What's In Europe's LARGEST WWI Museum??? History Traveler Episode 319

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 24 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 313

  • @Plutokta
    @Plutokta 11 місяців тому +15

    Quick note: This museum came to life basically be cause of a single man. He had spent his entire life building up the largest private collection of WWI uniforms and trench art. When he died, he gave his entire collection to the city of Meaux which ended up with an entire warehouse full of his collection. And they decided to build a museum to display this collection, and then added more stuffs and it became the museum you see today.
    One of the best I've seen on WWI.

  • @cleverusername9369
    @cleverusername9369 Рік тому +62

    As a lover of museums, I'm so grateful when JD gives us tours of museums I'll probably never get to see. Even if it's an abbreviated tour, I thoroughly enjoy these walk-throughs and JD's commentary.

    • @TheHistoryUnderground
      @TheHistoryUnderground  Рік тому +7

      👍🏻

    • @f1matt
      @f1matt Рік тому +1

      100%

    • @badbotchdown9845
      @badbotchdown9845 Рік тому

      The first name was meaux pronounce MO​@@TheHistoryUnderground

    • @GMT439
      @GMT439 Рік тому

      @@TheHistoryUnderground No History is in there for a start. ALL Wars are Fake.

    • @chrisbrooks2963
      @chrisbrooks2963 Рік тому

      Norm Christie is doing a tour of Canadian WW1 memorials, battlefields and cemeteries in May 2024 for $3500 Cdn I'm considering joining. So never count yourself out from Seeing some of these places.

  • @allaboutboats
    @allaboutboats Рік тому +8

    Hey JD, when you showed that "French 75" I was kind of surprised that you did not expand on it. It was perhaps the most successful artillery piece of the war and set the standard for modern field guns. It was the first to use a hydraulic-pneumatic piston recoil buffer and did not move hardly at all during repeated firing, unlike those big Krupp guns that would "roll recoil" back 10 yards every shot. It also has full "counter-recoil" mechanism to place the gun back into firing position after every shot. It also had the "Nordenfeldt" type breech mechanism, which uses a rotating block with a notch cut into one side. When rotated, the notch exposes the chamber so a round could be inserted, then the block was rotated back and closed. All these features made these amazing guns super quick and accurate to fire and a good crew could get 25-30 rounds per minute from these 3 inch cannons! Pretty amazing for a cannon designed in 1897! During development, the French military kept these guns a highly guarded secret especially how the recoil system worked. The French Army loaned several hundred of them to the USMC when they entered the battle on the Allied side late in the war. The USMC also loved their "French 75's". I think you could possibly do an episode covering these guns all by themselves! Jerry

  • @jameswilson3156
    @jameswilson3156 Рік тому +25

    Don't ever stop making videos! Your "pure heart" of wanting to present history with all its features (whether good, bad, or ugly) is very much appreciated by me. History is never as pretty as we want it to be, but that doesn't mean that we should ignore it or change it. Keep up the awesome work!

  • @cyndiebill6631
    @cyndiebill6631 Рік тому +19

    I love the museum trips. They’re a great place to learn history in one spot and this one didn’t disappoint. Hope you’re feeling better. Keep taking it easy and thank you for putting out another great video.👍😊

  • @MuscleCarSolutions
    @MuscleCarSolutions Рік тому +10

    Pigeon wrangler was a term I didn't know that I needed in my life until now. Thanks for that! 😆 Thank you for this series. Its been amazing.

    • @lighthousebaptistchurchbir4648
      @lighthousebaptistchurchbir4648 Рік тому +3

      Did you notice on the side of the vehicle the word "Colombophile"? I looked that up, and apparently, that is the French word for a pigeon keeper, or pigeon fancier.

    • @orbtastic
      @orbtastic Рік тому +1

      @@lighthousebaptistchurchbir4648 Came here to say Pigeon fancier in the UK. Term has always amused me. My old primary school was right next to some allotments and a lot of the guys kept pigeons.

    • @MrTumbleweed22
      @MrTumbleweed22 Рік тому

      I would have thought they would have been part of a signal corps as they were sending messages via pigeon

  • @frenchfan3368
    @frenchfan3368 Рік тому +17

    Meaux is pronounced "Mo," as in what you do to your lawn. The letter combinations -eau and -eaux simply produce the sound "oh" like the letter o. Great work on this series. Very well done and appreciated!

