Great story. Never heard of the Demologos even though i am a US Coast Guard Academy graduate and student of history. It would have been very interesting to have fought her. It might have changed Naval history 59 years sooner than the Ironclad era. Good vid. Keep at it!
Once again, just staggeringly interesting! I find myself at a loss for words; only able to get out “Wow!” repeatedly. Very well produced with corresponding production value. Thank you!
As a Canadian the War of 1812 is kind of a big deal, but in reality it was just a side show and a distraction for the British who were up to their necks fighting Napoleon. The British had few resources to send, and the "Savour of Upper Canada" Isaac Brock was actually bitterly disappointed at being sent to British North America, as he rightly saw it as a backwater and a career killer. I really enjoy your channel!
Im always amazed that most Canadians dont realize that the war of 1812 was a rather unimportant side show and Europe was in turmoil due to the Napoleonic wars
@@JohnWayneCheeseburger Well that is due the poor standard of education particularly regarding history. My son's text book was rife with errors. It looked like a pamphlet for the Liberal Party of Canada. It is a disgrace. If you want to learn about history you need to watch this channel!
MR History Guy, I haven't watched the video yet, but I will. If you're looking for something that _truly_ deserves to be remembered, look into the SOE and OSS operative Virginia Hall of WWII. I think you'll be amazed. The War of 1812? I served with 2/7 Inf Bn from 1991 to 1994, and we were 'the cottonbalers, by god'. I served in the unit that the song was written about. I was a bit late to the party, though. When I got there they had already returned from spearheading the invasion of Iraq. We were 'first' in a number of things, but I won't bore you with the details, but I was proud to be part of that unit.
As a Canadian, the War of 1812-1814 means something VERY different. Standing on our own against a continental bully, while the "mother country" was otherwise occupied, is how the war is seen in Canada. It was a war of economics for the USA but a war of survival for Canada. It was a war to keep our black citizens from the bonds of slavery, which had been abolished in Canada since 1793, and to keep our native citizens from extermination.
I have serious reservations about how deeply white Canadians cared about black 'citizens' in 1812, but I'm absolutely positive that most of them didn't give two cents worth of crap about native peoples. I will agree that the Northern States acted covetously of Canadian territory, but it *was* British actions at sea that got enough Southern votes to declare war.
@@frankmueller2781 'Coincidentally' both of these wars were fought when England was engaged with France. The US was selling goods in bulk to Napoleon and the British tried to stop it. Conveniently, the American narrative leaves out that this was seen as an opportunity to expand, “The acquisition of Canada this year, as far as the neighborhood of Quebec, will be a mere matter of marching; & will give us experience for the attack of Halifax the next, & the final expulsion of England from the American continent.” Thomas Jefferson to William Duane, 4 August 1812. The original settlers had the usual misgivings with First nations people, that said nothing in Canada compares to the truly brutal treatment in the US given to it's first inhabitants and it's acquired free labor. Further more, let us not forget that those 'votes' came from the few who were allowed to vote.
@@carbidegrd1 voting rights in Canada, or Britain for that matter, were no more liberal than those of the U.S. Sure, the U.S. wanted Territory. So did Britain, as the attacks on Detroit and Lake Champlain were not defensive. And enough of projecting modern Canadian attitudes toward "Indigenous Peoples" (i.e. Indians. Polls show that *They* don't mind the term, but white Leftists do) to early 19th Century Canadians. And as for American shipping to the continent, Americans were neutral and not legally bound by Britain's blockade. Moreover, the blockade was so porous that Napoleon himself regularly shaved with British razor blades. Enough of the "Holier-than-thou" attitude.
@@frankmueller2781 "Voting rights were the same in the US as Britain, You see the irony?" America wasn't neutral, it was taking sides. The famous statement above is an apt demonstration of what the thinking was. I have no holier than thou attitude. British history and for that matter Canadian history has come to terms with its shortcomings long ago. You are in a country that is just getting around to pulling down the statues of traitors. American history is riddled with exaggeration and blatant lies.
@@carbidegrd1 Thank God we have you to set the world straight. Must be a tremendous burden being the only one able to sort all those lies from the truths, and suppositions from the "True Facts." 🙄
When I was a kid my 5th grade teacher kept an upright piano in the classroom. Every week or two she'd haul off and throw a singalong. That's where I learned Johnny Horton's "Battle of New Orleans". This episode wonderfully stirred those old memories. Thanks, THG!
