That was fascinating and - as always - impeccably researched. I knew some of the story because my Dad was on a contemporary troopship (the 'Dilwara') at the same time whilst he was on National Service. In fact, he was very nearly posted to the "Empire Windrush" instead of the "Dilwara". Another contemporary British troopship from that era has a long and eventful story to tell - the "Empire Fowey" which began life as the German liner "Potsdam" in the early to mid 1930s. Captured by the British at Flensburg, she was refitted, renamed, and served as a troopship from the war's end until the 1960s. Incredibly, when her British service was done, instead of going for scrap she was sold to a Pakistani concern in Karachi, renamed "Safina-E-Hujjaj" and served for a further 20-odd years as a Pilgrim transport. She finally went to the breaker's yard in the mid 1980s, by which time she was at least 50 years old! If you were able to find out more about her to "fill the story out" she would, I am sure, make as equally fascinating a video as the "Empire Windrush" - very few of even the most heavily-built ships manage to reach a half-century of nearly constant service!
I travelled on the Windrush to Singapore aged 7 with my mother and sister leaving Southampton in December 1948 to join my father at RAF Changi. Remember being taken to the bridge by a ships officer when he saw myself and another boy up to mischief on deck! lol. Also her eventual sinking in the Med in 1954.
“I bet there are bits of this story you were not aware of” … that is an understatement of epic proportions. Just wow! That was a superb piece of work .. fascinating & thought provoking.
A lucky ship whose luck finally ran out! Thank you for yet another interesting video, Chris, this one proves that there is far more to the story than "popular culture" gives credit to.
What a fascinating and storied history that the Empire Windrush lived, I was in St. Kitts-Nevis which I believe was a former colony of the Empire. Thank you for telling her story so eloquently and with gusto. I think her brief involvement in the Holocaust can be forgiven as this ship brought numerous civilians and military personnel safely home. Kudos to you, amigo!
Thank you for the informative and interesting video, Mr. Green. I seem to be developing a fondness for British history. I would appreciate if you continued to make content, as you present your stories very well. Always a joy to watch. Take care!
Thank you for this, I had never heard of this vessel and its history, so I could enjoy it without any prior knowledge or subconscious bias relating to it.
I really liked the inclusion of the map of the Carribean at the 10:10 mark. My Dad was stationed in both Trinidad, and the Panama Canal Zone during WW II. And, when I was working in Angola, the "Houston Express" flight chartered by Chevron would overfly the island chain of the Eastern Carribean on the flight between Houston and Luanda. The lights on the islands at night were without number.
What a fascinating story...i never knew that the"windrush"had such an interesting backstory...thanks so much for posting ,always something more to learn😊
My Dad brought his new family back to the UK in September/October from India in 1947 on the Empire Windrush. I had just had my sixth birthday in the embarkation camp, Bombay. I recall the awful steamed fish meals. boys diving for coins at Aden, passing through the Suez Canal and docking at Southampton. I don't know if he sailed on her again going to and from the Korean war. My son still has the Teak trunk marked "Not Wanted on voyage.". This is part of our family too.
Sorry, forgot to say thankyou for such an important series of videos. Immensely enjoyable. Recently visited the bridge in Dandong over the Yalu river in China also in Shenyang where the Japanese had a POW camp for the Allies captured in the Pacific theatre. Nice to let the chaps they are not forgotten. Could be a video there?@@TheHistoryChap
Thanks, I'm glad you enjoyed it. Took a bit a flak from some quarters for mentioning the Windrush. Not sure they had actually bothered to watch the video.
I had never heard of the Empire Windrush, so found this story fascinating. What an incredible journey she had. Looking on Wikipedia I was amused to see that the "fate" of the Monte Rosa was to be Seized By The United Kingdom.
Chris I truly was interested in this story and makes you think what else happened in the second world war. Keep making the great videos love watching them
What an interesting history , darkened though by the history of the jewish prisoners to Germany and the disastrous one and only Caribean run and all that has entailed for Britain in the intervening years . Thank you for the video .
You have stated many of the passengers that came to the uk on the Windrush were ex servicemen and of the RAF. Also, making the point of how many people from the caribean fought for the british during the war. It felt to me like you were trying to justify them coming here and would like to see the evidence of how many of these passengers had indeed served in the war? Very interesting story of survival of a very lucky ship. I have to wonder how different the uk would be now, if the windrush had never visited the Caribbean?
