About the Liberty Bell and Big Ben: The Whitechapel Bell Foundry was a business in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. At the time of the closure of its Whitechapel premises, it was the oldest manufacturing company in Great Britain. The foundry closed on 12 June 2017, after nearly 450 years of bell-making and 250 years at its Whitechapel site. "Good Job"
Apple pie was also brought to US by Dutch and German immigrants, this type of pie is a favorite of the northern European countries. Pumpkins are native to the Americags as are all squashes , The pumpion in Shakespeare was probably more of an edible gourd. That name was transferred to the large American squash.
see i'm confused about that, because a gourd is still a squash, isn't it? all cucurbits are basically the same. and I know asia had squashes and melons going way back.
@@KairuHakubi A squash is a gourd, but not necessarily the other way around. True, the many members of the squash family (or at least, _many_ members _of_ the squash family) are gourds, but gourds are the more general term here. Squash is basically the many varieties of _Cucurbita pepo_ that include pumpkins and zucchini (the latter known elsewhere as marrows). Gourds include not only members of the _Cucurbita_ genus, but also the _Lagenaria_ genus, and can be found worldwide.
@@nobody8717 Oh, I don't know about that. The thought of a pumpkin pie with apple slices in it sounds pretty good. If I was a decent cook, I might even try making one. Maybe someone else is up to it?
I was told by the orchestra director at Berkeley that World War I absolutely shattered Elgar, and you can hear it in his music. The famous Pomp and Circumstance was written prior to the war, his equally famous cello concerto was written after the war.
@@digitalnomad9985 P & C No. 1 is extremely nervous, never easily settling into a comfortable key. Elgar was always quite proud that his "March in D" begins with a unison E-flat throughout the orchestra.
Read on and you can Google this ( is the American Liberty Bell original ? ) The bell was first made in 1752 for the Pennsylvania State House, now known as Independence Hall. The bell was cast in London, England, and shipped to Pennsylvania. Soon after it arrived, the bell cracked. In 1753, a new bell was cast from the same metal by John Pass and John Stow.
I never got the feeling that the phrase "as American as apple pie" was supposed to indicate we invented the thing. Just that we considered it beloved to the point where not liking it looked suspect.
@capitalb5889 I personally wouldn't consider it imported. Yes, the English invented it, but they brought it to the new world before America was even a thing. In this way, while is not wholly American, I'd say it certainly has a bit of American DNA tossed in
@@dinoguy6177 - I think that's fair enough - things always change over time, even pies. After all, tempura is seen as quintessentially Japanese, but was originally an import from Portugal some 400+ years ago.
Oooo, Mr. Lawrence...........you would make an awesome History teacher!! But I'm glad you have your channel, where the whole world can learn from your fun and glorious wisdom!
I think most kids in the US learned about Johnny Appleseed walking across the country bringing apple seeds to all the states he could for us to grow apple trees. I always thought how so many states now grow them that it is why it is as American as apple pie.
Good video, but I must correct you. The category term A1 denoting a best in class ship standard was not from Lloyds of London insurance company but it came from Lloyds Register, the assurance and ship classification society. Both companies came from Edward Lloyds coffee house in London but are not the same company.
Because I'm from New York and New York was originally settled by the Dutch, the propaganda here was that apple pie was invented by the Dutch and brought here by the early Dutch settlers. The more important question is who was the first to put vanilla ice cream or cheddar cheese on apple pie? I don't know how many people have cheese with apple pie any more but once it was very common.
3:07 Lawrence questioning himself repeatedly in various rooms of his house is a good idea for an episode. How many Lawrences talking to themselves can fit into one episode?
Chevrolet didn't speak English at the time he started his car company. He sold the company, then ended up working for it, and died poor. Hotdogs, at their root, are Germanic sausages. So much for advertisements. (and they only get worse....)
Hi Laurence, the "pompian" and "pomp and" was a great insight. I think they ought to give each graduate a small pumpkin to throw in the air in place of the mortarboard! Today's pumpkin spice is mostly cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg. It also goes well in pumpkin pie's cousin, sweet potato pie.
I think the whole concept of graduating from school devalues proper graduations i.e. from university. In Britain if you call yourself a graduate it means you have a degree.
My favorite author was born in Britian and didn't come to America until he was almost 5 (he turned 5 at sea, on his way here). So, thank Britain for Piers Anthony!
@@ellenmarch3095 Yes! And the Of Man and Manta trilogy, the Incarnations of Immortality series, But What of Earth... I have quite a few of his books, but I have to find space for more books before I get the rest ☺
He was my childhood. Definitely one of the best children's authors along with Brian Jacques who wrote the Redwall series. It was children ls novels that didn't say away from serious issues. Both were great. Piers Anthony wrote some sad books too, about real life experiences wrapped in fantasy. I am sad I don't still have all of his books :(
My grandma grew up in Philadelphia and, as a little girl, actually got to ring the liberty bell way back in the day before they started keeping everyone away from it.
Laurence, when you got to the subject of Samhain, my memory took me back to those fun days when you did a few episodes of you trying to guess the pronunciation of place names on this side of the pond. That Irish Gaelic word would certainly give some of the ones we offered up a run for their money.
In the battle between Anglicized Native American names and Anglicized Gaelic names, I think the Gaelic ones win. Native American ones are different, but recognizable from the spelling. Gaelic is a mystery.
@@davidskidmore3442 , you may be correct, but I think these would give Samhain a run for its money: Mquqᵂin = MUCK-wuh-in (BC, Canada), Xlukwskw = shlooksk (BC, Canada), S-chuchuligk = shkoo-COO-lick (AZ), Canyon de Chelly = Canyon de SHAY (AZ), Kwakwaka'wakw = KWOK-uh-wok (BC, Canada), Ksi Xts' at'kw = sis-AT (BC, Canada), Pugughileq = boo-woo-CHAY-look (AK; ch is like in 'Loch' and 'Bach'). Oh, 1 more: Sequim = skwim (WA).
@@davidskidmore3442I'll just say that Irish spelling is that way for a good reason, and it's not to confuse people. It's trying to fit two tonnes of phonology in a one tonne bag. The Latin alphabet is a poor fit for Irish in multiple ways, and it doesn't help that only one European language has been a continuously written vernacular language longer than Irish, and that's Greek. That said, the rules behind it are simple and consistent, and have largely stayed the same since Irish was first written, neither of which is true for English. People run into issues with Irish because they expect it to work like English, but it very much isn't.
As to "mh", that indicates that there's an underlying etymological "m", but for grammatical/phonological reasons, it's pronounced in a different manner. This change in pronunciation is 100% predictable and thus it makes sense to preserve the etymological spelling. Changing the "mh" to something else would actually make the spelling system _more_ complicated and obscure the relationship between words. Also, consider the case of the various digraphs English has (sh, ph, ch, gh) and how the sounds they're meant to represent get represented in other ways in non-obvious ways (-ti-, su- in sure), are redundant (ph is almost always there for etymological reasons), or aren't even used consistent (ch and gh, the former due to borrowings and the latter because it became a hot mess in the 1600s). Irish has _nothing_ on English in this regard!
I just love the way you annunciate everything. I also love learning about things and stuff. A.1. steak sauce is good, but better on a burger then on steak. Apple pie is also great on Thanksgiving as well.
In the early days of settlment in the US, the pumpkin pie was nothing like what it is today. A pumkin was opened an cleaned out. A seconf pumpkin was clean and cut up in pieces to be put in the first. Milk and some other ingredients were added and the whole thing was baked.