Thanks History Guy. The only thing I knew previously about the Demologos is that it existed. If you ever wish to revisit the naval aspects of the 1812 war, a video about Silas Halsey and his submarine is a sure winner.
Wow. Hit that one out of the park, History Guy. So interesting. This was exciting times when America was young and proud. We were first in many many things, just wish we continued this pride. Thanks again.
I just happened to be watching some videos on naval history this morning when this video posted. Perfect timing. Thanks for another great video. I don't know how you keep coming up with these stories that I've never heard of.
At 7:55 you mention Commodore Stephen Decatur, Jr. He would make an excellent topic for your program. I grew up in north Florida, but many of my relatives were from nearby Decatur County, Georgia, which was named after Commodore Decatur. Their county seat is Bainbridge, GA, named after Commodore William Bainbridge, another early US Navy hero and purported friend of Decatur. Anyone familiar with the history of Decatur and Bainbridge would find this combination of names rather strange. This is because of the Chesapeake-Leopard affair of 1807, which served as a precursor for the War of 1812 and would ultimately contribute to Decatur's untimely death in 1820. Bainbridge's part in his death remains a bit of an unresolved mystery, but the whole story is history worth remembering.
Mores of Johnny Horton's time prevented singing the name of the nether regions, so it was cleverly blanked out with "then we fired our squirrel gun and we really have them...Well, we fired our guns, but the British still were comin'..."
I absolutely love history so when I found THG I knew be a big fan. Lately I've gotten to where I don't watch for a week or so , then I can settle back kick off my shoe's and binge watch episodes.
Col. John Stevens of Hoboken is also a very interesting character, who was a leading engineer & builder in the steam revolution. BTW I love your stories. Well researched and well written, your presentations are entertaining and easy to follow. Thanks so much!
The war of 1812 was considered one of the events that defined Canada. Interestingly the Americans actually did quite well in the battles on the Great Lakes using Sloops and Schooners, The British were building full size Frigates for The Lakes when the war ended. It could have been and interesting confrontation if the Americans had constructed one of these for the Great Lakes.
It took 2000 years to go from the oar powered trireme to the steam powered Demologos. It took 100 years to go from the Demologos to the USS Texas. If only Fulton could have seen the evolution of the steam powered warship.
I often know something about the topic but I almost always learn something new from your tales of history. But the USS Demologos was news to me. Thank you for enlightening me about the world's first steam-powered warship.
Love the subject matter! Relatively unknown, yet significant impact. Thanks for this one. There’s an event that really seems to fit this channel that I would love to see THG’s take on. In September of 1863, a Union force of 5000 men, accompanied by multiple gunboats attempted to invade SE Texas. A Confederate artillery unit of 46 men with outdated smoothbore cannons routed the invasion force and turned back the Union fleet, ending the threat. The Second Battle of Sabine Pass is history worth remembering on this channel. 👍
Thank you for setting the name straight. In the l920s, my Dad built floating models of The Fulton pulling Fulton the 1st. Never knew the correct name Demologos. Unfortunately by the late 1960s, damp storage destroyed the model's glue. Parts fell off and were lost.
The naming reminds me of the city of Modesto, CA. Modesto was named after a San Francisco banker named William Ralston. Ralston was beloved by the people in the west in the mid-late 1800s. One of the wealthiest Americans, he was known for his many projects and philanthropy. When the city set to name itself Ralston, Ralston asked them not to. So instead they named it after his character "Modesto", Spanish for modest. His death is pretty crazy. Through a series of events his financial empire collapsed by 1875. The final event was the crash of Bank of California stock, a bank he founded. The day after the crash his body was found in San Francisco Bay. 50,000 people attended his funeral.
I'd also love to see a collab with Mark Felton Productions - they have a lot in common, similar presentation style, and often similar topics, sometimes even topics that compliment each other well. Fairly recently THG did a video on microfilm that touched upon V-Mail, around the same time Mark Felton did a video diving much deeper into the V-mail story.
It amazed me that I'd hear and read about the "Fulton the First" (and the Second) in historical accounts, but do not remember ever seeing the name Demologos. TY again THG for being our Vox Populi.
