@@TheWoodlandEscape You’re welcome! I’m from NH and revolutionary/native history is my favorite, so these are amazing. I hope you’ve read the narrative of the captivity of Mrs Johnson. One of my top reads ever
Wow, Peter, a video before Friday. And what a good one at that! This really shows how the women of the frontier kept things together. It shows we wouldn't have made it without them. Man, that bread looks good, and I can smell the stew clear down here in Pennsylvania. All the best to you and Cathy.
I loved this! I meant to comment a few weeks ago but, I got busy. Haha my busy is nothing compared to the women back in the day. Thank you for spotlighting what they had to do and go through. I am amazed at how much they got done with the tools they had. I am a stay at home mom of 4 and I struggle getting the meals cooked, laundry done, schoolwork taught, dishes done, and the house cleaned and organized. It was fascinating to see how much the community of women banded together and parsed out the chores. It makes so much sense. My husband is gone for weeks at a time for work so I even get not having help with that and everything falls to me. I think that is hard until I realize I have a washer and dryer, dishwasher, electricy, running water, and so many conveniences that allow me to get it all done. They really were amazing! I also cook from scratch 90% of the meals, still I don't make my own pasta and only sometimes have homemade bread. So that they also were growing and gathering all the food, preparing it and preserving it, and I have a grocery store across the street. I have a small garden but it couldn't sustain my family. Just impressive. Loved this video thanks!
Sounds like to me Elizabeth that you deserve a medal of trophy . You may have all those modern things, but you lack that community of woman working together for the common good. Thanks so much for watching and your most interesting comments.
You are to kind. As a little girl I always wanted to be a mom. If you asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up at 5 years old I would say a mom. And I have been blessed with 4 little ones. It is so challenging and rewarding at the same time. Thank you for your encouragement.
Peter, I can not thank you enough for highlighting Alyson, realtions between the peoples who resided in and around and this very beautiful Fort. Excellent!!
I had such a great time filming this. I could have talked for hours (and did off-screen... there are limits LOL) about all this stuff. Reenacting is such a huge part of my life, and I adore hearth cooking.
Thank you so much for recording this video. It brought back many fond memories for me. My family and I did much reenacting at Old Number Four when the Miller’s were the curators. My son Justin and I helped to build some of it as well. We typically portrayed a Scots immigrant family, but we’re occasionally called upon to be Canadians as well. I am Mohawk on my mother’s side from Saint Regis to the North and am pleased to see my people being represented. Again, thank you.
I really enjoyed this episode, especially the important role of women on the frontier. I enjoyed learning how the community functioned, taking care of each other and using people’s strengths. I also enjoyed the plant lore and alternate ways of adding to the diet in lean times. It was all fascinating! I grew up in Ohio and we went to a Mohican camp for a week in 6th grade. We learned a lot about what the colonists learned from the native populations. This was in the 70s, and it’s still one of the most significant experiences of my life. Learning about the trade and cooperation between the natives and the colonists was very interesting as well. Excellent video. Thanks for everyone’s hard work and coming together for this video!
Peter thank you so much for giving us "wee bit of history"!! It is so great to teach REAL history. When you look at the word it's "his-story" and yet so many of the wonderful stories are being lost. Keep it up. I would like to send you a gift if I could get an address to send d it to. Thanks again "Carcajou" Cliff Elliott (also of Irish descent)
I grew up eating squirrel stew. My dad in I used to go trapping in the fall and winter for rabbit and raccoon pelts. It was $20 for the raccoon and $15 for the rabbit. It was the way we paid our bills and had food in our bellies. Dad taught me that you don't waste anything. During the summer it was lots of squirrel and garden vegetables.
Just an Excellent visit to the eighteenth century when people worked together as a huge family. And Native People’s were very important for so many aspects of survival. A Beautiful fort indeed with Great Folks! These are times I long for and often felt I was there. Thank You So Much Peter and your Friends! You can’t imagine how much I wanted to dip that bread in that good stew! Many Blessings and Great Adventures! DaveyJO in Pennsylvania
Great video! I lived in NH for years and never heard of Fort #4. My son and I are going to NH in June. Hopefully we can fit this into our itinerary. 🐾🙏🏻✌🏻
As always, wonderful content, fantastic location, beautiful camera shots. Thank you for the extra conversations of and input by all included in this video.
