The Wild Wild West will always fascinate me, how people lived and survived. The Ice Skating picture really caught my attention just to see it in those days. Keep them coming.
"Wild West" photographs are SO ....interesting. History its self is incredibly fascinating...I hope young people will use this device for something credible -- like these photos. History is Cool , its just that the unfortunate people find out when its TOO LATE.....!
Did anyone notice the two mule deer does standing with the group of people in one of the last pictures? Pretty darn neat. Must have been pets. Great pictures ❤😊😊
A magnificent doco on the period and people,, it draws you in like a magnet to metal it is so much appreciated by those of us who can value HISTORY many thanks for this Priceless series ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
To think every single person in these photos and everyone they ever knew are all long gone.. Our time here on Earth is relatively short.. In a distant future the people of the 2100s will view our photos the same.. They’ll always wonder what life was like during our lifetime same we wonder and admire watching this bygone era..
True. My birth right after WWII in Southwestern West Virginia on the Kentucky and Virginia border was an exposure to the technology and lifestyle of the depression and the War years in that my grandparents worked for US Steel in the coal industry and yet each was smart/lucky enough to have construction and plumbing jobs rather than going into the mines, but they worked on other things after hours and gardening and canning on coal burning kitchen stoves (which were beautiful enamel and chrome). One grandfather dug a multi room basement that held the caned goods, root crops, seeds, mechanics tools, shoemaker tools, and he was famous for a skeleton key lock for use on the basement and his storage building that no one ever was able to break in after it was employed. He only sold a few to his friends, but I wish that I had had enough sense to have requested one. He died just 4 years after retirement and my grandmother lived to 94). Anyway there was no TV, but we would have a Sunday Family Dinner and the men would talk sports or politics on the front porch on rocking chairs while they wives helped to prepare the main table in the kitchen for the adults and places for the kids in the living room and porch. After dinner we kids would play until darkness approached and then we gathered around the console AM and world bands on the big Zenith Radio to listen Jack Benny or Burns and Allen, and then we kids were mesmerized by the mystery shows like “The Shadow Knows” or multiple others. If I got there on a weekday after I had a chance to hear Superman, The Lone Ranger, Buck Rogers or a multitude of cliffhangers. Now my parents didn’t invest in a radio, but soon I saw my first tube type stereos. One was a component that an uncle in the Air Force brought back from Japan in the early 50’s and then the other was a console that an uncle on my father had in the late 50s and my first portable record player of my aunts from the mid 50s. Anyway, the food, family gatherings, cousins that are like brothers and sisters and aunts and uncles that are like parents and the acceleration of our lives from that period on to the bullshit Marxist mess that has infiltrated our country with the Soros intent of destroying individuality, independence, creativity, freedom of choice and Liberty and the preservation of the constitution!! The old professor Live free or die!!! Death ☠️ to all tyrants, all tyrants foreign and domestic!!! Pedophiles too!!! No Shit………….
The Wild Wild West will always fascinate me, how people lived and survived. The Ice Skating picture really caught my attention just to see it in those days. Keep them coming.
Good to see you in the comments Renee! I was hoping my subscribers got a notification of the new video
@@legacyofthewest I am with you all the way as long as you are on TH-cam 😉!
@@reneethornton9228 Thank you!
I like to screen shot these photos and real study each individual on their expressions. So fascinating
Every time I look at one I find something else I hadn't noticed.
👏👏👏♥️
Nice, nice very nice. Fascinating! Thanks 👍💕
Just thank you. I paused and zoomed in on several. Quite enjoyable music. Again, thank you.
"Wild West" photographs are SO ....interesting. History its self is incredibly fascinating...I hope young people will use this device for something credible -- like these photos. History is Cool , its just that the unfortunate people find out when its TOO LATE.....!
Very nice and I can learn very much
Did anyone notice the two mule deer does standing with the group of people in one of the last pictures? Pretty darn neat. Must have been pets. Great pictures ❤😊😊
A magnificent doco on the period and people,, it draws you in like a magnet to metal it is so much appreciated by those of us who can value HISTORY many thanks for this Priceless series ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Very well photos❤
1:57 Ely, Nevada! 1871; 7:17 Truckee River, Nevada (Sailboat) 1867; 16:20 Swift's Station, Eastern Summit, Sierra Nevada Mountains, 1866. 19:56 Brown's Station, Nevada Chinese Camp, 1865
Priceless Photos
💛 Nevada
23:26 ("Native American Scaffold Burial"), Greenwood, South Dakota, 1890, "Photo with Most Important Historical Value"
Excellent
I don't care if you were white, brown, yellow or red that was one tough life for just about everyone. They were a hard and tough group of people!!
In a group, look left look right at least one did not make it to age 5 years back before meds…
@@markuskonwayless population...nature took it coarse the way it should
I love watching photos from the 1800s🙂
As long as I don't have to be there I enjoy them too in 2024.
To think every single person in these photos and everyone they ever knew are all long gone.. Our time here on Earth is relatively short.. In a distant future the people of the 2100s will view our photos the same.. They’ll always wonder what life was like during our lifetime same we wonder and admire watching this bygone era..
True. My birth right after WWII in Southwestern West Virginia on the Kentucky and Virginia border was an exposure to the technology and lifestyle of the depression and the War years in that my grandparents worked for US Steel in the coal industry and yet each was smart/lucky enough to have construction and plumbing jobs rather than going into the mines, but they worked on other things after hours and gardening and canning on coal burning kitchen stoves (which were beautiful enamel and chrome). One grandfather dug a multi room basement that held the caned goods, root crops, seeds, mechanics tools, shoemaker tools, and he was famous for a skeleton key lock for use on the basement and his storage building that no one ever was able to break in after it was employed. He only sold a few to his friends, but I wish that I had had enough sense to have requested one. He died just 4 years after retirement and my grandmother lived to 94). Anyway there was no TV, but we would have a Sunday Family Dinner and the men would talk sports or politics on the front porch on rocking chairs while they wives helped to prepare the main table in the kitchen for the adults and places for the kids in the living room and porch. After dinner we kids would play until darkness approached and then we gathered around the console AM and world bands on the big Zenith Radio to listen Jack Benny or Burns and Allen, and then we kids were mesmerized by the mystery shows like “The Shadow Knows” or multiple others. If I got there on a weekday after I had a chance to hear Superman, The Lone Ranger, Buck Rogers or a multitude of cliffhangers. Now my parents didn’t invest in a radio, but soon I saw my first tube type stereos. One was a component that an uncle in the Air Force brought back from Japan in the early 50’s and then the other was a console that an uncle on my father had in the late 50s and my first portable record player of my aunts from the mid 50s.
Anyway, the food, family gatherings, cousins that are like brothers and sisters and aunts and uncles that are like parents and the acceleration of our lives from that period on to the bullshit Marxist mess that has infiltrated our country with the Soros intent of destroying individuality, independence, creativity, freedom of choice and Liberty and the preservation of the constitution!!
The old professor
Live free or die!!!
Death ☠️ to all tyrants, all tyrants foreign and domestic!!!
Pedophiles too!!!
No Shit………….
All this was just a blink of an eye ago. Look how much the country has changed!
Sun up to sun down, never ending work just to survive
The Spanish Vaquero is the foundation of the cowboy 🤠
Its crazy to think that my house was built at this time... those people were alive. 🤯
So few women 9:28
👍
" Wild West". Was it wild to the indigenous?
Hardly any women there. Nobody had to diet to keep slim.