The Sons of History
The Sons of History
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Rare Black Justice in the Jim Crow South of East Texas
มุมมอง 2838 หลายเดือนก่อน
Jody Edward Ginn came across an anomaly during his research of the violence purported by the McClanahan-Burleson Gang in San Augustine, Texas on black sharecroppers during the Jim Crow Era. Original airing: April 26, 2021 Watch the full interview: th-cam.com/video/Xz_9dmpsA9A/w-d-xo.html #JimCrow #TexasRangers #TexasHistory
Meet the Violent East Texas McClanahan-Burleson Gang
มุมมอง 1.1K8 หลายเดือนก่อน
Racketeering. Bootlegging. Murder. You name it, the McClanahan-Burleson Gang had its hand in it. Their violence and intimidation owned San Augustine, Texas. Historian Jody Edward Ginn discusses the gang. Original airing: April 26, 2021 Watch the full interview: th-cam.com/video/Xz_9dmpsA9A/w-d-xo.html #allredrangers #texasrangers
How Accurate Is Walker, Texas Ranger?
มุมมอง 9868 หลายเดือนก่อน
Prepare to have your minds blown and your hearts broken as Jody Edward Ginn, Executive Director of the Texas Rangers Heritage Center, gives us the low down on the accuracy or lack thereof with Chuck Norris and Walker, Texas Ranger. Original airing: April 26, 2021 Watch the full interview: th-cam.com/video/Xz_9dmpsA9A/w-d-xo.html #chucknorris #texasrangers #walkertexasranger
A Brief History of the Texas Rangers Law Enforcement
มุมมอง 8618 หลายเดือนก่อน
Jody Edward Ginn with the Texas Rangers Heritage Center provides a brief history of the Texas Rangers - from their origins to today. Original airing: April 26, 2021 Watch the full interview: th-cam.com/video/Xz_9dmpsA9A/w-d-xo.html #texashistory #texasrangers #lawenforcement
How Do Historical Documents Get Overlooked?
มุมมอง 588 หลายเดือนก่อน
Old documents are constantly being discovered, which often put a new spin on how we viewed historical moments. How does this continue to happen? Historian Jody Edward Ginn discusses and references his own experiences. Original airing: April 26, 2021 Watch the full interview: th-cam.com/video/Xz_9dmpsA9A/w-d-xo.html #texashistory #history #research
The Veterans Project's Best War Veteran Stories
มุมมอง 208 หลายเดือนก่อน
Heartbreaking, daring, angering, and everything else in between. Hear some of Tim K.'s favorite stories from his war veteran interviews. Original airing: March 29, 2021 Watch the full interview: th-cam.com/video/SjnZkQU2yXA/w-d-xo.html #veterans #warstories
Capturing America's Greatest Stories: War Veterans
มุมมอง 208 หลายเดือนก่อน
"It's brought me the greatest blessing of an occupation that you could possibly have." Tim K., founder of the Veterans Project, discusses what capturing these stories means for him and for the veterans. Original airing: March 29, 2021 Watch the full interview: th-cam.com/video/SjnZkQU2yXA/w-d-xo.html #veterans #warstories
The Hollywood Tale of a French Resistance Fighter from World War 2
มุมมอง 928 หลายเดือนก่อน
"In almost a movie script way..." Tim K., founder of the Veterans Project, tells the incredible story of a French Resistance fighter from World War II, whom he interviewed. Original airing: March 29, 2021 Watch the full interview: th-cam.com/video/SjnZkQU2yXA/w-d-xo.html #FrenchResistance #veterans #worldwar2
The Race Against Death and Time: Capturing World War 2 Veteran Stories
มุมมอง 728 หลายเดือนก่อน
There aren't very many World War II veterans left. Tim K., founder of the Veterans Project, has worked to capture those stories. He urges whoever is willing, to capture those stories while you still can. #veterans #worldwar2 #warveterans
Finding Purpose and Healing for Our American Veterans
มุมมอง 148 หลายเดือนก่อน
"It's not just a veteran story. It's a human story." Tim K., founder of the Veterans Project, discusses the high suicide rate among veterans and how purpose can lead to healing. Original airing: March 29, 2021 Watch the full interview: th-cam.com/video/SjnZkQU2yXA/w-d-xo.html #veterans #militaryveteran