Great story! I love history, but naval history is my favorite. I spent more than 10 years in the nuclear navy. But I started really getting into naval history after I left the navy. Thanks for another great story!
Might I suggest a video on the James Rumsey steamboat of 1787? It was successful but didn't seem to garner much interest. It didn't use paddle wheels it used a water jet to propel it. There is a 1/2 scale replica which I have been on. It is a very interesting craft
I've heard of this before in my Naval readings. Excellent post! Your pic of an EP-3E (I believe VQ-2 my first squadron) at the end is always nice to see!👍🍻
Great story, well told. It's amazing the energy and love for country in our past. It is a good lesson for us today. Isn't that one of the best reasons to learn history?
thanks for another interesting video to get me thinking before work. also, congats on the 1M subscribers, they are very deserved and im sure there will be a million more before too long
It is stories, like this one, that made me stop reading fiction. True stories, like this, are more entertaining, than fiction for me. The knowledge that the story really happened makes it that much more profound. The tragedy or comedy is made sublime by the reality of it.
I have had several discussions with persons with technical skills that emigrated to the US after WWII. There was a common theme…. There was is a reason they call it the old country. They were completely frustrated with using new technologies at “home”.
The government was 30, the nation was 200 years old. People often assume America began with the declaration of independence. As if all of a sudden a people among cities sprouted from nothing in 1776. And it's also correct that nothing was lost from its British origins and other European influences that go back a thousand years. Sometimes people seem to start over. Like many nations after the fall of the western Roman empire lost technology, social order, literature, etc. And that's probably true for awhile in the early colonial period for America, but by the 1700s America was more like West Britain than something starting over. Great luck it was able to add to, not have to reset.
Great channel! Very educational. Did you by any chance do a video on the Voyager aircraft? The first airplane to fly around the world nonstop and unfueled.
Where you are in the US determines your history. In 1997, my sisters and I were in Washington for a wedding and we did much sightseeing. On our return from Mount Vernon, the guide on the bus said we were passing the last War of 1812 fixture in the area. My sisters and I looked at each other and smirked. The War of 1812 is a big historical event in WNY and Southern Ontario. In Niagara County there is Fort Niagara, opposite the Canadian Fort George; across from Buffalo is Fort Erie, with Buffalo's Fort Porter long gone. However, going east from Buffalo to visit Cooperstown, you get into areas of New York where the Revolution is the big historical event.
The area is so true. I grew up in Wyoming and never heard of your NY and Canadian battles. We heard of 1812 of course, but much more prominence was given to Wyoming and NE history, some Colorado and Montana, but very little on the East coast.
Perhaps you’d consider turning your attention to the old man of the mountain? New Hampshire’s great stone face. Gone May 23, 2003 but far from forgotten! "Men hang out their signs indicative of their respective trades; shoemakers hang out a gigantic shoe; jewelers a monster watch, and the dentist hangs out a gold tooth; but up in the Mountains of New Hampshire, God Almighty has hung out a sign to show that there He makes men." Daniel Webster
It's a shame for an amature naval historian to have to admit that he didn't know much about this vessel beyond the barest of basics. Thank you sir, I found this presentation enlightening.
The War of 1812 happened outside my bedroom window. We have a 200+ year old oak in our yard that could have heard (if it had ears) the shelling of Ft McHenry and I have been on the spot many times where FS Key wrote his poem.
I read a lot of military history, and I've never heard of this before. Fascinating topics you present. Question-how did they fire a hot shot? Wouldn't loading the red hot ball into the cannon set off the powder?
Please forgive Wikipedia as a source, but this describes the process. A clay or wet cloth plug was used to prevent the shot from igniting the powder. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heated_shot
Another good one a question came to mind while watching this.....when and how was the shift made from paddle wheels to stern props or propellers? Keep up the great work
This was an excellent lesson THG. I had never heard of the Demologos (Fulton the First) prior to this. Your videos are much appreciated.
Ready for class Mr. THG. Happy Hump Day.
Great story. Never heard of the Demologos even though i am a US Coast Guard Academy graduate and student of history. It would have been very interesting to have fought her. It might have changed Naval history 59 years sooner than the Ironclad era. Good vid. Keep at it!
Thank you for your service!
Wonderful story. Wonderfully done.
THG continues to find obscure history that freshly informs and entertains me. Bravo!
