapped well in greaseproof paper and aluminium foil put in to a container, plastic or metal, and stored in a cool dry place. This is so it can be used as the Christening cake for the first child born to the couple. In my case this was two years later. And yes it was still edible, smelt wonderful and moist. All that was done to it was the baby’s name and birthdate was piped on it. Shortly I will be making Christmas puddings and a Christmas cake, again full,of fruit and alcohol. Again if stored well they will last for ages with out going stale or spoiling. 😊😊

    • @annwilliams2075
      @annwilliams2075 3 года назад +4

      @Dj Luminol it is only a small piece of cake about two or three inches across and 1/2 in thick. 😂😂😂😂 Sorry to hear about your experience with fruit cake, I am sure his baking skills will improve. 😊😊

    • @waynebrundidge206
      @waynebrundidge206 3 года назад +6

      I’m in the USA. I had no knowledge of the wedding cake tradition. I enjoyed you sharing that information. I love learning new information to me. Be blessed and have a great day. 😎👍⭐️🌟✨

    • @k.c1126
      @k.c1126 3 года назад +3

      Just typed a summary of this much more detailed and erudite comment.
      I also don't understand the American antipathy to fruit cake. In the English-speaking Caribbean it is a delicacy served as part of the Christmas season celebration. Fruit is soaked in rum or brandy for weeks or months before the cake is made in October or November, and the cake is again doused in liquor after backing. It's ubiquitous at holiday parties, and there's rarely any fruit cake left by January.

    • @k.c1126
      @k.c1126 3 года назад

      @Dj Luminol Just a slice, not the whole thing .... lol ...

    • @k.c1126
      @k.c1126 3 года назад +1

      @Dj Luminol Alright.... this explains a question I had in mind.... You have confirmed my suspicion that what Americans call fruit cake and what the rest of English-speaking world calls fruit cake are two different things. .... lol ...

  • @ChadWSmith
    @ChadWSmith 3 года назад +512

    I was waiting for Steve1989 to be mentioned, and then he was. NICE.

    • @newjargon1697
      @newjargon1697 3 года назад +22

      I just started this video and was about to comment about Steve1989. Great content.

    • @micahfrye8885
      @micahfrye8885 3 года назад +32

      Nice hiss

    • @josifulis
      @josifulis 3 года назад +31

      Alright let's get this onto a tray.....nice!

    • @KageRyu1000
      @KageRyu1000 3 года назад +6

      Same!

    • @BenWorkmanAnimalFeeMre
      @BenWorkmanAnimalFeeMre 3 года назад +10

      Decadent, and a Nice video!

  • @briangray5921
    @briangray5921 3 года назад +278

    Steve1989 on history guy....nice

  • @hammer-fn7gm
    @hammer-fn7gm 3 года назад +16

    Back in the late 60s I was in the Civil Air Patrol. On a few occasions we would clean up the supply room. In there were rations left over from the 50s. We were supposed to toss them out, but opened them instead. The chocolate bars were still eatable as were the crackers, but no one dared eat the other things in there. The payoff for a 16 year old at the time were the cigarettes.

    • @mrfancypants29
      @mrfancypants29 7 месяцев назад +1

      I’m 45 years old and joined the CAP this past Spring. We were cleaning out supplies in one of hangar bays and I found many pieces and a couple of complete MREs in dark brown plastic wrapping. Our Commander told me I that they should probably be thrown away due to the scheduled “shelf life” of 3-5 years but that I could have them if I wanted. It is all terribly salty!
      When I was in USMC Boot Camp in 1996 our Drill Instructors let us eat MREs in this same wrapping except the chocolate turned white and the Tabasco sauce turned brown, the candy also needed to be handed in. We were told to place these in large trash bags and were collected by the DI’s. We were told these MREs were left over from some of the original issue in the 80s. There were such menu items as sausage links which were nicknamed the “4 fingers of de@th”. My 1st MRE was scrambled eggs. That was the worst tasting thing I had ever eaten! Other items were slightly more palatable, especially for a young 18-21 year old. We often collected uneaten MREs and items from them to eat after getting back to the barracks from a field exercise. It’s uncertain how long these military rations are good for. I’ve made it a point to not open the completely wrapped MREs for historic purposes but have thrown the others into my 72 hour kit for use at more opportune times when regular food isn’t available. Best wishes!
      P.S. Observation, the lady rinsing fallout off the vegetables in the plastic tub in the CD video in 50s was doing so with bare hands and no other PPE on her body… Just thought I’d throw that out there.

  • @raydunakin
    @raydunakin 3 года назад +14

    There is an abandoned mine in the Mojave desert that had been designated as a fallout shelter and stockpiled with cans of crackers and water. Up until a few years ago it was still there. From what I've heard, it's all been vandalized, trashed, or taken since then.

  • @CodyDockerty
    @CodyDockerty 3 года назад +149

    Let's get this video out onto a tray, nice!

  • @billcoggeshall6764
    @billcoggeshall6764 3 года назад +85

    I don't know what to say the history guy just mentioned Steve 1989 I guess the only thing I can say is
    NICE!

    • @Backroad_Junkie
      @Backroad_Junkie 3 года назад +4

      Let's get this out onto a tray...

    • @micahfrye8885
      @micahfrye8885 3 года назад +2

      @@Backroad_Junkie nice hiss

    • @brianartillery
      @brianartillery 3 года назад +1

      Zoom into some ham, and say: "Ham." Always makes me laugh, never gets old.

  • @Eastmarch2
    @Eastmarch2 3 года назад +12

    'I don't think it's my job to eat the historical artifacts' THG 2020 best quote ever

  • @MariaMartinez-researcher
    @MariaMartinez-researcher 3 года назад +10

    That guy in the film, reading a booklet about surviving an atomic bomb, with a cigarette in his hand.