As always, a very enjoyable video. The squirrel stew sure brought back some memories. Growing up here in the Smokey Mountains, we ate just about anything that moved. My favorite wild meat was always rabbit, but squirrel was a close second for me. We cooked it several ways. My favorite was to boil it until it became tender and then bread it and fry it. We would take the broth from the boiling and either make dumplings or gravy. I was more partial to the gravy.
What a beautiful video. I could listen to the ladies all day. What amazing stew and bread. Reminds me how many nights grandpa provided squirrel or rabbit for the meals. It helped out food on the table. And I still have his .22 rifle he hunted with back in 50’s. I can still feel his hands on that rifle with aim on a squirrel or rabbit. Thank you for such a beautiful video.
I was so angry with myself, because I managed to burn the bottom of the bread when I was baking it in the dutch oven. :) All in all, the meal turned out wonderful, though!
Yet another great episode…that is a very impressive site, I sure wish there was somewhere close to us here in eastern Kentucky. It’s wonderful that you were able to team up with Brian and Mel, whom I’ve followed on instagram for several years. They bring impressive real-life skills to their impressions. The “Wolves of the English” are a scary bunch, glad they were on our side!
You're a inspiration to me. And this video stirs me even more. To where I have to figure out how to delve deeper into this amazing "hobby"....lifestyle. Thanks for every video you and Cathy put out!
We had a great time filming with you. The video looks fantastic. I look like im 10 feet tall when i carried the squirel into the kitchen. Lol. Would love to do it again with the both of you.
Just a thought on Squirrel Stew! My mother-in-law-who, turns 91 this year, grew up during the depression in a log cabin built by her father. I was fussing about all the squirrels in the yard and said out loud that I needed to start shooting them. I asked my mother-in-law if she knew how to cook them. She said a couple of things. She said she ate so much squirrel when she was a young child, she would never eat it again! The 2nd thing she said was that you can survive on squirrel but you will never get fat on it! I changed the topic of the conversation!
What a great video! It was awesome to hear Brian and Melanie speaking, after I followed them both on Instagram. And the bread and especially the squirrel stew looked so good!! Excellent, excellent video! Thank you for sharing it!
Just another great vid Peter and Cathy. I wasn't expecting another one, and it is not Friday yet!! So.. maybe one more before the week is out?!?! You are so right to focus an episode on the contributions of the fairer sex!! The contribution was HUGE!! HOW IS IT THAT YOU ALWAYS SEEM TO WANDER INTO THE KITCHEN JUST AS THE FOOD IS ALMOST DONE, PETER??? Best Regards to you both!
Appreciate your efforts and dedication. Wonderful production as always. Thank you for showing the diversity and highlighting what it takes to keep a community running. Thanks again and keep your powder dry!
Are you kidding? I've seen most of your work as you go along, this my friend was one of the best. You could actually go back in time watching this episode. I'm in New Hampshire and had no idea about fort # 4 . That is now on my list of historical areas to spend time in. Thank you and your family and friends for giving us the opportunity to sit with you and enjoy. Thx Peter.
This made me laugh... it was indeed a nod to Jas. Townsend. LOL... Though nutmeg was used in quite a few of the recipes we still have written down. Likely (and this is a guess on my part, not something researched, so take it with a grain of salt) because it's a nut rather than a leaf or powder. It's easy to transport, and frankly, they're light. A little goes a long way, too!
Very cool! A pity TH-cam doesn't transmit smells. What was the gun your Mohawk reenactor friend was carrying? It looked a bit like a Brown Bess carbine.
Fort Klock and Johnson Hall, you will be in my back yard, lol. Visit The Fort Plain Museum and take a ride up Route 10 to the Stone Arabia Battlefield, visit the two churches on rte. 10, in the back gravesite is were Col. Brown is buried. Be sure to visit the museum, it is loaded with awesome history. Tons of great info.
Hello, my name Is Dennis Carron, my adopted Menominee name is One Wolf, I am a reenactor in southern Missouri, And I spend a lot of my time at Ft. Du Charters in Illinois. I found this video today on You tube and fell in love with it. My Question is I'm Retired now and want to spend more time in reenacting, But more in the living Historian way. How can I get started into this field of interest?