Once again, just staggeringly interesting! I find myself at a loss for words; only able to get out “Wow!” repeatedly. Very well produced with corresponding production value. Thank you!
Indeed, well done History Dude !!
As a Canadian the War of 1812 is kind of a big deal, but in reality it was just a side show and a distraction for the British who were up to their necks fighting Napoleon. The British had few resources to send, and the "Savour of Upper Canada" Isaac Brock was actually bitterly disappointed at being sent to British North America, as he rightly saw it as a backwater and a career killer.
I really enjoy your channel!
Im always amazed that most Canadians dont realize that the war of 1812 was a rather unimportant side show and Europe was in turmoil due to the Napoleonic wars
@@JohnWayneCheeseburger Well that is due the poor standard of education particularly regarding history. My son's text book was rife with errors. It looked like a pamphlet for the Liberal Party of Canada.
It is a disgrace. If you want to learn about history you need to watch this channel!
@@kellybreen5526 I agree completely history class has become a bit of a joke
MR History Guy, I haven't watched the video yet, but I will. If you're looking for something that _truly_ deserves to be remembered, look into the SOE and OSS operative Virginia Hall of WWII. I think you'll be amazed.
The War of 1812? I served with 2/7 Inf Bn from 1991 to 1994, and we were 'the cottonbalers, by god'. I served in the unit that the song was written about. I was a bit late to the party, though. When I got there they had already returned from spearheading the invasion of Iraq. We were 'first' in a number of things, but I won't bore you with the details, but I was proud to be part of that unit.
th-cam.com/video/7PEuedNJ1gc/w-d-xo.html
As a Canadian, the War of 1812-1814 means something VERY different.
Standing on our own against a continental bully, while the "mother country" was otherwise occupied, is how the war is seen in Canada.
It was a war of economics for the USA but a war of survival for Canada. It was a war to keep our black citizens from the bonds of slavery, which had been abolished in Canada since 1793, and to keep our native citizens from extermination.
I have serious reservations about how deeply white Canadians cared about black 'citizens' in 1812, but I'm absolutely positive that most of them didn't give two cents worth of crap about native peoples. I will agree that the Northern States acted covetously of Canadian territory, but it *was* British actions at sea that got enough Southern votes to declare war.
@@frankmueller2781 'Coincidentally' both of these wars were fought when England was engaged with France. The US was selling goods in bulk to Napoleon and the British tried to stop it. Conveniently, the American narrative leaves out that this was seen as an opportunity to expand, “The acquisition of Canada this year, as far as the neighborhood of Quebec, will be a mere matter of marching; & will give us experience for the attack of Halifax the next, & the final expulsion of England from the American continent.” Thomas Jefferson to William Duane, 4 August 1812.
The original settlers had the usual misgivings with First nations people, that said nothing in Canada compares to the truly brutal treatment in the US given to it's first inhabitants and it's acquired free labor. Further more, let us not forget that those 'votes' came from the few who were allowed to vote.
@@carbidegrd1 voting rights in Canada, or Britain for that matter, were no more liberal than those of the U.S. Sure, the U.S. wanted Territory. So did Britain, as the attacks on Detroit and Lake Champlain were not defensive.
And enough of projecting modern Canadian attitudes toward "Indigenous Peoples" (i.e. Indians. Polls show that *They* don't mind the term, but white Leftists do) to early 19th Century Canadians.
And as for American shipping to the continent, Americans were neutral and not legally bound by Britain's blockade. Moreover, the blockade was so porous that Napoleon himself regularly shaved with British razor blades. Enough of the "Holier-than-thou" attitude.
@@frankmueller2781 "Voting rights were the same in the US as Britain, You see the irony?" America wasn't neutral, it was taking sides. The famous statement above is an apt demonstration of what the thinking was. I have no holier than thou attitude. British history and for that matter Canadian history has come to terms with its shortcomings long ago. You are in a country that is just getting around to pulling down the statues of traitors. American history is riddled with exaggeration and blatant lies.
@@carbidegrd1 Thank God we have you to set the world straight. Must be a tremendous burden being the only one able to sort all those lies from the truths, and suppositions from the "True Facts." 🙄
I had the pleasure of serving aboard Fulton the Fifth, USS Fulton AS-11. Thank you for this enlightening story.