  • @whatsinanameish
    @whatsinanameish 3 года назад +96

    The real question is not 'is the shelf real', but rather, 'is the History Guy wearing any pants'.

    • @melvillecapps8339
      @melvillecapps8339 3 года назад +7

      He is wearing sweatpants like everyone else on camera during the pandemic (except Mr. Toobin).

    • @wendychavez5348
      @wendychavez5348 3 года назад

      The RUclipsr that I share a home with sometimes records wearing a very appropriate shirt and boxer briefs. I'm still trying to convert him to being comfortable with nudity at home, but like most people with kids he usually has SOMETHING on.

    • @simongleaden2864
      @simongleaden2864 3 года назад

      Do you mean underpants or trousers?

    • @whatsinanameish
      @whatsinanameish 3 года назад +3

      @@simongleaden2864 Trousers. I have this vision of him only having on satin boxers with little hearts.

  • @BHuang92
    @BHuang92 3 года назад +68

    Marty Pascal: Jesus, Buckman! This stuff's been on the Stingray since Korea! *This can expired in 1966!*
    Buckman: (tasting contents of can) What's the matter, sir? It still tastes like creamed corn.
    Marty Pascal: *Except it's deviled ham!*
    -Down Periscope

  • @reecetejani9796
    @reecetejani9796 3 года назад +7

    I live in the town where Huntley and Palmer’s Biscuits originated (Reading, Berkshire county, UK). The factory was one of the town’s largest employers and the building complex, situated a few hundred yards from Reading town centre, remains a town landmark. It was said that you could always smell biscuits in the surrounding streets. A branch of the railway used to run into the factory, to deliver coal and export tins of biscuits. The cube tins were made slightly off-square so when stacked in a railway van they sort of wedge together and don’t fall. In the east of Reading is a public park called Palmer Park, donated by George Palmer for the benefit of residents, most of whom worked for Huntley and Palmer’s. A statue stands in the park of George Palmer with an umbrella - well, it is England after all!

  • @piatpotatopeon8305
    @piatpotatopeon8305 3 года назад +21

    I literally cried out loud in exhilaration when you mentioned Steve1989mreinfo. I had to explain to a nearby coworker what was going on.

    • @videodistro
      @videodistro 3 года назад +2

      Nice.

    • @brandonsebastian1334
      @brandonsebastian1334 3 года назад

      What kind of job do you have that you can watch THG at work?

    • @piatpotatopeon8305
      @piatpotatopeon8305 3 года назад

      @@brandonsebastian1334 I was on my break. It would be a pretty cool job if I could watch THG on the clock.

  • @jarcher5626
    @jarcher5626 3 года назад +65

    I found a can of GI peanut butter dated 1953 on the top of a refrigerator on the living barge assigned to our boat in dry dock , NNSY 1988. It was good.

    • @DarkAudit
      @DarkAudit 3 года назад +7

      Similar story. The Combat Systems office on our barge at NNSY in 1993 had a can of "carbohydrate supplement" dated 1964. Basically just a big tin of hard candy.

    • @WHix-om4yo
      @WHix-om4yo 3 года назад +4

      Yes indeed. We had PB from C-rations left over from previous conflicts in ROTC during the 70s. It tasted ok but the vets told us that it's best used by sticking a match deep in it and lighting that: this kept the mosquitos away for hours. Cheers!

    • @comm744
      @comm744 3 года назад +2

      Yes sir. I have had WW2 "C" ration peanut butter, it is in little cans, fresh and very good.

  • @cecillanter3207
    @cecillanter3207 3 года назад +60

    In 1969 while in Vietnam we used C Rations that were date stamped 1944.... the cigarettes sure were not the best but when there is nothing else they were OK.....and an Army issued can opener was not issued but came with the C Rations, it was a P38

    • @01cthompson
      @01cthompson 3 года назад +12

      The p38 was the first multi-tool!

    • @51WCDodge
      @51WCDodge 3 года назад +11

      Still a sought after tool, they work!

    • @Houndini
      @Houndini 3 года назад +10

      Good ole P38. All our fancy can openers now days. That is still the most trustworthy.

    • @louisludlum8030
      @louisludlum8030 3 года назад +9

      After 9-11, an airport TSA worker told me I could not carry my P38 (on my key chain) onto the airplane. I said, “Normally I would comply but it has saved my life so many times, I will just not board.” He said I could go to the airport post office and mail it to myself. That’s what I did.

    • @ChiefMac59
      @ChiefMac59 3 года назад +13

      Carry a P-38 on my key ring to this day

  • @thetangieman3426
    @thetangieman3426 3 года назад +27

    One year in the late 70's we were realllllly poor and ended up eating these over the holidays. Pretty much tasted like other crackers. But clearly they were older than I was. 😅

    • @Fitzwalrus06
      @Fitzwalrus06 Год назад +1

      A friend worked at a local library in the mid-'70s when they were clearing out the old fallout shelter. He snagged a couple of cans of these crackers, and being eternally-hungry teenagers and college students we gave them a try. They were edible if not delicious: a bit stale tasting and kinda crumbly, but the whole can eventually disappeared and we all survived. 😁

  • @skyden24195
    @skyden24195 3 года назад +17

    "Taste like chicken" jokes.... always a winner. lol.

    • @CFRF13
      @CFRF13 2 года назад +1

      Winner Winner Chicken Dinner

  • @rockhardnipple6633
    @rockhardnipple6633 3 года назад +45

    Love the mention of Steve1989! He's tried all kinds of old food. Great guy, great channel.