Top of the morning Dennis. I’ve been a reenactor for multiple decades and have burnt a lot of black powder in the process. I found having a native persona very educational as I knew lots of European history on this continent, but little of the first peoples history. However, while not losing my interest in reenacting I’ve moved on to living archaeology. I love getting out in the hinterland and immersing myself in the ways of the past. There must be a number of groups that you can investigate, but you’re sort of on the cusp of the part of the world that didn’t see significant settlement until the 19th century, at least west of the Mississippi River. Should you ever get to our neck of the woods you’re welcome to visit Kelly Station.
I'd love to get into reenacting, but im not sure where to start. Im from western PA, Fort Ligonier, Fort Pitt, and Fort Necessity are all less than an hour from me. In fact, i live about 2 miles from Bushy Run battlefield if you are familiar with that one.
Great episode! It was nice seeing the perspective of the women and everything they did. Certainly unsung heroes. Their toils, I am sure, were appreciated then as they are now. Really enjoying following your adventures. Safe travels my friends!
How VERY INTERESTING! Thanks 4 this vid and the fine hand of Empress Catherine in filming. A 'lovely' fort that seemed to be 'well-thought-out'. Funny how the history I was taught spoke little about the intermarriage of colonists and natives, along with adoption of one with the other. I thought we had harbored animosities throughout homesteading/settlements...but the 'need' to consolidate goods and understanding/knowledge out -won foolish biases, thank Goodness! Can't say that squirrel bodies in a stew look appetizing to me...I'd a had to shop-em-up so as 'not' to recognize the critters...yeah I know...I'm a wuss! LOL! Seems the 9th President of the U.S.; William Henry Harrison, enjoyed squirrel stew. He said; "I actually had squirrel stew once. Not bad actually...the goal is to remove all the hair, which the chef in my case failed to do." YIKES! Twuz a fascinating telling of; 'Wee-bits' and both the Native and Female background on life at the Fort. Take care dear ones...health and blessings! :)
Oh my, hair on squirrel, not a pleasant thought. There were thousands of inter marriages in Colonial America and even more in Canada as the French immersed themselves in native culture.
Great content! I had just discovered the value of strawberry leaves. I have educated myself on what's edible and useful on my land. Thank you for preserving this knowledge. We all need to know some holistic helps.
Awesome seeing you at Fort #4! That was one of my first reenacting sites when I really got into it in 2000. I was with the 3rd Massachusetts Provincial RGT (New England Living History Association). It's a fun place and lots of great history. They're doing a Scottish Highland event on 29 June.
Good afternoon from Syracuse NY USA brother and everyone else thank you for sharing this video with all the information from history and my friends who I have shared this video with love this video
Excellent! It's great to see so much research-based historical activities and sites. Out west It's mostly black powder rendezvous, which are very loosely based on history, if at all.
Great video Peter and Kathy, one of my favorites. Man is that fort huge. Lucky us for another video. Interesting herb grinder. That squirrel stew looked very good, tender as well. History lesson in this was great, one of my favorites. Certainly in the top 5. Keep your powder dry
Apparently those herb grinders are incredibly rare. Most were made with an iron wheel and base, though the bowl and handles could be wood. I had never used one before, either, so it was new to me! The stew was *very* tender, and tasty!
I just shared this to FB with an incredulous lament that you're subs are as low as they are, and a request to all to like, subscribe, and watch previous vids of yours. Even though the frontier women weren't as well covered in the writings of the era, my impression of what I've read is that they were definitely not unappreciated; maybe taken for granted a little, but their roles weren't ignored. If you look at any society, those providing the "infrastructure support" rarely get mentioned, but that's not to say they weren't recognized somehow. Any man with half a brain in that environment desired a "good woman" to help with the homestead while he was out earning the money or the living, which was what society expected him to do. Great video, Peter, and Cathy did a fabulous job behind the camera as usual 😊 y'all keep up the good work 👍🏻😁
We appreciate your support. Some might say slow growth, we prefer to think of it as organic growth. I totally agree with you on both the need for and often lack of recognition that the female gender received.
I am of TUSCARORA descent. They did not move from NC until after 1804, when my cousin, Thomas Jefferson relocated them from eastern NC to western NY and PA.
Great great job! Always curious about #4. I read about the road being made through the woods they made from Crown Point! Must have been terrifying. Hey, im 15 minutes east of Ft Johnson! Stop by!
Might be the best history page on youtube
You flatter us, thanks for your interest!