You can't please everyone all the time, although you do a fine job of trying. "See, I don't like any of ya!" Absolutely hilarious. Love sarcasm and dark humor. Gonna stick with ya as long as I can. Thanks😜
Hello, fellow West Virginian. I really enjoy the way he educates us. I knew some of the info, but I was surprised about a few things. I truly appreciate and enjoy these videos.
I'm not shock with pies because the UK is known for their supreme bakery cuisines. But I was, in fact, shocked to find that my favorite "American" candy, Skittles, weren't actually made here in American. In fact, it was made in the UK. (As I type this I had Laurence's dialogue in my head lol)
In the USA, the pumpkin pie recipe that is printed on Libby's Pumpkin cans has been on that label since 1950. (Not the original recipe, but still pretty old.)
My grandmother tried many recipes for pumpkin pie, but decided she liked that one best, and baked it every year. I like to tell people that Grandma’s pumpkin pie recipe was so good that to this day it is printed on every Libby’s pumpkin label. I found a variant with no milk, eggs, or wheat (dietary restrictions) that still tastes good, and that’s the one that I bake every year for Thanksgiving and then again for Christmas.
My grandmother always used the Libbys recipe. Then one year, running short on granulated sugar, she added ¼ cup of brown sugar. Everyone raved about how good her pie was, so she continued to make it that way every year. I added my own tweak, as I really like cloves, so I put a little extra spice in mine.
Another funny and informative video! Now, instead of wandering about confused as to where apple and pumpkin pies first originated from, I'm now educated! My English ancestors would be pleased. 😃
Gaduations = Land of Hope and Glory Weddings = Midsummer Night's Dream Clowns = Entrance of the Gladiators Only one of these is even close to the original intention of the song.
Pumpkin pie originated in North America. The oldest written recipe was from a Colonies cookbook written 5 years early than what you mentioned New-Englands Rarities Discovered by John Josselyn. Max Miller of Tasting History has covered pumpkin pie. The recipe is closer to what we eat today as sweet potatoes than what today we eat as a pie, but it is still the orgin.
If it was in the colonies then he came from the British colonists... English writer Hannah Woolley’s 1670 book ,'Gentlewoman’s Companion' has a recipe for pumpkin pie.
@gooner_duke2756 except the Native Americans that created pumpkin pie simply didn't have a written recipe... It existed though, it just hadn't been written in a cookbook...
It's important to note a large reason so many Irish people migrated to the US in the 19th century was the British subjecting the Irish to the Great Hunger, a famine that killed a million people while England ate most of Ireland's food
Ahh I'm so glad that other people enjoy his eye movements! I'm pretty sure it's just him looking at the auto-cue that's been placed in different spots in different shots, but in any case, it makes me feel like I'm having a conversation with a person. You know, like how people naturally go in and out of eye contact while talking.
@Levacque The eye movements make me think Laurence is being forced to make these videos against his will, and is constantly checking to see if his narration is suitable to his captors.
Hat tip to sir for your take on the States. Canadian transplant in the Midwest for a number of years here, and I’m still surprised by what I hear. Also, great to hear you’re tackling Spanish…definitely worthwhile, and something I’ve spent time doing too. Cheers!
White Chapel was home to more serial killers than just Jack. He was just the most famous, which unfortunately means the rest have nearly been forgotten.
@@LyleFrancisDelp For leaving out crucial details like where the bell was cast. For not conveying the all important part about the 13 colonies were NOT the United States at that time. It was to honor the anniversary of a British guy (William Penn) who valued freedoms of all sorts of people. You simply shouldnt claim somthing for yourself (America) without sufficient historical backround.
Halloween Traditions began in Ancient Rome slowly converted with Catholocism/Christianity and transmitted through the empire to trading partners. Irish and Scottish adopted it from the Romans, as their celebrations didn't appear until after contact with Rome. Dies Parentales - Celebration of the Ancestors included several holidays and rituals regarding the dead, such as: Bringing Food to the Tombs, Dressing up in Deathly Attire, etc...
Halloween in my childhood involved a large turnip (swede to English viewers) a wood chisel and a certain amount of care. Even now the smell of scorched turnip is weirdly evocative.
@@capitalb5889I always think of them as separate vegetables, like you do and most other English people do, but I’m sure I remember reading that Geordies follow the Scottish convention of calling swedes ‘turnips’ (aka. ‘neeps’ in Scotland). They’re not technically wrong as a swede is a type of turnip (in fact it’s short for ‘Swedish turnip’) but it’s nonetheless useful to make a distinction between the two and only ever use ‘turnip’ to refer to small white turnips.
@@overlordnatthis is spot on. I was super confused about why everyone kept calling those little pink and white veg 'turnips' when I moved south from Newcastle. I'm pretty sure that as a kid, the big yellowy pink things that got carved for Halloween or eaten with haggis were turnips and the little pinky white things were called swede
I'd be curious to who celebrates the 4th of July with Apple pie. I've never heard of anyone making one for the 4th. It's much more common during Thanksgiving since the apples are being harvested.
Wow! My husband is from Scotland and also now lives in the US. When he began to miss his “broon” sauce, I recommended A1. Can’t wait to tell him it originated across the pond. We’ve since found a shop a couple hours away that sells a lot of the foods and beverages he misses from home. On another note, if you haven’t done so already, I think it would be interesting to point out some of the sitcoms over the decades that originated in Britain and were quickly turned into American shows.
7:00 A fellow teacher thought he would impress me one day by proudly announcing that Halloween was actually Samhein, I chuckled and explained that Sam Hein was the guy who owned the delicatessen down the street, then explained it is a Gaelic word pronounced sah-win'. Ah those tricky Gaels and their disappearing m sounds. At some point in the past the evening became a time for juvenile delinquents to run wild destroying property. Homeowners and business owners began bribing them with cakes and other sweets to leave their houses and businesses alone. So began the tradition of "trick or treat."
@@FavoriteThings606 Here is a Halloween joke. One Halloween a little boy and his friends decided to push the boy's family outhouse down the hill. They snuck up and pushed and pushed until it went rolling down the hill and crashed into a tree. When the boy got home his father confronted him and asked if he had any part in the destruction of the outhouse. The boy denied having any part in the prank. The father told the boy about George Washington cutting down the Cherry tree and when asked, told the truth. Nothing happened to him, and he even became the first President. The little boy confessed, and his father immediately beat the crap out of him. The boy tearfully asked, "I thought nothing happened to George when he confessed?" The father replied, "George's father wasn't sitting in the tree when he cut it down."
I feel the need to comment again on the graphic used at about 0:20. While it does cover all of the lower 48, the flag overlay also covers the vast majority of the Canadian populous!
A1 has a special meaning for me. I used to be part of a science fiction discussion group on one of the old pnline services. I was one of 3 people named Adrienne who eventually became part of that same group. We became known in the group as Adriennes 1, 2, and 3, but it was the late science fiction author, Mike Resnick, who shortened it to A1. His reason? "Because she's spicy, but it's also easier to spell."
Pomp and Circumstance is one of those things from high school that I have an irrational hatred of alongside The Great Gatsby. I played trombone in the band and the part is all quarter notes, same note per bar and only four different notes in the entire piece. I also went to high school where the graduating class was regularly 400+. Graduation day for three straight years was a grueling, mind-numbing experience that nearly drove me further to madness.