    • @animal16365
      @animal16365 3 года назад +6

      Yep. And the only thing that mite kill Steve is a Chinese ration

    • @ADHDWOOHOO
      @ADHDWOOHOO 2 года назад

      Nice.

  • @PurpleRhymesWithOrange
    @PurpleRhymesWithOrange 3 года назад +50

    Around 1987 while doing utility work in tunnels under the University of Minnesota they broke through a wall and found a 1950s civil defense shelter that had been forgotten more than 30 years. The shelves were still stocked with canned food and water. They opened a random assortment of cans and found all were still edible.

    • @batterymakermarkii2654
      @batterymakermarkii2654 3 года назад +2

      Heh, edible. They used that word...

    • @ChadWSmith
      @ChadWSmith 3 года назад +2

      THEY FOUND REAL WALL CHICKEN!?!?

    • @HSMiyamoto
      @HSMiyamoto 3 года назад +2

      I think I remember hearing about that. Class of '86 me.

  • @Elongated_Muskrat
    @Elongated_Muskrat 3 года назад +11

    "All Purpose" = food and building materials all in one.

  • @michael7324
    @michael7324 3 года назад +12

    I’m a big fan of Steve1989. “Let’s get it on a tray. Nice.”

  • @TheDCpicker
    @TheDCpicker 3 года назад +181

    STEVE1989 HAS ENTERED THE CHAT!
    NICE HISS!!

    • @demandred1957
      @demandred1957 3 года назад +3

      Damn... beat me to it..

    • @dbmail545
      @dbmail545 3 года назад +3

      I first thought of him too!

    • @Colty045
      @Colty045 3 года назад +3

      Nice!

    • @angelbangtana9885
      @angelbangtana9885 3 года назад +10

      lets get this onto a tray.... nice!

    • @W7DSY
      @W7DSY 3 года назад +1

      DC, YOU beat me to it!

  • @dantheman3214
    @dantheman3214 3 года назад +47

    I'm hoping that one day we have a, "Forgotten History of Billiards 🎱".

    • @JackG79
      @JackG79 3 года назад +2

      That would actually be SUPER interesting!!! THG, can we get this please?!?!?!?!

    • @Cujo2447
      @Cujo2447 3 года назад

      Can that be covered in 15 minutes??

    • @JackG79
      @JackG79 3 года назад

      @@Cujo2447 2npart show?

    • @alexmladen
      @alexmladen 3 года назад

      Walter Lindrum

    • @crossleydd42
      @crossleydd42 3 года назад

      An analysis of dumpster contents would be very interesting.

  • @Jollyprez
    @Jollyprez 3 года назад +10

    When stationed at Ft Gordon ( army ) Georgia in the early 1980s, the chow hall regularly served WWII rations as sides and even main courses. Sometimes the taste was, "interesting."

    • @robertstrickland2121
      @robertstrickland2121 3 года назад +1

      I was there in 81, USAF det, army chow halls were pretty sad compared to AF chow halls, guess this is why...

  • @atenachos6282
    @atenachos6282 3 года назад +7

    "Let's get this forgotten history out onto a tray... Nice."

  • @lawrenceestreich9737
    @lawrenceestreich9737 3 года назад +73

    As a kid in Brooklyn, our apartment building had a CD warehouse in the underground garage. Only relic I kept was a water drum/toilet barrel and a fallout shelter sign. I wish I kept the Geiger counters made by Bendix and a radio along with some candy and crackers. The med kits still had phenobarbital and other goodies in them. We tasted those crackers and let’s say they were like eating a floor tile. I cannot imagine a 7 story building’s worth of people, in that garage that wreaked of gasoline, living in there. They had a bad enough time living as neighbors on the same floors!

    • @mikenixon2401
      @mikenixon2401 3 года назад +6

      Lawrence, I'm just interested if like my school class; did you have some "expert" bring in a Geiger and counter and rock to demonstrate how it worked, and of course passed it around to all us kids? Oh, those were the days, but we've survived to tell about it. I think -- The History Guy is our good example -- we need to share these details before they are long forgotten.

    • @memathews
      @memathews 3 года назад +2

      Oh yeah, the Geiger counter and rock experiment, passed around to show us how air distance would lessen the effects of radioactive fallout. That and atomic bomb drills during the Cuban missile crisis.

    • @rumi9005
      @rumi9005 3 года назад +4

      Lawrence. You're comment confused me on first reading. When I lived in Canada there was a chain of stores called CD Warehouse. So I simply couldn't understand your comment. Then I realized that CD stood for Civil Defense. About the crackers - I wonder if they might have ALWAYS been like (what our modern sensibilities would describe as) 'eating a floor tile'. After all, they were meant for basic nutrition, not as merely a carrier for cheese or peanut butter etc.

    • @richardpehtown2412
      @richardpehtown2412 3 года назад +6

      In 2000 while installing a power panel for an X-RAY machine at a medical clinic built in 1974, we discovered a perfectly preserved (looking) glazed doughnut within the wall.
      Not desiring to unleash a curse, we carefully re-interred it and carried on with the project.

    • @rickyusa1000
      @rickyusa1000 3 года назад +5

      Very wise move. Fear the curse of Donutankhamun!

  • @tangydiesel1886
    @tangydiesel1886 3 года назад +57

    I was going to say something about steve1989mreinfo, but I see others already have.
    I am not disappointed.

    • @DawnOldham
      @DawnOldham 3 года назад +1

      I’m curious now- what are you and many others referring to when you mention Steve1989? 😁

    • @DieselxRobot
      @DieselxRobot 3 года назад +4

      @@DawnOldham If you don't know who he is, he has a RUclips channel where he collects and tries out many types of military MRE ration packs. He is famous for having tasted things like beef from over 100 years ago. He is mentioned in this video about having eaten 150 year old hard tack.