@@TheWoodlandEscape You’re welcome! I’m from NH and revolutionary/native history is my favorite, so these are amazing. I hope you’ve read the narrative of the captivity of Mrs Johnson. One of my top reads ever
That would be a grand wee bit of history for an episode. You live in a beautiful part of the world.
Wow, Peter, a video before Friday. And what a good one at that! This really shows how the women of the frontier kept things together. It shows we wouldn't have made it without them. Man, that bread looks good, and I can smell the stew clear down here in Pennsylvania. All the best to you and Cathy.
It was an amazing meal shared with some amazing historians.
Ya snuck one in on me Peter. But of course the content does not disappoint. & it's correct. Women were indeed the unsung heros.
We certainly agree on your point.
I loved this! I meant to comment a few weeks ago but, I got busy. Haha my busy is nothing compared to the women back in the day. Thank you for spotlighting what they had to do and go through. I am amazed at how much they got done with the tools they had. I am a stay at home mom of 4 and I struggle getting the meals cooked, laundry done, schoolwork taught, dishes done, and the house cleaned and organized. It was fascinating to see how much the community of women banded together and parsed out the chores. It makes so much sense. My husband is gone for weeks at a time for work so I even get not having help with that and everything falls to me. I think that is hard until I realize I have a washer and dryer, dishwasher, electricy, running water, and so many conveniences that allow me to get it all done. They really were amazing! I also cook from scratch 90% of the meals, still I don't make my own pasta and only sometimes have homemade bread. So that they also were growing and gathering all the food, preparing it and preserving it, and I have a grocery store across the street. I have a small garden but it couldn't sustain my family. Just impressive. Loved this video thanks!
Sounds like to me Elizabeth that you deserve a medal of trophy . You may have all those modern things, but you lack that community of woman working together for the common good. Thanks so much for watching and your most interesting comments.
You are to kind. As a little girl I always wanted to be a mom. If you asked me what I wanted to be when I grew up at 5 years old I would say a mom. And I have been blessed with 4 little ones. It is so challenging and rewarding at the same time. Thank you for your encouragement.
@@elizabethreneeprima We have 5 kids and 10 grandchildren.
That is awesome! We are going to see how things go but we might have one more! Congrats what wonderful family!
I never ask God to bless our food. I thank Him for the blessed food He provides.
Peter, I can not thank you enough for highlighting Alyson, realtions between the peoples who resided in and around and this very beautiful Fort. Excellent!!
That old saying “if you’re happy, I’m happy “. Glad it met your expectations.
I had such a great time filming this. I could have talked for hours (and did off-screen... there are limits LOL) about all this stuff. Reenacting is such a huge part of my life, and I adore hearth cooking.
I'm a descendant of Nathan Whiting. I had a chance to visit The Fort At No. 4 many years ago. I am glad the history of the fort is stay active.
As am I, many of our historical sites lack adequate funding and if not for volunteers would most likely be lost to history.
Thank you so much for recording this video. It brought back many fond memories for me. My family and I did much reenacting at Old Number Four when the Miller’s were the curators. My son Justin and I helped to build some of it as well. We typically portrayed a Scots immigrant family, but we’re occasionally called upon to be Canadians as well. I am Mohawk on my mother’s side from Saint Regis to the North and am pleased to see my people being represented. Again, thank you.
We were lucky to have the opportunity with Melanie, Brian and Alison … great people and knowledgeable to boot.
I could sit and watch this all day with everyone doing their own thing. it's all so interesting.
Thank you, very flattering.
Peter, I always await your video drops with great anticipation and I’m never disappointed.
Your channel is a treasure as far as I’m concerned.
Wow, thank you!
I really enjoyed this episode, especially the important role of women on the frontier. I enjoyed learning how the community functioned, taking care of each other and using people’s strengths. I also enjoyed the plant lore and alternate ways of adding to the diet in lean times. It was all fascinating! I grew up in Ohio and we went to a Mohican camp for a week in 6th grade. We learned a lot about what the colonists learned from the native populations. This was in the 70s, and it’s still one of the most significant experiences of my life. Learning about the trade and cooperation between the natives and the colonists was very interesting as well. Excellent video. Thanks for everyone’s hard work and coming together for this video!
When old memories remain vivid you know it had on impact on you as a person. Thanks for watching and your comments.
Thank you for shedding some light on an amazing place. I love that fort and my state.hope you had a wonderful time!
Our pleasure! You live in a beautiful state.
This is so awesome!!! Thank you for sharing this. Know that I appreciate it. I love your channel.