    • @TheHistoryUnderground
      @TheHistoryUnderground  Рік тому +4

      Thanks!

    • @GordonFreeman-sl6pi
      @GordonFreeman-sl6pi 2 місяці тому +1

      As a Frenchman, I'm so glad I didn't actually have to "learn" french, just grew up in it. Our language makes no sense whatsoever, you have to memorise everything because there's no logic. This is also the reason French people will often correct you if you make a mistake while speaking french. It's not because we're arrogant pricks, it's because it's how we learned, our parents and teachers correcting us all the time until it is hammered in our head, because you cannot GUESS French, you have to KNOW it.

  • @dawnlefevre9172
    @dawnlefevre9172 Рік тому +28

    What a brilliant display of all the different soldiers "marching to war"!! My favorite part!!

  • @MotDoiAnLac258
    @MotDoiAnLac258 Рік тому

    Wow! Thank you for sharing this.

  • @bradbalderson8172
    @bradbalderson8172 Рік тому +8

    Love the museum visits JD, this series continues to be very good!

  • @MajorDenisBloodnok
    @MajorDenisBloodnok Рік тому +10

    Fun fact: most of the taxis used during the battle of the Marne were taxis owned by a company called G7. The G7 was founded and owned by the count André Walewski, great grandson of Napoléon...
    André fought during WWI, was wounded and received the Croix de Guerre medal.

  • @Wreckdiver59
    @Wreckdiver59 Рік тому +7

    They really did a nice job showing the deeper history leading up to the war. The Franco-Prussian war was a whole other ballgame. The changes in the weaponry as the war progressed was also interesting. I would have liked to have seen more, but I understand the challenges of filming in a museum when everything is behind glass 😉

  • @froot6086
    @froot6086 Рік тому +4

    so much incredible history in one place, awesome video JD

  • @historyinyourhand1787
    @historyinyourhand1787 Рік тому +1

    Great video 👏 I need to get to that museum at some point in the future!

  • @pablopeter3564
    @pablopeter3564 3 місяці тому +1

    Thanks very much for this excellent video. You paid tribute to the ones who fought during WW I. My grandfather did on the Austro-Hungarian side, then moved to Mexico and here I am. Greetings from Mexico City.

  • @MrBradleyDavid
    @MrBradleyDavid Рік тому +2

    Welcome back JD. Glad you came out of your recent illness for another great post. Sorry it ruined your Thanksgiving...

  • @hartweld65
    @hartweld65 Рік тому +5

    Wonderful video. Thanks for sharing your journey through France during WW1. I have learned and re-learned much about WW1 from your journeys. Keep up the good work.

  • @Damo-np7ul
    @Damo-np7ul Рік тому +4

    Trench clubs were used in trench raids not official/traditional combat. A trench raid was undertaken in secret at night when a small group would slip into an opposing trench and silently kill and butcher the enemy. There was a large psychological element to the practise.

  • @TheRagratus
    @TheRagratus Рік тому +2

    That museum looks fantastic. Well thought out and put together. As a long-time sub to your channel, I can't tell you how many new entries you've been responsible for in populating my life's "bucket-list".

  • @mrDCunningham
    @mrDCunningham Рік тому +1

    Nice video JD. I hope you are feeling better 👍🏼😎

  • @jaycrawford1284
    @jaycrawford1284 Рік тому +4

    Hey JD, I'm a Canadian and been watching all videos from when you first started this channel. You going to be doing more WW1 videos outside of Verdun? Like the Somme, or Pachendale, or Vimy Ridge. You should do more on ww was just excellent to watch Verdun

  • @Homievegetable
    @Homievegetable Рік тому

    This video randomly came up in my auto-play, but man did I enjoy it. You're truly a gifted teacher/storyteller

  • @sevenonthelineproductionsl7524

    I visited this place with my aunt 11 years ago. Glad you got a chance to go in! Meaux has some significance in the 1918 fighting that involved the American Expeditionary force. I liked how they commemorated the war and its legacy. Definitely take the time to check out the Musee d'Armee in Paris if you ever get the chance! It's right up your alley and includes multiple eras of french history (as well as the tomb of Napoleon).