Do Veterans Want to Tell Their War Stories?
มุมมอง 308 หลายเดือนก่อน
Tim K., founder of the Veterans Project, is asked whether veterans want to discuss their war stories. The common belief is that they don't. Tim has a view that anyone who wants to know about their family member's or friend's stories should listen to. Original airing: March 29, 2021 Watch the full interview: th-cam.com/video/SjnZkQU2yXA/w-d-xo.html #veterans #veteransproject #warstories
WW2, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq & Afghanistan: How Do the Soldiers Differ?
มุมมอง 568 หลายเดือนก่อน
Founder of the Veterans Project discusses his conversations with soldiers, and how soldiers differ from World War 2, Korea, Vietnam and into the 21st century with Iraq and Afghanistan. Original airing: March 29, 2021 Watch the full interview: th-cam.com/video/SjnZkQU2yXA/w-d-xo.html #veterans #warstories
What Did the Mexican Army Leave Behind after San Jacinto?
มุมมอง 818 หลายเดือนก่อน
Mexican armies had prepared a follow up campaign against Sam Houston's Texian army, but a massive storm made it an impossibility. The march through what is known as the Sea of Mud contains the remnants of what these armies left behind. Original airing: April 12, 2021 Watch the full interview: th-cam.com/video/MTU2eipFBCQ/w-d-xo.html #TexasRevolution #TexasHistory #MexicanHistory
Politics, Santa Anna, and the REAL President of Mexico During the Texas Revolution
มุมมอง 2248 หลายเดือนก่อน
Was Santa Anna the Mexican president during the Texas Revolution? Gregg Dimmick discusses the convoluted politics in Mexican during the Texas Revolution and the fall of the Alamo. Original airing: April 12, 2021 Watch the full interview: th-cam.com/video/MTU2eipFBCQ/w-d-xo.html #TexasRevolution #SantaAnna #TheAlamo
Filisola and Urrea: Two Mexican Generals at Odds
มุมมอง 1568 หลายเดือนก่อน
Filisola and Urrea: Two Mexican Generals at Odds
What Did General Jose Urrea Do After Santa Anna's Capture?
มุมมอง 2128 หลายเดือนก่อน
What Did General Jose Urrea Do After Santa Anna's Capture?
Why Did the French Attack Mexico after the Texas Revolution?
มุมมอง 1618 หลายเดือนก่อน
Why Did the French Attack Mexico after the Texas Revolution?
The Importance of Telling the Mexican Side of the Texas Revolution
มุมมอง 1768 หลายเดือนก่อน
The Importance of Telling the Mexican Side of the Texas Revolution
Who Did the Tejanos Fight During the Texas Revolution?
มุมมอง 2678 หลายเดือนก่อน
Who Did the Tejanos Fight During the Texas Revolution?
How the Mexicans Viewed the Goliad Massacre; and the Texans' Revenge
มุมมอง 7338 หลายเดือนก่อน
How the Mexicans Viewed the Goliad Massacre; and the Texans' Revenge
How Gregg Dimmick Discovered the Sea of Mud that Altered Texas History
มุมมอง 8148 หลายเดือนก่อน
How Gregg Dimmick Discovered the Sea of Mud that Altered Texas History
How Mud Defeated the Mexican Army After San Jacinto
มุมมอง 3818 หลายเดือนก่อน
How Mud Defeated the Mexican Army After San Jacinto
Mexican Army Artifacts and the Rediscovery of Texas History
มุมมอง 739 หลายเดือนก่อน
Mexican Army Artifacts and the Rediscovery of Texas History
The Final Episode: A Walk Down Memory Lane
มุมมอง 132ปีที่แล้ว
The Final Episode: A Walk Down Memory Lane
Marshal Pétain's Fall from French Hero to Global Villain with Julian Jackson
มุมมอง 5Kปีที่แล้ว
Marshal Pétain's Fall from French Hero to Global Villain with Julian Jackson
The Bloody Battle for England and Her Throne with Don Hollway
มุมมอง 118ปีที่แล้ว
The Bloody Battle for England and Her Throne with Don Hollway
Is 600 Years of Agincourt Tradition Wrong? with Michael Livingston
มุมมอง 490ปีที่แล้ว
Is 600 Years of Agincourt Tradition Wrong? with Michael Livingston
Who Were the Assyrians and How Great Was Their Empire with Mark Healy
มุมมอง 650ปีที่แล้ว
Who Were the Assyrians and How Great Was Their Empire with Mark Healy
The Power Friendship: Theodore Roosevelt and Henry Cabot Lodge in the Gilded Age
มุมมอง 263ปีที่แล้ว
The Power Friendship: Theodore Roosevelt and Henry Cabot Lodge in the Gilded Age

