Very interesting historical story and tour of the city of Charleston California. and also views, cities and restaurants, greeting from England
@miodragjrКүн бұрын
interesting to see the last use of PASGT vests before the IBA replaced them
@user-er2ys7jh7e3 күн бұрын
The last scene shows a view Castle Pinckey from the Edmonson-Alston House. Since this video was made, Castle Pinckey has been cleaned up, the growth considerably cut back, and a large Confederate flag flies from the old fort.😊😊😊
@user-er2ys7jh7e3 күн бұрын
One of the last living Rhetts became a recluse in the Aiken-Rhett House. As the story goes, this woman had sealed herself in her bedroom,and, VERY SELDOM came out. Just before the house became a museum, she died in the house. Her ghost haunts house, and,she wasn't happy about the changes being made.😮😮😮😮
@user-er2ys7jh7e3 күн бұрын
The Manigaults,also, owned the Miles Brewton House at 21 King Street.😊😊😊
@Christofuzz-hc9xl4 күн бұрын
Nobidy ever talks about other blacks enslaving their own people, selling them, and still practicing slavery today
@sandylipscomb70037 күн бұрын
Such a wonderful place to visit🥰🥰🥰
@sandylipscomb70037 күн бұрын
True🤗🤗🤗
@sandylipscomb70037 күн бұрын
Beauty 🥰
@anything.with.motors15 күн бұрын
Css Georgia didn't have a power plant so why tf are you showing a propeller being pulled up?? 😂
@allysonmckenzieneyens-ayer903618 күн бұрын
My husband is from Savannah. Luckily, he was born to the classof people that lived in these monstrosity, elegant mansions. But 2 blocks over is drugs beyond belief. There s high crime in Savannah, threatening its Beaty and historicallness.
@FC-rg1vk18 күн бұрын
Nice city. But is it not affordable now????
@delorissamuelson698819 күн бұрын
Wow!! Nice!!
@maxlautner524222 күн бұрын
A whole film on Savannah!! Wow! Can't wait to watch!! I am really interested in the city. So much culture! I even have a song called "Savannah-Hannah." I also just uploaded a stop-motion animation music video for the song, so if you're interested in Savannah, you might want to see/hear it! 🎶
@maribethgeiger44425 күн бұрын
Really very well done!! Enjoyed this immensely!!!😃
@joanpellillo298128 күн бұрын
Thank you for the tour! - Amazing can't wait to go back !
@HoneysDad2024Ай бұрын
you were in my truck when the blast went off. we took you to the market. conseqyently the market was blow up a few weeks later
@emorel48Ай бұрын
If you are so eager to exposing the “sins” of forefathers, why are you not exposing the slavery today going on through illegal immigration. This slavery includes children, women and men. Why are so called historians not paying attention to an industry that has topped the drug trade!! Shame shame.
@jackdelvo2702Ай бұрын
People forget that until the early 1800s before the gradual elimination of slavery in the North this was common in wealthy northern homes. Many of those slaves were sold to southern states before the legal end of slavery to avoid financial loss.
@clogssteenstra119Ай бұрын
Your English is shocking, given that it is the general language of communication between countries and your rank.
@cherilafleur2 ай бұрын
Paula Deen’s was the BIGGEST disappointment of food while visiting Savannah! Skip it and go elsewhere to eat!
@mariwillalwaysgivethanks2 ай бұрын
These precious souls were overworked, under appreciated and the worse of the enslavers sexually abused many of the women. They will have a crown of glory of that I'm certain! 👑
@StevenvonBriesen2 ай бұрын
Awesome, Thank you!
@mrbutch3082 ай бұрын
To think that there are some people who want to hide this history or create a revisionist history where slavery and torture weren't so bad.
@leeatterberry12392 ай бұрын
Some people don't remember they forget Abraham Lincoln suspended the United States Constitution which meant anything goes in the civil war
@marywetterlund84542 ай бұрын
Slavery was awful.
@phantasm813 ай бұрын
I was one of the first units there in 01. No chow line and definitely no px. You shit in holes or into drums of diesel next to like 3 other people.