    • @ThraceVega
      @ThraceVega 3 года назад +4

      @@DawnOldham also, his fans have decided that every time he goes without uploading for an extended period of time, he has died of botulism.
      It happens frequently.

    • @DawnOldham
      @DawnOldham 3 года назад +1

      Diesel Robot Thank you for clueing me in, and so quickly! I enjoy this channel very much and again, thank you for taking the time to answer!

    • @DawnOldham
      @DawnOldham 3 года назад

      R B that is so funny!

  • @tonydeleo3642
    @tonydeleo3642 3 года назад +3

    I was trained as a fallout shelter manager and shelter manager instructor for my area in Washington State. We had the crackers but also large tins of "carbohydrate supplements". This was the name given to the contents to deter anyone from opening them prematurely. These were actually sugar coated fruit flavored hard candy and, after the shelter were deactivated, most of us ended up with a can of them in our office, they were actually some of the best candy I have ever eaten.

    • @ForbiddTV
      @ForbiddTV 4 месяца назад

      These were recalled after the fervor over red die #2 being banned in 1976. By then nuclear scare was waning and most never were never actually returned or destroyed, they ended up in situations like you describe. Sealed tins fetch around $100 today, but since they weigh over 30 pounds, the aren't easily shipped. I have a pallet of them in the warehouse.

  • @JohnDoe-pv2iu
    @JohnDoe-pv2iu 3 года назад +2

    In the 80s, a friend's father used to travel to Europe and buy warehouses of old WW2 era military gear. He collected and dealt with uniforms particularly but bought and sold a little of anything. He was always collecting Nazi marked items.
    One time when he returned home he had a box with him (most of the items he purchased were shipped to America and took a little while going thru customs and such). Inside the box was a sealed tin containing a sheet cake from WW2. I don't know for sure who had made it but it was labeled in English. He opened it with a can opener and we all tried some. It didn't smell bad and we all lived, but like you said in reference to the twinkies, it was very dry.
    I love the cracker tin and I wouldn't open it either. I love historic things from the Cold war.
    Great video! Take Care and be safe, John

  • @constipatedinsincity4424
    @constipatedinsincity4424 3 года назад +42

    Hard tack also clean teeth and makes your coat shiny!💯

    • @davidlyon1899
      @davidlyon1899 3 года назад +4

      Best comment.

    • @lightweight1974
      @lightweight1974 3 года назад +1

      I've heard it's also an aphrodisiac.😀🤣🤣

    • @davidgiancoli2106
      @davidgiancoli2106 3 года назад +1

      Woof!

    • @johnh.tuomala4379
      @johnh.tuomala4379 3 года назад

      @@lightweight1974 I've eaten hardtack,
      and didn't find that to be the case.

    • @lightweight1974
      @lightweight1974 3 года назад +3

      @@johnh.tuomala4379 You're supposed to eat it? Wow, I've been using it wrong... don't tell my girlfriend. 😀

  • @richardsforrest
    @richardsforrest 3 года назад +5

    Reminded me of eating C rations while in the Army that were dated 1946. I was eating them in 1972.Tasted just like all field rations; especially enjoyable eaten unheated at night while sitting in an uncovered foxhole during a rainstorm, in the mountains of northern Georgia, during the winter.

    • @DavidWilliams-so2dy
      @DavidWilliams-so2dy Год назад +1

      I remember C rations from my Army years 81-86. Everyone disparaged them but I found them very palatable except for the ham and eggs.

  • @sarajenkins3485
    @sarajenkins3485 3 года назад +4

    Nice hiss!! Let’s get that on a tray. Who would LOVE to see a History guy / Steve collaboration

  • @DanQuoLives
    @DanQuoLives 3 года назад +3

    I was a graduate student in the early 1980's. My building (engineering built in ~1962) had fallout shelter signs and a room full of supplies. I helped throw out the contents of the room and take down the signs - none of which I kept. I recall that the contents of the room included small drums of water that were supplied with custom-fit plastic toilet seats and plastic bags. There were hundreds of boxes of cracker tins, large cans of peanut butter, jars of stool softeners and a big jar of barbituates. Picture the grim shelter life as you drank your water, ate your crackers with peanut butter and used the stool softeners before refilling the drums and swallowing barbiturates to get some sleep. Repeat for weeks.
    We did try the crackers and peanut butter. Both seemed okay but were dry and probably not very appetizing when new. The crackers were made with a lot of cornmeal and were hard to swallow.

  • @masterimbecile
    @masterimbecile 3 года назад +11

    Scurvy causes spontaneous bleeding because Vitamin C is needed to help the body build collagen, which makes up the support structures for stretchy/elastic tissues (e.g. those found in blood vessel walls and in the skin).

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 3 года назад +1

      It still occurs, too. About 25 years ago I noticed my teeth were getting very cold sensitive, to the point I had to brush with very warm water. Then I realized the pain was immediate, before the temperature soaked inside the teeth... it was my gums hurting. When I realized I had not been consuming much in the line of fruits and vegetables, I got a bottle of vitamin C and took them twice a day. Within a week the sensitivity was gone. Lesson learned.

    • @Lawofimprobability
      @Lawofimprobability 3 года назад

      @@flagmichael Cases of scurvy among drug addicts have also been noticed.

    • @simongleaden2864
      @simongleaden2864 3 года назад

      I've been taking one gramme a day of Vitamin C for many years. I have fewer colds than I used to.