ความคิดเห็น

  • @lazarocatellanoslandero7994
    @lazarocatellanoslandero7994 25 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Muchas gracias por su relato Sr. Usted fue el que se encontró un fusil en el Atascoso? En el fusil estaba escrito en el guadavalle 'Geronimo Hinojosa ' .

  • @calebjay1wilson431
    @calebjay1wilson431 หลายเดือนก่อน

    San Augustine county Attoyac Bayou. Grew up west of KELLYYVILLE on FM 1277. I remember my great grandfather telling me stories about this. His name was Elijah McDaniel from Broaddus. Born in 1917.

  • @gmicg
    @gmicg หลายเดือนก่อน

    You are forgiven of your bad French. At least you tried and did your best. (A native francophone)

  • @KevinBullard
    @KevinBullard หลายเดือนก่อน

    Charles deGaul was a Churchill lap dog

  • @angusmorrison9433
    @angusmorrison9433 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Rats. You lost me at “what’s vaunted”.

  • @traceymatney1427
    @traceymatney1427 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This was great, thank you! Added to our homeschool studies. ❤️

  • @superniger4822
    @superniger4822 หลายเดือนก่อน

    America is the greatest country on earth. American history is badass

  • @stuartbarclay7940
    @stuartbarclay7940 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    "Indeed, he did beseech the word of Almighty God as Allied Forces assaulted the beaches of Normandy. I can't imagine the ordeal those brave men must have gone through in securing a beachhead, but once they had, American and British forces began pouring into Europe. And not long after Paris was retaken, we were reassigned to the continent. As we did in Africa, we fought in a number of battles and supported the Allied invasion; And it would be during this time, we would see for ourselves the true horror of the war. And, I'm very sorry to say, there would be atrocities committed by *all* sides…" Edward, The Stories of War

  • @Antony-18
    @Antony-18 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The Roman Republic period is the best history of ROME.

  • @AmandaPye-l1n
    @AmandaPye-l1n 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Is there any significance to the massacre happening on Palm Sunday with Santa Anna being Catholic?

  • @PEACEEASE108
    @PEACEEASE108 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    They were gang members my friend. Most likely Gangster Disciples

  • @MojoMedicineMan
    @MojoMedicineMan 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    One helluva a man..

  • @Mscookievl
    @Mscookievl 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    😴

  • @alteredbeast1974
    @alteredbeast1974 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Blah blah blah....he loves endlessly babbling

  • @YOUTUBEfucku
    @YOUTUBEfucku 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I like to party !

  • @EYEQuestionEverything
    @EYEQuestionEverything 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I worked there post 9/11. Posted a few “ghost stories” a while back on the account “Scared To The Bone”. They’re not made up, the stories came from 7-8 people who worked/still work there. Most happened with multiple people experiencing it. I have a story when another person and I were in a hallway off a stairwell, and the door slammed. Figured it was the stairwell pressurization but the door opened the opposite direction.