I went to America for the first time 20 years ago and the first meal I bought there was at an Applebys. I was genuinely disappointed that there was no apple-pie on the menu.
Shame on Applebee's; that might border on the fraudulent! (I usually refer to that chain restaurant as 'Pineapple Q's'.) Have you been to a Village Inn restaurant here in the US? They make many different types of pies (though not as many as they used to do), and it would be a good place to see about apple pie.
+Both videos, RE: things Amerian which are actually from the British Isles and things British from the USA represent some of your best writing and delivery since you began the series. Well done, Lawrence!
No one bothered with All Hallow's Eve until E.T. showed Brit kids a way to get free sweets. Then it got bigger and bigger driven by pure avarice and the bloodbath that is the average trick or treat gang holding up little old ladies for Maltesers and vodka, masked, at midnight (and that's just the under 5's out with their mums!). 🎃
I celebrated Halloween in the 60's in England well before ET. Then it would have been considered rude to knock on people's doors demanding sweets. That part is definitely American
And did those feet, When 'twas half time, Jog upon Wemb-bul-ey's, Green sward? And did the ho- -ly hand of god, Let the Argies win, 2-1 at full time? Bring me my pie! Is that some mould? An' bring me some beer! Pro-gram unfold! Oh look you've spilt some spesh, Spilt some spesh, On Mickey's green and pleas-ant vans!
Since America was a British Colony for so long, of course there are many things, even nearly 250 years after our independence, that came from England. My favorite English-American thing is my grandparent’s Southern accent. There are so many things that come from other countries, too, because the best part of being American is getting to enjoy the best parts of every culture and country and never having to leave the country to do so. Not that traveling isn’t fun and educational, it’s just nice that I get to experience so many cultures and countries simply by befriending my neighbors. ❤
He didn't mentioned the many laws, which are so vital to American society. Trail by jury, 'innocent until proven guilty', 'beyond reasonable doubt', 'due process of law', etc., etc., from English common law. All came/inherited from England.
Dark steak sauces such as A1, I've read, are a British Victorian-era invention just as Laurence says. There's one in Canada/UK called H.P. Not so popular in U.S.
There is a big difference between the British pompion pie and American pumpkin pie from how the pumpkin is prepared for the pie to the herbs and spices used. I think I'd prefer the American style pie over the British one.
@@chiprbob of course. you can find british recipes with chinese ingredients, too. it is irrelevant. pumpkin is by and large almost never eaten here in the uk, i should know, im actually from here. naturally you prefer your pumpkin pie because it is some horrific sweet and savoury abomination only your tastebuds are acclimatised to
I grew a winter squash this year called cushaw. It's about 2 or 3 times the size of a butternut squash. A word to the wise. I threw a handful of seeds in the dirt and I got 9 of these mammoths. You can toast the seeds for snacking. I'm still planning on growing them next year as long as my friends are willing to help me out eating them.
TIL I learned that Land of Hope and Glory, which I’d seen referred to in British novels, is actually a tune I know. Its proper name actually is the Trio from Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 in D. It’s one of 6 Pomp and Circumstance marches that Elgar wrote, and that particular one was featured at the 1901 Proms, where it was popular enough to merit a double encore.
All the way till grocery stores had ready access, both apples and oranges were considered presents. Transport across this large nation was expensive, so prohibitive for many. They were also used at christmas.
Yes, my mother used to tell me what a special treat it was to get an orange and a few walnuts in your Christmas stocking. In our family that morphed into tangerines because my mom liked them better.
@@Birdbike719 Wow! We always had an apple and orange as Dad was from Connecticut, Mom from California. Dad 1915, Mom 1923. their folks the 1800s. So much has changed re fruits and vegetables, have to look up on the cell phone all the newer types of produce when shopping!
We always got apples, oranges, and a variety of unshelled nuts in our Christmas stockings. I know it isn't as common now, but it was when I was growing up.
@@donnagoring250 Yes ! My parents , born in 1921 , also told we kids about getting an orange at Christmas - how special it was & considered " exotic " ! Also , my parents & grandparents talked about other fresh fruits , like pineapples , & veggies not common when they were growing up .
As an ex pat Geordie in Canada I love to hear all the myth debunking on your channel. ;). That being said I enjoy how you connect all the 'Merica to UK" history. ;)
As a Canadian, these videos have been fun to see which British things we have and which American things. Generally speaking through my whole life, Canada has seemed like a cultural midway point between the UK + Ireland and America, with a bias towards American tendencies. Are there any things you've found living here that seem quintessentially British?
1:29 I have to add that Spanish is very confusing. The Western Hemispheric SPANISH has no word for “lime.”. In French, one can say, “Citron vert,” but when I say “límon verde,” I always end up with a lemon. 100% of the time. I live in houston, texas, but I am from San Diego, California.
Also our Star Spangled Banner’s tune is from England, adapted from a London men’s club drinking song. Was half shocked to learn that, as it’s our national anthem, and half not surprised at all, as countless aspects of our country, such as patriotic tunes, city names, and so on are derived from England
One of the best versions of the Halloween story appears in the novel "Faerie Tale," by Raymond Feist: Every year at Samhain all manner of supernatural critters have to move house, so you see them roaming the streets at night, looking for new abodes. And if you don't leave a "treat" out for them, they just might move in with you and haunt your house for a year.
I first remember hearing Pomp and Circumstances playing on a cartoon that played on Nickelodeon. I believe it was called "Dangermouse" and they'd play it whenever Buckingham Palace was shown.
Wow, Laurence!, you’ve gotten 5,000 views in the first 50 minutes since this video was posted. Well done! A1 Steak Sauce origin in England was a surprise.
When you do your episode of British things with American origins I assume you’ll include Heinz Beanz which are grown in America, dehydrated and shipped to England where they are rehydrated, cooked and canned for use in your traditional English breakfast. The Company Heinz is based in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania. Heinz makes lots of condiments and other Rod it’s for sale in the US but oddly, not beans. Bush’s, Del Monte, & Van de Camps are the “go to” brands for canned beans in America.
@@conniecrawford5231 Yes. I used to attend a brit expat meetup group and we had a taste-off and every brit picked the Heinz. I did actually run across some US Heinz beans a while back so they must have been testing the market. They were barbeque flavored though.
@@stevethepocket I think many Brits know Heinz as an American brand, but when referring to the best baked beans, they say “Heinz” obviously but specially make it known the English/Brit version… they know the difference ingredients change through UK production enough to state this when I’ve watched many UK celebs interviews, UA-camrs etc 😂🤷🏻♀️ From what I’ve heard it quite a lot different. 😆🤷🏻♀️
I recently read that the Scottish immigrant kids would also take your garden veg and sling it at your house, preferably a cabbage. Apparently back in Scotland they would throw one cabbage and it would be your neighbor and it was all in good fun...
A1Steak sauce? Hey great tasting sauce crosses all borders. Texas Roadhouse steaksauce is also awesome too. And Halloween is my Wifes SuperBowl. As in Go Big or Go Home. One example: We have over 18 Halloween Inflatables in our front yard, maybe 20.
Well, it's almost midnight in south-east Australia and I think it's very cruel that you're discussing the origins of apple pie because now that's all I want as a midnight snack 😅
What I recall hearing (okay, this was fifty-some years ago and I was ten, and at a reproduction of Independence Hall in California, so bear with me) was that the Liberty Bell was *recast* after cracking on its first sounding -- and cracked again when sounded after recasting. I don't recall them mentioning it being shipped across the Atlantic for the rework, but I suppose it's possible. Interestingly, their replica Liberty Bell, exact to dimension and with a *faux* crack cast in, sounded in the exact same pitch as the original, but had been sounded several times without cracking...
