Last Witness to President Abraham Lincoln Assassination I've Got A Secret

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  • Опубліковано 24 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 29 тис.

  • @jmiller4280
    @jmiller4280 5 років тому +82220

    So he lived through 4 depressions, 2 World Wars, witnessed the invention of the light bulb, the automobile, invention of aircraft, and last saw Lincoln alive. Someone needs his life story in a book.

    • @Sacredmia
      @Sacredmia 5 років тому +1975

      John MILLER I’m afraid it did not happen if so I need to read the book!

    • @starrykailani
      @starrykailani 5 років тому +2867

      That would be a cool Twitter bio

    • @SquirrelDarling1
      @SquirrelDarling1 5 років тому +1171

      John MILLER you got 66 likes with very decent, kind hearted statement, where “doctor whooey” got over 12k with a stupid statement about dead people witnessing dead people get dead. Great current state our dumbed down nation is in smh.

    • @alexdicarlo109
      @alexdicarlo109 5 років тому +1036

      Not to mention he lived through two other presidents get shot and almost saw a third.

    • @danaxe407
      @danaxe407 5 років тому +466

      And now he is rolling in has grave because we put a corrupt Orange moron in the White House

  • @DeanCole
    @DeanCole 5 років тому +4863

    That is absolutely amazing that someone who witnessed Lincoln getting shot was on a TV game show in the 1950s.

    • @moniquemosley2122
      @moniquemosley2122 5 років тому +44

      But...he didn't. He said he saw John Wilkes Booth jump from the box and break his leg and was concerned about him being hurt. The announcer said:

    • @mmlindsey8635
      @mmlindsey8635 5 років тому

      TRUE

    • @theboyscout0156
      @theboyscout0156 5 років тому +94

      Monique Mosley he saw it happen he just didn’t understand. He said he saw the shooting but he didn’t understand and his only concern was for the man who fell from the balcony

    • @xgtreaper7969
      @xgtreaper7969 5 років тому +2

      I can’t tell if you are being sarcastic or being for real

    • @sheyannebusche375
      @sheyannebusche375 5 років тому +3

      Monique Mosley he was confused he probably heard the gunshot as well plus this game show was in 1961

  • @diogodavid3557
    @diogodavid3557 5 років тому +33786

    This is so crazy. Here I am, in 2018, watching a TV show from 1956 that had as a guest someone who witnessed a 1865 event.

    • @wesrumbelow2844
      @wesrumbelow2844 5 років тому +2005

      Diogo David it’s 2019....

    • @suuzq35
      @suuzq35 5 років тому +98

      Phenomenal!

    • @alexgfan101
      @alexgfan101 5 років тому +173

      2019*

    • @tulatularosa
      @tulatularosa 5 років тому +277

      computers have created a condundrum...we may lose our privacy but the trade-off is connections like this. I, for one, am thankful for the ability to see Doppler Radar and UA-cam. I was 6 years old when this show was televised and I KNOW my mom watched it. I don't recall it at all. I look at Doppler and think this is the gift of the GODS. So is this. thank you.

    • @Power2K12
      @Power2K12 5 років тому +442

      How the fuck did you manage to get the current year wrong? 😂😂😂

  • @kiplangatbett4755
    @kiplangatbett4755 Рік тому +8357

    The fact he fell and injured his head and still chose to show up to the interview for me to watch it 77years later I have mad respect for him.

    • @MRMTF
      @MRMTF Рік тому +17

      162 ? Must be new math!

    • @AwfullWaffle
      @AwfullWaffle Рік тому +79

      @@MRMTF you missed replying to the correct comment, it was one up from here. BTW that was made a year ago so 1860 would have been 162 years prior. As of march 28th 2023 it has been 163 years since his birth.

    • @sainters7
      @sainters7 Рік тому +30

      67 years later, but I hear ya. Tough old guy

    • @RH-cv1rg
      @RH-cv1rg Рік тому +23

      @@MRMTF 2022 - 1860 = 162. Not new math to most of us. It might be new to you.

    • @BradleyCoopertest
      @BradleyCoopertest Рік тому +21

      But he was lying his ass off. They checked all the names of the people attending the theatre in 1865, and he wasn't on any list, nor was his godmother's name. There were no small children in the theatre that day. The fact that he came out with his story first at age 94 should have given everyone a clue.

  • @liambrooks3987
    @liambrooks3987 3 роки тому +37296

    The fact that this guy even saw Lincoln is incredible.

    • @thealiachekzaifoundationof3822
      @thealiachekzaifoundationof3822 3 роки тому +281

      Lincoln was a horrible person anyway, so don't buy into government propaganda

    • @icedmorning7610
      @icedmorning7610 3 роки тому +1862

      @@thealiachekzaifoundationof3822 you disgust me. Get out of the internet, you’re ideology belongs in the grave.

    • @anormalfacedguy8251
      @anormalfacedguy8251 3 роки тому +1509

      @@icedmorning7610 You should've known what he was gonna say by his pfp and username...

    • @Cruzer871
      @Cruzer871 3 роки тому +213

      @@thealiachekzaifoundationof3822 Jefferson Davis was a democrat so you are a disgrace to the confederate soldiers who lost there lives in thar war

    • @dillonculler3171
      @dillonculler3171 3 роки тому +718

      @@thealiachekzaifoundationof3822 Dude nice trolling.

  • @camo12121
    @camo12121 4 роки тому +5788

    Just think for a second, this man’s grandparents could have lived through the American revolution, that’s amazing.

    • @myapologiesmissgurl5069
      @myapologiesmissgurl5069 4 роки тому +462

      camo12121 Crazy how young US history is compared to some parts of the world. I wonder when his grandparents were born

    • @davidb7212
      @davidb7212 4 роки тому +157

      KrisMarie Atx512 I know right our country is actually very young

    • @Adam-g01
      @Adam-g01 4 роки тому +96

      yep, he may have heard stories of the American revolution from his grand parents and meanwhile been alive during the Suez crisis or the beginning of the Cold War.

    • @renerpho
      @renerpho 4 роки тому +165

      @@myapologiesmissgurl5069 James Seymour (born 1809), Susan Ann Seymour née McQuay (born 1812), Samuel Callaway (born 1770 in Maryland), Elizabeth Callaway née Thompson (born 1810).
      Only his maternal grandfather was old enough to witness the American Revolution. But he was old enough to have remembered it.

    • @myapologiesmissgurl5069
      @myapologiesmissgurl5069 4 роки тому +29

      Daniel Bamberger Wow, thank you 🙏🏼 that’s so cool!!

  • @CTS1661
    @CTS1661 5 років тому +8671

    Hearing someone say they were born in 1860 is insane

    • @insaneone4369
      @insaneone4369 5 років тому +84

      The fucking Queen was.

    • @Toast0808
      @Toast0808 5 років тому +285

      When I was a child, I KNEW people born in the 19th century. It’s not insane. You’re just young.

    • @gtPacheko
      @gtPacheko 5 років тому +40

      @@insaneone4369 No lol

    • @gtPacheko
      @gtPacheko 5 років тому +233

      @@Toast0808 Ok Mr. Boomer.

    • @dariusanderton3760
      @dariusanderton3760 5 років тому +135

      I knew a lady born in 1889. It was remarkable how far back it was. My Dad 1920-2010 knew his great grandmother who was born in 1854.

  • @VariantBank
    @VariantBank 4 місяці тому +573

    This was filmed just 63 days before he passed away. Its actually insane that the human brain, at the very end of its life, can still remember video, audio, and thoughts from 91 years prior.

    • @cutecats532
      @cutecats532 Місяць тому +28

      It's easier for the brain to remember bad things because they were important lessons to stay alive when we were cave people. We're hard wired to remember the worst parts of our lives. And thank goodness he didn't have alzheimers.

    • @emisor9272
      @emisor9272 Місяць тому +6

      I recall reading somewhere that when you recall things, you overwrite them in your brain, and surely this man would recall this event constantly throughout his life

    • @treaisland
      @treaisland 21 день тому +1

      Visual and auditory memories

    • @NoobAviation24
      @NoobAviation24 3 дні тому

      @@cutecats532 True, each brain that belongs to a Alzheimer’s patient is like a depressing Library of Alexandria

    • @Frank-mu5yz
      @Frank-mu5yz 2 дні тому

      Events in our life time..some that we can't forget...
      Not knowing your age.. I'm in my 70s.. I still remember
      .of where I was
      .what I was doing and time of day..
      Of when JFK was assassinated..
      And also the assassination of
      R.F.K-- two great Men in American History..
      GOD Rest their Souls..

  • @PirateRadioDude
    @PirateRadioDude 2 роки тому +41914

    This man was born 162 years ago. He lived through two world wars, the Great Depression, and was an eyewitness to the Lincoln assassination. He went on TV which wasnt a thing when he was in his youth to tell his story, and that story is still being seen now in 2022. Mind blowing.

    • @CopperRavenProductions
      @CopperRavenProductions 2 роки тому +1152

      Isnt, its so creepy and amazing at the sametime

    • @JamalJamal-pz4qt
      @JamalJamal-pz4qt 2 роки тому +550

      Literally mind blowing

    • @ericv7531
      @ericv7531 2 роки тому +787

      Two world wars, a civil war, a Great Depression and three presidential assassinations

    • @kevinmiller6380
      @kevinmiller6380 2 роки тому +298

      @@ericv7531 Not to mention the Battle Of Bunker Hill (1898).

    • @kevinmiller6380
      @kevinmiller6380 2 роки тому +241

      @@darcyperkins7041 And seeing the Wright Brothers flying for the first time (12-17-1903).

  • @co2677
    @co2677 5 років тому +7498

    Imagine witnessing the death of Abraham Lincoln and later going on a game show about it. It seems almost as it's time travel. That's insane.

    • @mjlucey-zm7wp
      @mjlucey-zm7wp 5 років тому +132

      "Game show?" "Yeah, they had them on T.V." "T.V.?"

    • @defiverr4697
      @defiverr4697 4 роки тому +58

      An episode of Twilight Zone, more like it.

    • @dutchmastah07
      @dutchmastah07 4 роки тому +3

      Big Bubba for shizzle

    • @minermike61
      @minermike61 4 роки тому +5

      @@defiverr4697 There were a few episodes involving Lincoln as well as the Civil War.

    • @johnroscoe2406
      @johnroscoe2406 4 роки тому +14

      well, I mean, we're all time traveling right now so...

  • @kydost6167
    @kydost6167 3 роки тому +10009

    Dude fell down the stairs and gave himself a black eye at 95 years old, and still went on this game show to tell that he was the last & only witness to Lincoln's assassination. LEGEND.

    • @jimscaggs2422
      @jimscaggs2422 3 роки тому +157

      A different generation they did not need safe spaces did not even know what trigger words were and if you insulted their honor it was down to you and him did not need some ACLU' types to take you to court.you would man up and be a man.

    • @Memory_Gatherers
      @Memory_Gatherers 3 роки тому +100

      He died not long afterwards so may have been due to the fall.

    • @dailydoseofvitaminc6565
      @dailydoseofvitaminc6565 3 роки тому +249

      @@jimscaggs2422 ah yes, it’s so great that people had to deal with trauma with no understanding on how to truly cope with it. They’re so lucky

    • @FirstnameLastname-kn5sw
      @FirstnameLastname-kn5sw 3 роки тому +87

      @@jimscaggs2422 I'm sure his generation had people equally as whiny as you.

