It was once known as the Yucatán Peninsula, then turned to Redwood, but it was also known by Rustwood 1946 let me let you know a little secret time travel chronoscope we can make chronological movies now, huh?
@ons-ps2slКүн бұрын
It was once known as the Yucatán Peninsula, then turned to Redwood, but it was also known by Rustwood 1946
@DennisNavarro-qw9uoКүн бұрын
Vigil died a loser. Wait he always was a loser.
@ItsCaroParker2 күн бұрын
And they didn’t had any idea that 100 years later we would have games and experience life based on them.
@richie80434 күн бұрын
I wonder if they entered the country with legal paper work I doubt it
@tommoyer46974 күн бұрын
So Adelia seen the civil war, all of WW1 and early WW2
@michaelkurz90675 күн бұрын
I wanted to rob that Shasta mining co.but Butch said not just yet,so we rode all the way to Castle Dale Utah and waited the next day and rode off with at least $15,000 dollars south towards green river Utah.they call me money Mike
@legacyofthewest5 күн бұрын
Lol
@bluelava42827 күн бұрын
Appreciate
@NotMotorola9 күн бұрын
Ruff days
@reneethornton92289 күн бұрын
Greetings, I am just catching up on my KZfaq channels after a long needed vacation. However, during vacation one day I did get to see a documentary on the Buffalo which was so fascinating. I enjoyed these pictures and the music had me patting my feet. I believe it would have been great being part of a wagon train and stage coach rider being lead by six horses, WOW! Much appreciated, thanks!
@legacyofthewest9 күн бұрын
Hope you had a good vacation!
@reneethornton92289 күн бұрын
@@legacyofthewest it was wonderful. I went home to Cleveland, OH to celebrate one of my dearest friend’s 70th birthday, to see her family and other friends I have not seen since moving to Los Angeles in 2012 was truly a joy. However, I do plan to either move back home or nearby in 2026.
@user-rg6um2ri1x9 күн бұрын
This reminds me of 5th grade. The teacher was so into Wild west. We mostly studied that time period
@danielwebster574811 күн бұрын
No one but Wyatt Earp ever said Frank Stilwell was one of the conspirators to kill his brother. Wyatt one must always remember even his champions was a very biased witness. You cannot get 75 me in 5 hours in the wild west times.
@danielwebster574811 күн бұрын
A lot of people are enamored with Wyatt Earp for some reason at the time he was mainly despised by contemporaries. I mean he believed that Frank still will was involved in the murder of Morgan. Pete Spencer's Mexican wife named all the conspirators and Stillwell was not mentioned. She said my husband and a half breed named Hank swilling and a German name bode where are the shooters and the conspirators. She said they also had two half-breeds that were holding horses one of whom was florentino Cruz the other was probably pony deal. All of these men with the exception of florentino Cruz lived well into the 20th century and some of them outlived Wyatt Earp so his vendetta ride is also a hoax. He believed Stillwell was involved despite the fact that Morgan was murdered around midnight slightly before. At 5:00 a.m. Frank Stilwell was known to be in Tucson which is 75 miles away. He quite simply did not have time and therefore could not have been involved. Also Johnny Ringo was shot while he was sleeping. At the time he was drunk and helpless and sleeping unfortunately doc Holliday was 700 mi away and Wyatt Earp was 900 miles away. Neither man could have been involved although I don't think they would have any problem with shooting a passed out sleeping man. Especially a man that backed Wyatt Earp and his whole crew down on at least three different occasions two of them he was actually arrested. Share behan sent Billy brackenridge to arrest Ringo because he said he's making a play for the earps again. Billy Breckenridge said I passed Ringo on the trail and he offered me a drink of his whiskey. He was drunk very drunk and practically helpless. I asked him to go home with me because of the condition he was in but he was drunk and stubborn and he declined. He offered me a drink from the whiskey bottle which was so hot from the Sun it burned my lips. About 1 mi further up the trail I ran into Frank Leslie who admitted he was looking for Ringo. He asked Breckenridge have you seen Ringo I want to apologize for the argument we had earlier. Breckenridge didn't believe him for 1 minute so he said he had not seen Ringo. Frank Leslie after he murdered his live-in