  • @74charger44
    @74charger44 Рік тому +1

    Thanks J.D. for showing us this museum. I really appreciate this because I know that I will never make it to Europe. If I could, I would visit all these places.

  • @hotbug597
    @hotbug597 Рік тому +1

    Nice job, very well presented. Left me wanting more, much more. You really do present history such a way that it is relatable, not at all dry and makes the life of an ordinary soldier come to life. Thank you so much. I always await your next video with lots of anticipation.

  • @pauldouglas3084
    @pauldouglas3084 Рік тому +1

    Really enjoyed the video mate can't wait for the next video

  • @joshmarks3954
    @joshmarks3954 Рік тому +8

    That French light machine gun the might of had its faults but it was a huge step forward in mobile firepower. Check out Ian from Forgotten weapons shooting the thing.
    Love the series by the way!

  • @davidsawmandave8731
    @davidsawmandave8731 Рік тому +1

    What a treat to see this one , they have alot , the different uniforms were amazing , imagine what this collection is worth , as an only child , I grew up with a special friend who collected artifacts from all wars , he used to let me play with the different coats and caps , I have a special place in my heart for this kind of stuff

  • @michaeldelahunty2440
    @michaeldelahunty2440 Рік тому +1

    The Australian slouch hat made so the men would not knock the hat off when shouldering arms

  • @NickRatnieks
    @NickRatnieks Рік тому +3

    I think those blue flowers we can see at the beginning, are cornflowers and this plant is symbolic for a number of reasons. It was adopted as the French symbol of war as was the poppy by the British Empire. It is known as the bleuet de France and represented the first conscripted soldiers who arrived on the front line and has been used in remembrance since the war.

  • @ShirleyMalia
    @ShirleyMalia Рік тому

    So glad you're well again!

  • @michielvanratingen8958
    @michielvanratingen8958 Рік тому +1

    JD, I thoroughly enjoy your coverage of WW1. If you are ever in Ingolstadt, Bavaria, please visit the Museum of World War I (Bavarian Army Museum). So often we only look at one side of the conflict only, but this museum will show you the other side (without choosing sides). I can really recommend it.

  • @sandramosley2801
    @sandramosley2801 Рік тому +2

    What great displays this museum has. Of course, we have your excellent narration as well (really, really good), but, for example, displaying the uniforms in those narrow cases, at roughly your height, so that you are “marching” with them, tells you significantly more than just the uniforms identified in a case along a wall.

  • @MrEaglesfan40
    @MrEaglesfan40 Рік тому +1

    What a fascinating museum seems to have a little of everything, and very well put together

  • @searchingforaway8494
    @searchingforaway8494 Рік тому +1

    Outstanding!!!! 👍

  • @dystopianfuture1165
    @dystopianfuture1165 Рік тому +2

    This should be a Netflix series. Quality content.

  • @jamessmith5266
    @jamessmith5266 Рік тому

    I visited this museum a couple of times whilst living in France, I am so happy to see it again here. I highly recommend going to all those who can

  • @agreenandscaredtube6078
    @agreenandscaredtube6078 Рік тому +1

    a little correction on the rifles you pointed out at 19:51 it is not the K98 as that would come later in 1933 but this one is the G98 which entered service in 1898

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 Місяць тому

      There was a K98AZ in service during the Great War. The later K98k was developed from it.
      If it had a side sling and bent bolt in WW1 Germany terms, it was a Karbiner.

  • @museedelagrandeguerre77
    @museedelagrandeguerre77 Рік тому

    Thank you for you visit and your vidéo ! See you soon

  • @patriot3294
    @patriot3294 Рік тому +1

    Just discovered you, instant subscriber. Thanks

  • @A410-f1o
    @A410-f1o Місяць тому

    Such a great video you did there ! Thank you

  • @JW-sy2yt
    @JW-sy2yt Рік тому

    Excellent summation of the WWI museum. Can never get enough of WWI!

  • @markdul7857
    @markdul7857 Рік тому

    Always a pleasure to watch. Thank you for all you do

  • @250sabre
    @250sabre Рік тому

    Thank you very much for the tour sir !!!