  • @grimreaper6557
    @grimreaper6557 3 года назад +18

    Steve 1989 has an awesome channel on survival foods some very old he ha tryed some that were scary old and still breaths hahah so some things do survive longer then they should thank you for this awesome video as always great information

    • @rutabagasteu
      @rutabagasteu 3 года назад

      Oldest I have seen him eat wss hard tack from the 1860s.

    • @legoeasycompany
      @legoeasycompany 3 года назад +2

      @@rutabagasteu Dude also ate beef from the Boer war, that cow had been dead for 10 years before the Titanic sank and he made it into porridge

  • @6412mars
    @6412mars 3 года назад +7

    Steve 1989...Nice hiss! lets get this on a tray..Nice!!

  • @HikuroMishiro
    @HikuroMishiro 3 года назад +5

    "I don't think it's my job to eat the historical artifacts." Out of context on a t-shirt would probably get some baffling looks.

  • @bruceberg5375
    @bruceberg5375 3 года назад +7

    My mother was a principal of a school that had many cans of crackers. We fed them to our hogs.

  • @CB-jk3ue
    @CB-jk3ue 3 года назад +8

    Let’s get this out on the Internet, nice
    Yes yes I love Stere MRE!
    He shares the history and the taste. I discovered him before The History Guy. I get excited when I see either of y’all put up a new video.

  • @lordg69
    @lordg69 3 года назад +3

    That’s crazy you mentioned the University of Montana and those crackers being found. I’m from there and Missoula itself has old tunnels underground that have been around forever. Tons of stories about why they were built/used and I’ve been fortunate enough to go into them to explore. Crazy how the tunnels still lead into the back of businesses and you can move around that way. What amazed me was they had storage all throughout these tunnels and I’ll never forget the stacks of tins full of survival crackers. Thanks for the history and memories!

  • @michaelroberson2546
    @michaelroberson2546 3 года назад +1

    History Guy, you and I share a presence at Northern Arizona University. Likely not at the same time as I crammed 4 years into 6 from 74-80. But I did live in the dorms there and as you know, NAU has a series of tunnels under the campus for steam pipes for heating. In the basements of these dorms were civil defense rooms. These rooms had stacks of these crackers along with several barrels of water. When I was an RA in one of the dorms I had keys to the basement rooms and thus access to the tunnels and CD rooms. My fellow RAs and I in either 76 or 77 broke open one of the tins. As I recall the manufacture date was 1962 but I'm not sure.
    For 15 year old crackers, they weren't bad but I sure wouldn't want to have 6 a day for 2 weeks.
    Best regards from an old Lumberjack!

  • @jasonpayne1240
    @jasonpayne1240 3 года назад +25

    😂...tastes like chicken...well done History Guy!!!

  • @Gradius6
    @Gradius6 3 года назад +5

    Always happy to see more History Guy videos. I appreciate that he delves into interesting historical topics that often get overlooked in traditional classroom settings.

  • @stevecannon1774
    @stevecannon1774 2 года назад +1

    I was given 2 Delux Fruitcake form the Collin Street Bakery in Corsicana TX. They are the very best and filled with native Pecans. They were ordered online and we ate one Christmas time and I will open the other when we celebrate our birthdays on St Valentine’s Day. My birthday is February 10 and my spouse is Feb 17. (I was born in 1958 and Jerry in 1956) .This will also be 39 years together on the 17th. As a kid in Oklahoma in the 60s, we had duck and cover drills often because of tornadoes but still had the old duck and cover films shown during the Cuban crisis of 62. I started school in 65 so they were still fresh in everyone’s memories.

  • @4shink
    @4shink 3 года назад +2

    A close cousin of Hardtack is the Sailor Boy brand "Pilot Bread" currently manufactured by Interlake Foods, Richmond, Va. and available on the Net. "Pilot Bread" also known generically as "Pilot Biscuits", is made with nutritionally fortified flour, palm oil and salt....no scurvy risk here but the texture and taste are identical to hardtack. Pilot bread/biscuit is ideal for expedition purposes as it is light, durable and is a useful replacement for soft bread products. From my personal experience with arctic canoe trips, Pilot biscuits are perfectly useable even after complete soakings...simply place on a rock in full sun...let dry completely...repackage as needed. Another advantage is that after consuming two pilot biscuits as P-B-and J sandwiches and drinking a tin cup of water, the biscuits will expand in one's stomach and eliminate hunger for the next 8 hours +/-. Great stuff and still plays a role in contemporary travel ventures.

  • @TheKulu42
    @TheKulu42 3 года назад +5

    I can remember when brochures filled with bomb shelter plans -- one which could stand in as a bar until you needed to avoid nuclear fallout -- were passed out to us in elementary school. Overall, I think these plans plus all the "Duck and Cover" stuff and tips for washing fallout off your vegetables were designed to be morale boosters rather than actual survival tips.

    • @imchris5000
      @imchris5000 3 года назад +2

      as long as your not directly under a bomb your pretty good to go the usa is a huge place they cant nuke every inch

    • @51WCDodge
      @51WCDodge 3 года назад +3

      Bulldust the Public with Survial Advice to keep them fat, dumb and happy. Why is that sounding familiar all of a sudden?

    • @georgemckenna462
      @georgemckenna462 3 года назад +2

      Civil Defense Preparedness for nuclear war was and is a propaganda ploy for the gullible.

  • @LTDunltd
    @LTDunltd 3 года назад +4

    Late 70's to mid 80's being on flight duty, I ate many C-ration & the newer MCI rations.
    The first time our crew were issued MREs we found that the 'heating' units were removed, 'due to aircraft safety'.
    We learned that we could put 6 of our hot food packets on top of the nav computer and they would be warm it about 30 minutes, so half of the crew would eat now and the second half would eat later.
    Once they installed a cooler, aka mini fridge, we started getting meals from the Flight Kitchen and the ration meals were history.