girlfriend and attempted to murder a man that was waiting on him supposedly to return set to a guard I came upon Ringo sleeping and passed out and I shot him. I cut off a lock of hair for a souvenir which 1,000% matches the crime scene. He was going around town saying he shot Ringo in a stand-up gunfight that's why none of the contemporaries believed he was guilty. Any contemporary at the time in Arizona if asked who the most dangerous man was would have said Ringo. Nobody would have said Leslie or even doc Holliday. The problem was it wasn't a fair stand-up gunfight he came upon A drunk passed out sleeping man and shot him. There is a lot of proof that this is what happened and the other suspects were known to be hundreds of miles away and therefore could not possibly be involved. Afterwards when Billy Claiborne challenge Leslie to a fight. After being shot he told everyone Frank Leslie killed Ringo I seen him do it. I don't think he saw him do it because Billy Breckenridge only said he saw Ringo he did not say he saw Claiborne. I believe he either told Claiborne he done it or Claiborne helped him set up the body to where it become officially a suicide. Before being shot by him Claiborne was a friend of both Ringo and Leslie. It is also interesting to note that the gun fight between Leslie and Claiborne Claiborne was said to be in almost as helpless as Ringo was before while Leslie was relatively sober. Just trying to set the record straight I love the movie tombstone as much as anyone else but doc Holliday could absolutely not have been involved and it certainly was not a stand-up gun fight. Billy brackenridge in every other contemporary whose opinions matter more than anyone else when asked who the most dangerous man was almost 100% they said ringo.
@TommyBoy-719-11 күн бұрын
I’m from Pueblo Colorado and never knew he’d been there
@pamartin12 күн бұрын
😂 takes me an hour to see this. With all the pausing and zooming... Just thanks. Alot.
@legacyofthewest12 күн бұрын
If you are on FB you might check out our page, I upload photos there as well
@mikeseier444912 күн бұрын
Love these pictures,.. Thank you!🙏
@ZackLongdick12 күн бұрын
I love the Old West! I wish I could travel back in time to that time period and stay there! I was born in the wrong time period 🥺
@HangtownDave13 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing these great moments of American History with us! Looking forward to more! They are greatly appreciated!
@legacyofthewest13 күн бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@Go4Corvette13 күн бұрын
Thanks again for a great video of the Old West. Mike, currently in Oregon.
@legacyofthewest13 күн бұрын
Hope you get to see some history up in Oregon!
@Go4Corvette12 күн бұрын
Will be hitting the road soon. Full time RV van life. Lots to see. @@legacyofthewest
@legacyofthewest12 күн бұрын
@@Go4Corvette Sounds like fun!
@baldeagle529713 күн бұрын
Here I am, grooving to the tunes and photos, wishing I was there.
@legacyofthewest13 күн бұрын
I would love to have walked through any of those old towns and talked to the people
@ZackLongdick12 күн бұрын
Me three! I was born in the wrong time period 🥺
@markfrench889213 күн бұрын
The train in photo 93 is not approaching a mining tunnel . That's a regular railroad tunnel.
@legacyofthewest13 күн бұрын
Here's a link to the source: calisphere.org/item/0c18f0e46c76227482f6ce3916269ec3/
@freedomforever671813 күн бұрын
The entitled spoiled GenZ would never have survived 125 years ago.
@LilPistachiofr12 күн бұрын
💤
@freedomforever671812 күн бұрын
@@LilPistachiofr You need to cut back on the tryptophan. Lol.
@LilPistachiofr12 күн бұрын
@@freedomforever6718 So it seems
@YouEatBabies191110 күн бұрын
And you would?
@thesquirrelchroniclesakare780813 күн бұрын
I love it ! Can you do a video on nothing but early photos of the west ? Maybe 1850s to 1890s ?
@legacyofthewest13 күн бұрын
That's a good idea-there aren't as many photos in the 1850s but I'll have to go look, have you seen my California Gold Rush video?
@thesquirrelchroniclesakare780811 күн бұрын
@@legacyofthewest yes I did. Loved it too !
@Benusthegoat13 күн бұрын
3:50 horseshoe overlook
@Benusthegoat13 күн бұрын
Bro responded one year later and I found the video 5 minutes ago
@fatdoctor00713 күн бұрын
"...his father had RUN [NOT "RAN"}....). Must be a product of Amreican public schools; people in other countries speaking English never do this as they seem to know and use proper verb conjegation.