When I was a kid my 5th grade teacher kept an upright piano in the classroom. Every week or two she'd haul off and throw a singalong. That's where I learned Johnny Horton's "Battle of New Orleans". This episode wonderfully stirred those old memories. Thanks, THG!
When I saw this title in my subscriptions list I thought it's from Drachinifel. Glad to see more channels give naval history attention.
Yeah almost thought that myself once I found it in my subs list, it's certainly in his wheelhouse to produce a video about a naval oddity like this.
So, the first ship called Fulton pulled Fulton the First.
Later, they made USS Fulton (the Second), which was actually the Third.
I love it lol
To avoid further confusion at family gatherings, the fourth Fulton was affectionately known as "Bubba".
Thanks History Guy. The only thing I knew previously about the Demologos is that it existed. If you ever wish to revisit the naval aspects of the 1812 war, a video about Silas Halsey and his submarine is a sure winner.
A new Naval tale. Looking forward to it. Thank you 😃
Wow. Hit that one out of the park, History Guy. So interesting. This was exciting times when America was young and proud. We were first in many many things, just wish we continued this pride. Thanks again.
Great bit of overlooked history.
How did I miss this? Excellent video!
Never heard this tale before. Amazing story!
Great Presentation.
I just happened to be watching some videos on naval history this morning when this video posted. Perfect timing.
Thanks for another great video. I don't know how you keep coming up with these stories that I've never heard of.
At 7:55 you mention Commodore Stephen Decatur, Jr. He would make an excellent topic for your program. I grew up in north Florida, but many of my relatives were from nearby Decatur County, Georgia, which was named after Commodore Decatur. Their county seat is Bainbridge, GA, named after Commodore William Bainbridge, another early US Navy hero and purported friend of Decatur. Anyone familiar with the history of Decatur and Bainbridge would find this combination of names rather strange. This is because of the Chesapeake-Leopard affair of 1807, which served as a precursor for the War of 1812 and would ultimately contribute to Decatur's untimely death in 1820. Bainbridge's part in his death remains a bit of an unresolved mystery, but the whole story is history worth remembering.
What I remember of the war of 1812 comes from the song "The Battle of New Orleans" by Johnny Horton.
Mores of Johnny Horton's time prevented singing the name of the nether regions, so it was cleverly blanked out with "then we fired our squirrel gun and we really have them...Well, we fired our guns, but the British still were comin'..."
It’s no wonder Perry liked the idea. In the Battle of Lake Erie what commander would not want a ship like that? Brilliant as usual.
I absolutely love history so when I found THG I knew be a big fan. Lately I've gotten to where I don't watch for a week or so , then I can settle back kick off my shoe's and binge watch episodes.
I love these histories of naval vessels. Thanks again!
Superb as always. Thank you
Col. John Stevens of Hoboken is also a very interesting character, who was a leading engineer & builder in the steam revolution. BTW I love your stories. Well researched and well written, your presentations are entertaining and easy to follow. Thanks so much!
There's a really great model of this ship at the Annapolis museum.
Thanks for posting!
The war of 1812 was considered one of the events that defined Canada.
Interestingly the Americans actually did quite well in the battles on the Great Lakes using Sloops and Schooners,
The British were building full size Frigates for The Lakes when the war ended. It could have been and interesting confrontation if the Americans had constructed one of these for the Great Lakes.
Ship of the Line too
@@sfs2040 And it was a fist rate...
Every time I start a History Guy episode I am reminded how much I have yet to learn!
It took 2000 years to go from the oar powered trireme to the steam powered Demologos. It took 100 years to go from the Demologos to the USS Texas. If only Fulton could have seen the evolution of the steam powered warship.
To the USS Enterprise, she was still a steam powered ship
Steam????? Surely the USS Enterprise had warp engines utilising dilithium crystals. Every body knows that? 😅😁😅
1800s were so rapid in tech development a 10 year old warship that was top of the line whennit was new was already crippling obsolete.
I've always been a fan of Robert Fulton, but I had never before heard of Fulton the First. Thanks for telling such a great story in such a great way.
Fitch was the first to have a steam boat.
I often know something about the topic but I almost always learn something new from your tales of history. But the USS Demologos was news to me. Thank you for enlightening me about the world's first steam-powered warship.
Love the subject matter! Relatively unknown, yet significant impact. Thanks for this one.