Probably no different as it only made i voyage and 2 ships had already arrived. The justification was that they were allowed to come as British subjects. I guess that was part of having an empire.
I sailed to Hong Kong from Liverpool on the Empire Clyde and back to Southampton on the Empire Fowey. On the way out we had to stand at attention as we passed over the Windrush.
Fascinating, please do more of this kind of content. Your videos get better all the time. There is much more history to know than the narrative about Big A and his band of psychopaths.
My Dad came back from Libya on her in 1953 to be demobbed. I remember as a kid we had a Reader's Digest in the house (still the only one I've ever seen outside of a doctor's waiting room) with an article called "They Remembered The Birkenhead Drill", about the origin of the 'women and children first' protocal (HMS Birkenhead - 1852) and its rigid application when the Empire Windrush sank.
As an Australian old white man 64 lol I can honestly say say brilliant my friend would love a bit of a story about hmas Sydney doing the runs to Vietnam in our campaign and the 707 that flew to and from Australia to nam and return thank you Sir
Great video again, can you let me know if you have done any research into Job Henry Charles Drain V.C from the first world war, I believed he died at the beginning of the war saving two guns. he was a barking boy and has a statue out side the town hall. Once again great videos keep them coming I have enjoyed every one
Chris, is there any name for the biography or the life of a ship ? Your fine crafted story made me think of Hornblower and Graf Luckner .. Thx for the lesson again despite any propaganda or political ideas behind it, it was at least a very good history of a vessel! Ludwig
The Service Personnel and the Polish passengers were certainly different from those now known as "The Windrush generation"; afterall ther had been invited .
They were NOT invited - they took advantage of cheap fares being offered to help fill the available berths. The Govt. was dismayed by their arrival, and actually looked into ways of preventing a repeat performance.
You seem to be getting it from both sides, Chris. I am sorry for my earlier comment on your previous video. The comment about your video on the Windrush is also lacking in justification. This is a very good video about the ship, not its supposed symbolism, which you address very clearly as lacking in justification. It was not the first ship taking immigrants from the Caribbean, it did it once but it was the one that got the publicity. That is a lot like how history is written. Great video, keep it up, Chap.😊
Excelent story. It was Max Manus and Gregers Gram who put limpet mines on her in Oslo. They later sank the "Donau" the same way. It's covered in the movie, "Max Manus", which is quite viewable, though slightly exagerated....
I was a passenger (11 months old), travelling with my mother from Hong Kong to Southampton in 1954, on that fateful voyage when the engine room exploded and caught fire. Four crew members died, but of course that story is never told because no-one has been interested since “The Windrush Generation” was created. True, they and their descendants were cruelly treated by successive UK governments, but whether it is fair that the only voyage to the West Indies continues to be the one story the ship is known for some would disagree with. My story is virtually unknown.
Whole story completely new to me. I was afraid it would end in tragedy, to be honest. Thank God all of her last batch of passengers made it safely home.
The 1947 Polish resettlement was a grear example of immigrant integration. The 1948 Nationality Act was a far far less useful idea. If the government hadn't sent so many soldiers abroad in the late 40s and 1950s there would have been no need for immigrant labour. The UK should have dissolved the Commonwealth after Indian independence.
"They (the Poles) had been detained by the Soviets after Stalin's occupation of Poland in 1939" I thought it was Hitler's attack and occupation of Poland in 1939 that marked the start of WW2. Or do I need to watch another one of your educational videos to correct my thinking?
@@TheHistoryChap I'm not 100% but I think the British tried to conquer them for more land but they couldn't beat them in the end, I think the British just asked them to join us as mercenaries?.. I'm not good on military history that's why I rely on you 🤣
How on earth can you judge my video without watching it? The whole story includes it being a British troopship, attending the Queen's coronation review at Spithead and being in the Kriegsmarine during WW2.
@TheHistoryChap in his defense it is the only proper reaction to have these days as the lives of Western Europeans are filled with revisionist history, replacement & propaganda The video is pretty good I'm about half way through but when one of us hears "Windrush" we know what to expect 99.9% of the time
Sometimes I despair for humanity... all it takes to trigger a negative attitude is the mention of the name Windrush? Thanks for an excellently informative story that few would have heard about.
i'm at an age (i originally learned by reading so many long books🤫), that i kinda envy the youngers who are just learning such fond history tales. tyvm again, Chris. 🫎🇨🇦😁
Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? If that was a quiz, I got an F-.