Great episode, thanks to everyone who participated in this. Sure would like to have some squirrel gravy about now. Thanks Mr. Peter and Ms. Cathy.
A man of my own heart…. Squirrel is good!
I would sure like to have me some of that squirrel stew. Thank you for another wonderful video.
It was a treat indeed.
Peter thank you so much for giving us "wee bit of history"!! It is so great to teach REAL history. When you look at the word it's "his-story" and yet so many of the wonderful stories are being lost. Keep it up. I would like to send you a gift if I could get an address to send d it to. Thanks again "Carcajou" Cliff Elliott (also of Irish descent)
Glad you enjoyed it, Cliff. As to a gift, your kind words are in themselves, gift enough.
I am very appreciative of all your videos, but this one has been special on all fronts.
Wow, thank you, Hayward.
I grew up eating squirrel stew. My dad in I used to go trapping in the fall and winter for rabbit and raccoon pelts. It was $20 for the raccoon and $15 for the rabbit. It was the way we paid our bills and had food in our bellies. Dad taught me that you don't waste anything. During the summer it was lots of squirrel and garden vegetables.
Your dad was wise to give you such sound advice.
That squirrel looked so tender cooked that way.
I enjoyed the history of life in the fort on the frontier.
The meal was exquisite!
This is hands down the best video you have put together, thank you Peter and all the others who helped. God bless you all.
Wow, thank you, glad you enjoyed it.
Just an Excellent visit to the eighteenth century when people worked together as a huge family. And Native People’s were very important for so many aspects of survival. A Beautiful fort indeed with Great Folks! These are times I long for and often felt I was there. Thank You So Much Peter and your Friends! You can’t imagine how much I wanted to dip that bread in that good stew! Many Blessings and Great Adventures! DaveyJO in Pennsylvania
We agree, the fort was amazing.
Great video! I lived in NH for years and never heard of Fort #4. My son and I are going to NH in June. Hopefully we can fit this into our itinerary. 🐾🙏🏻✌🏻
Worth the trip ! Thanks for watching.
As always, wonderful content, fantastic location, beautiful camera shots. Thank you for the extra conversations of and input by all included in this video.
I’ll pass on your fine compliments.
As always, a very enjoyable video. The squirrel stew sure brought back some memories. Growing up here in the Smokey Mountains, we ate just about anything that moved. My favorite wild meat was always rabbit, but squirrel was a close second for me. We cooked it several ways. My favorite was to boil it until it became tender and then bread it and fry it. We would take the broth from the boiling and either make dumplings or gravy. I was more partial to the gravy.
Like you, my favorite way is deep fried and we are a lot of it growing up and still to this day.
What a beautiful video. I could listen to the ladies all day. What amazing stew and bread. Reminds me how many nights grandpa provided squirrel or rabbit for the meals. It helped out food on the table. And I still have his .22 rifle he hunted with back in 50’s. I can still feel his hands on that rifle with aim on a squirrel or rabbit. Thank you for such a beautiful video.
What a fantastic memory, thanks for sharing.
I was so angry with myself, because I managed to burn the bottom of the bread when I was baking it in the dutch oven. :) All in all, the meal turned out wonderful, though!
Yet another great episode…that is a very impressive site, I sure wish there was somewhere close to us here in eastern Kentucky. It’s wonderful that you were able to team up with Brian and Mel, whom I’ve followed on instagram for several years. They bring impressive real-life skills to their impressions. The “Wolves of the English” are a scary bunch, glad they were on our side!
Brain and Melanie were amazing hosts and very avid historians.
Another fascinating episode. The production values are exceptional.
Thank you, I’ll pass on your compliment to Cathy.
Words escape me on how to express how much i enjoyed this interesting video on the great frontier of the Americas well done folks
A very flattering compliment, I thank you.
You're a inspiration to me. And this video stirs me even more. To where I have to figure out how to delve deeper into this amazing "hobby"....lifestyle. Thanks for every video you and Cathy put out!
I'm so glad, it’s a great hobby with great people.
We had a great time filming with you. The video looks fantastic. I look like im 10 feet tall when i carried the squirel into the kitchen. Lol. Would love to do it again with the both of you.
Well sir, in my books you are 10 feet tall. We had a blast Brian … don’t you forgetting your visit.
Excellent presentation! thank you!
You're very welcome!