    • @saphorr
      @saphorr 3 роки тому +74

      @@jimscaggs2422 You know the ACLU was already 46 years old at the time this clip was filmed.

  • @daehr9399
    @daehr9399 2 роки тому +1883

    Thank you, Mr. Seymour, for insisting to come onto the show. I sit here, 70 years later, watching you on TV. The information passed on from you to us today is priceless. Thank you for coming on even though you had a shiner!!!

    • @Sarah_270
      @Sarah_270 Рік тому +36

      @sea-pin thank you for your psychological insight Doctor sea pin.

    • @ltipst2962
      @ltipst2962 Рік тому +21

      ​@sea-pinSo what if we do, I mean millions have watched this video hundreds of thousands have liked it and the newspaper wrote about it and he went on TV about it. Why wouldnt you believe it? Your argument for it not being true is completely made up guessing nonsense and you try to gatekeep others in learning history and respecting this man.
      Get a grip!

    • @darlingdeb7010
      @darlingdeb7010 Рік тому +12

      ​@sea-pin there's no reason to doubt it.

    • @darlingdeb7010
      @darlingdeb7010 Рік тому +14

      @sea-pin you've literally given no reason to doubt it.

    • @IbelieveinGod483
      @IbelieveinGod483 Рік тому

      ​@@darlingdeb7010Look at his profile picture. Even with evidence, he won't believe anything that he didn't expirence himself.

  • @TheJiggs666
    @TheJiggs666 5 років тому +33384

    This man lived through the Civil War, WW1 and WW2...what a life.

    • @aleckushmerek1757
      @aleckushmerek1757 5 років тому +1289

      @D man Dman my great grandfather fought in the Spanish American War. Thing is, I'm actually kind of young, so the reason why that's possible is because my grandma was born when her father was sixty. Some of her brothers died in WW1 and WW2 before she was born in '45.

    • @triptothecosmos836
      @triptothecosmos836 5 років тому +829

      Don't forget the Korean War

    • @sirduck4454
      @sirduck4454 5 років тому +907

      He also had to go through the dust bowl and the great depression

    • @SuperMisteryMan01
      @SuperMisteryMan01 5 років тому +776

      That’s insane. He must’ve seen so much shift in culture so fast.
      Slavery was still alive,
      The Great Depression,
      The push for women’s rights,
      Nixon
      Pearl Harbor,
      So much more lol but he was def alive in points of history were so much had happened.

    • @xaniety.2691
      @xaniety.2691 5 років тому +31

      TheJiggs666 damn dude

  • @decam5329
    @decam5329 5 років тому +12323

    When a 96 year-old wants to go on TV.
    You let him.

    • @decam5329
      @decam5329 4 роки тому +188

      @Mathew Mus some of the coments in the thread are decrying the fact that an old guy was on TV.

    • @wastehazey6468
      @wastehazey6468 4 роки тому +37

      Damn straight.

    • @ActionMediaProductions
      @ActionMediaProductions 4 роки тому +6

      De Cam I would hit like but it’s on 196

    • @timbo752
      @timbo752 4 роки тому +6

      95*

    • @giggleherz9491
      @giggleherz9491 4 роки тому +5

      shit you just won the internet lol

  • @dru254msquare3
    @dru254msquare3 2 роки тому +3272

    He was around the civil war, WW1, WW2 radio broadcasting, television, and the the first telephone, the great depression, this man is history written in time. Bless his heart

    • @SStupendous
      @SStupendous 2 роки тому +37

      To be honest a mere decade beyond the Civil War (telephone) isn't that amazing, since before the war 'telephones' were being developed and researched by investors, eventually leadingto the telephone. Not half as amazing as the other things he lived through

    • @PhilMoskowitz
      @PhilMoskowitz Рік тому +54

      Plus movies, electricity, the automobile, airplanes, and birth of the computer. Missed out on the first person in space by five years.

    • @Cba409
      @Cba409 Рік тому +3

      You forgot like 57 other wars but ok

    • @susanjoyce-yq2mg
      @susanjoyce-yq2mg Рік тому +15

      This is why we need to actually speak to our elders & listen to their answers. They have much to teach us.

    • @awepossum1059
      @awepossum1059 Рік тому +9

      Honestly, living from 1850-1950 was probably the BIGGEST jump in technology that any human could witness first hand. I wish i was born then.

  • @MrLeeStories
    @MrLeeStories Рік тому +597

    I know he is no longer with us, but could you imagine being able to say you are the last person alive that witnessed Abe’s assassination? Man. History right there.

  • @astatauri
    @astatauri 3 роки тому +5466

    The $80 dollars he was given from the show is equivalent to about $766 dollars today

    • @ZaibatsuHeavyIndustries
      @ZaibatsuHeavyIndustries 3 роки тому +105

      @Cryptorum nah bro he died like 2 months after this was filmed

    • @thepencil448
      @thepencil448 3 роки тому +484

      @@ZaibatsuHeavyIndustries so that was basically a life’s supply of money

    • @yeahit9109
      @yeahit9109 3 роки тому +57

      @@thepencil448 oof

    • @Joybuzzahz
      @Joybuzzahz 3 роки тому +99

      In a few months it will be equal to 7000 dollars today.

    • @zachzgod7354
      @zachzgod7354 3 роки тому +9

      @@Joybuzzahz facts

  • @GAPSYO3O1
    @GAPSYO3O1 5 років тому +2947

    This dude fell down the stairs and still wanted to go onto the show

    • @k6151960
      @k6151960 5 років тому +14

      Good thing he didn't fall off the stage...

    • @robinlillian9471
      @robinlillian9471 5 років тому +93

      Why wouldn't he still want to go on television? It was his big chance. No one could have ever imagined television when he was 5 years old. Black and white photos were new and rare. Television would have seemed like magic. $80 was also still good money back in the 1950s.

    • @chrisgeorgallis7746
      @chrisgeorgallis7746 5 років тому +21

      They tried to silence him.

    • @captainamericaamerica8090
      @captainamericaamerica8090 5 років тому +7

      @tinylilmatt we heard he actually was badly beaten at his Hotel
      In a fight with a hooker, over the fee. The hooker beat him with her high heel shoe✨✨✨

    • @Mike_Greene
      @Mike_Greene 5 років тому

      @@chrisgeorgallis7746 forced him into it.

  • @carloswaluda8048
    @carloswaluda8048 3 роки тому +11028

    It's incredible that he passed just 2 months after this taping. It would have been a damn shame if his story never got out, and now look at us! 65 years after this airs, his story is still able to be told to us!

    • @Farrah300
      @Farrah300 3 роки тому +181

      Mr. Seymour was bound and determined to go on that show despite the accident that gave him a black eye. He has my utmost respect.

    • @LittleFatFeet68
      @LittleFatFeet68 3 роки тому +46

      His story did get told via the newspaper article before the show even knew anything about him.

    • @carloswaluda8048
      @carloswaluda8048 3 роки тому +103

      @@LittleFatFeet68 that newspaper article would now be long gone, the point of my comment is how wonderful we have UA-cam to broadcast his story 65 years later still, not losing this form of media

    • @RockstarRacc00n
      @RockstarRacc00n 3 роки тому +36

      When you are that old, you know you could go any day, so if you're smart, you don't pass up opportunities to do things like this.

    • @keithstewart9890
      @keithstewart9890 3 роки тому +27

      You know I've seen this many times people live to a certain age because of a certain reason and this man living to 96 and coming on TV was all about preserving history and once he did that and got it off his mind he was able to go meet his maker and fall asleep and pass on to the spirit world. It obviously was great importance for him to tell this bit of History and he was at peace when he passed away

  • @tommyl.dayandtherunaways820
    @tommyl.dayandtherunaways820 Рік тому +383

    There were multiple living Revolutionary War veterans in 1865, the last one, John Gray, lived until 1868. A baby born in 1956 would be about 67 years old today. This man could have met someone who was there at the founding of the nation, and a person still alive now in the present day.

    • @CaseyBerard-qv6bi
      @CaseyBerard-qv6bi 11 місяців тому +6

      Yeah sad what happened to our country we’re are the folks like this?

    • @arctic3678
      @arctic3678 8 місяців тому +5

      Fun fact! It was found out the last one was Daniel F. Bakeman, died a year after at 109 years old

    • @arctic3678
      @arctic3678 8 місяців тому +3

      But John Gray also did have a long life dying at 104

    • @justayoutuber1906
      @justayoutuber1906 8 місяців тому +2

      you just blew my mind, dude

    • @stargazer-elite
      @stargazer-elite 8 місяців тому +13

      I did the math and yeah, a revolutionary war veteran could’ve been talking to a Civil War veteran who could’ve been talking to a World War II veteran who would eventually live to see our modern day. The US is only 4 (counting the modern generation) generations old at minimum. I guess that’s why the Europeans always say the US is so young But it’s incredible how much history we’ve packed within those nearly 250 years

  • @A_Random_Rat
    @A_Random_Rat 3 роки тому +24972

    It always amazes me how young America really is. His grandparents lived in the same time as our founding fathers.

    • @SelectCircle
      @SelectCircle 3 роки тому +375

      I thought we weren't supposed to mention them. Should I flag this comment? : )

    • @jovisummerp8141
      @jovisummerp8141 3 роки тому +1159

      @@SelectCircle why shouldn’t we mention the founding fathers?

    • @SelectCircle
      @SelectCircle 3 роки тому +510

      @@jovisummerp8141 Go ask the Left. That's the point of my joke. (racist/sexist homophobes)

    • @kfcnewbornflea5333
      @kfcnewbornflea5333 3 роки тому +1638

      @@SelectCircle you are dumb af

    • @SelectCircle
      @SelectCircle 3 роки тому +185

      @@kfcnewbornflea5333 Is it that you don't like irony - or just can't recognize it? : )

  • @barbaro267
    @barbaro267 4 роки тому +4467

    **sees a picture of John Wilkes Booth**
    "Oh, yes, I know that man. He's the poor fellow who fell off the balcony and broke this leg during the play."

    • @minecaftisbad9296
      @minecaftisbad9296 4 роки тому +33

      Tom Wilkes Booth?

    • @babygrandma8654
      @babygrandma8654 4 роки тому +22

      Tom? Do you mean John or did I miss something somewhere???

    • @barbaro267
      @barbaro267 4 роки тому +72

      @@babygrandma8654 HAHA sorry I got his name wrong. My brain is dumb.

    • @babygrandma8654
      @babygrandma8654 4 роки тому +8

      @@barbaro267 Ha Ha ok thanks for replying.

    • @sirrivet9557
      @sirrivet9557 3 роки тому +13

      I’m not sure if he’s become a bit senile or just joking. I mean this was 2 months before his death

  • @ashleymufasa
    @ashleymufasa 2 роки тому +10075

    This man witnessed Lincoln's murder at 5 years old. He lived to be 96 and the memory still haunted him his entire life. That's eerie. Bless him.

    • @Aaroncarter95
      @Aaroncarter95 2 роки тому +199

      This is the type of stuff I love. Not...not the assassination. I mean history. I love hearing about how things were done before and even love the songs of yesteryear. I'm 27 and I'm listening to songs my grandmother had growing up in the 50's. Looking at old pictures, listening to old phonographs, hearing stories about how things were and life in a past year. I love history so much. I'm a nerd for it and I would listen for hours to my grandma(rest her soul) tell stories about being in Vietnam, being a nurse in hospitals, seeing the statue of liberty before it was fully green....people swear I was born in the wrong era.