  • @Pilgrimdave1960
    @Pilgrimdave1960 2 года назад +1

    Dude, you're such a treat. Truly happy I found your show.

  • @keithweiss7899
    @keithweiss7899 3 года назад +2

    The Vietnam era canned pound cake was made by the Sara Lee Corp. It was a favorite among troupes. I have eaten it many times and it is delicious, even decades after it was canned. I have also eaten Civil Defense crackers that were many decades old, from a tin just like THG. I thought they were quite good and I had no ill effects from them, although caution is the key word.

  • @thedungeondelver
    @thedungeondelver 3 года назад +9

    "Let's get these out on a tray. Nice."

  • @steveanderson9290
    @steveanderson9290 3 года назад +4

    During "service week" in boot camp in 1970, I was assigned to work in the stock room at the mess hall. The cooks would order lists of ingredients from us with which to prepare the meals they served...pallet loads for every meal. I was shocked to read the production dates stamped on the boxes of canned food we sent them. Most were packed during WWII, almost 30 years earlier.

  • @theotherwaldo
    @theotherwaldo 3 года назад +1

    I had two cans of those survival biscuits in my travel trailer when my family got stranded in the Siskiyou Mountains in 1973.
    After almost a month we got hungry enough to eat them.
    They weren't too bad.

  • @anonnymousperson
    @anonnymousperson 3 года назад +2

    This is why I love the History Guy, he doesn't pander with unboxing videos.

  • @geneard639
    @geneard639 3 года назад +4

    When I was stationed in this one carrier, the Mess Cooks pulled out a crate of 'spam'. 6 cans, buldged, dented, corroded, discolored... And the Supply Officer demanded it be used. MS1 checked the lot number and said it was made in 1943.... Supply Officer said 'use it'. MS1 took the one can of spam, fried it up by himself and didn't let anyone touch it, didn't serve anyone but....the Supply Officer who loved fried spam sandwiches. The next morning the Ships Surgeon came down to yell at us, but after hearing about the antique spam laughed and said "Well, he earned what his got then" which was the worst case if food poisoning you can imagine.

  • @jefferyepstein9210
    @jefferyepstein9210 3 года назад +5

    Personally my favorite was the green water drum that after being emptied could then serve as a toilet with a powder included to help with odor.

    • @h.h.6171
      @h.h.6171 3 года назад +3

      Aren't you.....dead??

  • @ttun100
    @ttun100 3 года назад +1

    What I've always noticed on the shelf was the replica of the red British mail box. I grew up in the Bahamas and we have them there, complete with E II Reigns on them, and over 50 years later, she still does to this day.

  • @mattinmontana7901
    @mattinmontana7901 3 года назад +1

    My grandfather worked as a Civil Defense coordinator in the 60's and 70's, I've eaten alot of those crackers growing up. Also in some of the shelters CD had 55 gallon cardboard barrels of drinking water and 25 pound cardboard containers of hard rock candy. The flavors were only lemon or cherry, it was to supposed to increase the daily calorie count and give energy. Ate the candy well into the early 90's and still here. Thanks for the great topic and a stroll down memory lane, keep up the great work.

    • @ForbiddTV
      @ForbiddTV 4 месяца назад

      You got some inaccuracies there. The water barrels were steel 17.5 gallons which made them easier to move around. The cardboard barrels were the same size as sanitation kits with a toilet seat and toilet paper inside. The carbohydrate supplements ("candy") were steel tins about twice the size of the cracker tins he showed in the video and weighed 32-37 pounds (depending on manufacturer). I have many of said examples on pallets in the warehouse.

    • @kellyvaters1689
      @kellyvaters1689 4 месяца назад

      Eek. The "carbohydrate supplements" would not have been safe to eat; the red ones contained Red Dye #5.

  • @robertschemonia5617
    @robertschemonia5617 3 года назад +10

    Civil defense all purpose crackers, cement mix, tank armor patch, sandbag fill, roof patch, and more! If you can think of it, these puppies can do it!

    • @51WCDodge
      @51WCDodge 3 года назад

      Britsh Military equivalent Biscuits Brown AB, ditto! :-)

    • @lightweight1974
      @lightweight1974 3 года назад +2

      But can you make a boat out of it?

    • @Whammytap
      @Whammytap 3 года назад

      I think the biscuits are actually pretty tasty. Haven't tried the crackers.

    • @robertschemonia5617
      @robertschemonia5617 3 года назад

      @@lightweight1974 Well yeah, just use the "peanut butter" from MREs as glue, heat until cured using the meal heater pack, and voila! Boat. Lol

  • @Ciborium
    @Ciborium 3 года назад +5

    THG gives a shout-out to Steve1989? Nice!

  • @jamesgrisham4830
    @jamesgrisham4830 Год назад

    During the summer of 1973 I was one of many college engineering students working for the Army Corps of Engineers to update Civil Defense files on designated fallout shelter sites located in the Midwest. We were called “Shelter Survey Technicians”. Our inspections large buildings and structures including schools, banks, beer breweries, jails, libraries and diaries. The shelter food stockpiles we often missing, in poor condition, rancid or consumed by persons unknown. The Watergate hearings were being televised that summer and sometimes people would cast suspicions upon our work. The was also the beginning of Détentes with the then Soviet Union and the surveys were not solely focused on nuclear attacks. The surveys were expanded to evaluate the structures for flooding, earthquakes and other natural disasters. Fun summer for a college kid.

  • @JS-DeepStar
    @JS-DeepStar 3 года назад

    In 1971 I helped my grade school janitor move tins of CD Crackers and 10 gallon barrels of CD water. I remember it so well because he let me use a hand truck and I was completely amazed at 7 years old that he allowed me to operate the two wheeled tool. Thanks History guy for some fond memories.