    • @Michelle-ee3ff
      @Michelle-ee3ff 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Love this ❤

    • @EYEQuestionEverything
      @EYEQuestionEverything 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Michelle-ee3ff I’ve only had two experiences that were weird. The other was, being in the “central plant”, awaiting a few employees dropping off food. I heard keys jingling and a small group walking towards the office, except no one ever walked in. When I called the employees, they hadn’t picked up the food yet. I worked there for five years and only experienced that, but let me tell you. I was never really scared. It always felt peaceful. Plus I’m not someone who believes in “ghosts”. If you listened to the clips, as absolutely unbelievable as it sounds the “burning man” story happened overnight in the generator plant. The person who witnessed this, called a couple of the bosses in the middle of the night. He even submitted an incident report to the entity that manages the site for the owners… I even have pictures of bare footprints in the museum, after a porter mopped. So, who knows.

    • @Greenrocketqueen
      @Greenrocketqueen 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Based on the comments I’m not gonna watch the full 50 min. Are they actually discussing supernatural or metaphorically “ghosts”? I’ve been doing a lot of digging into the supernatural side of 9/11 as with an event this large impacting so many, I can’t imagine there NOT being a supernatural residual energy at the site or amongst those involved. I know a window of one of the victims wrote a book compiling stories similar to hers of receiving signs from friends/family. But generally it’s difficult to find (in my searching so far) testimonies of that nature.

    • @EYEQuestionEverything
      @EYEQuestionEverything หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Greenrocketqueen I left the site almost two years ago. We work in the deepest depths of the 5 underground levels, which was the hole you remember seeing following the attacks. I know of 3-4 people who have worked there since it was a hole. That’s where I got most of the stories from. Excluding the one that happened to me, while I was with one of my helpers, so it wasn’t in my head. The other stories I talked about were experienced with a group of 2-3 people, who still work there. I think I uploaded to “scaredtothebone”..there’s like 2 25-30 mins ish compilations. May be 3-4 stories each. I did it a while back. One of the stories was experienced by a bunch of people since it was happening over the radio. I can literally upload my ID, minus my face lol. Believe it or not, there was only one area that scared me (spooked everyone out). Area near fire pump 2, I think it was at the corner of the old south tower, from what my old boss told me. Other than that, I always felt peace there. My cousin works at the museum, and I think I added one of those stories. But I do still have the photo of the bare foot print.

  • @RexColt
    @RexColt 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    9:30 When the conversation finally starts

  • @timbrelane
    @timbrelane 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is refreshing....no, reinvigorating. My name is Neal Davies, I am 73 years old. My Grandmother's name was ... Vera Greene, and she was a direct descendant of Nathaniel Greene. I've been told this since i was a child. As a token of my claim, since Greene's male descendants died out in the late 1800's, the tokens of General Greene's service mementos have passed down matrilineally to my eldest sister. It should be noted, besides Cowpens, the Race to the Dan, and Guilford Courthouse, General Greene's widow, Catharine Liddfield Greene, is credited with Eli Whitney as co-inventor of the cotton Gin! So much history, so little time. I can already see the presenters have a genuine appreciation of this subject, and will watch attentively to the end. I served my country during the Vietnam era as an Electronic Warfare Officer, and Telemetry Specialist (keeping track of Russian satellites and missile ranges). Better service than devastating a beautiful country that posed no threat to our nation. Thank you!

  • @CharlieBrwn8
    @CharlieBrwn8 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This dude Hagee hide and covered the Haditha massacre evidence. 24 civilians killed including children killed point blank inside a home.

  • @tiamatsmirnov938
    @tiamatsmirnov938 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Michael Hagee... happy to learn thanks to the New Yorker that this pig was responsible for hiding pictures of the Haditha Massacre where 23 civilians, mostly kids and as young as 3yrs old were massacred by Marines point blank.... All while he enjoys walking freely, boasting about his war prowess in a museum. USA is country filled with war criminals... most walking freely and never condemned as they were spreading "democracy".... Article just released today "The Haditha Massacre Photos That the Military Didn’t Want the World to See"

  • @lisafountaine5831
    @lisafountaine5831 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great Video. I know this video is old but can you do a video on how the founders felt about parties and how the electoral college played a part in that?