    • @nemonucliosis
      @nemonucliosis 2 роки тому +44

      He didn't witness the actual shooting, just the aftermath .

    • @FlintTruth
      @FlintTruth 2 роки тому

      Lol it's a FREEMASONIC hoax.. Wake up. Quit being like the lost sheep believing everything you see on television and on the news. It's propaganda

    • @FlintTruth
      @FlintTruth 2 роки тому

      @@Aaroncarter95 you're a fool

    • @jordyjohn2275
      @jordyjohn2275 2 роки тому +69

      And it all ended up being entertainment fodder for a game show

  • @tammyt3434
    @tammyt3434 2 роки тому +79

    "It's been a great joy and you might say, and honor..." Absolutely. I'm glad he insisted on going on the show, made this clip a historical treasure, on top of introducing us to a funny yet brave man.

  • @GeneralCane
    @GeneralCane 5 років тому +21537

    It's crazy to me that in 2019 I can see a man who witnessed a presidential assassination that occurred 155 years ago. It's mind-blowing.

    • @regularfather4708
      @regularfather4708 5 років тому +1241

      What's more, is that he probably heard first hand accounts from war of 1812 veterans as a boy.

    • @brucefreadrich1188
      @brucefreadrich1188 5 років тому +220

      If you have a couple of minutes -- 1911 - A Trip Through New York City (speed corrected w/ added sound) ua-cam.com/video/aohXOpKtns0/v-deo.html -- is an interesting little ride on a time machine. I really appreciate the film editor who made it so watchable (less herky-jerky) compared to some other old films I have seen.

    • @MRBOOOYA
      @MRBOOOYA 5 років тому +61

      And winston 🚬 lol

    • @mumuseer87
      @mumuseer87 5 років тому +131

      GeneralCane yet you all tell descendants of slaves to get over that atrocity in 2019-2020.

    • @MRBOOOYA
      @MRBOOOYA 5 років тому +148

      @@mumuseer87 It's the past though, we can't change it...We can only make a better tomorrow, but are you really going to sit here and critique the descendants that know nothing of what their ancestors did, cause i'm pretty sure their is someone out their who doesn't know about the hole slavery thing

  • @shubhamsahai2492
    @shubhamsahai2492 4 роки тому +4079

    And 2 months 4 days later he passed away. I guess it was destined that he share what he saw with the rest of us...may Mr. Seymour Rest in peace!

    • @darian2975
      @darian2975 3 роки тому +45

      Damn! Thank you Mr Seymour for this wonderful gift

    • @goldfamy
      @goldfamy 3 роки тому +9

      @R At the end they show a newspaper supporting his claims

    • @nathanthanatos3743
      @nathanthanatos3743 3 роки тому

      @R it's plausible enough to go either way

    • @footballdays5548
      @footballdays5548 3 роки тому +9

      He died on April 12 and Lincoln was shot on April 14 could have been a weird coincidence if he lived for 2 more days

    • @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat
      @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat 3 роки тому +6

      I don't think destiny's got anything to do with a 96 year old dying, no matter how it's timed lol.

  • @nathanhatfield8790
    @nathanhatfield8790 5 років тому +2877

    Can’t imagine the change he saw in his lifetime. From horse and carts to automobiles and planes.

    • @vincentsartain3061
      @vincentsartain3061 5 років тому +121

      Heck, I was born in 1960 and *I've* witnessed all kinds of changes in technology, social trends, etc. We have a younger crowd today who has never used a landline / rotary phone, never had to get up from the couch to change the dial in the TV, heck, never even had a whiff of what the world was like before computer technology and the internet age! The times, they are a-changin' as Bob Dylan sang, and they KEEP changing at an ever-accelerating rate! 😱

    • @brianwilliams5662
      @brianwilliams5662 5 років тому +34

      EVERYONE who lives a long life witness that much change lol

    • @tannerhall3856
      @tannerhall3856 5 років тому +3

      vincent sartain you don’t talk your age💀

    • @vincentsartain3061
      @vincentsartain3061 5 років тому +9

      @@tannerhall3856 How do you mean? :-)

    • @vincentsartain3061
      @vincentsartain3061 5 років тому +13

      @William Wykoff You mean like I'm between 18 and 34 or something? NAH. If you listen to me long enough you'll soon have me pegged for an old fart of 58.😁

  • @CornyVR.
    @CornyVR. Рік тому +484

    Lived through
    Part of the Civil War
    The Spanish Flu
    WW1
    The great stock crash
    The Great Depression
    WW2
    Hitler’s suicide
    The Cold War
    The Korean War
    Three presidential assassinations
    And chose to still do the show after getting a bump on his head.
    What a fucking guy.

    • @Goofi3177
      @Goofi3177 11 місяців тому

      I think it’s 4 assassinations, isn’t it? There was Lincoln of course, then James Garfield a few years later, then william Mckinley and JFK

    • @OneSmileAtATime.
      @OneSmileAtATime. 11 місяців тому +5

      No kidding!!! Wow! Incredible….

    • @ItalianCountryball11
      @ItalianCountryball11 11 місяців тому +6

      HOLY SHI-

    • @silvervoid8906
      @silvervoid8906 11 місяців тому +8

      And the spanish American war

    • @ASocialistTransGirl
      @ASocialistTransGirl 8 місяців тому +3

      is he still alive?

  • @Chris-lh7wj
    @Chris-lh7wj 3 роки тому +8595

    This man would have seen the world transform drastically during his lifetime. Born in candlelight when horses roamed the trails, he witnessed the birth of automobiles, airplanes, early space craft, skyscrapers, electricity, radio, motion picture, television, and telephones. He was around when Napoleon III ruled France’s last monarchy, as well witnessed American civil war, reconstruction, the Great Depression, and two world wars.

    • @averongodoffire8098
      @averongodoffire8098 3 роки тому +333

      .... sounds like a long disaster to be witnessed and lived through and I fucking love it😂🤣🤣

    • @liammurphy2725
      @liammurphy2725 3 роки тому +320

      We all can say that about any reasonably long life. I was a year old when this was broadcast. KKK were still lynching folk. The British Empire still thought it was an Empire. There was nothing much to speak of in space and personal computers weren't even on science fictions radar. The Cold war was still a thing and America was still living in it's post war boom. We had, and still have South American Death squads backed by the CIA. The world was collectively shitting itself at the thought of a nuclear holocaust, and then the Cuban Missile thing came along and some folks really did shit themselves. Many folks who really should have known better still thought that Communism/Marxism was going to save humanity from the Capitalist running dogs. Then we read the Gulag archipelago and found out (eventually) the true cost of Chairman Mao's Great Leap forward. We saw the advent of mobile/cell phones and information gathering on a scale that would have had J. Edgar Hoover creaming his favourite dress in delight. We are seeing the subtle and not so subtle ploys of the Chinese and the Russians to foment dissent and destabilise the western hegemony. We see the rise of Neo Marxists latching onto every conceivable cause in order to gain a political ascendancy. We are reaping the benefits of decades of wilful denial regarding our impact on the planet. The seas are full of that wonderful substance that was so going to improve the quality of everyone's life. The air is full of the shit from all those day trips to the coast. The internet is full of trolls and scammers and people you definitely would not want to take home for dinner.
      So yes, he saw some changes. Well... so have we all.

    • @jawjagrrl
      @jawjagrrl 3 роки тому +145

      My husband's father rode a horse from his farm to a 1 room schoolhouse as a kid. Was the first group to take this new test called the SAT. When he got a perfect score GA Tech and MIT called the farm. He went to MIT.

    • @o.c.g.m9426
      @o.c.g.m9426 3 роки тому +86

      I was born back in the day when movies were worth seeing. 12 eggs was $.86 cent milk was $1.35 a gallon AND THAT WAS ONLY 1983 🤣🤣.

    • @bennylevine387
      @bennylevine387 3 роки тому +60

      That's funny. I've pondered this before, what people saw the world change the most in their lifetimes. And while an argument can be made for current super-old people who may have experienced the Depression, I think the nod goes to guys like this in that 1860-1950 range.

  • @jumboJetPilot
    @jumboJetPilot 4 роки тому +1810

    And he died only a couple months later. I’m so glad he had the opportunity to tell his story, recorded for the world to remember him by.

    • @jamesyancey4854
      @jamesyancey4854 4 роки тому +36

      I wonder if the fall he encountered in the hotel while waiting to film the show had any bearing on his death

    • @jumboJetPilot
      @jumboJetPilot 4 роки тому +24

      James Yancey so hard to say. May God bless him and his generation. They worked hard, didn’t ask for anything, and wanted nothing more than to set successive generations up for success.

    • @disgruntledunicorn007
      @disgruntledunicorn007 4 роки тому +6

      @@jamesyancey4854 I was just wondering that. Blood clot may have formed. A time bomb for the poor fellow.

    • @modders12
      @modders12 4 роки тому +3

      Cause of that shiner 😉

    • @davidnave2919
      @davidnave2919 4 роки тому +1

      The last soldier of The War Between the States died in 1959 .Confederate. Age 117

  • @sirmolio
    @sirmolio 5 років тому +8091

    Died 64 days after this broadcast. Glad he had his 15 minutes of fame before passing.

    • @Renvere
      @Renvere 5 років тому +607

      sirmolio probably because of the fall he took. The size of that lump on his head would be detrimental to someone that advanced in age.

    • @gemgem24able
      @gemgem24able 5 років тому +17

      @@Renvere what fall?

    • @Renvere
      @Renvere 5 років тому +425

      gemmy2492 The man on the show said he fell down the stairs before the show was aired. That’s why he has a massive knot on his forehead.

    • @gemgem24able
      @gemgem24able 5 років тому +101

      @@Renvere oh wow... thats sad

    • @PirateoftheTouYube
      @PirateoftheTouYube 5 років тому +185

      Hope he decided to blow through that $80 he won in those last couple months!

  • @denislacombe4103
    @denislacombe4103 Місяць тому +6

    I'm 70 years old, i was born in Paris in 1954, your video is outstanding , seeing a Man.who saw Booth jumping from the balcony! Wow! I 'm.speechless! God bless you all! And of course the Soul of Mister Seymoure! Thank once again for your very stunning video! It's worthy! Denis frim France...

  • @CooperDooper38
    @CooperDooper38 2 роки тому +6964

    "Was it a pleasant thing?"
    "Not very pleasant, I don't think."
    That's certainly one way to describe witnessing an assassination! This man was a hoot.

    • @khaoticpenguin3945
      @khaoticpenguin3945 2 роки тому +82

      People don't have that kind of comic wit nowadays. I wish they did.

    • @iceleftinpop5353
      @iceleftinpop5353 2 роки тому +42

      @@khaoticpenguin3945 what? Lol

    • @BigbodyTonkaa
      @BigbodyTonkaa 2 роки тому +46

      He was 96 and was 5 when he saw it 91 years isnt the best age to remember things that happened almost a century ago and

    • @dannyackland3983
      @dannyackland3983 2 роки тому +59

      @@BigbodyTonkaa bruv just be apriciative of someone who lived to tell the tale memory clear or not he lived and witnessed that and two world wars forget about the man's memetoy and have some respect clown

    • @georgerandall5686
      @georgerandall5686 2 роки тому

      very pleasant! got what he deserved.