@NguseCivilisation32473 ай бұрын
They are Afro American revolutionaries and not "Slaves". Slavery is the name of one of the many crimes that were committed against them. This is obviously not the term we should be using to describe the status of the American or any other people of colour or otherwise. It is only a sadistic RACIST prick who can not see how insensitive and completely offensive it is to classify the history and the memories of a whole race of people by a term that is highly illegal and highly offensive in today's world? My people are not the living with the names of the crimes against humanity committed by ANOTHER RACE or any other Nation. The HISTORY of those who committed the actual crimes of international people abduction and hostage taking should be LABELLED with the name of the CRIME. It should be the perpetrators of the crimes of slavery who should always reminded of their crimes at all time lest they forget and continue to repeat those many crimes against humanity. Since even know you still continue to insult the whole melanated WORLD with this word 'Slave' everytime you mention anything to do with the glorious history of Afro people of colour. White history is slave history. THE HISTORY OF SLAVERS.
@Deeper_issues3 ай бұрын
Black Diamond's for life
@tonyatoby13473 ай бұрын
White people profiting of off our pain and suffering, JUST TELL THE TRUTH, THE REAL TRUTH.
@tonyatoby13473 ай бұрын
WHITE PEOPLE AGAIN TRYING TO BE IN CONTROL OF THE/OUR NARRATIVE, AND TELL OUR STORIES!!!! ONCE AGAIN TRYING TO DOWNPLAY THE HORRORS OF CHATTEL SLAVERY SO THEY DONT LOOK WICKED!!!]
@FC-hj9ub3 ай бұрын
They were not employers!! They were slave holders
@TDBurrow3 ай бұрын
MAGA 🇺🇸 ✊🏻
@WyteXLighting3 ай бұрын
Are they gonna build it again and put it on display in georiga would be cool [><] css georiga was a beast
@teressawilliams86793 ай бұрын
It was forced to do it wasn't a job wrong word used.
@uniquesubstance23534 ай бұрын
The translator lie 😂
@uniquesubstance23534 ай бұрын
I’m from Iraq Baghdad it was really dangerous I remember that day 😢
@smoceany94784 ай бұрын
omg ca n you dunk a baskingbalL?
@YouknowmeOUdo4 ай бұрын
Love my city!
@floridagator0134 ай бұрын
USS Nebraska Commissiong crew member (Gold) checking in. As a military historian I ponder... was the closing statement that Boomer Boats (i.e., Nebraska's Trident missiles) are America's "Final Solution" the proper phraseology?
@janetprice854 ай бұрын
Bonaventure is beautiful in spring when the azaleas bloom. My grandparents are buried there. And the Colonial cemetary has many interesting and historical sites. And the old Candler hospital where I was born dates back to the 1800's and has all kinds of ghost stories associated with it. The best way to see Savannah is to take a walk through the squares. I used to walk from Taylor St. To the river with my little cousins and step grandma and we'd stop in Forsyth Park and feed peanuts to the pigeons and squirrels. If you've never been to Savannah go there. You won't be disappointed either by the restaurents
@janetprice854 ай бұрын
The relationships between owners and slaves has never been told truthfully in films or documentries. It's more complicated when dealing with daily interpersonal long term relationships. Keep in mind that slavery and slaves have been worldwide and of different ethnicities and though strange and bad in our modern eyes it was accepted as normal in past societies since ancient times. That's not an excuse just a fact. And the brutality that did exist in the larger plantations with absentee landlords especially in the industrial huge rice, cane,and cotton plantations was different from thst in small farms and plantations. There are instances where slaves were freed, given land, or even taught trades and to read and allowed to keep part of their earnings. Again it's strange to us but factual.
@karenchilders24494 ай бұрын
I have visited Bonaventure. It is amazing.
@janetprice854 ай бұрын
It was once a plantation home. And burned down during a dinner party, not uncommon in the days of candles, and later donated to Savannah. It already had family graves on it.
@chrissewell16084 ай бұрын
This is so interesting to me!
@mcallisterlucky5 ай бұрын
Great city built on the back of slaves
@barrycarter92895 ай бұрын
GREAT VIDEO
@user-kl6dv8yy8i5 ай бұрын
Thats my name charlestone hahhaah i will never forget this
@TheScreamingFrog9165 ай бұрын
I am fascinated by Ektar/Diddly Bow, single/double string instruments, made all around the world 🎶🌎🎶 There are so many ways they are made, with local, inexpensive materials, and played in different cultural contexts. I have some great store bought music instruments. but there is still nothing like, jamming on an instrument you made yourself 🔥 Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge about these things. I learned a lot today, about the history of the Cigar Box Guitar, I built for myself. Have a great day, and best wishes for your continued success/fun with music 🎸🎶🌎☮❤
@desmondmurray46505 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂 I love hearing stories of how these losers were defeated
@tomjarrett24775 ай бұрын
Cotton drove the New England industrial revolution.