  • @Traderjoe
    @Traderjoe 3 года назад +4

    My nephew bought a house a few years ago and the guy who used to live in the house had made a kind of fallout shelter in the basement and had a room full of those tins and big barrels of water and Geiger counters and other stuff. The tins looked in good shape and we opened a few and tried the crackers, which were from the 1950s and they were edible. But did not taste great. We gave them to our chickens to eat and they were fine.

  • @h2odragon1
    @h2odragon1 3 года назад +7

    When King Tut's Tomb was opened, they found some Crystalized Honey! Whet they heated it, it melted and became Honey again, which they said was good!

  • @RealWolfmanDan
    @RealWolfmanDan 3 года назад +1

    Your ability to make a subject as seemingly mundane as a tin box of crackers not just interesting, but entertaining and thought provoking is nothing short of amazing. Bravo sir.

  • @georgeroy8509
    @georgeroy8509 3 года назад +1

    Great episode. Look forward to all your history moments. As an aside, I grew up on a dairy farm in northern Massachusetts where my mother canned everything. At 69 years old I opened a jar of her canned peaches from the late 50s. They were still as good as remembered as a kid.
    Thanks for keeping history alive.

  • @frankturrentine
    @frankturrentine 3 года назад +5

    oh hey! I'm a history nerd and a huge fan, and I just got off work and find myself catching a new vid a few minutes after it came out.
    Thank you!

    • @frankturrentine
      @frankturrentine 3 года назад

      I'd love to see stories about the cavalry forts that sprang up in Texas before the Civil War.

    • @frankturrentine
      @frankturrentine 3 года назад

      I was a HIstory major at the University of Texas and will always remember my historiography professor and my paper on Gibbon. I varied between being a medievalist and a Civil War scholar. I was out of high school before it occurred to me that not everyone in the US was required to learn Texas history in high school. There were some fascinated episodes in the history of Texas forts, however, Lee served for a time at Fort Griffin, I think. And Sherman was around during that time. There was an interesting circumstance in Texas in that for almost a generation after statehood it remained in a state of constant conflict because of the Comanche. My farm was on the Brazos River just west of the DFW metro area. Not only were there many ancient middens on that stretch of the river, but it was essentially the old Comanche trail that they followed to south Texas to raid Mexican and Anglo settlements to steal women and horses. There were so many interesting people on both sides of that conflict, like Cynthia and Quanah Parker. But there were many more.
      Additionally, there were hot springs along the Rio Grande and there is a story there that includes Pancho Villa. I'd love to see your take on any of those episodes.

  • @Bigbacon
    @Bigbacon 3 года назад +42

    how did I know Steve would be brought up in this.

  • @hollymorris785
    @hollymorris785 3 года назад

    I really enjoyed this episode, thank you!

  • @southernpacific4319
    @southernpacific4319 3 года назад +2

    The History Guy...making history more palatable...one crumb at a time!

  • @jimgrieme1961
    @jimgrieme1961 3 года назад +4

    I cannot remember how I first came across your channel. You are always informative, well-researched and immensely entertaining! I have two degrees in history and I am constantly amazed at the amount of research I understand you have had to do in order to produce such fantastic content! I grew up in Illinois and my family lives in the St. Louis area. Thank you for doing such a wonderfully accurate job in relating stories from the parts of history that are far too easily forgotten! Blessings!

  • @davesilverman3325
    @davesilverman3325 3 года назад +3

    Lance, in the middle of the 70's I and my teen aged friends went into a WWll air raid shelter and made off with several cans of survival crackers just like the can you have (except ours were made in 1942) and we ate them and even enjoyed them. In fact, we liked them so much we went back and nabbed several more cans. We ate them with peanut butter, cream cheese, jam and every conceivable way you can imagine. We thought it was a hoot! Anyway, just thought you'd like to know. Great video, as always!

  • @rosetownstumpcity
    @rosetownstumpcity 3 года назад

    i love this video and this channel. and i love the image of your reflection on the tin in the outro, a perect end to an interesting and informative video.... yet another gem from THG

  • @johne7100
    @johne7100 3 года назад

    One of your best. Well done!

  • @RicMoxley
    @RicMoxley 3 года назад +28

    Looks like we can never say that the history guy has lost his crackers.

  • @Bill-xx2yh
    @Bill-xx2yh 3 года назад +5

    Hard tack, would likely be fine in that tin..
    "Simply remove the FALL OUT"

  • @jamesturner2126
    @jamesturner2126 2 года назад +1

    THIS IS A GREAT EPISODE! 👍🏿

  • @shallendor
    @shallendor 3 года назад

    This story Crackered me up!

  • @rlbennett
    @rlbennett 3 года назад +5

    You should research “ government cheese” as we called it in the South . It was given to the poor but came from civil defense stock .

    • @flouisbailey
      @flouisbailey Год назад +1

      As a Kentucky Hillbilly I remember Guv-Ment cheese, but the good stuff was the butter don’t know how or where it was made but it was great.

  • @SMichaelDeHart
    @SMichaelDeHart 3 года назад +5

    I too was born in 64' and am a Eagle Scout (81').
    My father (17'-06')was a true fruit cake aficionado. Every Christmas mom made 2-3 (the only time that alcohol was allowed in our home). Of 7 kids and our parents...dad is the only one that ate them.

  • @a-a-ronbrowser1486
    @a-a-ronbrowser1486 3 года назад

    By far one of my favorite channels!

  • @volofly2011
    @volofly2011 3 года назад

    Love it, nicely done. Your use of "pause for effect" is well timed. :) Keep em coming.