  • @trentwise3762
    @trentwise3762 2 роки тому +8581

    The fact that there were people around during Lincoln’s presidency that were also alive when tvs were a thing is incredible.

    • @MetaITurtle
      @MetaITurtle 2 роки тому +99

      They probably had TVs long before it was given to the public. That's usually how it goes. Like cell phones where mostly for military

    • @UraniumBullets
      @UraniumBullets 2 роки тому +194

      ​@@MetaITurtle They? As in people who worked with Lincoln? Do you honestly believe there were TV's during the civil war era?

    • @MetaITurtle
      @MetaITurtle 2 роки тому +16

      @@UraniumBullets No

    • @cow4741
      @cow4741 2 роки тому +114

      This guy grew up with horses and steam, that is mental, just woke up so idk if this is accurate, but he was born in the 1840s, saw the civil war, Lincoln obviously, disease famine, the height of the wild west and the taming of it, women's rights movements, seeing slavery go from highly lucrative business to highly illegal, the prohibition, the banning and unbanning of so many things, watching horses, to cars and horses, to cars. From the world of steam to watching nikola tesla pioneer electricity in the news, doubting it and then watching its rise 50 years later, seeing the empire states being built, the hindenberg, the titanic, hearing political unrest turn into years of conflict twice, the invention of moving films to TV the skyrocket of the technology curve, from revolvers and experimental pistols to fully automatic, the invention of rocket ships, men going to space and the looming threat of being blown to bits by the atomic bomb, could you imagine just telling this guy anything from the future when he was in his 20s.

    • @ashenone3883
      @ashenone3883 2 роки тому +12

      @@UraniumBullets He meant in the 1900s era. Now I think he is wrong but I dont blame him for that idea simply because the government had Drones for warfare reasons in 1980. They hide alot.

  • @garrywood5345
    @garrywood5345 4 роки тому +3927

    Just imagine if he would have lived another couple of years he could have witnessed Kennedy's Assassination in 1963..almost 100 year's later!!!

    • @toddaustin449
      @toddaustin449 4 роки тому +221

      He would've lived for 2 assassinations of US Presidents

    • @devrim4928
      @devrim4928 4 роки тому +453

      He's lived through three presidential assassinations. Lincoln (1865), Garfield (1881) and McKinley (1901)

    • @Mozartini
      @Mozartini 4 роки тому +138

      @@devrim4928 and the 4th would have been Kennedy if he had lived a little bit more

    • @ThatGuyCanmanNC
      @ThatGuyCanmanNC 4 роки тому +11

      11.22.63

    • @paultrusten6205
      @paultrusten6205 4 роки тому +70

      Garry Wood Garry, how terribly sad THAT would have made him feel! He would have questioned the entire purpose of his long life. In fact, the JFK assassination might have ended up being his endgame. He would have been 103 years old. But yes, he would have had a most extraordinary autobiography to tell, as the only living American to know the eras of all four assassinated Presidents..

  • @ashley3k
    @ashley3k Рік тому +76

    RIP Mr. Samuel Seymour!!! So glad he was adamant about appearing to share his experience. Amazing I was able to hear this with my own two ears!! 😊

    • @Thebois753
      @Thebois753 11 місяців тому

      @@sea-pinYou are against religion; ur retarded and what you say, and think does not matter to me nor anyone on earth.

    • @ASocialistTransGirl
      @ASocialistTransGirl 8 місяців тому

      @@sea-pinevidence?

    • @ASocialistTransGirl
      @ASocialistTransGirl 8 місяців тому

      @@sea-pin no, im asking for YOUR evidence. sorry, i shouldve phrased better

    • @ASocialistTransGirl
      @ASocialistTransGirl 8 місяців тому

      @@sea-pin All he said he remembers is seeing him fall

    • @ASocialistTransGirl
      @ASocialistTransGirl 8 місяців тому

      @@sea-pin same, so I think it’s reasable to judge it as “more likely than not” unless evidence supporting it being false surfaces

  • @codingsource7309
    @codingsource7309 4 роки тому +2606

    "It's been an honor to meet the ONLY living witness..."
    Imagine the feeling that everyone in this video died already, and the fact that this is 64 years ago. The people at that stage were lucky to meet him. Damn. I say that it is an HONOR for us to witness this clip wherein they express how good it was to meet the man who witnessed something memorable in 1865. WOW. JUST WOW.

    • @LavergneBalls9
      @LavergneBalls9 4 роки тому +41

      They could still be alive.

    • @celion5798
      @celion5798 4 роки тому +121

      my grandmother was in that crowd and she’s still alive.

    • @ispartacus1337
      @ispartacus1337 4 роки тому +33

      That just shows how not so long ago the civil war was.. 2 people living back to back. That's all. Slavery ended. Think about that.

    • @rickyparrilla2426
      @rickyparrilla2426 4 роки тому +27

      It is amazing. I was glad I saw this video. So many people today don't honor our seniors. They forget about them as they are worthless. Forgetting that one day they will be a senior themselves. Love & respect our seniors they are full of knowledge.

    • @hypn0298
      @hypn0298 4 роки тому +29

      People just don’t realize how recent 1865 really was in our history. The Roman Empire peaked nearly 2000 years ago. Vikings declined nearly 1000 years ago. Meanwhile the civil war only happened 155-160 years ago. There are still some people alive today born in the 1900s but mostly 1910s who knew people that lived through the civil war.

  • @MrSatanSandwich
    @MrSatanSandwich 4 роки тому +3660

    3:25 “Was he ever president, this man?”
    “Oh, i think he was...once.”

    • @G_xx_
      @G_xx_ 4 роки тому +275

      Such a kind and witty old man

    • @geralds1500
      @geralds1500 3 роки тому +7

      @@Ronnie-Jones What

    • @brandonweatherford2843
      @brandonweatherford2843 3 роки тому +9

      @@Ronnie-Jones thank you for sharing !! I have been trying to gain much of the knowledge that you have introduced 😉I appreciate your helpful contribution my friend!!!! Peace, love,and happiness to you and yours.

    • @joeschmoe9657
      @joeschmoe9657 3 роки тому +15

      I don’t think it was pleasant

    • @nathanthanatos3743
      @nathanthanatos3743 3 роки тому +3

      Technically twice

  • @andresgarabito1856
    @andresgarabito1856 4 роки тому +3161

    Is anyone gonna talk about the fact that this 96 year old man fell down a flight of stairs and is valid afterwards.

    • @CodeineAbdulJabbar
      @CodeineAbdulJabbar 4 роки тому +538

      @Zetegu Anderson. THE ZODIAK SHOW what the fuck are you talking about LMAO

    • @GoatzombieBubba
      @GoatzombieBubba 4 роки тому +348

      @Zetegu Anderson. THE ZODIAK SHOW You need to lay off the drugs...

    • @morpheus7422
      @morpheus7422 4 роки тому +2

      Zetegu Anderson. THE ZODIAK SHOW Nice job

    • @timbo752
      @timbo752 4 роки тому +4

      He was 95 not 96

    • @MikeM275
      @MikeM275 4 роки тому +24

      LOL...you are a hoot. Dumb as a rock...but a hoot! lololol

  • @king_fresh27
    @king_fresh27 Рік тому +71

    it's amazing to me that this man was born 162 years ago, he appeared on a game show, and it blows my mind to think there were still revolutionary war veterans alive when he was a boy..

    • @pollypurree1834
      @pollypurree1834 Рік тому +6

      There were revolutionary war veterans alive when my great grandmother was born in 1864. She died in 1980 at 116.

    • @Post_Stall_Maneuver
      @Post_Stall_Maneuver Рік тому +2

      ​@@pollypurree1834 Your grrat-grandmother lived through the end of the Civil War in her toddler years, saw Reconstruction in her childhood and early adulthood, the First World War in her 50s, the Second World War in her 70s, most of the Cold War in her 80s and 90s, Vietnam in her 100s, and passed away just after the rise of color television and just nine years before the fall of the Berlin Wall. Truly a life to have lived!

  • @kevincady5613
    @kevincady5613 4 роки тому +4232

    Here I am in 2020, witnessing a show filmed in 1950s with a Gentleman who was alive in 1850....it’s like time is threading us all together.

    • @heathernewman5272
      @heathernewman5272 4 роки тому +111

      Yes. My grandmother's grandfather was in the Civil War. It hit me one day that I knew someone who knew someone that fought in the Civil War!

    • @windex1707
      @windex1707 4 роки тому +5

      @@heathernewman5272 geez!

    • @victorialesch951
      @victorialesch951 4 роки тому +95

      Kevin, Mr. Seymour was not alive in 1850, because as they stated, repeatedly, that he was 5 years old in 1865, when Lincoln was assassinated. You have added 10 years to his age by mistake. Tho, definitely, time is threading us all together.

    • @thewizardoz3917
      @thewizardoz3917 4 роки тому +50

      He was born in 1860.

    • @emilemc
      @emilemc 4 роки тому +19

      UA-cam gives us a view of the world like never seen before. It is great to be alive at this time and look back at the threads that have weaved this thing we call history.

  • @brickbybrick251lego8
    @brickbybrick251lego8 3 роки тому +5651

    I feel privileged to have heard this man’s voice and to have seen him. This is an experience that will be carried across the generations, and it’s incredible to have witnessed a recording of his recounting.

    • @finalfantasy3808
      @finalfantasy3808 2 роки тому

      John Wilkes Booth was hired by JESUITS TO KILL LINCOLN. It started with Former Roman Catholic Priest Charles Chiniquy. The jesuits tried to get him hanged for exposing them in his book "50 years in the Church of Rome". The Jesuits conspired to bring a false accusation against him, but Abraham Lincoln defended Chiniquy as his lawyer. It was Abraham Lincoln's most high profile case. After a lady named Mrs. Philomene Moffat gave her oath of how she overheard the Jesuit telling his sister to accuse him of inappropriate behavior with her, telling her to do this and he will just forgive her of her sins, she went to the trial to give her testimony. That's what saved Charles Chiniquy.
      When Lincoln became president he felt it was God's will to free the slaves. He was later murdered by Booth because of the jesuits. Booth said:
      "I can never repent. God simply made me the instrument of his (Lincoln's) punishment...Booth pressing the medal of the virgin Mary to his breast, when falling mortally wounded "-Trial of Surratt, Volume 1, page 310
      From Chiniquy's testimony:
      "My dear President, I must repeat to you here what I said when at Urbana in 1856. My fear is that you will fall under the blows of a Jesuit assassin if you do not pay more attention than you have done, till now, to protect yourself. Remember that because Coligny was an heretic, as you are, he was brutally murdered in the St.
      Bartholomew night; that Henry IV. was stabbed by the Jesuit assassin, Revaillac, the 14th of May, 1610, for having given liberty of conscience to his people; and that William the Taciturn was shot dead by another Jesuit murderer, called Girard, for having broken the yoke of the Pope. The Church of Rome is absolutely the same today as she was then; she does believe and teach today, as then, that she has the right and that it is her duty to punish by death any heretic who is in her way as an obstacle to her designs. The unanimity with which the Catholic hierarchy of the United States is on the side of the rebels is an incontrovertible evidence that Rome wants to destroy this republic, and as you are, by your personal virtues, your popularity, your love for liberty,
      your position, the greatest obstacle to the diabolical schemes, their hatred is concentrated upon you; you are the daily object of their maledictions; it is at your breast they will direct their blows. My blood chills in my veins when I contemplate the day which may come, sooner or later, when Rome will add to all her other iniquities the murder of Abraham Lincoln."
      When saying these things to the President, I was exceedingly moved, my voice was as choked, and I could hardly retain my tears. But the President was perfectly calm. When I had finished speaking, he took the volume of Busembaum from my hand, read the lines which I had marked with red ink, and I helped him to translate them into English. He then gave me back the book, and said:
      "I will repeat to you what I said at Urbana, when for the first time you told me your fears lest I would be
      assassinated by the Jesuits: 'Man must not care where and when he will die, provided he dies at the post of honour and duty.' But I may add, today, that I have a presentiment that God will call me to Him through the hand of an assassin. Let His will, and, not mine be done!"-"50 Years in the Church of Rome",1885, page 350

    • @weirdchamp4601
      @weirdchamp4601 2 роки тому +24

      @@finalfantasy3808 no one cares bro + ratio

    • @finalfantasy3808
      @finalfantasy3808 2 роки тому

      @@weirdchamp4601, I didn't ask for your opinion, but yes, ignorant fools such as yourself may not care. However, intelligent truth seeking individuals would care why Booth killed a great Christian U.S. President like Lincoln.
      "A fool takes no pleasure in understanding, but only in expressing his opinion."-Proverbs 18:12

    • @docadams7099
      @docadams7099 2 роки тому +26

      I feel privileged, too. This gentleman was amazing.