Went to my local UK 🇬🇧 shoppe to buy a box of Curly Wurly's. Not because I miss them from all my years in the UK, but because I miss the exact same Marathon bar from the 1970s USA. Same candy bar. Had to go decades without the Marathon bars until I discovered they were still in production in the UK as the Curly Wurly.
That's odd! UK Marathons were rebranded 'Snickers' 30-odd years ago, but Curly Wurly has ALWAYS been Curly Wurly - although it is pressed out of a sheet of toffee instead of being laid in that shape with thin nozzles. I bought Curly Wurlys right from the original time they appeared in the shops. Incidentally, the American Marathon is nothing like the UK one, the Mars Bar has the texture of a Milky Way, and Butterfingers are the best chocolate bar in the world (after Crunchie and Bounty, of course).
@@theboyisnotright6312 Do you mean the UK Snickers bar? As I said, that's not the same as the US Marathon bar. And I don't know if you can get it in the US.
Grape pies are American, invented by Irene Bouchard in the Finger Lakes region of New York in the 1950s. I've never tried it. I've never heard the term "As American as Grape Pie" so I suppose it hasn't caught on yet.
We Americans are the only ones smart enough (or crazy enough) to make desserts and children's drinks from *grapes* 🍇! For thousands of years, raisin pies 🥧 and cakes existed all over the world. But not until Mrs. Bouchard, did anyone contemplate baking with grapes without drying them first! Similarly, *wine* 🍷 for millennia was a beverage produced in every corner of the globe. But not until 1869, did Thomas Welch think to himself "what if, instead of naturally letting then ferment, we pasteurized and sieved crushed grapes?" Now, you just can't imagine American kids' birthday parties 🎂 or snack times without *grape juice* !
American here. I've made that Pompion Pie recipe! It was delicious and more savory than sweet. We can't get currants here, so I had to sub with what they call red currants here, but aren't really currants. It was simple and delicious.
@@laurat7232 Differently than in English? I suppose it's because the Gaelic languages are Celtic languages and not comparable to the origins of English. Fun fact: Irish is still the first official language of Ireland.
Oooh It's Laurence! 😀
🤣🤣🤣
I definitely read that in his voice.
😂😂😂
A UA-cam sensation!
Before discovering this channel at my house, we used to say, “Oooh, cool!” We now say, “Oooh, Laurence!” 😂
As an American, I've never thought of the graduation march as an American song. It's one of the most British-sounding things I've ever heard.
Really, when Americans think Pomp and Circumstance that sounds more like British Royalty than anything else...
"As an American, I've never thought" Sums it up pretty good.
@@windowsseven8377oh come on
@@leaffinite2001 Where are we going? lol
I have questions. Were you in band? As an American, it was the only time I ever heard it. How you connected it to an English song, I am curious about.
About the Liberty Bell and Big Ben:
The Whitechapel Bell Foundry was a business in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. At the time of the closure of its Whitechapel premises, it was the oldest manufacturing company in Great Britain. The foundry closed on 12 June 2017, after nearly 450 years of bell-making and 250 years at its Whitechapel site. "Good Job"
fuck man the Empire really is dead
Little Ben is on Victoria st near railway station.
Apple pie was also brought to US by Dutch and German immigrants, this type of pie is a favorite of the northern European countries. Pumpkins are native to the Americags as are all squashes , The pumpion in Shakespeare was probably more of an edible gourd. That name was transferred to the large American squash.
see i'm confused about that, because a gourd is still a squash, isn't it? all cucurbits are basically the same. and I know asia had squashes and melons going way back.
@@KairuHakubi A squash is a gourd, but not necessarily the other way around. True, the many members of the squash family (or at least, _many_ members _of_ the squash family) are gourds, but gourds are the more general term here. Squash is basically the many varieties of _Cucurbita pepo_ that include pumpkins and zucchini (the latter known elsewhere as marrows). Gourds include not only members of the _Cucurbita_ genus, but also the _Lagenaria_ genus, and can be found worldwide.
@@KairuHakubitechnically all squash are native to the Americas
oof, the idea of a squash and apple pie... not sure about that.
@@nobody8717 Oh, I don't know about that. The thought of a pumpkin pie with apple slices in it sounds pretty good. If I was a decent cook, I might even try making one. Maybe someone else is up to it?
I was told by the orchestra director at Berkeley that World War I absolutely shattered Elgar, and you can hear it in his music. The famous Pomp and Circumstance was written prior to the war, his equally famous cello concerto was written after the war.
Really? I heard Pomp and Circumstance is supposed to be satirical and about the boys marching off to war just to die.
@@ferretyluv Weird, it doesn't seem bombastic, or grandiloquent enough for anti-military satire.
I thought he said Algar
@@ferretyluv No, not at all. It was written in 1900.
@@digitalnomad9985 P & C No. 1 is extremely nervous, never easily settling into a comfortable key. Elgar was always quite proud that his "March in D" begins with a unison E-flat throughout the orchestra.
Read on and you can Google this ( is the American Liberty Bell original ? )
The bell was first made in 1752 for the Pennsylvania State House, now known as Independence Hall. The bell was cast in London, England, and shipped to Pennsylvania. Soon after it arrived, the bell cracked. In 1753, a new bell was cast from the same metal by John Pass and John Stow.
I never got the feeling that the phrase "as American as apple pie" was supposed to indicate we invented the thing. Just that we considered it beloved to the point where not liking it looked suspect.
If memory serves that expression dates from a 1930's advertising campaign.
I figured it's because we use it as a staple for many of our social get-togethers
I've definitely met Americans who were unaware that it was an imported dish.
@capitalb5889 I personally wouldn't consider it imported. Yes, the English invented it, but they brought it to the new world before America was even a thing. In this way, while is not wholly American, I'd say it certainly has a bit of American DNA tossed in
@@dinoguy6177 - I think that's fair enough - things always change over time, even pies. After all, tempura is seen as quintessentially Japanese, but was originally an import from Portugal some 400+ years ago.
Oooo, Mr. Lawrence...........you would make an awesome History teacher!! But I'm glad you have your channel, where the whole world can learn from your fun and glorious wisdom!
I think most kids in the US learned about Johnny Appleseed walking across the country bringing apple seeds to all the states he could for us to grow apple trees. I always thought how so many states now grow them that it is why it is as American as apple pie.
But the apple trees were for cider not pie.
Yes, and where do u think he got the Apple seeds from
@@ivetterodríguez-j4kSadly prohibition put an end to that. Alcoholic ciders seem to be starting to make a comeback though.
Johnnie Appleseed was an enthusiastic hard cider drinker, which is why he did that.
Your pronunciation of “Samhain” is correct
Yes it is, but now I want somebody to write a mystery thriller with a detective named Sam Hain. 😉😁
The MH in the Irish language is pronounced as a V.
Good video, but I must correct you. The category term A1 denoting a best in class ship standard was not from Lloyds of London insurance company but it came from Lloyds Register, the assurance and ship classification society. Both companies came from Edward Lloyds coffee house in London but are not the same company.
Because I'm from New York and New York was originally settled by the Dutch, the propaganda here was that apple pie was invented by the Dutch and brought here by the early Dutch settlers. The more important question is who was the first to put vanilla ice cream or cheddar cheese on apple pie? I don't know how many people have cheese with apple pie any more but once it was very common.
