Did anyone read “that dark and bloody river “? I’m sorry but I think he’s a sociopath! I guess genocide is interesting.
@jonwanrocks18 сағат бұрын
born and raised in them hills. we'd hear that panther ever fall for real. mom said she seen it once. she said she heard it again last september
@jimmybrock6593Күн бұрын
Truck drivers have told of seeing Panter at night on the bridge crossing lake Hartwell on interstate 85.😊😮
@bodayshus14375 күн бұрын
Thanks so much for doing this.
@Poki-TheBismarckDynasty5 күн бұрын
This is the kind of Americans we need today
@Wootangtw10 күн бұрын
What happened… you haven’t posted anything in a long time… you have some good content…
@AnthonyWilliams-fd5yx11 күн бұрын
I read all three books great adventures lots of Indian encounters Zane Grey's my favorite author for western folklore 🇺🇸
@benitastevens61215 күн бұрын
So loved this interview
@benitastevens61215 күн бұрын
Love the times of music and every thing you share… I don’t know what I would do if I didn’t have you and your family to listen to ! To old to take part in the music, the gardening, the food making, the canning, the drives I like to share in, the shopping I get to take with you.. love, love this family. Thank you so much and the prayers are so up lifting.
@benitastevens61215 күн бұрын
Loving this interview. Thank you for sharing this!
@benmopar423916 күн бұрын
My neck of the woods.
@bdi1100017 күн бұрын
saint paris,ohio (mad river)
@davidbunch48317 күн бұрын
I met with the goat man when I was a youngster in Attalla Alabama at Del_,Ed Speed Way. What a memory that was we gave the goats a soft drink during the visit.
@tomiepowell651318 күн бұрын
I'm 43 and would see him in or around Augusta GA ., with his goats. That would have been in the early 80s.
@jim-pauladams919421 күн бұрын
American Mythology? WTF? This isn’t a myth, it was true.
@sherryweeks595625 күн бұрын
I met him several times...in the 60s....
@jimmydeanpatterson142226 күн бұрын
Growing up in Cleveland Tennessee, I remember the Goat Man well. He could certainly draw a crowd when he came through Cleveland.
@borneyraybergantine2124Ай бұрын
A to the man!
@KENKENNIFFАй бұрын
Cantrells men had it all worked out. Nearly all.
@olphausmegaletor8835Ай бұрын
I wanted to ask a question on the video about the Bluesman that did a deal with the devil, but the comments were disabled. What is the Music track you are using in that video?.
@onithedemonslayer3142Ай бұрын
My mawmaw and pawpaw told me about the goat man coming through soddy daisy and middle valley Tennessee.
@actualsurferАй бұрын
Big Wetzel fan here from Gilmer county WV. His story is one of the most interesting of all Americans.
@CTCDetroitАй бұрын
Lewis Wetzel was an absolute terror to Native Americans and never gave up his hatred for them. There are a number of good fa tual books about Wetzel.
@robinboone4352Ай бұрын
My daddy has relatives buried there
@robinboone4352Ай бұрын
My dad grew up in Booger hole
@hollyvincent77262 ай бұрын
Lacy Ann Boggs is my 3rd great grandmother. I ❤this!
@jmessenger9192 ай бұрын
great video, you have a new subscriber. keep up the good work
@langbo99992 ай бұрын
Never f*** with your War Heroes.
@CarolynK07182 ай бұрын
Very cool to see this place again, I spent hours and hours playing in that ravine as a kid in the 90s. We often took chalk sticks with us so we could trace the letters and read it more clearly. I grew up in Morgan county and a school friend lived within hiking distance from the rock. Feels like another lifetime and a world away.
@7wayzeli13892 ай бұрын
How come nobody knows what he looks like besides the skeleton
@yaimcjsdad2 ай бұрын
So dope
@kensmith88323 ай бұрын
There is a cave in Northeast TN, that was unearthed during the 1970's. There was a spray painted note in the cave from the early 1920's.
@unkolawdio3 ай бұрын
Yes
@beverlygilbert36753 ай бұрын
Hahaha
@keithnoneya3 ай бұрын
American non-mythology in this case. Odd you can't go down and buy more than three guns in a week now. Hum wonder why the ATF made that rule, hum really wonder why?
@SHAD0WZOMBIE3 ай бұрын
Man i miss this guys videos
@SarahWRah3 ай бұрын
Lewis Wetzel was closely associated with Colonel Ebenezer Zane -- an ancestor of famous author Zane Grey. Wetzel and Eb Zane defended Fort Henry as one of the last battles of the Revolutionary War. Eb Zane left behind a detailed journal of his life, which Zane Grey used to write the "OHIO RIVER TRILOGY" containing "Betty Zane" + "Spirit of the Border" + "The Last Trail". The Trilogy follows the real life adventures of Wetzel and Zane, describing actual events and other historical people. See: kzfaq.info?search_query=Ohio+River+Trilogy+ or obtain the novel from booksellers.
@genebarnhart55273 ай бұрын
Yes I'm in Elyria good video very interesting
@REIronminer3 ай бұрын
Beautiful work
@megzdubv29504 ай бұрын
The Dark and Bloody River
@gunk70714 ай бұрын
I'm from oklahoma and my dad used to tell me about rawhead and bloody bones but as one solid entity that was completely skinless besides a pair of wings made entirely of children's skin (I think he took a lot of that from the jeepers kreepers movie me and my brother used to watch it a lot when we were kids) and that if you were in the woods alone after night he'd swoop down from the trees and skin you alive
@firechiefsampolitano15414 ай бұрын
What I find interesting is that looks like the middle of nowhere but clearly it was a well traveled area 200 years ago since wetzel isn't the only one that scratched a message into the rocks.
@tommytooreal41524 ай бұрын
18-US Codes 241&242 Against the Law to stop and harrass a Traveler. Public Law 108-447, Passed in 2004. If Agency received Federal funding are Required to know the Constitution. Does away with Qualified AMUNITY.
@0323195814 ай бұрын
I loved that book! I wanted to sleep inside a tree and make pecan pancakes
@gigginbig34 ай бұрын
Did they make a movie of this
@artielark42584 ай бұрын
Amazing work. Where can I find this incredible artist. Would like to do something like that for a project of mine.
@manleynelson94194 ай бұрын
Check out the lumby Indians l u m b i e down near White lake North Carolina Lumberton North Carolina and you'll see that the Indians from the coast were taken into the inland to cut lumber and the escape slaves ended up in that same swamp but now the Lumbee are a mixture of those two peoples even though they're fixing to be recognized as a official tribe they're really not
@manleynelson94194 ай бұрын
I could be wrong but I don't think Clark county Virginia was even created at that time it was created out of Frederick county Virginia at a later date being the smallest county in Virginia ever to this day it did not exist during the colonial. The settlers at that time would not have lived in a tree in Clark county Virginia it would have been Frederick county at that time
@pmmp8555 ай бұрын
Can anyone tell me if the stone is accessible to the public? I'd like to visit it myself. 2/27/24
@wadewetzel94934 ай бұрын
The last time I was there, the landowner was real nice about letting us go. You’ll just have to stop and ask otherwise you are trespassing.
@ryansandridge10445 ай бұрын
You know the prophet Amos in the Bible talks about the people who hid in the caves.....