    • @pepe_de_phroog2.033
      @pepe_de_phroog2.033 2 роки тому +9

      @@weirdchamp4601 L lil bro +counter +fatherless

  • @jreal79
    @jreal79 5 років тому +2950

    This is the internet working as it should. Providing information and insight that we normally would not have without this outlet.

  • @Utonian21
    @Utonian21 Рік тому +32

    The last excerpt from the article gave me chills. The trauma from that night haunted him to the very end...

  • @jamesleeolsen
    @jamesleeolsen 5 років тому +10928

    Imagine witnessing one of the most significant events in recent history and going on a game show and winning 80$ bucks for it.

    • @littlerascal1427
      @littlerascal1427 5 років тому +1172

      That's a lot of money back then

    • @kevinsmith6oh6
      @kevinsmith6oh6 5 років тому +1840

      It would of been $754.62 in today's money.

    • @swkohn1279
      @swkohn1279 5 років тому +55

      @William Wykoff same

    • @recubican6453
      @recubican6453 5 років тому +455

      80 dollars back then isnt 80 dollars today. Its much more

    • @smbcollector
      @smbcollector 5 років тому +14

      lol

  • @mattslay9407
    @mattslay9407 5 років тому +3277

    Despite all of the stupid stuff on the internet, sometimes you stumble upon things like this...

    • @frogskinshoelace
      @frogskinshoelace 4 роки тому +3

      You're visiting the wrong parts of the internet.

    • @wizz6648
      @wizz6648 4 роки тому +16

      That's why we need to honor our seniors in this country as institutions because they are the last line of defense against fake news...this was truly amazing

    • @killmefam8321
      @killmefam8321 4 роки тому +1

      I have a severe porn addiction

    • @jamesware5100
      @jamesware5100 4 роки тому +2

      @@killmefam8321 Well look at it this way..you cant catch an STD or get caught cheating.

    • @ronibajralia7008
      @ronibajralia7008 4 роки тому

      I agree! This is gold!

  • @RCAvhstape
    @RCAvhstape 4 роки тому +2631

    He saw the end of the American Civil War, witnessed Lincoln being shot, and lived long enough to see television, early computers, jet planes, and hydrogen bombs. Amazing.

    • @johnnotgalt2697
      @johnnotgalt2697 4 роки тому +131

      And has he lived one more year, he would have seen the dawn of the Space Age with the Sputnik launch !

    • @KRAFTWERK2K6
      @KRAFTWERK2K6 4 роки тому +175

      He also knew how the ORIGINAL coca cola tasted like when it actually still had cocaine in it. That lucky bastard :(

    • @WALTERBROADDUS
      @WALTERBROADDUS 4 роки тому +20

      @@KRAFTWERK2K6 that is a good one .. 🤗

    • @danielmarkulic9399
      @danielmarkulic9399 4 роки тому +40

      Civil war, 2 world wars, 1919 spanish flu, titanic, great depression, pre-penicillin ... tough life

    • @WgWilliams
      @WgWilliams 4 роки тому +15

      Just to demonstrate how these 96 years this man lived was a timeframe with a giant leap in technology:
      One of the first riders of the Pony Express that stared in 1860 could have met Buzz Aldrin that was to become a man that walked on the moon in 1969. From horseback as the fastest way to get from point A to point B to a rocket to the moon!
      Buzz Aldrin was 39 in 1969 and born in 1930. If the first rider of the Pony Express was 20 years old at that time in 1860, he could have met a 5 year old Buzz Aldrin in 1935 while he himself was 95 years old. One year less older than this man!

  • @john.highheels.3244
    @john.highheels.3244 Рік тому +32

    This has got to be THE most remarkable video I've ever seen on UA-cam! Truly amazing Mr. Seymour! When you look at all the crap that is normally shown on UA-cam this is exceptional and will definitely be remembered. Thanks Mr. Seymour.

    • @edithbannerman4
      @edithbannerman4 Рік тому

      @Hello there, how are you doing this blessed day?

    • @john.highheels.3244
      @john.highheels.3244 Рік тому

      ​@@edithbannerman4Hi Edith I don't know what country you're in but I'm here in the UK. Certainly a surprise to get your comment! It's been absolutely ages since I first watched this video about the old man witnessing Lincoln's assassination. Truly amazing! 👍🇬🇧

    • @edithbannerman4
      @edithbannerman4 Рік тому

      @@john.highheels.3244 I’m now living in the USA and it’s nice to watch this video again. Hope to hear from you soon

  • @matthewattaway2675
    @matthewattaway2675 3 роки тому +11715

    But... dude. Ok. This guy fell down stairs and was so determined to get onto this show to be broadcast to the world, he fought through it. So it went out on TV in February of 1956 and he died two months later.
    ...And now I'm watching it on UA-cam in 2021. All because Sam Seymour wasn't gonna let some stupid staircase get in his way. Respect.

  • @ThomasG_
    @ThomasG_ 5 років тому +2269

    "Was it a pleasant thing you saw?"
    "Not very pleasant, I don't think..."

    • @leonidas1749
      @leonidas1749 5 років тому +145

      "I mean, I was scared to death..."

    • @theflash6755
      @theflash6755 5 років тому +2

      Conflux 😂 haha

    • @mrbayd3069
      @mrbayd3069 5 років тому +51

      Conflux you really are unpleasant

    • @hammydammy123
      @hammydammy123 5 років тому

      BigToke get the fuck out of here 😒

    • @jasminelav.332
      @jasminelav.332 5 років тому +9

      After Lincoln was shot (which everyone saw), the theater immediately fell into a riot. So no, not a great night for anyone.

  • @DaReeldeal13
    @DaReeldeal13 4 роки тому +1488

    When Seymour was born, Lemuel Cook, the last surviving official veteran of the Revolutionary War, was still alive. He died when Seymour was 6 years old.

  • @mihailos8701
    @mihailos8701 6 місяців тому +6

    I've seen this video in the past, I came back to say thanks for uploading this, and for scanned paper, and I appreciate this. And, I wanted also to say that I'm grateful that Mr Seymour agreed to appear in this show

  • @grandexandi
    @grandexandi 4 роки тому +6095

    an eyewitness called "see more"

  • @mulletsrule3388
    @mulletsrule3388 4 роки тому +5955

    This man saw the civil war, Two world wars, the spanish flu, the invention of the car, the radio, the television, and the phone. What a wild life

    • @cardboardheadguy7814
      @cardboardheadguy7814 4 роки тому +171

      Don’t forget about Elvis

    • @harmanjotsingh4230
      @harmanjotsingh4230 4 роки тому +341

      He went from horse carraiges and morse code to television, and automobiles and atom bombs
      Lived through emancipation of slaves, women's suffrage rights, and bunch of social change

    • @Fuzzybeanerizer
      @Fuzzybeanerizer 4 роки тому +89

      Wow, from muzzleloading muskets to machine guns and atom bombs and ICBM's. The birth and death of Adolf Hitler. X-rays, radio, TV, jet aircraft, penicillin...

    • @rbeforme
      @rbeforme 4 роки тому +10

      Didn't see the Civil War, but ok

    • @harmanjotsingh4230
      @harmanjotsingh4230 4 роки тому +70

      @@rbeforme yes he did
      If he was alive and five year old during Lincolns assasination, he was born a year before the war started

  • @ktonder1
    @ktonder1 4 роки тому +3343

    The fact that the game show host is smoking a cigarette (1:40) while the show is live is the most 1950s thing ever.

    • @kennethwayne6857
      @kennethwayne6857 4 роки тому +21

      @TrashPanda Raccoon Ah, those days! The quaintness of it all.

    • @spellchanger1169
      @spellchanger1169 4 роки тому +98

      You'll see that up into the 1970s too. I think 1980s people were starting to become aware of dangers of smoking.

    • @oldtwinsna8347
      @oldtwinsna8347 3 роки тому +52

      The shows back then had corporate sponsors and often they were cigarette companies because they had a ton of cash and saw the tv format fitting to portray how cool one looks smoking their product.

    • @dwilliams2794
      @dwilliams2794 3 роки тому +68

      The name "Winston" was plastered all over the the desk so yeah, it was sponsored by a cigarette manufacturer.

    • @violetgolden3380
      @violetgolden3380 3 роки тому +6

      Back in the early 80's you could sit and smoke in the mall !!

  • @debbiew.7716
    @debbiew.7716 Рік тому +15

    It is so important to have first hand accounts as Mr. Seymour demonstrates. In our society today so many are willing to manipulate facts. Thank you for your life and willingness to share what you witness that tragic night.

  • @effix9097
    @effix9097 3 роки тому +1913

    He died just 2 days before the 90th anniversary of Lincoln's shooting. He died 64 days after this interview. It interests me that there are many people that are interviewed short times before their deaths, even if they weren't very famous. The fact that he died so close to the anniversary of the event is even more shocking.

    • @n0body550
      @n0body550 3 роки тому +48

      My birthday is on the same day as my birth. Coincidence? I think NOT!

    • @simlevesque
      @simlevesque 3 роки тому +11

      When you've told your story and some of it will outlast you, it means you'll live forever.

    • @minamiharashima1253
      @minamiharashima1253 3 роки тому +3

      It's 1956, so it was the 91st.

    • @nathanthanatos3743
      @nathanthanatos3743 3 роки тому +8

      There's a 1 in 100 chance that he died within 4 days of it. Not too small.

    • @erichramone7812
      @erichramone7812 3 роки тому +4

      it's because he hit his head that day before the show

  • @himynameisdan9259
    @himynameisdan9259 3 роки тому +1908

    This is mind blowing. A video posted in UA-cam in 2016 of an interview from 1956 where the host speaks to a man who saw the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln in 1865. The man was born in 1860. His life overlapped with the lives of revolutionary war veterans. There is so much history here.