3:07 Lawrence questioning himself repeatedly in various rooms of his house is a good idea for an episode. How many Lawrences talking to themselves can fit into one episode?
I'm old. We used to have an advertisement on TV (or the tellie) for cars that included, "baseball, hotdogs, apple pie and Chevrolet."
Chevrolet didn't speak English at the time he started his car company. He sold the company, then ended up working for it, and died poor. Hotdogs, at their root, are Germanic sausages. So much for advertisements. (and they only get worse....)
I’m old too…I can still sing the song….😝
Hi Laurence, the "pompian" and "pomp and" was a great insight. I think they ought to give each graduate a small pumpkin to throw in the air in place of the mortarboard!
Today's pumpkin spice is mostly cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg. It also goes well in pumpkin pie's cousin, sweet potato pie.
OUCH
I think the whole concept of graduating from school devalues proper graduations i.e. from university. In Britain if you call yourself a graduate it means you have a degree.
Slash...the Guns and Roses guy was actually born in Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire in central England.
I just giggled to myself imagining little baby Slash.
I would have actually loved my history class if you were my teacher.
I know. He makes it fun.
I did love history class, but yes, he is more fun than most of my teachers were!
My high school history teacher used books that were older than me by a decade lol. He also looked like the preacher in Poltergeist 2.
No your lazy. just an excuse to play on your phone and prioritise what yor friends were doing.
I would also have liked my sports classes if Michael Jordan was my teacher.
Your videos are always super interesting and lots of fun. Thank you.
My favorite author was born in Britian and didn't come to America until he was almost 5 (he turned 5 at sea, on his way here). So, thank Britain for Piers Anthony!
Xanth! Isle of View. 😍
@@ellenmarch3095 Yes! And the Of Man and Manta trilogy, the Incarnations of Immortality series, But What of Earth... I have quite a few of his books, but I have to find space for more books before I get the rest ☺
Wish the library in Hollywood would carry his work, only thing they’re doing is remaking, sometimes remaking the remake.
@@ellenmarch3095I still shake my fist at King Cumulus.
He was my childhood. Definitely one of the best children's authors along with Brian Jacques who wrote the Redwall series. It was children ls novels that didn't say away from serious issues.
Both were great. Piers Anthony wrote some sad books too, about real life experiences wrapped in fantasy.
I am sad I don't still have all of his books :(
My grandma grew up in Philadelphia and, as a little girl, actually got to ring the liberty bell way back in the day before they started keeping everyone away from it.
Laurence, when you got to the subject of Samhain, my memory took me back to those fun days when you did a few episodes of you trying to guess the pronunciation of place names on this side of the pond. That Irish Gaelic word would certainly give some of the ones we offered up a run for their money.
In the battle between Anglicized Native American names and Anglicized Gaelic names, I think the Gaelic ones win. Native American ones are different, but recognizable from the spelling. Gaelic is a mystery.
@@davidskidmore3442 , you may be correct, but I think these would give Samhain a run for its money: Mquqᵂin = MUCK-wuh-in (BC, Canada), Xlukwskw = shlooksk (BC, Canada),
S-chuchuligk = shkoo-COO-lick (AZ), Canyon de Chelly = Canyon de SHAY (AZ), Kwakwaka'wakw = KWOK-uh-wok (BC, Canada), Ksi Xts' at'kw = sis-AT (BC, Canada),
Pugughileq = boo-woo-CHAY-look (AK; ch is like in 'Loch' and 'Bach'). Oh, 1 more: Sequim = skwim (WA).
@@davidskidmore3442I'll just say that Irish spelling is that way for a good reason, and it's not to confuse people. It's trying to fit two tonnes of phonology in a one tonne bag. The Latin alphabet is a poor fit for Irish in multiple ways, and it doesn't help that only one European language has been a continuously written vernacular language longer than Irish, and that's Greek. That said, the rules behind it are simple and consistent, and have largely stayed the same since Irish was first written, neither of which is true for English. People run into issues with Irish because they expect it to work like English, but it very much isn't.
As to "mh", that indicates that there's an underlying etymological "m", but for grammatical/phonological reasons, it's pronounced in a different manner. This change in pronunciation is 100% predictable and thus it makes sense to preserve the etymological spelling. Changing the "mh" to something else would actually make the spelling system _more_ complicated and obscure the relationship between words.
Also, consider the case of the various digraphs English has (sh, ph, ch, gh) and how the sounds they're meant to represent get represented in other ways in non-obvious ways (-ti-, su- in sure), are redundant (ph is almost always there for etymological reasons), or aren't even used consistent (ch and gh, the former due to borrowings and the latter because it became a hot mess in the 1600s). Irish has _nothing_ on English in this regard!
Lady Liberty herself, is from FRANCE!
Yeah, we know. Still not the subject of this video…
Did you not notice that on the screen?
And has been an iconic symbol of America ever since
She was offered to the Germans who declined. Our gain!
Hence why she hangs out by the docks doing nothing
I just love the way you annunciate everything. I also love learning about things and stuff. A.1. steak sauce is good, but better on a burger then on steak. Apple pie is also great on Thanksgiving as well.
Laurence's Annunciation. Very famous painting.
* enunciate 😊
In the early days of settlment in the US, the pumpkin pie was nothing like what it is today. A pumkin was opened an cleaned out. A seconf pumpkin was clean and cut up in pieces to be put in the first. Milk and some other ingredients were added and the whole thing was baked.
That sounds like the pumpkin soup a friend of mine made for a pumpkin feast a few years ago
@@FallacyBites Love homemade pumpkin soup !
I love the information you share with us, and the laughter is always there 😁 Thank you for always cheering me up!
You can't please everyone all the time, although you do a fine job of trying.
"See, I don't like any of ya!" Absolutely hilarious. Love sarcasm and dark humor.
Gonna stick with ya as long as I can. Thanks😜
Sarcasm and dark humour: That is how good humour should be. Who cannot understand it, seems rather dumb.
Hello from West Virginia 😊 This was educational
Hello, fellow West Virginian. I really enjoy the way he educates us. I knew some of the info, but I was surprised about a few things.
I truly appreciate and enjoy these videos.
Some of my ancestors lived in West Virginia.
Lord Elgar: one of my favorite peices of music... Especially when played at the poms..
A history of Pumpion pie (based off an Italian recipe from 1570) can be found on Tasting history with Max Miller.
I had fun baking it, thrice
I'm not shock with pies because the UK is known for their supreme bakery cuisines.
But I was, in fact, shocked to find that my favorite "American" candy, Skittles, weren't actually made here in American.
In fact, it was made in the UK.
(As I type this I had Laurence's dialogue in my head lol)
Pies were invented in ancient Greece an apples are from Asia
Americans call them "bowling"
@@jeffhampton2767 And the apple pie, specifically, come from the British colonists 🤷♂ which is the point here.
In the USA, the pumpkin pie recipe that is printed on Libby's Pumpkin cans has been on that label since 1950. (Not the original recipe, but still pretty old.)
My grandmother tried many recipes for pumpkin pie, but decided she liked that one best, and baked it every year. I like to tell people that Grandma’s pumpkin pie recipe was so good that to this day it is printed on every Libby’s pumpkin label. I found a variant with no milk, eggs, or wheat (dietary restrictions) that still tastes good, and that’s the one that I bake every year for Thanksgiving and then again for Christmas.