  • @G.S.T.K
    @G.S.T.K Рік тому +8

    Hi JD just wanted to wish you and your family a very merry Christmas 🎅 when it comes round,and thank you for all that you do,I’ve watched you for a long time now and have learned so much,thanks again JD stay safe

  • @markb.7642
    @markb.7642 Рік тому

    JD. The Meaux is pronounced "MOW" you never cease to amaze me at the content of what you bring us, I could spend days in a museum not to mention meandering around all those battle fields. While you are over there I hope you get the chance to brings the battle of Belleau Wood.

  • @Wiewel1960
    @Wiewel1960 12 днів тому

    After having read “ Vimy” by Pierre Berton your tours have been very informative and (being Dutch ) visiting all the sites will be on my bucket list for the coming season 🏍️👍
    Keep up the good work

  • @tonydoggett7627
    @tonydoggett7627 Рік тому +1

    There’s just about every example of German ww1 artillery, as war memorials in towns across Australia. 🦘🇦🇺

  • @Headstoneman
    @Headstoneman Рік тому +1

    This is a great video! As a civil war lover I’m starting to really enjoy a lot of WW1 content now too… also I had to chuckle when you said “pigeon wrangler” lol!

  • @davidolien2828
    @davidolien2828 Рік тому

    Thank you for bringing back memories of my visit to the museum in 2018.

  • @chipcook5346
    @chipcook5346 Рік тому +1

    So pleased to find there is another WW1 museum besides the one in my neck of America. Maybe someday, should I ever go to Europe, I will visit it. Thank you for the video, man.

    • @n0rmal953
      @n0rmal953 2 місяці тому +1

      I mean there’s plenty in pretty much every European country.

  • @jetsons101
    @jetsons101 Рік тому

    Your museum narration is really enjoyable, it almost like I'm standing there with you....

  • @lthom5158
    @lthom5158 Рік тому

    Hope you’re feeling better! Great video! The museums are always interesting!

  • @stevenveltrie1868
    @stevenveltrie1868 Рік тому

    Nice tour.... thanks.

  • @baldophil1386
    @baldophil1386 Рік тому

    Très intéressant merci pour la belle visite.

  • @Dillon6191
    @Dillon6191 Рік тому

    I’m so dumb, started watching without really looking at the title and thought it was WW2 and was confused when yo talked about the assassination of the Archduke.
    Love the content as always man, stay safe!

  • @Stoney_AKA_James
    @Stoney_AKA_James Рік тому

    Another interesting video JD!
    I'm glad that I found this video, for whatever reason it was not on my feed...

  • @hnkr
    @hnkr Рік тому

    thanks you for the cool tour. i would love to visit it myself!

  • @dawnlefevre9172
    @dawnlefevre9172 Рік тому

    Wonder if the enemy had "pigeon snipers" to mess with communications!
    Thanks for putting this out while being sick! Very much appreciated! Feel better soon!

  • @garyc39
    @garyc39 Рік тому

    You have done an excellent job explaining things.

  • @Conn30Mtenor
    @Conn30Mtenor 9 місяців тому

    This museum is amazing- I've been to the French Army museum and the Tomb of Napoleon, which is fantastic but It has nowhere near as much WW I artifacts. Thanks very much for that- I'll be seeing this museum on my return to France.

  • @timwirasnik5878
    @timwirasnik5878 Рік тому

    Yet ANOTHER Top Quality Video JD! You know, your getting pretty good at these things!

  • @Dellboy56
    @Dellboy56 Рік тому

    I was never notified about this latest video from JD. I found it by scrolling. I've been a subscriber for some time, this is poor service from UA-cam. Thankfully I'm here now, but no thanks to UA-cam!
    Great stuff as ever from JD.

  • @luskimo1
    @luskimo1 Рік тому

    looks like a great museum to visit...learning stuff about WWI that i never knew in school except for the basis of why the war happened..thanks for filling in some gaps

  • @Sir_vAce
    @Sir_vAce Рік тому +1

    I'm sorry, but being born and living in Ypres, at 10:10 seeing that top arrow go straight through my beloved city... the truth is the Germans never got passed Ypres, due to the heroic defense mounted by hundreds of thousands of soldiers. To see it depicted here like wasn't even a pushback makes me sick. The French museums need to understand that Ypres was AS big as Verdun, if not bigger. The destruction even to this day scars our lands, and every year (I'm not kidding) people die due to unexploded shells getting dug up during plowing.