    • @hmbackup6577
      @hmbackup6577 2 роки тому +103

      Mind blowing definitely isn’t the term you should use to describe it

    • @gabesmith201
      @gabesmith201 2 роки тому +11

      @@hmbackup6577 lmfao

    • @alainportant6412
      @alainportant6412 2 роки тому +39

      It will be the year 2053 when a 95 years old dude born in 1958 will be the last witness to the 1963 Kennedy assassination, which he saw at age 5.

    • @idiotwind2248
      @idiotwind2248 2 роки тому +10

      @@alainportant6412
      Was born in 55. If I were a bible believing kind of guy, I'd tell ya there would be a better chance of me talking to JFK , then talking about him to a great great grandkid

    • @carnageassassin2617
      @carnageassassin2617 2 роки тому

      @@alainportant6412 I think that'll have more living witnesses since people live longer and a lot of people saw it also unlike Lincoln's assassination we can JFK assassination on youtube

  • @liveinms9949
    @liveinms9949 5 років тому +1773

    Imagine from the civil war to television in a lifetime and Im cringing watching the host smoke

    • @EvanK2EJT
      @EvanK2EJT 4 роки тому +31

      I literally just had that conversation with my wife. Mind blowing

    • @bigsmilereviews100
      @bigsmilereviews100 4 роки тому +71

      Really puts into perspective how young the nation really is

    • @CMCSS-to3to
      @CMCSS-to3to 4 роки тому +4

      Progress is shocking, the world changes, just ask some old people

    • @t.c.thompson2359
      @t.c.thompson2359 4 роки тому +4

      This was a fact of life for so many. Time muddles things so much that a commonplace notion of the past blows our minds today.

    • @n0denz
      @n0denz 4 роки тому +16

      Muskets to machine guns. Balloons to jet aircraft. Coal to atomic energy. Had he lived another year, he'd have witnessed Sputnik.

  • @silxvrrr
    @silxvrrr Місяць тому +4

    why is this still better quality than most bank security cameras today?

  • @grit1
    @grit1 4 роки тому +517

    Poor man even had an injury and still wanted to come on the show. Glad he did, this is historic.

    • @vivianjordaan3096
      @vivianjordaan3096 4 роки тому +31

      I respect the shit out of him, he was so old and could have decided to go home and take a nap, but no he decided to come to the show while enduring his pain and tell everyone what he saw. If I find his grave I will always put flowers by his tomb because he is one in a million that is so selfless.

    • @iamwhoyousayiam6773
      @iamwhoyousayiam6773 4 роки тому

      @@vivianjordaan3096 We don't even know if he was telling the truth. Lol

    • @vivianjordaan3096
      @vivianjordaan3096 4 роки тому

      @@iamwhoyousayiam6773 well everybody believes old people.

    • @jimmyduncan7650
      @jimmyduncan7650 4 роки тому +1

      @@iamwhoyousayiam6773 I'm sure he is being truthful.

    • @Figs3
      @Figs3 4 роки тому

      @@iamwhoyousayiam6773 I mean he was 95. He was at deaths door(literally died later that year). Why lie?

  • @maskedmarvyl4774
    @maskedmarvyl4774 3 роки тому +772

    I looked him up. He died only a few months after this aired. It's like he knew his time was limited and was determined to appear on the show and tell his story.

    • @jfandersson3223
      @jfandersson3223 3 роки тому +48

      Of course he knew his time was limited he was 96 years old.

    • @germanyball982
      @germanyball982 2 роки тому +19

      @@jfandersson3223 Bruh show some respect jeez.

    • @jfandersson3223
      @jfandersson3223 2 роки тому +59

      @@germanyball982 There is nothing disrespectful about commenting on someone’s age, especially when that person is decades over the median life span. We’ll all die at some point - some later than others. By accepting this fact, like the gentleman in the video surely had, you’ll be able to appreciate life to its fullest.

    • @Mizuki47
      @Mizuki47 2 роки тому +1

      ​@@jfandersson3223 you are so frustrared man.

    • @QuinlanVoss.
      @QuinlanVoss. 2 роки тому +5

      @@Mizuki47 okay man.

  • @adesh2383
    @adesh2383 4 роки тому +5403

    This should’ve been an interview not a game show.

    • @PhirePhlame
      @PhirePhlame 4 роки тому +325

      "He said he wouldn't miss it" does imply that this may have been the way he _wanted_ to tell his story.

    • @serrielu8025
      @serrielu8025 4 роки тому +162

      Why? He was like 5 yrs old. What exactly do you recall from before say 7 or 8 even. Very little.
      Edit. To my repliers. I didn’t say he doesn’t remember something….you know,
      like a “scary scene man…”
      The original comment from A desh was that this should be an interview. If you watch the end of the video, as I had btw, you read an interview of what the gentleman claims to have saw and his thoughts and words actually at the assignation. …IMO
      I believe there is no way a five year old recalls or processes details, regardless what unfolded, of that level of maturity as he does. No way. I believe he was there, as well as adults with him, and over the course of decades he has the memory and yes you can say he witnessed Lincoln’s murder.

    • @York22
      @York22 4 роки тому +73

      The fact that he said he wouldn’t miss it says this is the way he wanted his story told

    • @libertasautmors8995
      @libertasautmors8995 4 роки тому +122

      The man was clearly very old and weary to hold an interview that's lengthy enough to broadcast on TV. Notice how the video description indicates his date of death shortly after his appearance in the program. They mostly just brought him to the cameras to show off a living relic.

    • @MacCentrisSimpleSencilla
      @MacCentrisSimpleSencilla 4 роки тому +91

      The ignorance baffles me... back in those days there was no such thing as "documentaries".. this game made history, had amazing personalities, including Lucille Ball, John Wayne, etc. Amazing program, more than just a common "game show". By the way, people used to read books, tons, to learn about what this man just told. Do people even read anymore? Nope, they go to youtube and cheat by watching documentaries.

  • @jjgillmen
    @jjgillmen 5 місяців тому +4

    God bless that man's soul. When you put things into historical perspective, Mr. Seymour was blessed to have been able to see the following things after Lincoln was shot:
    1. The invention of the modern light bulb and the common use of electricity.
    2. The invention of the automobile and, later on, the modern Interstate highway system.
    3. The invention of modern flight and the introduction of air travel.
    4. Two World Wars
    5. The Great Depression.
    6. The invention of radio and television.
    7. Baseball and its evolution, from stars like Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth to Ted Williams and Willie Mays.
    What an incredible life that man lived...

  • @elijahmassey2355
    @elijahmassey2355 3 роки тому +5515

    It's really too bad this was a game show rather than a proper interview. I'd love to hear or read more about this man and what he remembers. This country is still in its infancy, and this video is a testament to that.

    • @jakport
      @jakport 3 роки тому +120

      Well, what we have of an interview is in that article. You can almost hear his words in your head.

    • @elijahmassey2355
      @elijahmassey2355 3 роки тому +1

      @SkyCop Wife Do you have a link or title?

    • @finchborat
      @finchborat 3 роки тому +19

      @@elijahmassey2355 Here it is: ua-cam.com/video/Q6IFEE_CM-I/v-deo.html

    • @finchborat
      @finchborat 3 роки тому +9

      245 yrs old isn't really infancy.

    • @elijahmassey2355
      @elijahmassey2355 3 роки тому +1

      @SkyCop Wife Thanks

  • @evose1238
    @evose1238 5 років тому +1826

    This really shows how young America actually is compared to other countries

    • @theghostlyfigure9989
      @theghostlyfigure9989 5 років тому +36

      It is only 300 or so years I believe so if lucky to live to be 90 to 100, 3 people could give so much information. This will have downsides since one person probably can't do everything such as live through wars or even live to be of this age. So take what i say with a grain of salt.

    • @malik5835
      @malik5835 5 років тому +38

      America is as old as any other country!. Fucking Europeans took the land and killed off the natives that was already here

    • @religiousmilk8612
      @religiousmilk8612 5 років тому +1

      @@malik5835 Very true

    • @ColasTeam
      @ColasTeam 5 років тому +111

      @@malik5835 You do realize a country is different from the land the country exists on right?

    • @malik5835
      @malik5835 5 років тому +6

      ColasTeam no shit, you know what I meant. The land they had probably was country you guys call “America “ to them. But we will never know because the Europeans were aliens to the natives and didn’t speak their language most were killed and forced to move else where.

  • @AManOnline.
    @AManOnline. 3 роки тому +1516

    Apparently he died about 2 months after this was made... I guess he had to get this out before he left Earth.
    Rest in peace, Mr Seymour

    • @AgentE1Games
      @AgentE1Games 3 роки тому +20

      R.I.P

    • @yungmuthafuckinsimba526
      @yungmuthafuckinsimba526 3 роки тому +2

      HIS NAME IS SAMUEL JC MOORE, NOT MR. SEYMOUR LIKE DA DICKHEAD HOST KEPT SAYIN💀💀💀

    • @ikramzadran8527
      @ikramzadran8527 3 роки тому +3

      @@yungmuthafuckinsimba526 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_J._Seymour

    • @captainfangle2245
      @captainfangle2245 3 роки тому +2

      @@yungmuthafuckinsimba526 nobody cares

    • @sw0578
      @sw0578 3 роки тому +1

      @@captainfangle2245 Why are we all on this video, just to suffer?

  • @jackpandora3160
    @jackpandora3160 10 днів тому +2

    this recording was made roughly 6 weeks before mr seymour passed away, respect.

  • @Kment011
    @Kment011 3 роки тому +2268

    I know it's not as impressive as this, but my grandmother just turned 100 last December, and when she was a little girl her next door neighbor was an old man who was a civil war veteran.

    • @joseantonioespinosagonzale1500
      @joseantonioespinosagonzale1500 3 роки тому +172

      It's not a competition, that's actually real cool, I live in Mexico but my grandpa's brother in law was a World War 2 vet, I always regreted not meeting him because of the stories he probably could've told

    • @Kment011
      @Kment011 3 роки тому +55

      @@joseantonioespinosagonzale1500 Thanks man! I always thought it was pretty crazy myself! Both of my Grandparents (they're deceased) were WW2 vets. My grandmother actually kept all the letters that my grandfather wrote to her while he was overseas.

    • @joseantonioespinosagonzale1500
      @joseantonioespinosagonzale1500 3 роки тому +18

      @@Kment011 That's cool! Those letters must mean a lot to her.
      Down here it's not really common to have vets for relatives so I always tought it was cool to have a political grand uncle who fought in Germany and Korea, specially cause he wasn't born in the states but a small town in southern Mexico, wish I'd met, probably had some stories to tell.

    • @darkmemes953
      @darkmemes953 3 роки тому +2

      @@Kment011 That is really cool.

    • @Kment011
      @Kment011 3 роки тому +2

      @@darkmemes953 thanks bro !

  • @SpoofRecaps
    @SpoofRecaps 4 роки тому +1897

    You're watching a man on videotape that was a 40-year old middle-aged man in the year 1900. This man enjoyed his fruitful years in the 1880s and lived until almost 1960 to tell us he witnessed Lincoln being shot. Unreal. Thank god for footage like this.

    • @charliebockover
      @charliebockover 4 роки тому +6

      You win this thread !