That fort is amazing, love this channel.
Glad you enjoy it!
It's fun being in the kitchen, next to the fire with the ladies.💗
It really is a true learning experience.
Another interesting video with great food.
Glad you enjoyed it
Loved this! Important information for where we are today.
Glad it was helpful!
Just a thought on Squirrel Stew!
My mother-in-law-who, turns 91 this year, grew up during the depression in a log cabin built by her father. I was fussing about all the squirrels in the yard and said out loud that I needed to start shooting them. I asked my mother-in-law if she knew how to cook them. She said a couple of things. She said she ate so much squirrel when she was a young child, she would never eat it again! The 2nd thing she said was that you can survive on squirrel but you will never get fat on it!
I changed the topic of the conversation!
Never grow fat … made me laugh.
As a former reenactor, this warms my heart.
And your comment, mine.
Thx guys for this very educational video, filming it and sharing it with us.
Our pleasure!
I’m born and raised in the White Mt’s of NH., and I never heard of Louis Gill fascinating TY ❤
I love your State. Spent many a week rock climbing in those beautiful mountains in my youth. Thanks for watching.
@@TheWoodlandEscape I moved from NH in 1975, but my heart is still there!
@@guytwombly2955 understandable!
Another very educational presentation. Outstanding.
Glad you enjoyed it!
What a great video! It was awesome to hear Brian and Melanie speaking, after I followed them both on Instagram. And the bread and especially the squirrel stew looked so good!! Excellent, excellent video! Thank you for sharing it!
Our pleasure!
A wonderful piece of history.
Thank you so much.
That was a fantastic video, and a great bit of history. That looked like a wonderful place, and the stew didn't look bad either!
Thanks 👍. The stew was absolutely amazing.
Thank you for sharing this. I sure enjoyed it
I'm so glad!
Absolutely fascinating, i loved your video! Thank you so much for keeping our history alive!
Glad you enjoyed it, we have a whole lot of fun doing it.
Just another great vid Peter and Cathy. I wasn't expecting another one, and it is not Friday yet!! So.. maybe one more before the week is out?!?! You are so right to focus an episode on the contributions of the fairer sex!! The contribution was HUGE!!
HOW IS IT THAT YOU ALWAYS SEEM TO WANDER INTO THE KITCHEN JUST AS THE FOOD IS ALMOST DONE, PETER???
Best Regards to you both!
Another one on friday. As to my timing, years of practice.
@@TheWoodlandEscape
You have obviously perfected your skill!
Three vids in one week!! You spoil us and raise our expectations!!
Appreciate your efforts and dedication. Wonderful production as always. Thank you for showing the diversity and highlighting what it takes to keep a community running. Thanks again and keep your powder dry!
There was indeed a lot to keep folks, housed, safe and feed. Watch yer top knot.
I enjoy listening how life was back in 1750. I also enjoy looking at the wooden furniture and items of that time period. Awesome Video! 👍👏😃
Glad you enjoyed it
These Women are EPIC
Indeed they are.
Thank you Peter, Cathy, and fellow historians.
Thanks for watching.
Really glad to have found the channel! Thank you from Minnesota. Cheers!
Thanks for watching and a big hello from Upper Canada.
Are you kidding? I've seen most of your work as you go along, this my friend was one of the best. You could actually go back in time watching this episode. I'm in New Hampshire and had no idea about fort # 4 . That is now on my list of historical areas to spend time in. Thank you and your family and friends for giving us the opportunity to sit with you and enjoy. Thx Peter.
It is definitely worth the trip, it’s a wonderful historical site.
There's Highland Games coming up in the near future, and the Fort is open quite a bit during the summer months!
Awesome video Peter. You were very close to my home when you were at Number 4.
Well then, I should have dropped in, lol.
Thank you! I was able to find the both volumes and look forward to learning more.
You’re welcome, I hope you enjoy the information! They are excellent books.
Wonderful… I enjoy your videos so greatly.. keep up the good work..
Onward and Upward is Still the Watchword ..
Thank you! Will do!
Oh, wonderful. Great job you guys❤❤❤
Glad you enjoyed it! The easy people I’ve ever worked with and exceptionally nice !
Great stuff, Peter. You are certainly making your travels recently.
We are indeed getting about!
Such a great area my father in law and I used to go on fishing trips by Crowne Point great memories
It certainly a very beautiful area.