    • @elchapito4580
      @elchapito4580 Рік тому +1

      Ypres is less than 200,000 killed.
      Verdun is more than 305,000 dead.
      Give me a MASSIVE BREAK, right now.

    • @elchapito4580
      @elchapito4580 Рік тому +1

      SHAMEFUL COMMENT !!!

    • @elchapito4580
      @elchapito4580 Рік тому +1

      Maybe you should get a clue before spewing such revolting nonsense.

  • @MrEaglesfan40
    @MrEaglesfan40 Рік тому

    Great video JD thanks for showing the museum very cool

  • @merlijnveijk855
    @merlijnveijk855 Рік тому

    Lovely episode again JD

  • @lollclark457
    @lollclark457 Рік тому

    A brilliant museum! More unusual than most but definitely worth a visit!

  • @Gitarzan66
    @Gitarzan66 Рік тому +1

    Welcome back my bearded brutha.

  • @Thecohostobviouzx
    @Thecohostobviouzx Рік тому +2

    19:11 The Germans were not the first to use gas, actually the French were. They deployed the first gas attack in August of 1914, less than a month after the war began.

    • @TheHistoryUnderground
      @TheHistoryUnderground  Рік тому +1

      You’re gonna have to give me a bit more than that because every resource that I can find points to April 22nd, 1915 as being the first time that gas was used in warfare.

    • @frontenac5083
      @frontenac5083 Рік тому +2

      You are correct!

    • @NewChannel-wi7vj
      @NewChannel-wi7vj Рік тому +1

      The German gaz attack in Ypres in April 1915 was the first large scale use of gas in warfare, but technically, there were indeed attempts as early as a year before that, in August 1914, when the French used tear gas grenades against the Germans.
      The Second Battle of Ypres, though, (on April 22nd, 1915) was the first time chlorine gas was used (by the Germans after their chemists had "invented" the thing).
      @@TheHistoryUnderground

    • @NewChannel-wi7vj
      @NewChannel-wi7vj Рік тому

      I think you and the original commenter you've answered to are both correct!
      Indeed, gas was used as early as August 1914, but April 22nd, 1915 was the first use of a *deadly gas* ; which, to be fair, is what really matters!
      @@TheHistoryUnderground