    • @Oshidorinohina
      @Oshidorinohina 4 роки тому +24

      more like thank whoever filmed this, invisible man in the sky didn't film this

    • @viveka2994
      @viveka2994 4 роки тому +14

      @@Oshidorinohina Haha, funny, fuck off, be tolerant

    • @Oshidorinohina
      @Oshidorinohina 4 роки тому +13

      @@viveka2994 You preach tolerance but tell me to fuck off okay LOL

    • @christopherh4653
      @christopherh4653 4 роки тому +2

      Except that it is real. Unreal is such a stupid thing to say.

  • @jollygrapefruit786
    @jollygrapefruit786 3 роки тому +3051

    This man deciding to go on this show with his "shiner" despite the wishes of the showrunners was the greatest decision he could have made. He knew this was going to last.

    • @Janszler
      @Janszler 3 роки тому +89

      And that it would be his last chance. He passed away only two months later..

    • @LucyWest370
      @LucyWest370 3 роки тому +13

      @@Janszler thats sad :(

    • @DailyDriverGarage
      @DailyDriverGarage 3 роки тому +5

      HE PROBABLY WAS PAID $5

    • @LucyWest370
      @LucyWest370 3 роки тому +21

      @@DailyDriverGarage that doesn't even make any sense, what point are you trying to make?

    • @EyesHaveMiles420
      @EyesHaveMiles420 3 роки тому +23

      Props to him for being able to do so. That’s a tough old man.

  • @Staplegun
    @Staplegun 4 місяці тому +10

    I like how this was recommended by the algorithm.

  • @JoshRaymond
    @JoshRaymond 5 років тому +9778

    Thats like someone witnessing JFK’s assassination and being interviewed in 2050 then that interview being shown in 2119!!

    • @andromedastar4900
      @andromedastar4900 5 років тому +877

      Or someone who was in NYC on 9/11 in 2001 being interviewed about it in 2092 and then people watching that video in 2155.

    • @cellgrrl
      @cellgrrl 5 років тому +554

      I was in 8th grade and my school was about 3 miles from Dealy Plaza. My school let anyone who wanted to go see Kennedy that day to do so. I chose not to go, but my friends and classmates who did go witnessed JFK's assassination. I am so glad I didn't go, my friends were highly traumatized. Years later I ended up working at Parkland hospital as a nurse, and I also worked with the attending doctors who tried to save Kennedy on that fateful day. I just turned 70.

    • @eddierayvanlynch6133
      @eddierayvanlynch6133 5 років тому +55

      You just had to bring math into this...
      jk

    • @TheKonga88
      @TheKonga88 5 років тому +8

      And?

    • @thunderridge4830
      @thunderridge4830 5 років тому +48

      2054 and 2117 would be correct math on JFK. Sorry.

  • @octodaddy877
    @octodaddy877 4 роки тому +2293

    "Was this man ever president?"
    "Well, I think he was once."
    Love this guy

  • @casualeann
    @casualeann 3 роки тому +5352

    This is absolutely incredible. Kids are so intuitive. He knew something was wrong, at 5 years old. It's awful to think how it haunted him, though.

    • @Farrah300
      @Farrah300 3 роки тому +29

      It's unimagineable.

    • @LittlePanda888
      @LittlePanda888 3 роки тому +166

      He lived through some tough times. Aside from the assasination which occurred around the civil war period, he had to live through WW1, Spanish flu, WWII.
      Cant imagine the horrors he has witnessed.

    • @Pamela.B
      @Pamela.B 3 роки тому +15

      He felt the evil foreboding feeling ever since he rode into Washington DC. Jesuit assassins were plotting Lincoln’s murder ever since he defended that priest Chas. Chiniquy. But they’ve basically rewritten that “history”. See book by Jack Chick for accurate history. Super good read 👍🏻

    • @rickdeckard1075
      @rickdeckard1075 3 роки тому +4

      @@Pamela.B yeah i read chiniquy's book...lincoln was a piece of crap, and 600k whites died for absolutely nothing exc to give the new york/london bankers control of the southern trade/ports

    • @onyx7273
      @onyx7273 3 роки тому +32

      @@Pamela.B lol Jack Chick is bigoted anti Catholic fiction.

  • @JAMESPATTERSON-mk9sr
    @JAMESPATTERSON-mk9sr 25 днів тому +1

    kudos to the production staff of these old game shows for finding such compelling topics / people . They really did a job.

  • @jeffreydotson4842
    @jeffreydotson4842 4 роки тому +1623

    This video shows that a century really isn't as long as we think sometimes.

    • @GoatzombieBubba
      @GoatzombieBubba 4 роки тому +49

      Our life times are a grain of sand compared o the beings living in eternal life in Heaven and beyond.

    • @souloftheage
      @souloftheage 4 роки тому +30

      Our lives are nothing when compared to geological time on of this planet.
      And "Deep Time" the billions and billion of years in the universe, makes our lives seem insignificant.

    • @gian8448
      @gian8448 4 роки тому +7

      Don Beverage well that is your belief. even if you don’t believe it, you shouldn’t be rude about it. You will never grow if you have confirmation bias

    • @janetneiman3990
      @janetneiman3990 4 роки тому +1

      You only need to reach the age of 60 to realize that!!!

    • @gian8448
      @gian8448 4 роки тому +3

      CooCooWizard no bro you got the whole reason of religion wrong, take a psych class, religion is not meant for you to believe in something strictly, it’s for you to reason it on how you want to be, it’s the same thing for atheist, just because you don’t believe in god, doesn’t mean you don’t believe there is something else. You are arguing with the basis of humanity. Religion isn’t meant to brain wash you. If you think you are smarter for not believing in god. Than it comes to show that you aren’t able to understand The complex aspects of life.

  • @SnappyPenguin566
    @SnappyPenguin566 5 років тому +2165

    "Would this person ever have been the president of the United States?"
    "I think he was once."
    WHAT A LEGEND!

    • @Erod20258
      @Erod20258 5 років тому +2

      SnappyPenguin566 lol oof

    • @greenllama2856
      @greenllama2856 5 років тому +2

      Major oof

    • @lumina_
      @lumina_ 5 років тому +1

      Uhh...why?

    • @Justicia007
      @Justicia007 5 років тому +16

      @@greenllama2856 not an oof. Classic northern Yankee wry expression. Sounds like my Grandfather, and countless others.

    • @DM12128
      @DM12128 5 років тому +16

      Why “oof”? Dude dropped some dry humor on that panel. I cracked up the first time I heard it.

  • @puzzLEGO
    @puzzLEGO 2 роки тому +9043

    It’s weird to think that if you were alive in 1960 there were many people alive from the 1800s

    • @space3709
      @space3709 2 роки тому +377

      It’s kinda cool in a way

    • @TsarumanTheWhite
      @TsarumanTheWhite 2 роки тому +209

      I have an uncle who was around in the 40's

    • @liamwilzies
      @liamwilzies 2 роки тому +85

      @@TsarumanTheWhite It happens

    • @stevedyches4635
      @stevedyches4635 2 роки тому +357

      My great-grandmother died in 1980 at the age of 96, born in 1884. I watched the first moon landing with her in 1969, she was more amazed than I was, but then again I was only 6 at the time, she was 85 then. I knew it was a big deal though. She was born just 19 years after the civil war ended, still fresh in just about everyone's mind, not too long after this man was born.

    • @c8a6lvin
      @c8a6lvin 2 роки тому +350

      The believe it or not, the last person who was born in the 1800s died in 2017.

  • @ashley3k
    @ashley3k Рік тому +2

    Thanks for including those excerpts as well as the link from his article. Super cool video

  • @martonk
    @martonk 3 роки тому +7345

    "was this person a president?"
    Mr Seimour: "I think he was once, yes"
    I'm a huge history nerd but the thing that I value most in my studies is that I discover that there always existed people who had a good sense of humour.

    • @basicallystupid7080
      @basicallystupid7080 3 роки тому +106

      Me too, these videos are great to watch honestly, I *LOVE* history. It’s amazing to see some of these videos preserved in UA-cam!

    • @wrestlerx8494
      @wrestlerx8494 2 роки тому +45

      @@basicallystupid7080 I am the type of person who would have given that same sarcastic response, even though the other people are asking because they don't know who it is

    • @rockk9753
      @rockk9753 2 роки тому +1

      Sense of humor isnt anything new you A-hole people have had one since the beginning of humanity

    • @razorfox3968
      @razorfox3968 2 роки тому +3

      Thats funny because Lincoln was elected illegally into office🤣

    • @qinjiwei5058
      @qinjiwei5058 2 роки тому +8

      @@rockk9753 The hell? Why so hostile my guy?

  • @OneSingleAnt
    @OneSingleAnt 4 роки тому +1878

    I absolutely love how the host is trying to involve Seymour and making sure hes getting a say its pretty touching to watch

    • @TheKing60210
      @TheKing60210 4 роки тому +93

      That host was a class act

    • @Absentiezz
      @Absentiezz 4 роки тому +14

      Great comment

    • @oldtoby9377
      @oldtoby9377 4 роки тому +95

      This was from the Golden Age of television where the hosts were actual intelligent people. They sure knew how to treat their guests

    • @Sewingbee23
      @Sewingbee23 4 роки тому +49

      Much more respect for the elderly back then

    • @catswalkjpgr
      @catswalkjpgr 4 роки тому +20

      catherine ringwood Definitely. Respect for anyone. Being cordial to is the way it should be. Imagine him being a little 5 year old boy. Amazing!

  • @DeadlyLazer
    @DeadlyLazer 4 роки тому +2622

    "was it a pleasant thing you saw?"
    "Not very pleasant, I don't think"
    Even at 95, he still has a sense of humor

    • @timmarkell402
      @timmarkell402 4 роки тому +21

      Frankly, i don't see anything funny about what Mr. Seymour said. Mr. Seymour did not even smile either.

    • @ELLIOT1311
      @ELLIOT1311 4 роки тому +93

      Tim Markell It was what the brits call over your head comedy.

    • @timmarkell402
      @timmarkell402 4 роки тому +11

      @@ELLIOT1311 @Elliot Belliss ok then explain it to me. Jayne Mansfield asked if it was a pleasant thing. Mr. Seymour replies "not very pleasant. I don't think [it was pleasant]."---what the heck is funny about that?

    • @jessebradford3900
      @jessebradford3900 4 роки тому +95

      Tim Markell Relax. It is funny because it was a horrible thing and it was explained so lightly. You’re looking into it way too deep.

    • @thewalkingdeadgameofthrone1470
      @thewalkingdeadgameofthrone1470 4 роки тому +1

      There is nothing funny about a president being assassinated

  • @brantsager3001
    @brantsager3001 Місяць тому +2

    I’m impressed with the fact that at his age of 96 that he could still recall that frightful night as if it happened yesterday.

  • @busydior
    @busydior 5 років тому +3171

    one day i will be nearing death, and tell everyone that i witnessed a man speak about how lincoln died.

  • @robwayne8322
    @robwayne8322 5 років тому +1964

    This makes you realize that only a few grandpas ago, this nation was born!

  • @roboticsandwich8139
    @roboticsandwich8139 4 роки тому +968

    Ok, I am looking at a person who witnessed Abraham Lincoln getting murdered.

    • @jasonups5386
      @jasonups5386 3 роки тому +6

      He didn’t witness it. Witness the shooter jumping and breaking his leg. Did you watch the video at all? 😩

    • @lunnabellarosales8882
      @lunnabellarosales8882 3 роки тому +25

      @@jasonups5386 Same thing.