Really enjoyed this video, very informative!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Hi. What can I say? Wow! Thanks for sharing. Greetings from Germany, Chris
Thanks for watching and greetings from this side of the pond.
I think you have hit a home run, Peter!!! GREAT episode!!!
I thank you sir.
Enjoyed this Peter and Cathy. Great content.
Thank you.
Always so special.
Thank you.
As always great video and history lesson. You inspire me to try to get into reenactment in my area.
Great hobby with great people. If your just starting you’ll find the most welcoming people in any hobby.
There is so much to learn from this video. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
Nutmeg? Is this JAs.Townsend and son. LAL 😅 great vedio.Thank you all.
Glad you enjoyed and thanks for watching.
This made me laugh... it was indeed a nod to Jas. Townsend. LOL... Though nutmeg was used in quite a few of the recipes we still have written down. Likely (and this is a guess on my part, not something researched, so take it with a grain of salt) because it's a nut rather than a leaf or powder. It's easy to transport, and frankly, they're light. A little goes a long way, too!
Beautiful spot! Thanks for sharing!
It is worth a visit if you’re ever down there.
Just looking at this video makes me wanna go there
It is a wonderful historical site, indeed.
Very cool! A pity TH-cam doesn't transmit smells. What was the gun your Mohawk reenactor friend was carrying? It looked a bit like a Brown Bess carbine.
The musketts is a cut down bess. Ranger cut
The musketts is a cut down bess
Often natives and Ranger Companies cut down Bess’s for better handling in the bush.
@@TheWoodlandEscape Thanks. I have a Bess carbine replica and that one appears to be cut just a bit shorter.
@@BrianMcCormack-w6w Thanks. The native style tacks on the stock are a nice touch.
I'm from a little town in S.C. called Bath. In horse valley, the fist mill was set up in 1711. Gust east of August Ga.
Fort Klock and Johnson Hall, you will be in my back yard, lol. Visit The Fort Plain Museum and take a ride up Route 10 to the Stone Arabia Battlefield, visit the two churches on rte. 10, in the back gravesite is were Col. Brown is buried. Be sure to visit the museum, it is loaded with awesome history. Tons of great info.
I’m definitely coming back.
New to your channel, but I must say it's excellent!
Thanks and welcome, glad you enjoyed it.
Squirrel Stew is one of my favorite meals. In fact, it's in the Betty Crocker Cookbook.
And mine!
Hello, my name Is Dennis Carron, my adopted Menominee name is One Wolf, I am a reenactor in southern Missouri, And I spend a lot of my time at Ft. Du Charters in Illinois. I found this video today on You tube and fell in love with it. My Question is I'm Retired now and want to spend more time in reenacting, But more in the living Historian way. How can I get started into this field of interest?
Top of the morning Dennis. I’ve been a reenactor for multiple decades and have burnt a lot of black powder in the process. I found having a native persona very educational as I knew lots of European history on this continent, but little of the first peoples history. However, while not losing my interest in reenacting I’ve moved on to living archaeology. I love getting out in the hinterland and immersing myself in the ways of the past. There must be a number of groups that you can investigate, but you’re sort of on the cusp of the part of the world that didn’t see significant settlement until the 19th century, at least west of the Mississippi River. Should you ever get to our neck of the woods you’re welcome to visit Kelly Station.
I'd love to get into reenacting, but im not sure where to start. Im from western PA, Fort Ligonier, Fort Pitt, and Fort Necessity are all less than an hour from me. In fact, i live about 2 miles from Bushy Run battlefield if you are familiar with that one.
You are literally surrounded by living historians. Google groups, you’ll find them more than welcoming.
Great episode! It was nice seeing the perspective of the women and everything they did. Certainly unsung heroes. Their toils, I am sure, were appreciated then as they are now. Really enjoying following your adventures. Safe travels my friends!
We agree totally.