There’s an event that really seems to fit this channel that I would love to see THG’s take on. In September of 1863, a Union force of 5000 men, accompanied by multiple gunboats attempted to invade SE Texas. A Confederate artillery unit of 46 men with outdated smoothbore cannons routed the invasion force and turned back the Union fleet, ending the threat. The Second Battle of Sabine Pass is history worth remembering on this channel. 👍
Thank you for setting the name straight. In the l920s, my Dad built floating models of The Fulton pulling Fulton the 1st. Never knew the correct name Demologos. Unfortunately by the late 1960s, damp storage destroyed the model's glue. Parts fell off and were lost.
The naming reminds me of the city of Modesto, CA. Modesto was named after a San Francisco banker named William Ralston. Ralston was beloved by the people in the west in the mid-late 1800s. One of the wealthiest Americans, he was known for his many projects and philanthropy. When the city set to name itself Ralston, Ralston asked them not to. So instead they named it after his character "Modesto", Spanish for modest.
His death is pretty crazy. Through a series of events his financial empire collapsed by 1875. The final event was the crash of Bank of California stock, a bank he founded. The day after the crash his body was found in San Francisco Bay. 50,000 people attended his funeral.
I'd love a co-historical bit done by History guy and Drachinifel.
Never met the man, but I wouldn't be opposed.
I'd also love to see a collab with Mark Felton Productions - they have a lot in common, similar presentation style, and often similar topics, sometimes even topics that compliment each other well. Fairly recently THG did a video on microfilm that touched upon V-Mail, around the same time Mark Felton did a video diving much deeper into the V-mail story.
@@TheHistoryGuyChannel Ive watched you both for several years now and think a collaboration would be awesome! Great job keeping history alive.
@@TheHistoryGuyChannel you and Drachinifel
and Bernhard Kast could be delightful.
Thank you. I remember learning about Fulton's steamboat in school many, many years ago. But, I never knew anything else about it (until today)!
You never cease to amaze, bringing seemingly obscure events of history to the forefront, and relating their importance...
Fascinating story well told as usual!
XLNT! Well done as ever, and fascinating.
What a great morning watch, well off to work. Thanks to THG
just wanted to say , you make history fun
It amazed me that I'd hear and read about the "Fulton the First" (and the Second) in historical accounts, but do not remember ever seeing the name Demologos. TY again THG for being our Vox Populi.
I see what you did there. Well done. 👏
Thank You THG! I had heard of it but informed discussion was not available in my previous computer less life.
Great story! I love history, but naval history is my favorite. I spent more than 10 years in the nuclear navy. But I started really getting into naval history after I left the navy. Thanks for another great story!
Might I suggest a video on the James Rumsey steamboat of 1787? It was successful but didn't seem to garner much interest. It didn't use paddle wheels it used a water jet to propel it. There is a 1/2 scale replica which I have been on. It is a very interesting craft
This was awesome-never got into this detail even in secondary school.
thats y keep coming back good job
Excellent.
I've heard of this before in my Naval readings. Excellent post!
Your pic of an EP-3E (I believe VQ-2 my first squadron) at the end is always nice to see!👍🍻
I love history that has left the popular imagination. Truly history worth remembering!
I knew the basics of what the Fulton I was but I did not know any of her story. Thank you once again!
Great story, well told. It's amazing the energy and love for country in our past. It is a good lesson for us today. Isn't that one of the best reasons to learn history?
thanks for another interesting video to get me thinking before work. also, congats on the 1M subscribers, they are very deserved and im sure there will be a million more before too long
It is stories, like this one, that made me stop reading fiction.
True stories, like this, are more entertaining, than fiction for me.
The knowledge that the story really happened makes it that much more profound.
The tragedy or comedy is made sublime by the reality of it.
Awesome story. I had no idea.
I find it amazing that a nation barely 30 years old could be at the forefront of naval innovation.
Why not? The inhabitants obviously had the knowledge from their previous countries, they didn’t start at 0.
Necessity is the Mother of Invention. Be suppressed and I mean REALLY Suppressed and see what you come up with to survive.
I have had several discussions with persons with technical skills that emigrated to the US after WWII. There was a common theme…. There was is a reason they call it the old country. They were completely frustrated with using new technologies at “home”.