  • @lisafountaine5831
    @lisafountaine5831 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    48:47 And look at us now. Politics is all about money and politics. It’s so sad.

  • @lisafountaine5831
    @lisafountaine5831 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    37:56 When you say ballot stuffing doesn’t matter to the electoral college, I don’t understand that. It can change the electors for that area. Rinse and repeat and all of the sudden the majority of the electors goes to the cheating side. Am I missing something or not understanding it correctly?

  • @elliottprats1910
    @elliottprats1910 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    @34:30 ish. Why would he or anyone else think that ANYKIND of cannonball found near Wharton, Texas would be from the civil war!?! I don’t know of ANY CIVIL WAR battles that were fought anywhere nearby. So EVERYTHING militarily that is found should be assumed to be from the War of Texas Independence

  • @elliottprats1910
    @elliottprats1910 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    WOW! Thank you guys for this interview, it hit alot closer to home than I would have imagined growing up in East Bernard Tx. I KNOW firsthand exactly how bad the sea of mud can get!

  • @jeffbattle9599
    @jeffbattle9599 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    A more serious approach about history would be appreciated. Your back and forth banter was corny and unnecessary. JUST THE FACTS, please.

  • @HistoricalWonder720
    @HistoricalWonder720 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Good video/history lesson. I'm visiting Valley Forge and (possibly) Brandywine in the same day soon and wanted a refresher on the series of events. I appreciate it.

  • @BK-uf6qr
    @BK-uf6qr 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I don’t think Truman had to think long. After years of war. After a Japanese leadership that refused to surrender. After a group of young men not knowing whether their lives would end should the war continue.

  • @vbendau
    @vbendau 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Fun to watch. Thanks.

  • @OlssonDaniel
    @OlssonDaniel 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    A great talk with an author. Thank you! Your channel desirbes many more views!

  • @bkelsey6692
    @bkelsey6692 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    He was definitely a few in already HAHAHA LOVE IT! You guys are keeping the spirit alive as I am transferring to a CSU to get my BA in history and teach

  • @laurabrown-rn9ed
    @laurabrown-rn9ed 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is a great movie. . Chuck Norris is the one and only...no one can take his place...love him

  • @manugamer9984
    @manugamer9984 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I never believed Petain was an evil man: in his mind, he was not even a traitor. He was a useful idiot. Laval was an evil man, Darlan was, but Petain? Still, the Good Samaritan won’t be praised for his good intentions alone. As for honour and life, it’s a tragically divisive concept… the way I see it, we’re not just born to think for ourselves: nobody hopes to die, and honour preserved can be at most a consolation in your last breath before everything goes dark… but we are just one generation of the many that came before and the many that will come. We will pass anyway, sooner or later: the thing is, what are we going to leave behind? We are part of societies that stretch along centuries, we can’t just live as if we only had to think for ourselves: that is selfish, and arrogant. By putting your life above all else, you are also saying you’re willing to sacrifice anything below it. If you do, what you’re left with? What else, but your breath? We didn’t come to this world just to breathe…

    • @didierroux1547
      @didierroux1547 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      This is not correct, yet another attempt to rid the traitor Pétain responsible for all official decisions taken between June 17, 1940 and the end of July 1944. Who called Laval in Bordeaux on June 14, 1940? PÉTAIN Petain knew Laval at least from 1931. Petain used Laval to be PM on June 17, 1940 and illegally proclaimed himself Head of State on July 11, 1940

    • @didierroux1547
      @didierroux1547 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      He knowingly betrayed his government in 1940 and his homeland. Petain voluntarily met Hitler and offered to collaborate with Nazi Germany. He did everything he thought in his head Petain was an evil man !