Wonderful show 👍
Glad you enjoyed it
How VERY INTERESTING! Thanks 4 this vid and the fine hand of Empress Catherine in filming. A 'lovely' fort that seemed to be 'well-thought-out'. Funny how the history I was taught spoke little about the intermarriage of colonists and natives, along with adoption of one with the other. I thought we had harbored animosities throughout homesteading/settlements...but the 'need' to consolidate goods and understanding/knowledge out -won foolish biases, thank Goodness! Can't say that squirrel bodies in a stew look appetizing to me...I'd a had to shop-em-up so as 'not' to recognize the critters...yeah I know...I'm a wuss! LOL! Seems the 9th President of the U.S.; William Henry Harrison, enjoyed squirrel stew. He said; "I actually had squirrel stew once. Not bad actually...the goal is to remove all the hair, which the chef in my case failed to do." YIKES! Twuz a fascinating telling of; 'Wee-bits' and both the Native and Female background on life at the Fort. Take care dear ones...health and blessings! :)
Oh my, hair on squirrel, not a pleasant thought. There were thousands of inter marriages in Colonial America and even more in Canada as the French immersed themselves in native culture.
Great content! I had just discovered the value of strawberry leaves. I have educated myself on what's edible and useful on my land. Thank you for preserving this knowledge. We all need to know some holistic helps.
Glad it was helpful and I totally agree on more natural approach to one’s health.
Awesome seeing you at Fort #4! That was one of my first reenacting sites when I really got into it in 2000. I was with the 3rd Massachusetts Provincial RGT (New England Living History Association). It's a fun place and lots of great history. They're doing a Scottish Highland event on 29 June.
Awesome fort and awesome people. The Highland Games sounds like fun.
Fantastic... very enjoyable. Thanks for all the wonderful content that you create.
Many thanks, thanks for watching.
Good afternoon from Syracuse NY USA brother and everyone else thank you for sharing this video with all the information from history and my friends who I have shared this video with love this video
So nice of you, thanks.
I'm watching on Mother's Day, thanks for recognizing women.
You are so very welcome and Happy Mothers Day to you.
Excellent! It's great to see so much research-based historical activities and sites. Out west It's mostly black powder rendezvous, which are very loosely based on history, if at all.
It is much older for sure on the east side of the continent.
Great video Peter and Kathy, one of my favorites. Man is that fort huge. Lucky us for another video. Interesting herb grinder. That squirrel stew looked very good, tender as well. History lesson in this was great, one of my favorites. Certainly in the top 5. Keep your powder dry
Thanks 👍 . That herb grinder was one of my favorite things in the fort … I’d never seen one.
Apparently those herb grinders are incredibly rare. Most were made with an iron wheel and base, though the bowl and handles could be wood. I had never used one before, either, so it was new to me! The stew was *very* tender, and tasty!
Awesome thank you for the education
Our pleasure! Thanks for watching.
Very interesting
Glad you think so!
Très intéressant. Merci.
Thank you, glad you enjoyed.
My Grandfather was Mohawk/German and a Fur Trader for Hudson Bay Fur Company.
Very interesting family lineage!
Great meal in a cool location.
It was indeed!
I just shared this to FB with an incredulous lament that you're subs are as low as they are, and a request to all to like, subscribe, and watch previous vids of yours.
Even though the frontier women weren't as well covered in the writings of the era, my impression of what I've read is that they were definitely not unappreciated; maybe taken for granted a little, but their roles weren't ignored. If you look at any society, those providing the "infrastructure support" rarely get mentioned, but that's not to say they weren't recognized somehow. Any man with half a brain in that environment desired a "good woman" to help with the homestead while he was out earning the money or the living, which was what society expected him to do.
Great video, Peter, and Cathy did a fabulous job behind the camera as usual 😊 y'all keep up the good work 👍🏻😁
We appreciate your support. Some might say slow growth, we prefer to think of it as organic growth. I totally agree with you on both the need for and often lack of recognition that the female gender received.
Very good thank you!
Our pleasure!
Great show.
Thank you.
Wonderful episode!
Thank you.
Loved tho thank you!
I appreciate your kind words.
I am of TUSCARORA descent. They did not move from NC until after 1804, when my cousin, Thomas Jefferson relocated them from eastern NC to western NY and PA.
My research indicates much, much early as to oral history. I’d love to see a link to the documentation you refer to.
Only 3 hours from my place! Should have went with you!! thanks for the video
Indeed you should have.
Very educational and interesting. TFS.
💛 From 🇨🇦
Thanks for watching
My daughter lives a couple miles from Fort 4. You can hear the canon firing on reenactment days. Now I have to go!
You’ll not be disappointed.
Great great job! Always curious about #4. I read about the road being made through the woods they made from Crown Point! Must have been terrifying. Hey, im 15 minutes east of Ft Johnson! Stop by!
Thanks for the offer, but I’m back in Upper Canada. Imagine building the road.