@@yeoldesaltydog7415 *surprised
The government was 30, the nation was 200 years old.
People often assume America began with the declaration of independence. As if all of a sudden a people among cities sprouted from nothing in 1776.
And it's also correct that nothing was lost from its British origins and other European influences that go back a thousand years.
Sometimes people seem to start over. Like many nations after the fall of the western Roman empire lost technology, social order, literature, etc. And that's probably true for awhile in the early colonial period for America, but by the 1700s America was more like West Britain than something starting over. Great luck it was able to add to, not have to reset.
What a nice nugget of history !!
Never knew about this tale. Thanks Lance, you've done it very well again.
I look forward to seeing your videos young man great job
You’re the best Mr & Mrs. History Guy. Thanks
I had completely forgotten about that ship. Thank You.
Great story, thank you for the great content!
excellent story
The first I had heard of this. Thank you.
Thank you! That was an outstanding story! Happy New Year!
Great channel! Very educational. Did you by any chance do a video on the Voyager aircraft? The first airplane to fly around the world nonstop and unfueled.
Where you are in the US determines your history. In 1997, my sisters and I were in Washington for a wedding and we did much sightseeing. On our return from Mount Vernon, the guide on the bus said we were passing the last War of 1812 fixture in the area. My sisters and I looked at each other and smirked. The War of 1812 is a big historical event in WNY and Southern Ontario. In Niagara County there is Fort Niagara, opposite the Canadian Fort George; across from Buffalo is Fort Erie, with Buffalo's Fort Porter long gone. However, going east from Buffalo to visit Cooperstown, you get into areas of New York where the Revolution is the big historical event.
The area is so true. I grew up in Wyoming and never heard of your NY and Canadian battles. We heard of 1812 of course, but much more prominence was given to Wyoming and NE history, some Colorado and Montana, but very little on the East coast.
Great story
Innovation is one of the qualities that has always and currently makes America exceptional!
Perhaps you’d consider turning your attention to the old man of the mountain? New Hampshire’s great stone face. Gone May 23, 2003 but far from forgotten!
"Men hang out their signs indicative of their respective trades; shoemakers hang out a gigantic shoe; jewelers a monster watch, and the dentist hangs out a gold tooth; but up in the Mountains of New Hampshire, God Almighty has hung out a sign to show that there He makes men."
Daniel Webster
Another BZ to The History Guy. I have always been fascinated by our Second War for Independence.
Very interesting story, thank you for sharing.
Thank you for what you do.
Amazing: of course, I knew of Fulton, but had never heard of this ship.
Obscure fascinating history with pirates / privateers once again masterfully researched and told.
WOW - Great story. Thanks, Professor
Amazing episode!
That was Great
Thank you history Guy great work Sir
This is my favorite channel. Keep up the good work!
It's a shame for an amature naval historian to have to admit that he didn't know much about this vessel beyond the barest of basics. Thank you sir, I found this presentation enlightening.
Despite being a bit of a maritime history buff. I had never heard of this vessel, nor the fact she was more catamaran than monohull.
Well done sir!
thanks
Great work as always! Thank you
This is news to me. Great story History Guy!!
Love these use these clips to teach my kids history
HG -- Fulton's Folly Indeed. ! Thanks for bringing Fulton into his due.
Never disappointed by this channel. 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟
Excellent!
How about a look at the Erie Canal?
The War of 1812 happened outside my bedroom window. We have a 200+ year old oak in our yard that could have heard (if it had ears) the shelling of Ft McHenry and I have been on the spot many times where FS Key wrote his poem.
That was wicked cool. Thank you for that.
Always fascinating. Always intriguing.
Excellent account of a pioneering engineer!
Thank you for making this happen !
Great video as usual!
I read a lot of military history, and I've never heard of this before. Fascinating topics you present. Question-how did they fire a hot shot? Wouldn't loading the red hot ball into the cannon set off the powder?
Steam powered cannon
Please forgive Wikipedia as a source, but this describes the process. A clay or wet cloth plug was used to prevent the shot from igniting the powder. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heated_shot
I never knew about this ship. Thanks for filling me in!!!
Another good one a question came to mind while watching this.....when and how was the shift made from paddle wheels to stern props or propellers? Keep up the great work
1839, SS Archimedes was the first vessel to use one, but it was a few more years before naval vessels would consider it.