That was fascinating and - as always - impeccably researched. I knew some of the story because my Dad was on a contemporary troopship (the 'Dilwara') at the same time whilst he was on National Service. In fact, he was very nearly posted to the "Empire Windrush" instead of the "Dilwara". Another contemporary British troopship from that era has a long and eventful story to tell - the "Empire Fowey" which began life as the German liner "Potsdam" in the early to mid 1930s. Captured by the British at Flensburg, she was refitted, renamed, and served as a troopship from the war's end until the 1960s. Incredibly, when her British service was done, instead of going for scrap she was sold to a Pakistani concern in Karachi, renamed "Safina-E-Hujjaj" and served for a further 20-odd years as a Pilgrim transport. She finally went to the breaker's yard in the mid 1980s, by which time she was at least 50 years old! If you were able to find out more about her to "fill the story out" she would, I am sure, make as equally fascinating a video as the "Empire Windrush" - very few of even the most heavily-built ships manage to reach a half-century of nearly constant service!
That's a fantastic post. Thanks so much for taking ther time to share.,
@@TheHistoryChap my pleasure.
Thank you Chris, for another great story. As retired Merchant Navy officer I know what a lot of research has gone into this story....! Great!
Glad you enjoyed it.
My Mother went out to India to join my Father on her in '46.
" the Windrush, more Wind than Rush ", she used to say !
It certainly was prone to mechanical problems!
How it stayed afloat was amazing !
... during it's life, that is ...
God Bless your Mum & all of us as well...
I travelled on the Windrush to Singapore aged 7 with my mother and sister leaving Southampton in December 1948 to join my father at RAF Changi. Remember being taken to the bridge by a ships officer when he saw myself and another boy up to mischief on deck! lol. Also her eventual sinking in the Med in 1954.
Thanks so much for sharing
Excellent video as always Chris, and you are correct, I knew very little about this ship.
Glad you enjoyed it. thanks.
What an amazing story she has. Thank you.
My pleasure. Thanks for your support.
“I bet there are bits of this story you were not aware of” … that is an understatement of epic proportions. Just wow! That was a superb piece of work .. fascinating & thought provoking.
Researching this story was like opening a Russian doll.
Thanks Chris. Delightful as always. I never miss your videos and I am yet to be disappointed. 👍👍
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks.
A lucky ship whose luck finally ran out! Thank you for yet another interesting video, Chris, this one proves that there is far more to the story than "popular culture" gives credit to.
Thanks for watching my video & for your comment.
What a fascinating and storied history that the Empire Windrush lived, I was in St. Kitts-Nevis which I believe was a former colony of the Empire. Thank you for telling her story so eloquently and with gusto. I think her brief involvement in the Holocaust can be forgiven as this ship brought numerous civilians and military personnel safely home. Kudos to you, amigo!
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks for watching.
I did not know the story of this ship.
thank you for telling it!
Did you really need to quibble on that point?
Thank you for the informative and interesting video, Mr. Green. I seem to be developing a fondness for British history. I would appreciate if you continued to make content, as you present your stories very well. Always a joy to watch. Take care!
Thank you for your very kind comment. I’m glad you’re enjoying my stories from British history plenty more to come.
Thanks!
You are welcome. Harry, I really do appreciate your support. Hope to see you on the live call today.
Wow! so much i didn't know. Love this channel
That’s very kind of you. Please consider joining my membership channel for even more insights.
Thank you for this, I had never heard of this vessel and its history, so I could enjoy it without any prior knowledge or subconscious bias relating to it.
Thanks for watching my video & for taking the time to comment.
What an amazing story, thanks for sharing.
Glad you enjoyed it.
What an amazing story. I obviously know of her, but nothing else. Fascinating, thanks Chris, looking forward to many more.
Thanks for watching my video, glad you enjoyed it.
Thanks
Thank you for your very generous support. Much appreciated.
I really liked the inclusion of the map of the Carribean at the 10:10 mark.
My Dad was stationed in both Trinidad, and the Panama Canal Zone during WW II.
And, when I was working in Angola, the "Houston Express" flight chartered by Chevron would overfly the island chain of the Eastern Carribean on the flight between Houston and Luanda. The lights on the islands at night were without number.
Thanks for your comment.
Just found your channel Chris and can’t stop binge watching. Superb channel , thank you Chris 👍
I’m glad you’re enjoying my videos.
Please make sure to subscribe to the channel so you don’t miss future ones
Such interesting history. Thank you for sharing!