    • @NewChannel-wi7vj
      @NewChannel-wi7vj Рік тому

      (Attempt 3 at posting the text...)
      (Edit: it worked! I had to amputate the internet address for the site.)
      Bellow is the text that turned me into a last-minute armchair expert about gas in WWI. It's relatively lengthy and not a primary source, but in the unlikely case you find some of it useful, here it is (from as site called remembrance trails - northern france):
      *Gas- Remembrance Trails of the Great War in Northern France*
      (Author: Edouard ROOSE)
      The war of position and attrition that was the trench warfare of the Great War soon encouraged the belligerent armies to develop new weapons, such as aeroplanes and tanks, in order to gain a better knowledge of the enemy's defensive organization and weaken or eradicate its forces. Poison gas was the epitome of this process.
      In August 1914 the French started using tear gas grenades against the German troops. In turn, in Neuve-Chapelle in October 1914, the Germans used shells containing a chemical which caused violent sneezing fits amongst the French soldiers. Used on a small scale, the effects of these incapacitating gases were very short-lived.
      Aware of the military potential of chemical substances, it did not take long for German chemists to isolate a very harmful gas which was produced during dye manufacturing: chlorine gas. Chlorine burns the mucous membranes of the lung walls and is therefore ultimately fatal. On 22 April 1915, during the Second Battle of Ypres, the German Army used chlorine gas for the first time. This first ever use of a deadly gas was unanimously condemned, both by enemy belligerent states and neutral nations such as the United States of America. Nevertheless, this attack opened the way for this new breed of weapon to be used regularly by both sides.
      Chlorine gas had two major drawbacks: it had a strong smell and its green colour was easily recognizable. It therefore alerted its intended victims to the imminence of an attack. Furthermore it was extremely tricky to handle because not only was it contained in heavy cylinders, which had to be carried to the front line by hand, once in position, soldiers could only use it if the weather conditions were right. For example, during the Battle of Loos in September 1915, the British Army was the first victim of its own gas attack when a fickle wind changed direction. This consideration forced the belligerents to seek new ways of delivering the gas and they soon started adding it to their shells and mortars. The advantage of gas mortars was, like shells, they could be fired in any weather and over distances extending well beyond the front lines.
      In 1915 the French discovered that if they mixed chlorine gas, which is very light, with a heavier gas it spread out better. They chose phosgene, a colourless gas whose strong odour resembles that of rotting hay. It was less of an irritant than chlorine gas and as a result victims inhaled it more deeply and over a longer period, making it all the more effective.
      The dangers of chlorine gas and phosgene were very real and both camps soon developed the means of protecting their soldiers from the gases' effects. For chlorine gas, soldiers were issued with a piece of gauze which they soaked in a solution made from bicarbonate of soda, or failing that urine, which they held in front of their noses and mouths. The first chlorine gas attack was made in April 1915 and by June of the same year the entire British Army was equipped with Balaclava-like hoods, the fabric of which was impregnated with agents to neutralize the effects of the gas. From January 1916 this hood was replaced by the first "gas mask" which very soon equipped all the Allied and German troops. It was to be kept in a metal box always at the soldier's side and comprised a mask with eyeholes connected by a tube to a cartridge containing an active carbon filter. Special gas masks were also created for animals working on the front, such as horses and dogs. Numerous gas alert procedures were developed and bells (sometimes pieces of shell) were installed in all the trenches to be used as alarms.
      However, these gas masks were of limited effectiveness against the notorious "mustard gas" used by the Germans during the Third Battle of Ypres in July 1917 and thereafter. The French called the gas, which was colourless but had a very light mustardy smell, "yperite" in reference to the place where it was first used. Mustard gas is a vesicant, since, as well as attacking the eyes and lungs, it burns the skin, causing extensive blistering. Soldiers exposed to strong doses of mustard gas died of asphyxia within four to five weeks.
      However the use of chlorine, phosgene and mustard gas in preparation for an assault was not intended to cause the death of enemy soldiers, indeed the concentration of these gases was rarely strong enough to have lethal effects, but merely incapacitate them. The gases caused blindness, which was usually temporary, as well as respiratory problems which were harder to cure.
      In addition to their physical effects, gases also proved to be a powerful psychological weapon. Despite the rapid spread of gas masks making gas-induced deaths rare from May 1915 onwards (according to estimates, only 3% of gas poisonings proved to be fatal), the stories told about the suffering endured by gas attack victims spread fear among the soldiers.
      At the end of the war, the horror of gas warfare led to the signature in 1925 of the Geneva Protocol prohibiting the "use in war of asphyxiating, poisonous or other gases, and of bacteriological methods of warfare". This did not however prevent European armies from stockpiling large reserves of poison gas as a preventive measure; although none were used during the fighting in the Second World War in Europe. Adolf Hitler, who was himself gassed at Wervicq-Sud in October 1918, was opposed to their use on the battlefield. His own use of gas, in particular Zyklon B, in the implementation of the Final Solution is however common knowledge.
      @@TheHistoryUnderground

  • @rodeastell3615
    @rodeastell3615 Рік тому

    Excellent and most interesting video. Thanks for posting.

  • @inlandsailor2541
    @inlandsailor2541 Рік тому

    Like the jazzy intro music, JD!

  • @Chris-Nico
    @Chris-Nico Рік тому

    Thank you so much, JD! What an awesome museum. Appreciate everything on WWI videos. I had two great uncles who fought in France in WWI.

  • @jrprimo5372
    @jrprimo5372 Рік тому

    Nice job!!!

  • @bernardlabat9423
    @bernardlabat9423 Рік тому

    Hello, i'm french and live near Paris. i went to this museum a few weeks ago, ignoring it was purposely the biggest of its kind in Europe. Very nice collection of uniforms and diverse artifacts, some nicely rehabilitated vehicles. The little problem is that's its mainly focused on german / french front with only a few mentions or exemples from other fronts (turquey / Dardanelles, Eastfront, or arabian front). Anyway it's a nice spot if you're going to Paris for a few moment and if you've got time... and are found of WWI history of course. Good alternative to a visit of the landbattles, much farther. Notice that the museum is almost at the maximum point of advance of the german army in 1914. Thanks for this very good video (and yes, you pronounce just "MO" but with an "O" in the french style !).