And cranberry sauce is best served in the shape of the can in which it was delivered.
My grandmother always used the Libbys recipe. Then one year, running short on granulated sugar, she added ¼ cup of brown sugar. Everyone raved about how good her pie was, so she continued to make it that way every year. I added my own tweak, as I really like cloves, so I put a little extra spice in mine.
@@525Linesamen!
@@525Linesbest comment yet.
The tune adapted for our national anthem is also English. It’s an old pub drinking song, “Anacreon in Heaven”.
Not exactly a "pub" drinking song, but a gentlemen's club drinking song - The Acreontic Society.
And the tune is terrible. Even the pros hate to sing it.
@@genab2539 Well, I AM a pro and I think it's a great tune, and it's not hard to sing at all.
Another funny and informative video! Now, instead of wandering about confused as to where apple and pumpkin pies first originated from, I'm now educated! My English ancestors would be pleased. 😃
Hey, didn’t the guy sitting 4th on right side at picnic table kinda look like😊 comedian Jim Carey?
Gaduations = Land of Hope and Glory
Weddings = Midsummer Night's Dream
Clowns = Entrance of the Gladiators
Only one of these is even close to the original intention of the song.
Monty Python = Liberty Bell March
Pumpkin pie originated in North America. The oldest written recipe was from a Colonies cookbook written 5 years early than what you mentioned New-Englands Rarities Discovered by John Josselyn. Max Miller of Tasting History has covered pumpkin pie. The recipe is closer to what we eat today as sweet potatoes than what today we eat as a pie, but it is still the orgin.
Sweet potato pie is very similar to modem pumpkin pie.
If it was in the colonies then he came from the British colonists... English writer Hannah Woolley’s 1670 book ,'Gentlewoman’s Companion' has a recipe for pumpkin pie.
@gooner_duke2756 except the Native Americans that created pumpkin pie simply didn't have a written recipe... It existed though, it just hadn't been written in a cookbook...
@_Clivey ah yes, nothing existed in the New World until the Bri'ish "discovered it" theory... well, good on you old chap.
@@firefighter1c57 and that's totally fair enough. The native Americans had their pumpkin pie and so did the British settlers. Cool.
It's important to note a large reason so many Irish people migrated to the US in the 19th century was the British subjecting the Irish to the Great Hunger, a famine that killed a million people while England ate most of Ireland's food
Thank you for this. It was educational, humorous, and thoroughly enjoyable.
12:12 How interesting that someone I was aware I was related to has a connection to pumpkin pie that I was not aware of!
In Colonial America, pumpkins were also used for soup.
Pumpkin soup is still eaten in the UK today !
@@gooner_duke2756
Pumpkin soup was one of George
Washington's favorite winter foods.
@@here_we_go_again2571 ah nice. Its very nice, plenty of black pepper, some nice bread. Good in winter for sure
@@gooner_duke2756I make pumpkin and yellow squash soup.
Laurence, you had me LOL at “Freedom , Freedom, Freedom, and in that order.” And I love your eye movements. Thank you for a delightful channel!
Ahh I'm so glad that other people enjoy his eye movements! I'm pretty sure it's just him looking at the auto-cue that's been placed in different spots in different shots, but in any case, it makes me feel like I'm having a conversation with a person. You know, like how people naturally go in and out of eye contact while talking.
@Levacque The eye movements make me think Laurence is being forced to make these videos against his will, and is constantly checking to see if his narration is suitable to his captors.
Hat tip to sir for your take on the States. Canadian transplant in the Midwest for a number of years here, and I’m still surprised by what I hear.
Also, great to hear you’re tackling Spanish…definitely worthwhile, and something I’ve spent time doing too. Cheers!
I had no idea the "Liberty Bell" was manufactured in England! TY... As well as A1 sauce...
You're one of two people I really enjoy learning about history from! Thank you!
White Chapel was also the site of Jack the Ripper.
I had no idea that the bell was cast in London. Thanks for the info. I love learning new things.
White Chapel was home to more serial killers than just Jack. He was just the most famous, which unfortunately means the rest have nearly been forgotten.
Fire your history teacher
@@windowsseven8377 Why?
@@LyleFrancisDelp For leaving out crucial details like where the bell was cast. For not conveying the all important part about the 13 colonies were NOT the United States at that time. It was to honor the anniversary of a British guy (William Penn) who valued freedoms of all sorts of people. You simply shouldnt claim somthing for yourself (America) without sufficient historical backround.
The Liberty Bell was recasted in Philadelphia
I'm surprised you didn't include Lipton Tea.
From Glasgow.
Halloween Traditions began in Ancient Rome slowly converted with Catholocism/Christianity and transmitted through the empire to trading partners. Irish and Scottish adopted it from the Romans, as their celebrations didn't appear until after contact with Rome. Dies Parentales - Celebration of the Ancestors included several holidays and rituals regarding the dead, such as: Bringing Food to the Tombs, Dressing up in Deathly Attire, etc...
Halloween in my childhood involved a large turnip (swede to English viewers) a wood chisel and a certain amount of care. Even now the smell of scorched turnip is weirdly evocative.
To English viewers, a turnip is a turnip and a swede is a swede. They are different vegetables, even if they look quite similar.
@@capitalb5889I always think of them as separate vegetables, like you do and most other English people do, but I’m sure I remember reading that Geordies follow the Scottish convention of calling swedes ‘turnips’ (aka. ‘neeps’ in Scotland). They’re not technically wrong as a swede is a type of turnip (in fact it’s short for ‘Swedish turnip’) but it’s nonetheless useful to make a distinction between the two and only ever use ‘turnip’ to refer to small white turnips.
@@overlordnatthis is spot on. I was super confused about why everyone kept calling those little pink and white veg 'turnips' when I moved south from Newcastle. I'm pretty sure that as a kid, the big yellowy pink things that got carved for Halloween or eaten with haggis were turnips and the little pinky white things were called swede
I love things and stuff. Thank you, Laurence, for being one of our favorite things, bringing us our favorite stuff.
I think you would enjoy "Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America"’
I'd be curious to who celebrates the 4th of July with Apple pie. I've never heard of anyone making one for the 4th. It's much more common during Thanksgiving since the apples are being harvested.
"My Country 'tis of Thee" is the most used melody for most if not all patriotic themes across the globe.
Much better song.
@@garryferrington811 Listen to 'land of hope and glory', from the proms at the Royal Albert hall. You might change your mind...
Wow! My husband is from Scotland and also now lives in the US. When he began to miss his “broon” sauce, I recommended A1. Can’t wait to tell him it originated across the pond. We’ve since found a shop a couple hours away that sells a lot of the foods and beverages he misses from home. On another note, if you haven’t done so already, I think it would be interesting to point out some of the sitcoms over the decades that originated in Britain and were quickly turned into American shows.
7:00 A fellow teacher thought he would impress me one day by proudly announcing that Halloween was actually Samhein, I chuckled and explained that Sam Hein was the guy who owned the delicatessen down the street, then explained it is a Gaelic word pronounced sah-win'. Ah those tricky Gaels and their disappearing m sounds.
At some point in the past the evening became a time for juvenile delinquents to run wild destroying property. Homeowners and business owners began bribing them with cakes and other sweets to leave their houses and businesses alone. So began the tradition of "trick or treat."
@@FavoriteThings606 Here is a Halloween joke.