    • @nadanican
      @nadanican 3 роки тому +41

      @@jasonups5386 Don't be a dick.

    • @nadanican
      @nadanican 3 роки тому +2

      @Soviet Union General Justin Y. Seems so.

    • @Braig-si5zp
      @Braig-si5zp 3 роки тому +2

      @Soviet Union General Justin Y. 😔

  • @jamesbobreski9353
    @jamesbobreski9353 Місяць тому +3

    It gives us an idea of how young our country actually is our history in spite of the tragedy

  • @alwaysbroke188
    @alwaysbroke188 5 років тому +4621

    "I witnessed Lincoln getting shot"
    *crowd cheers and claps*

    • @mmjahink
      @mmjahink 5 років тому +180

      Confederate sympathizers?

    • @alwaysbroke188
      @alwaysbroke188 5 років тому +97

      @@mmjahink I mean it was the 50's soo 👀

    • @mmjahink
      @mmjahink 5 років тому +27

      @@alwaysbroke188 I think it would be a painful memory to which have been borne witness

    • @mikeelmira
      @mikeelmira 5 років тому +86

      Equivalent of clicking like when someone post a loved one has died

    • @tex6929
      @tex6929 5 років тому +198

      mmjahink lmao wat? Pretty sure they applaud because they realise that in front of them is a man who witnessed a historic event.

  • @Lgevirtz
    @Lgevirtz 3 роки тому +2342

    It's amazing how television could bridge a 90-year gap by bringing this witness to Lincoln's assassination into view for later generations, and then have UA-cam make him permanently available over 50 years after the original broadcast!

    • @jakport
      @jakport 3 роки тому +34

      The older I get, the more I appreciate history, and the more I wish I could interest young people in it, the way I never was as a kid!

    • @Europa-Last-Battle_on_Bitchute
      @Europa-Last-Battle_on_Bitchute 3 роки тому +1

      ua-cam.com/video/MyoJ69GlqEo/v-deo.html

    • @BlakeGibbons
      @BlakeGibbons 3 роки тому +3

      Lol you called youtube permanent.

    • @Lgevirtz
      @Lgevirtz 3 роки тому +10

      @@BlakeGibbonsit's pretty much permanent unless someone goes around deleting every download, or something like an asteroid crashes into earth and deletes us all!

    • @scottkrafft6830
      @scottkrafft6830 2 роки тому +14

      He probably saw people born in the 1700s.

  • @Bukubands223
    @Bukubands223 4 роки тому +2234

    He is old enough to where his grandfathers could have fought alongside Washington

    • @DuskPShermanWallaby123
      @DuskPShermanWallaby123 4 роки тому +8

      Nice Sasuke pfp

    • @Randy-ry9ss
      @Randy-ry9ss 4 роки тому +115

      I bet they helped Washington take control of the airports.

    • @christianali5431
      @christianali5431 4 роки тому +90

      Not only that, but is old enough so that his father could have actually fought in a part of the Civil War itself.

    • @lightningmacqueen4097
      @lightningmacqueen4097 4 роки тому +63

      @@idurisu930 Sweetie, reading comprehension. Learn it. Live it.

    • @idurisu930
      @idurisu930 4 роки тому +3

      @@lightningmacqueen4097 bruh

  • @barbiek3987
    @barbiek3987 Рік тому +6

    And he died just 2 months after this show. While I realize that 95 is elderly, I hope that fall he took didn't hasten his passing. RIP Mr Seymour.

  • @teegjames6357
    @teegjames6357 5 років тому +3730

    “Did Mr. Seymour witness Abriham Lincoln’s death?”
    Audience: *CLAPS*

    • @user-hw2re4gd7w
      @user-hw2re4gd7w 5 років тому +40

      Abraham*

    • @vc9491
      @vc9491 5 років тому +44

      @@user-hw2re4gd7w abruham*

    • @user-hw2re4gd7w
      @user-hw2re4gd7w 5 років тому +12

      Aryana are u stupid?

    • @vc9491
      @vc9491 5 років тому +50

      @@user-hw2re4gd7w no but do u hear that?

    • @vc9491
      @vc9491 5 років тому +82

      @@user-hw2re4gd7w its the joke going over ur head

  • @swishfish8858
    @swishfish8858 2 роки тому +3607

    "Was this man president of the United States?"
    "I think he was, once"
    For an old guy with a head injury and hearing issues, he still had quite the sense of humor! :D

    • @L30GH05TDUD3
      @L30GH05TDUD3 2 роки тому +69

      Being old doesn’t mean you can’t be funny anymore lmao

    • @swishfish8858
      @swishfish8858 2 роки тому +174

      @@L30GH05TDUD3 No, but having a nasty head injury and being unable to hear people can dull your wit. Not that guy's though, clearly!

    • @jamal.hood.shakers.gadgets924
      @jamal.hood.shakers.gadgets924 2 роки тому +2

      @@swishfish8858 what does hearing have to do with it If u funny u just funny 🤣🤣🤣

    • @swishfish8858
      @swishfish8858 2 роки тому +46

      @@jamal.hood.shakers.gadgets924 ...you need to be able to hear what someone said in order to say something funny back to it, my dude.

    • @Agreaf
      @Agreaf 2 роки тому +6

      Plot twist: he wasn't kidding

  • @FilmBucket
    @FilmBucket 5 років тому +2155

    This man died 2 months after this was filmed
    RIP

    • @clickbait7322
      @clickbait7322 5 років тому +62

      Yes for all that smoke that host was blowing at his face

    • @donaldsmith3926
      @donaldsmith3926 5 років тому +80

      @@clickbait7322 Oh, give it a rest.

    • @mariaescandon8022
      @mariaescandon8022 5 років тому +61

      Maybe due to the severe head trauma

    • @WATERMELONZZZ123
      @WATERMELONZZZ123 5 років тому +1

      @@mariaescandon8022 On my husband's account-Unfortunately probably true,R.I.P. Mr.Samuel J. Seymour

    • @navysealsliedtheyneverburi430
      @navysealsliedtheyneverburi430 5 років тому +1

      ​@@WATERMELONZZZ123
      One

  • @Blocboi41k65
    @Blocboi41k65 26 днів тому +3

    the fact he saw abraham Lincoln is
    crazy

  • @xxExoticButterzxx
    @xxExoticButterzxx 4 роки тому +2107

    “Does it have political significance?”
    “Myeh”

  • @ReaperKezia
    @ReaperKezia 6 років тому +2530

    Insane... This guy is like 160 years old now & here we are watching him on a TV show.

    • @petersonj76
      @petersonj76 6 років тому +179

      He is dead though

    • @deemueller6470
      @deemueller6470 6 років тому +52

      Hahaha. Many thanks to all the wonderful people that gave us the great television shows. They preserved our history for our posterity and by watching it, we feel connected knowing it wasn't as long ago as we feel that it was. My grandmother talked about being 5 yrs old and riding the buck board from Maine to Florida. One of her cousins was the first in her county to die due to an auto accident. Something having to do with riding on the side of vehicle, hitting a cow at 25mph and being thrown head first into a tree. My grand daughter asked me about a payphone she saw in an "old" music video (70's-80's).

    • @Elegies22
      @Elegies22 6 років тому +112

      @@petersonj76 no shit sherlock

    • @nintendo9231889
      @nintendo9231889 6 років тому +20

      Why didn't they ask him more questions?!?!

    • @clarencemerritt5003
      @clarencemerritt5003 6 років тому +10

      160 years old? Exaggerating much?

  • @jesusslushies2192
    @jesusslushies2192 3 роки тому +3057

    Im almost 65 yrs old. So when i was 6, I met an extremely old lady who lived at the end of our street in 1963. She was 102. She walked very slow with a cane and would watch us play. sometimes we watched her do laundry from a wringer washer! She made us stay away because it was dangerous for us to be around. It was a real interesting thing to watch! Anyway, one day she told me that her parents took her to see President Lincoln give his Emancipation Proclamation speech! I didnt fully understand but she told me how she was just a little girl and her Dad put her on his shoulders to watch him speak. She talked about how cold it was but everyone was excited to hear President Lincoln. President Lincoln spoke January 1, 1863!
    A few mos later that lady passed away. I never forgot her. ❤️

    • @rachellambert4791
      @rachellambert4791 3 роки тому +99

      What an amazing story you have to tell! She seems like she was a wonderful lady.

    • @onefortheroad2291
      @onefortheroad2291 3 роки тому +42

      I wonder how much she remembered of it vs her parents recounting the day to her over the years. No doubt it’s possible she remembers (I and others I know have tiny faint memories of anything prior to 3 years old) but I’m inclined to think it was a story told time and time again, particularly after Lincoln’s death, so some of the “memory” was created rather than actually memorized. Either way, super cool that she was there for it!

    • @Mr_Fancypants
      @Mr_Fancypants 3 роки тому +50

      That reminds me of a old man that lived in the city here, i wont mention his name because he was well known here but i'l tell what he told me.
      It's a story he only told a few people because it's a theme people are desperatly try to forget/hide.
      He was born in 1938 and was 7 years old in 1945 close to the end of the war.
      The city remained for a miraculously relative untouched by allied bombing untill that faitfull night when American Bombers were coming.
      He knew they were American because next to his house and exactly next to his room was a communicationsbuilding and if you were quiet and listened to the wall you could barely hear the radio operators.
      Shortly after that the air raid sirens wend off and he fled with his sister to the shelter.
      His mom was at the moment in the hospital for a operation. His dad was visiting there.
      During the whole bombardment he kept waiting for those doors to open and his parents to come.
      But they never did.
      After the bombardment they'r house was gone and they had nowhere to go or to stay.
      Dutch Nurses of the red cross took care of him and his sister.
      But the situation was getting bad and the allies were closing in.
      There was not a chanse to evacuate and they had to endure 1 day of close city fighting untill the civillians begged the Wehrmacht to surrender to prevent even more losses.
      As the fighting stopped he and his sister crawled out of they'r hiding spot only to walk into a American soldier who pointed his M1 Garand right between his eyes.
      This made such a deep inpact on him he told me exactly how the soldier looked like to what gear he was wearing.
      Ever sinds that moment he had a deep grudge against U.S soldiers.
      It might not be a story everyone is exited to hear, but if nobody shares it, it will be lost to time forever.

    • @onefortheroad2291
      @onefortheroad2291 3 роки тому +4

      @kevin mcconnell dude no one is tearing it down. Like I said it’s very cool and exciting that she was there for it. Stop being a UA-cam troll

    • @VirtualLunacy
      @VirtualLunacy 3 роки тому +15

      My mother's family lived on a farm in New England. The 'town' would send old folks to live on the farm and my grandparents would be their caretakers, like some kind of old folks home. They called the place the 'Town Farm". when my mother was a young girl, one of the elderly women that lived on the farm was the widow of a civil war veteran. It still amazes me that today, in 2021, I can hold the hand of someone who held the hand of a window of a civil war veteran.
      To be fair, the lady must have been quite young and married off to a nearly elderly man... just so weird to think about.

  • @jdmvogel
    @jdmvogel 3 місяці тому +4

    He was born in 1860, witnessed Lincoln’s assassination when he was five years old…told the world about it in 1956, 91 years later, and we’re watching him tell us in 2024, 68 years later…that’s crazy.