  • @me3333
    @me3333 3 года назад +8

    This video feels weird, there was no "Nice Hiss" and no "lets get this out onto a tray... NICE"

  • @Dr_Kenneth_Noisewater
    @Dr_Kenneth_Noisewater 3 года назад +4

    "Nice" shout out to @Steve1989MREInfo! Steve has nearly 1.8M subs so he's definitely popular. Steve1989 does a great thing. He finds and purchases rations and documents their contents and their history before they go bad - and many of them are in pretty bad condition. And he spends some serious money on some of the rations - to the point a normal person would not want to open them. But Steve does and presents the results on YT.
    If he finds something edible - even barely - he often tastes and describes it as colorfully as a restaurant critic might. His channel was one that I didn't know I needed..
    but The Algorithm did.

  • @jesseviator8910
    @jesseviator8910 3 года назад

    Excellent video. Thank you for making this video.

  • @rexstetson1717
    @rexstetson1717 3 года назад

    Another educational and fun video from The History Guy. Thank you.

  • @richardklug822
    @richardklug822 3 года назад +26

    What...we'd have crackers and no peanut butter? I'd never have survived!

    • @swj719
      @swj719 3 года назад

      After making me try to subsist on 6 crackers a day, the LEAST of your worries would be a lack of peanut butter.

    • @melvillecapps8339
      @melvillecapps8339 3 года назад +1

      That's what the giant bottles of phenobarbitol in CD shelters were for - so you would be too stoned to care.

  • @confusedvoyager7916
    @confusedvoyager7916 3 года назад +17

    Scary to know you're a year younger than me and about 3 decades smarter....

    • @DawnOldham
      @DawnOldham 3 года назад

      Yes, I found out today that I’m two years older that THG and I spent my life and career on an entirely different subject. That makes him a delight since I’ve always loved history and this is a fun way to learn snippets!

    • @davidcarroll8735
      @davidcarroll8735 3 года назад

      Four years older and puts my knowledge of history to shame, but been watching for over a year, so I’m pretending to keep up.

  • @WrightM88
    @WrightM88 3 года назад

    SteveMRE! Thanks History Guy! Always enjoy watching your videos.

  • @cdigames
    @cdigames 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for linking my video about eating old crackers! What a great surprise!

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  3 года назад +1

      My pleasure! Nice to meet you! You are a brave man- I assume the crackers did not cause "gastrointestinal distress?"

    • @cdigames
      @cdigames 3 года назад

      @@TheHistoryGuyChannel Absolutely none! They were quite good with some preserves atop them as well!

    • @cdigames
      @cdigames 3 года назад

      @@TheHistoryGuyChannel Finally off of work and able to watch the video. Loved it! For the record, I saved the lid of the cracker tin as a memento!

  • @timothyhayes9724
    @timothyhayes9724 3 года назад +6

    Steve has been summoned

  • @FuzzyMarineVet
    @FuzzyMarineVet 3 года назад +8

    When I was on active duty in the Marine Corps, we were issued C-Rations that had been in storage since before the Korean War. When they ran out in 1978, we were issued rations that were packaged during the 1960s.

    • @jameswhite153
      @jameswhite153 3 года назад +2

      I'm going to guess that they were edible but not pleasant.

    • @mjrussell414
      @mjrussell414 3 года назад +3

      That was considerate of them.

    • @FuzzyMarineVet
      @FuzzyMarineVet 3 года назад +3

      @@jameswhite153 Actually, the older ones tasted better, but that's likely because they were made with more natural preservatives.

    • @jameswhite153
      @jameswhite153 3 года назад +3

      @@FuzzyMarineVet Thank you for the information, having never tasted military rations, it's genuinely interesting to hear from someone who actually ate the stuff.

    • @FuzzyMarineVet
      @FuzzyMarineVet 3 года назад

      @@jameswhite153 Whatever happens, never eat the Ham and Eggs, Chopped. Instead, use the can as a dummy grenade.

  • @turpialito
    @turpialito 3 года назад

    And stories like these are why I became a History Guy subscriber. Thanks, mate. As always, an unexpectedly delightful video. Cheers!

  • @finallyfriday.
    @finallyfriday. 2 года назад

    Good show, history guy!

  • @FrankCastle-he8fl
    @FrankCastle-he8fl 3 года назад +9

    Love Steve if you don't know who he is check him out

  • @joemackey1950
    @joemackey1950 3 года назад +8

    I, for one, love fruitcake. My mother made the best, soaked in brandy (I think). One can hardly find it in stores any longer.

    • @athelwulfgalland
      @athelwulfgalland 3 года назад +1

      Yeah, I dunno what's up with so many people hating on fruitcake. The missus hates it, so do our children, and though I love it, it's been pretty rare for me to be able to indulge in it over the past two and a half decades. lol

    • @michaelwarren2391
      @michaelwarren2391 3 года назад

      I get mine from Collin Street Bakery. I think its good, but probably not as good as Mom's. In fact, I just finished last Christmas' fruitcake - time to order another.

    • @genebohannon8820
      @genebohannon8820 3 года назад

      So your the one in your county, state, or prefecture?

    • @genebohannon8820
      @genebohannon8820 3 года назад

      Sorry I forgot Province, I know a Quebecois who loves it. Everyone gives theirs to him, he has enough for his own shelter

  • @jackyancey6379
    @jackyancey6379 2 года назад

    History guy you are the man! I thoroughly enjoy every episode and am enlightened on various historical facts on random things you cover a wide variety of topics and I have to say all that you do, deserves to be remembered.

  • @mellissadalby1402
    @mellissadalby1402 3 года назад

    Holy cow! Yet another truly great episode. You Sir, have talent and skill.