One Halloween a little boy and his friends decided to push the boy's family outhouse down the hill. They snuck up and pushed and pushed until it went rolling down the hill and crashed into a tree. When the boy got home his father confronted him and asked if he had any part in the destruction of the outhouse. The boy denied having any part in the prank. The father told the boy about George Washington cutting down the Cherry tree and when asked, told the truth. Nothing happened to him, and he even became the first President. The little boy confessed, and his father immediately beat the crap out of him. The boy tearfully asked, "I thought nothing happened to George when he confessed?" The father replied, "George's father wasn't sitting in the tree when he cut it down."
I feel the need to comment again on the graphic used at about 0:20. While it does cover all of the lower 48, the flag overlay also covers the vast majority of the Canadian populous!
A1 has a special meaning for me. I used to be part of a science fiction discussion group on one of the old pnline services. I was one of 3 people named Adrienne who eventually became part of that same group. We became known in the group as Adriennes 1, 2, and 3, but it was the late science fiction author, Mike Resnick, who shortened it to A1. His reason? "Because she's spicy, but it's also easier to spell."
Pomp and Circumstance is one of those things from high school that I have an irrational hatred of alongside The Great Gatsby. I played trombone in the band and the part is all quarter notes, same note per bar and only four different notes in the entire piece. I also went to high school where the graduating class was regularly 400+. Graduation day for three straight years was a grueling, mind-numbing experience that nearly drove me further to madness.
I went to America for the first time 20 years ago and the first meal I bought there was at an Applebys. I was genuinely disappointed that there was no apple-pie on the menu.
Shame on Applebee's; that might border on the fraudulent! (I usually refer to that chain restaurant as 'Pineapple Q's'.) Have you been to a Village Inn restaurant here in the US? They make many different types of pies (though not as many as they used to do), and it would be a good place to see about apple pie.
That's because Applebee's is trash
Why is it called "Apple" if there is no Apple (pie)?
Applebee's? Oh, man, I'm so sorry; you deserved a better experience than that!
+Both videos, RE: things Amerian which are actually from the British Isles and things British from the USA represent some of your best writing and delivery since you began the series. Well done, Lawrence!
No one bothered with All Hallow's Eve until E.T. showed Brit kids a way to get free sweets. Then it got bigger and bigger driven by pure avarice and the bloodbath that is the average trick or treat gang holding up little old ladies for Maltesers and vodka, masked, at midnight (and that's just the under 5's out with their mums!). 🎃
According to Alan Moore, at least in Yorkshire, All Hallow’s Eve was a thing but much more solemn.
In the 70s it was apple dunking and toffee apples only. Bonfire night, November 5th was more important to us kids
I celebrated Halloween in the 60's in England well before ET. Then it would have been considered rude to knock on people's doors demanding sweets. That part is definitely American
This channel is awesome.
Interesting fact is that Elgar was a huge football fan (Wolverhampton Wanderers) and has been credited with coming up with the first football chant.
And did those feet,
When 'twas half time,
Jog upon Wemb-bul-ey's,
Green sward?
And did the ho-
-ly hand of god,
Let the Argies win,
2-1 at full time?
Bring me my pie!
Is that some mould?
An' bring me some beer!
Pro-gram unfold!
Oh look you've spilt some spesh,
Spilt some spesh,
On Mickey's green and pleas-ant vans!
Was it, "who's the wanker in the black?"
That's an exaggeration, but he did set a phrase from a football report to music, for fun - "He banged the leather for goal".
You are fantastic, my man!
Since America was a British Colony for so long, of course there are many things, even nearly 250 years after our independence, that came from England. My favorite English-American thing is my grandparent’s Southern accent. There are so many things that come from other countries, too, because the best part of being American is getting to enjoy the best parts of every culture and country and never having to leave the country to do so. Not that traveling isn’t fun and educational, it’s just nice that I get to experience so many cultures and countries simply by befriending my neighbors. ❤
He didn't mentioned the many laws, which are so vital to American society. Trail by jury, 'innocent until proven guilty', 'beyond reasonable doubt', 'due process of law', etc., etc., from English common law. All came/inherited from England.
Dark steak sauces such as A1, I've read, are a British Victorian-era invention just as Laurence says. There's one in Canada/UK called H.P. Not so popular in U.S.
"See I don't like any of You"
No worries Lawrence, everyone feels this way on a Friday evening after a long week.
So true 😅
mmmm best dessert to have on the 4th of July....a piping hot slice of apple pie with a scoop of vanilla ice cream...we call it Pie Ala Mode
There is a big difference between the British pompion pie and American pumpkin pie from how the pumpkin is prepared for the pie to the herbs and spices used. I think I'd prefer the American style pie over the British one.
"pumpkins" as we know it today were discovered in the Americas. "pompion" was just another name for "gourd". It was probably made with squash.
@@WGGplant All squashes, including pumpkins, originate in the Americas.
Us Brits do not eat Pumpkins. We only use them for decoration at Halloween as they see easier to carve than a turnip
@@heatherboardman7004 Yet there are several websites with British recipes for dishes with pumpkin in them.
@@chiprbob of course. you can find british recipes with chinese ingredients, too. it is irrelevant. pumpkin is by and large almost never eaten here in the uk, i should know, im actually from here. naturally you prefer your pumpkin pie because it is some horrific sweet and savoury abomination only your tastebuds are acclimatised to
I grew a winter squash this year called cushaw. It's about 2 or 3 times the size of a butternut squash. A word to the wise. I threw a handful of seeds in the dirt and I got 9 of these mammoths. You can toast the seeds for snacking. I'm still planning on growing them next year as long as my friends are willing to help me out eating them.
Everyone should try making pumpkin pie with a layer of pecans baked on top..
10:45 Didn't know you had a cat as well! Would love to see it featured.
Things that are American but came from Britain:
1. America
No, North America was here all along. The British just started stealing it.
TIL I learned that Land of Hope and Glory, which I’d seen referred to in British novels, is actually a tune I know. Its proper name actually is the Trio from Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1 in D. It’s one of 6 Pomp and Circumstance marches that Elgar wrote, and that particular one was featured at the 1901 Proms, where it was popular enough to merit a double encore.
Every flavor of Gaelic, actually. I've always wanted to learn Gaelic.
Flavour*
"Pompion Circumstance" sounds like a PDQ Bach composition.
All the way till grocery stores had ready access, both apples and oranges were considered presents. Transport across this large nation was expensive, so prohibitive for many. They were also used at christmas.
Yes, my mother used to tell me what a special treat it was to get an orange and a few walnuts in your Christmas stocking. In our family that morphed into tangerines because my mom liked them better.
@@Birdbike719 Wow! We always had an apple and orange as Dad was from Connecticut, Mom from California. Dad 1915, Mom 1923. their folks the 1800s. So much has changed re fruits and vegetables, have to look up on the cell phone all the newer types of produce when shopping!
We always got apples, oranges, and a variety of unshelled nuts in our Christmas stockings. I know it isn't as common now, but it was when I was growing up.
@@donnagoring250 Yes ! My parents , born in 1921 , also told we kids about getting an orange at Christmas - how special it was & considered " exotic " ! Also , my parents & grandparents talked about other fresh fruits , like pineapples , & veggies not common when they were growing up .
@@cynthiajohnston424 Thank you Cynthia! Happy Holidays!
Thank you, chef Henderson for your wonderful gift to the world!