  • @peterwhitman5575
    @peterwhitman5575 Рік тому

    Always a Great vlog. Nice work, Thanks for your wonderful effort. 😮😮

  • @OldFrontLine
    @OldFrontLine Рік тому

    It's a superb museum, been visiting since it first opened. Another great video!

  • @MrEaglesfan40
    @MrEaglesfan40 Рік тому +1

    Howdy JD hope you are well sir

  • @Chiller11
    @Chiller11 Рік тому +2

    Ian McCollum is not gonna be happy with the Chauchat description I’m thinking.

  • @davidkimmel4216
    @davidkimmel4216 11 місяців тому

    Thanks for sharing your video

  • @russellmania79
    @russellmania79 Рік тому

    Absolutely fascinating

  • @TheGuit1
    @TheGuit1 Рік тому +3

    20:58 “french were Late adopters of camouflage“… WTF, we litteraly invented it, and you use a French word to describe it. (From the parler Picard « camucher »

    • @scottbivins4758
      @scottbivins4758 3 місяці тому

      Just because you invented it doesn't mean you thought about using it in warfare. It's okay

    • @TheGuit1
      @TheGuit1 3 місяці тому +2

      @@scottbivins4758 we were the first Military to create a whole section dedicated to creating Camouflage in WWI.

  • @jacquelinebloom4339
    @jacquelinebloom4339 Рік тому

    Very good. Thank you.

  • @daviddodson8922
    @daviddodson8922 Рік тому

    Apparently museums do that with lighting on purpose to reduce quality of video photography. I could be wrong but I feel like I've heard it mentioned by others. Thanks again for the great content. Hope to run into you again at the Gettysburg museum.

  • @julienporisse9902
    @julienporisse9902 Рік тому +1

    Thanks JD for this visit. Those shells are pretty nasty looking. Worse are the trench clubs…can you imagine the thing of actually man to man combat where you either kill or are killed…speechless

  • @Hardbody94
    @Hardbody94 Рік тому

    thanks for the upload, boss.

  • @mikemontgomery2654
    @mikemontgomery2654 Рік тому

    I gotta check this one out.

  • @justinweaver8107
    @justinweaver8107 Рік тому

    Have a good week

  • @bobbennett7195
    @bobbennett7195 Рік тому

    That was very interesting thank you.

  • @nicklrrueckert
    @nicklrrueckert Рік тому

    Great video, clicked instantly

  • @steveshipkie1624
    @steveshipkie1624 Рік тому

    Totally fascinating

  • @NDB469
    @NDB469 Рік тому

    Very very cool, thank you for sharing. I find WW1 to be just creepy and insane. The gas mask alone just makes each image of any soldier during the time absolutely haunting. Must of been hell on earth. Unimaginable

    • @frontenac5083
      @frontenac5083 Рік тому +1

      must *have been
      (or *must've been)

    • @NDB469
      @NDB469 Рік тому

      lol well alrighty then

  • @steph976
    @steph976 Рік тому

    You should visit Overloon (Holland) sometime. You also have Milletracks for German vehicles in Mai and one for allied vehicles in June around the museum.

  • @dcjway
    @dcjway Рік тому +1

    Great music soundtrack.

  • @amesbancal
    @amesbancal Рік тому +1

    Excellent

  • @gaylewilliamson9183
    @gaylewilliamson9183 Рік тому

    As usual JD ,very,very enteresting every bit of the video,thank you.👍❤️🇺🇸

  • @dbach1025
    @dbach1025 Рік тому

    Guns, guns, guns. Great original content. I swear you editing is getting even better. Great job. Love and look forward to your videos.

  • @digitalbase9396
    @digitalbase9396 Рік тому

    Great video, your camera frame rate may need to be changed to either 25 frames or 50 frames per second to compensate for the flickering in Europe. Shutter speed could also be adjusted.

  • @wildcolonialman
    @wildcolonialman Рік тому +1

    Fabulous.

  • @carguy1979
    @carguy1979 Рік тому +1

    Great look at this museum, thank you. Great editing as usual.
    5:10 Question: Is it just me or is any form of patriotism being vilified as nationalism now by the media and our politicians? Feels like another word being twisted into a dog whistle. I only ask because I hear it now and instantly have the negative aspects come to mind versus the virtuous ones.