Thanks for watching my video, glad you enjoyed it.
What a fascinating story...i never knew that the"windrush"had such an interesting backstory...thanks so much for posting ,always something more to learn😊
I was aware of the troopship bit but as I researched I couldn’t believe it!
My Dad brought his new family back to the UK in September/October from India in 1947 on the Empire Windrush. I had just had my sixth birthday in the embarkation camp, Bombay. I recall the awful steamed fish meals. boys diving for coins at Aden, passing through the Suez Canal and docking at Southampton. I don't know if he sailed on her again going to and from the Korean war. My son still has the Teak trunk marked "Not Wanted on voyage.". This is part of our family too.
Great story. Thanks for taking the time to share.
Sorry, forgot to say thankyou for such an important series of videos. Immensely enjoyable. Recently visited the bridge in Dandong over the Yalu river in China also in Shenyang where the Japanese had a POW camp for the Allies captured in the Pacific theatre. Nice to let the chaps they are not forgotten. Could be a video there?@@TheHistoryChap
Thanks Chris, great education
Glad you enjoyed it.
Such an interesting story and really well told, thanks and have a great weekend and stay well.
I’m glad you enjoyed it. Thanks very much for watching and have a lovely weekend too.
Another excellent video, these stories are niche and not always noticed but the shine a light on the past.
Thanks, I'm glad you enjoyed it. Took a bit a flak from some quarters for mentioning the Windrush. Not sure they had actually bothered to watch the video.
Thank you - I do not know how you make such good videos - I never go away from you video without being more entertain, enlighten and edumacated
Very kind of you. And thanks for your generous support.
An amazing and odd history for a ship. Well worth the listen. Thanks Chris. 👍
Glad you enjoyed it
I had absolutely no idea about this story other than the trip from the Caribbean.
Thank you so much for your excellent video sir.
Thanks for watching my video, glad you enjoyed it.
Thank you this was really interesting, i had no idea about the history of the ship
Glad you enjoyed it. If you haven’t already, please do subscribe to my channel so you don’t miss future videos.
Fascinating. Thanks Chris 🎉
Glad you enjoyed it
Excellent video Chris.. what a remarkable life the Monte Rosa / Empire Windrush had; the ship version of Carlton de Wairt
Speaking of whom, I will be telling his story in the non-distant future
I'm a naval history buff, enjoyed this story a lot , not being aware of this ship, thank you mr.Green!
Glad you enjoyed it
Another great video thanks
Glad you enjoyed it.
Hi Chris have you made a video on the Royal Navy’s West African Squadron.? A tale of great hardship for all concerned.
It’s on the cards. Please subscribe to my channel so you don’t miss it.
I just came here for the comments and I wasn’t disappointed.
Very interesting history of the ship although I think I like the original name better.
Thanks for watching my video & for taking the time to comment.
Thank you Chris for another fascinating video.🛳
Glad you enjoyed it.
Thanks
Very generous of you, thanks.
Excellent story. It would make a good specialist knowledge round on Mastermind!
I’m chuckling at the idea! Thank you for your support and please make sure you subscribe to my channel so you don’t miss future videos
I had never heard of the Empire Windrush, so found this story fascinating. What an incredible journey she had.
Looking on Wikipedia I was amused to see that the "fate" of the Monte Rosa was to be Seized By The United Kingdom.
It’s an amazing story.
Chris I truly was interested in this story and makes you think what else happened in the second world war. Keep making the great videos love watching them
Glad you enjoyed it.
Quite a story. Thx.
Thanks for watching my video
I thought it was unlucky to rename a ship, oh well bad memory on my part. Interesting video thanks Chris.
I guess it could be called unlucky seeing as it sunk within 10 years.
Thanks Chris awesome as always
My pleasure. Thanks for watching.
Great to hear more about this famous ship
Glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for watching
What an interesting history , darkened though by the history of the jewish prisoners to Germany and the disastrous one and only Caribean run and all that has entailed for Britain in the intervening years . Thank you for the video .
Thanks for watching my video & for taking the time to comment.
Good video Chris, excellent story well told. Thank you. Regards Jim.
Thanks, glad you enjoyed it.
You have stated many of the passengers that came to the uk on the Windrush were ex servicemen and of the RAF. Also, making the point of how many people from the caribean fought for the british during the war. It felt to me like you were trying to justify them coming here and would like to see the evidence of how many of these passengers had indeed served in the war? Very interesting story of survival of a very lucky ship. I have to wonder how different the uk would be now, if the windrush had never visited the Caribbean?