As an ex pat Geordie in Canada I love to hear all the myth debunking on your channel. ;). That being said I enjoy how you connect all the 'Merica to UK" history. ;)
As a Canadian, these videos have been fun to see which British things we have and which American things. Generally speaking through my whole life, Canada has seemed like a cultural midway point between the UK + Ireland and America, with a bias towards American tendencies. Are there any things you've found living here that seem quintessentially British?
1:29 I have to add that Spanish is very confusing. The Western Hemispheric SPANISH has no word for “lime.”. In French, one can say, “Citron vert,” but when I say “límon verde,” I always end up with a lemon. 100% of the time. I live in houston, texas, but I am from San Diego, California.
As a fluent speaker of American, I would love a Babbel course on English.
You'll find the English Babbel course pretty similar to your 'American'... funny enough, just another thing you inherited 🤷♂
Also our Star Spangled Banner’s tune is from England, adapted from a London men’s club drinking song. Was half shocked to learn that, as it’s our national anthem, and half not surprised at all, as countless aspects of our country, such as patriotic tunes, city names, and so on are derived from England
It was adopted as the national anthem only in about 1930. It's rival at the time was My Country 'Tis of Thee.
Thank you, Laurence, for giving some love to the Pagans, acknowledging that it's about more than just dressing up and begging for candy.
pie! It's about pie right!?
Ok but dressing up and getting candy is fun even if it is silly 😊
One of the best versions of the Halloween story appears in the novel "Faerie Tale," by Raymond Feist: Every year at Samhain all manner of supernatural critters have to move house, so you see them roaming the streets at night, looking for new abodes. And if you don't leave a "treat" out for them, they just might move in with you and haunt your house for a year.
I want to learn Mongolian but I have not seen that in babl.
@@nmgg6928damn right
Lirterally put it in my board yesterday on Today in History board!
I first remember hearing Pomp and Circumstances playing on a cartoon that played on Nickelodeon. I believe it was called "Dangermouse" and they'd play it whenever Buckingham Palace was shown.
My husband grew up watching Danger Mouse. He quotes it to me often, and now has the DVD set.
Nice video and just in time for the fall Holidays.
Wow, Laurence!, you’ve gotten 5,000 views in the first 50 minutes since this video was posted. Well done! A1 Steak Sauce origin in England was a surprise.
Ooo! Laurence! So great to see you 😊
A.1. primary base is raisin mash. Kit Kats are also British.
1930’s so right
I love your witty humor.
When you do your episode of British things with American origins I assume you’ll include Heinz Beanz which are grown in America, dehydrated and shipped to England where they are rehydrated, cooked and canned for use in your traditional English breakfast. The Company Heinz is based in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania. Heinz makes lots of condiments and other Rod it’s for sale in the US but oddly, not beans. Bush’s, Del Monte, & Van de Camps are the “go to” brands for canned beans in America.
Do any Brits actually mistake them for actually being British in origin? I feel like the German name would have tipped them off.
I bought some Heinz Baked Beans made in the UK in Warrendale near Pittsburgh, oh the irony.
As a native Pittsburgher. I ca mmmm attest that English Heinz beanz taste very different than our American Heinz baked beans!
@@conniecrawford5231 Yes. I used to attend a brit expat meetup group and we had a taste-off and every brit picked the Heinz. I did actually run across some US Heinz beans a while back so they must have been testing the market. They were barbeque flavored though.
@@stevethepocket I think many Brits know Heinz as an American brand, but when referring to the best baked beans, they say “Heinz” obviously but specially make it known the English/Brit version… they know the difference ingredients change through UK production enough to state this when I’ve watched many UK celebs interviews, UA-camrs etc 😂🤷🏻♀️
From what I’ve heard it quite a lot different. 😆🤷🏻♀️
I recently read that the Scottish immigrant kids would also take your garden veg and sling it at your house, preferably a cabbage. Apparently back in Scotland they would throw one cabbage and it would be your neighbor and it was all in good fun...
A1Steak sauce? Hey great tasting sauce crosses all borders. Texas Roadhouse steaksauce is also awesome too. And Halloween is my Wifes SuperBowl. As in Go Big or Go Home. One example: We have over 18 Halloween Inflatables in our front yard, maybe 20.
Thanks. I love your posts. Very knowledgeable guy.
Well, it's almost midnight in south-east Australia and I think it's very cruel that you're discussing the origins of apple pie because now that's all I want as a midnight snack 😅
What I recall hearing (okay, this was fifty-some years ago and I was ten, and at a reproduction of Independence Hall in California, so bear with me) was that the Liberty Bell was *recast* after cracking on its first sounding -- and cracked again when sounded after recasting. I don't recall them mentioning it being shipped across the Atlantic for the rework, but I suppose it's possible. Interestingly, their replica Liberty Bell, exact to dimension and with a *faux* crack cast in, sounded in the exact same pitch as the original, but had been sounded several times without cracking...
Went to my local UK 🇬🇧 shoppe to buy a box of Curly Wurly's. Not because I miss them from all my years in the UK, but because I miss the exact same Marathon bar from the 1970s USA. Same candy bar. Had to go decades without the Marathon bars until I discovered they were still in production in the UK as the Curly Wurly.
That's odd! UK Marathons were rebranded 'Snickers' 30-odd years ago, but Curly Wurly has ALWAYS been Curly Wurly - although it is pressed out of a sheet of toffee instead of being laid in that shape with thin nozzles. I bought Curly Wurlys right from the original time they appeared in the shops. Incidentally, the American Marathon is nothing like the UK one, the Mars Bar has the texture of a Milky Way, and Butterfingers are the best chocolate bar in the world (after Crunchie and Bounty, of course).
Where can I get one. Loved marathon bar!!!!
@@theboyisnotright6312 Do you mean the UK Snickers bar? As I said, that's not the same as the US Marathon bar. And I don't know if you can get it in the US.
@@leoniemarks4594 the curly wurly I guess they call it. Like a carmaly toffee covered in chocolate.
See also; The Flump
Lawrence, have you not figured out that what makes America great is that it has part of every country in it ?
Grape pies are American, invented by Irene Bouchard in the Finger Lakes region of New York in the 1950s. I've never tried it. I've never heard the term "As American as Grape Pie" so I suppose it hasn't caught on yet.
We Americans are the only ones smart enough (or crazy enough) to make desserts and children's drinks from *grapes* 🍇!
For thousands of years, raisin pies 🥧 and cakes existed all over the world. But not until Mrs. Bouchard, did anyone contemplate baking with grapes without drying them first!
Similarly, *wine* 🍷 for millennia was a beverage produced in every corner of the globe. But not until 1869, did Thomas Welch think to himself "what if, instead of naturally letting then ferment, we pasteurized and sieved crushed grapes?"
Now, you just can't imagine American kids' birthday parties 🎂 or snack times without *grape juice* !
American here. I've made that Pompion Pie recipe! It was delicious and more savory than sweet. We can't get currants here, so I had to sub with what they call red currants here, but aren't really currants. It was simple and delicious.
I can't tell you how excited I was to hear someone actually pronounce Samhain correctly for once🤩
I know, right?
He didn’t say it how we pronounce it in Ireland but a good attempt!
So non Gaelic speaker here, why are the M and H pronounced so differently?
@@maireadr Yeah, I was just excited he got close and didn't say Sam Hane
@@laurat7232 Differently than in English? I suppose it's because the Gaelic languages are Celtic languages and not comparable to the origins of English. Fun fact: Irish is still the first official language of Ireland.
You do some serious research! Very interesting!🙂