    • @didierroux1547
      @didierroux1547 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Well, you are totally wrong. Petain betrayed the French Gouvernement which had appealed to him by wrongly trusting him. The misdeeds that petain will commit afterwards prove it.Petain will arrest, imprison an judge government's leaders such as Daladier, Reynaud..who believed in his patriotism . They were wrong ! Where was this so-called Good Samaritan. And you are doubly wrong for Laval and Darlan, because it was Pétain who appealed to Laval on June 14, 1940 to help him overthrow the government, It was soon Pétain who suggested to Darlan, admiral of the fleet, that he betray the government by refusing, on June 15, 1940, to transfer the entire government and the remaining army units to North Africa. This is where we find these two friends of Pétain in his government after June 17, 1940.

    • @didierroux1547
      @didierroux1547 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @manugamer9984 Under the illegal regime of Pétain, from 1940 to 1944, there were 150,000 French people shot 110,000 people were politically deported 120,000 people were deported for racial reasons. 750,000 French workers were forced to work for the German war effort Petain was as guilty as Laval. It was Petain who in July 1940, with his colleague Raphael Allibert, began to write the first discriminatory statute for the Jews published in October 1940, and Laval did not participate in it.

  • @stevebenaszeski9153
    @stevebenaszeski9153 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Worst Presidents who were actually against the best US interests were Buchanan, Pierce, Andrew Johnson, Tyler, Wilson & Biden.

  • @expletivedeleted
    @expletivedeleted 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    When pure unadulterated evil abominations came to America. The biggest bunch of sicko malevolent monsters on the planet at the time.

  • @BStrapper
    @BStrapper 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    "Without Petain there would not have been an armistice signed..." Meaning ALSO for a start that nearly all French jews would have been deported and killed just just like in all other Nazi-occupied countries. That did not happen in France most Jews were saved! We are not told a word about that still that has to be the credit of those who orchestrated the armistice.. Petain became a national Hero because he saved French lives during WW1, in June of 1940 he thought it was his role to save French lives once again now that France had been totally defeated and could not count on anyone else ... for a while and possibly a lot more. who could imagine in 1940 that both the Russians and the American would enter the war against Germany and its allies and that Britain would not sue for peace virtually totally intact? The author is dead wrong on one thing: Petain is not remotely a burden in France, all the people who lived the war as adults are long dead. The fact that among the French a very small minority is fiercely pro-Petain and a barely larger minority is fiercely anti-Petain truly suggests that French people turned the page. in 2024 most people do not have much of a clue of what their forebears went through... Most of the French are not interested by history. This author's idea that the French feel shame ever since ww2 for the defeat is a typical British and American fantasy... mingled with a good amount of eternal British francophobia and schadenfreude. Right after the war the French were just angry not against themselves but against those who, in their mind, deserved the blames for the suffering. as last word, What amazes me is this: How a historian who spent a great deal of time writing a book about France during WW2 can be so far off the mark on so many key aspects... i am afraid that historian write books that their targeted audience will like and the distortion of historical reality is always the by-product.

  • @M80Ball
    @M80Ball 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I thought I was gonna learn about at Claire’s defeat. I just watched 3 minutes of BS.

    • @BobNob-dp9tn
      @BobNob-dp9tn 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Same. Seinfeld was degenerate garbage, and I could care less about the feelings a few alcoholic’s living on casino money somewhere. My ancestors had it hard too. Blah Blah, it went on, nothing about Claire’s defeat by the time I was over it.

    • @garyjacobs2789
      @garyjacobs2789 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Please say wall bash that's how it was pronounced

  • @DelgadoAlexander-hs2kh
    @DelgadoAlexander-hs2kh 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My name is Alexander Delgado, I am from California this video is for educational purposes only

  • @mwjohnson2857
    @mwjohnson2857 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    PLEASE stop all the historical lessons of the program and get to the topic! I DO suggest pertaining to the topic that you get yoour head out of the books YOU have read get to what your guest, WHO HAS READ LETTERS, DIARIES, documents, and has done more prep on Nathaniel Greene than what you two have inferred and spoke about.