@legacyofthewest13 күн бұрын
*American, *conjugation
@justme883715 күн бұрын
my weird brain wonders what they were doing when the picture was taken, what conversations were being had and where did they go after.
@justme883715 күн бұрын
75 miles in 11 hours.... wow!
@HarpsichordHymnsTimRemington16 күн бұрын
Fascinating information! Thanks for presenting this interview and putting it in context of what was happening in Doc's life at the time.
@legacyofthewest16 күн бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@silvereagle196017 күн бұрын
Mather, one of my relatives!
@DanielNelson-s9r20 күн бұрын
Millions on the line
@DanielNelson-s9r20 күн бұрын
Penny bet this place is mine Daniel nelson chips for me 007
@DanielNelson-s9r20 күн бұрын
Prime
@DanielNelson-s9r20 күн бұрын
I call the hands to be read right now optimiss
@Eadbhard23 күн бұрын
6:51 "Ponco Indian scouts skinning a buffalo, 101 Ranch, Bliss, Oklahoma." Circa 1890. That buffalo might've been one of maybe 500 left in the entire country.
@albertdeleon627224 күн бұрын
The Spanish Vaquero is the foundation of the cowboy 🤠
@ZackLongdick24 күн бұрын
I love 19th Century women! Such sweet little muffins 😊! I vow to learn all about those little lovely women! May those lovely ladies rest in peace 🌹❤️
@paulboyd56125 күн бұрын
Leave the written captions on the screen a little longer
@larry182425 күн бұрын
Historically not much
@maulporphy439925 күн бұрын
Visited Tombstone in 1990. Locals told me the actual site of the gunfight was in the street in front of the present OK Coral. I can't see it makes any difference now, but they seemed to think it important.
@BillytheKid21328 күн бұрын
Awesome little biography 🤝🏻
@BillytheKid21328 күн бұрын
If you go to the channel on youtube called "life in the 1800s" there is a video where Virgil Edwin Earp. Wyatt earps nephew the one that they talked about in these questions is on a game show talking about the wild wild west. Wyatt earp got paid 250$ a month back in those days as marshall the equivalent of over $7,000 today and Virgil Edwin got $75/month as an officer. Crazy cool channel
@stateazureАй бұрын
Amazing to see photographs from that far back, the comparison to today is crazy. I only wish the camera had been invented a few thousand years earlier.
@stopmotionkid1041Ай бұрын
3:34 how i found out how waldo was made the creater probly stuideid the wild west and found this buildings name😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😅😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😅😂😂
@mikem.2078Ай бұрын
9:28 Why does it say "nearer to Sonora than Tombstone by 75 miles"? I looked on the map and there does not seem to be any Sonora AZ nor any Sonora Mexico. Are they talking about Sonora California? That is hundreds of miles away?
@legacyofthewestАй бұрын
Sonora is one of the states in Mexico: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonora When it says "nearer to Sonora than Tombstone by 75 miles" it means Tombstone is 75 miles away from Tucson (in a south east direction). So Tombstone is 75 miles closer to Sonora than Tucson is (at least with the trails that existed at the time). The author was trying to list all of the advantages that Tombstone had over other towns, and being closer to that region of Mexico was one of them.
@vlady8meАй бұрын
M+T bank sucks
@InfinitiovniАй бұрын
Agora mostre nas mesmas datas fotografias de Chicago, salt lake city, Detroit, Omaha,N.york... muito desenvolvidas em época de carroças e cavalos.... Tartaria Empire....
@rossmansell5877Ай бұрын
Makes you realise how lucky you really are today.....life could be really hard in those days....
@donc9751Ай бұрын
Great video!!!
@ll7868Ай бұрын
My grandpa's sister Yvonne was a family historian, I used to like going to visit her when I was a kid in the 70s and 80s, she had so many photo albums and memorabilia I could spend an entire day looking through them and learning about the old days. They grew up in Northern BC in the early 1900s, Gramps was born in 1929, the youngest of 13 kids, they had a pig farm and ran a lumber mill near Dawson Creek, the land was given to them as an incentive to become Canadian citizens in the 1880s (They'd been on a quest for gold and were on their way to Alaska since not having much luck in California). Yvonne had albums full of photos during those times from California's gold rush through to 1989 when she passed. My aunt Diane does the history collection now.