  • @jessewilliams1422
    @jessewilliams1422 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Having a witness's account from the Mexican side during San Jacinto, Alamo and the Siege of Bexar is actually priceless. The more information gathered from both sides sheds light on these battles as a whole. Cheers! Great details and interview

  • @danell5202
    @danell5202 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I just started a new job when tower was hit. I was still standing in the same place when both towers fell. I was in such shock

    • @kathyr.8135
      @kathyr.8135 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I don’t understand completely?

    • @kathyr.8135
      @kathyr.8135 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I don’t understand completely?

  • @8656737s
    @8656737s 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I need to look into this book. I'll never forget 9/11. I was staying at my parents house in Upstate Ny. I had just turned 21. My parents were going to drive me to the airport to move to live with my fiance in AK. He had only been in the AF for two year. My flight was scheduled to leave two days after 9/11. Of course after this happened all the airports were closed for a while. I woak up September 11 at 9am. Turned on the tv couldn't believe what I was seeing! I called my mother at work and asked her if she'd seen the news. I was crying my heart was in my throat. I was two hours away form the city but felt so close. I felt horrible for everyone that was there. I flew out a week later. It was only my second time flying. I asked a question at the air port in Seattle washington. I was nervous and didn't know where my gate was. The woman got mad at me and thought because I was nervous, there was something off about me. I was stranded in Seattle for a night. They took my luggage all I did was asked a question. Everyone was really paranoid after 9/11. You could see fear In everyone's eye's. None of us knew to what to expect next. We felt safe until that horrible day. When I think about 9/11 I always wonder what those terrorists were thinking, the night before they did what they did. Were they scared? Did they have familes of their own? Did they sleep well the night before. Were they scared? I'll never understand how someone could do what they did. I can't imagine the pain and terror those people felt that day. The poor families left to morn. All the kids that had to grow up without parents, Grandparents, Ants and Uncles, Cousins, Friends. It's just horrific. RIP to all of them ❤

    • @geslinam9703
      @geslinam9703 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      It was a horrible day. I was living an hour south of the city, right on the coast. Had been to a Yankees game in the city 2 days before, on Sunday. I was at work that morning, in a sales meeting, when a woman came in our facility. I went to see if she needed help and she was very agitated, said she just wanted to get off the road because a plane had just hit the World Trade Center. We turned on the only TV we had and spent the rest of the day huddled around it. Later, when I went home, we could see the smoke from where we were, looking north over the water from the back of our house. My mother was working in Philadelphia, I called her on the phone, was so worried something would happen there. Horrible, horrible day, and the first time I realized we are not safe in this country.

  • @bluegtturbo
    @bluegtturbo 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I decided after all the waffle at the start that I must be watching the wrong bio

  • @benjaminjarrett9816
    @benjaminjarrett9816 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    One day we will be united again. One day we will be strong and great as we were before if not better. One day America will overturn the tyrants who wish to destroy her values and standards.

  • @escaladeEXTon28s
    @escaladeEXTon28s 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    back when AMERICA was a force to be reckoned with

    • @davidallbaugh6858
      @davidallbaugh6858 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      America is still the greatest nation in the world.

  • @SKaR64
    @SKaR64 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This video was really throwing facts and it's only the second one that I have watched on this history channel. It had a great and insightful interview with Denton, then concluded with some informative details on the catalysts of the Texas Revolution. Forget the Alamo is indeed an awful book and few of the Texas historians that I know take it seriously.

  • @timothyramsey7010
    @timothyramsey7010 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    If you’re talking about the remake of Midway, it sux so bad

  • @TheWinston86
    @TheWinston86 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very insightful video. One appreciates the research and effort put into making these. Thank you.

  • @babyboomercritic1119
    @babyboomercritic1119 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    JIm Crow was American Slavery 2.0. MAGA is American Slavery 3.0.

  • @theodoredallas7332
    @theodoredallas7332 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Interesting