Probably no different as it only made i voyage and 2 ships had already arrived.
The justification was that they were allowed to come as British subjects. I guess that was part of having an empire.
We never had a Somalian colony did we?@TheHistoryChap
Fascinating. She seemed unsinkable, grounding, torpedoes, sea mines. Ironic that she destroyed herself in the end.
Glad you found it interesting. Thanks for watching.
I sailed to Hong Kong from Liverpool on the Empire Clyde and back to Southampton on the Empire Fowey. On the way out we had to stand at attention as we passed over the Windrush.
That’s a brilliant story. Thank you so much for taking the time to share.
Interesting post, thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it.
Truly Fascinating!!!
Thank you. Getting some flak in the comments 😆
Thank you so much for this video! I hope there will be many more of this era. I will be watching the Suez video next.😊
Thanks for watching my video
I knew that she was German but never got the history. Thank you,
Glad you enjoyed it. It f you haven’t already, please subscribe to my channel.
Brilliant 👍
Thank you very much.
If you haven’t already, please do subscribe to my channel so you don’t miss future videos
The arrival of the Windrush was the beginning of the end for Great Britain.
Thanks for your feedback
Sorry mate but it’s not Christians from the Caribbean that’s causing all the problems in Europe and Britain….its the religion of peace
Fascinating, please do more of this kind of content. Your videos get better all the time. There is much more history to know than the narrative about Big A and his band of psychopaths.
Glad you enjoyed it. Strangely enough I have taken some flak from certain quarters!
My Dad came back from Libya on her in 1953 to be demobbed. I remember as a kid we had a Reader's Digest in the house (still the only one I've ever seen outside of a doctor's waiting room) with an article called "They Remembered The Birkenhead Drill", about the origin of the 'women and children first' protocal (HMS Birkenhead - 1852) and its rigid application when the Empire Windrush sank.
Thanks for watching my video & for your interesting feedback.
As an Australian old white man 64 lol I can honestly say say brilliant my friend would love a bit of a story about hmas Sydney doing the runs to Vietnam in our campaign and the 707 that flew to and from Australia to nam and return thank you Sir
I will add to my list for potential future videos. If you haven't already, please do subscribe so you don't miss futures.
Mmm, Windrush, that's certainly a word... Mmm. Well, fishing later anyway, ships are a fitting topic when on the hunt for carp.
Thank you for taking the time to comment
That ship had quite the existence, good and bad. Her demise reminds me of the Titanic. I'd be up for a video on the Third Battle of the Hook.
Thanks for watching my video, & your comment.
Another excellent story, again revealing how History is "messy" - a lot more complicated than we think!
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks for watching.
Great video again, can you let me know if you have done any research into Job Henry Charles Drain V.C from the first world war, I believed he died at the beginning of the war saving two guns. he was a barking boy and has a statue out side the town hall. Once again great videos keep them coming I have enjoyed every one
Thanks for taking the time to comment & no, I haven't, but I will add him to my ever growing list.
Chris, is there any name for the biography or the life of a ship ? Your fine crafted story made me think of Hornblower and Graf Luckner .. Thx for the lesson again despite any propaganda or political ideas behind it, it was at least a very good history of a vessel! Ludwig
Not sure that there is. Nevertheless there are some great stories and I enjoy telling them.
Far too many in America have forgotten the Korean war too!
Thanks for watching my video.
No matter if Man or Boat, those Montys get around
Thanks for watching my video
Was she one of the Strength Through Joy ships in the 30s?
Yes, from 1934. She visited Norway and the fjords.....
She was not purpose built for it like the Gustloff.
Yes at some time in the 30's, but she was not built for that purpose.
I do hope this video does not get demonetized due to your mention of Germany in certain years and a certain warship
I doubt it.
The Service Personnel and the Polish passengers were certainly different from those now known as "The Windrush generation"; afterall ther had been invited .
Thank you for taking the time to comment
They were NOT invited - they took advantage of cheap fares being offered to help fill the available berths. The Govt. was dismayed by their arrival, and actually looked into ways of preventing a repeat performance.
@@vincekerrigan8300 Apolgies for lack of clarity, I was of course referring to the Poles.
You seem to be getting it from both sides, Chris. I am sorry for my earlier comment on your previous video. The comment about your video on the Windrush is also lacking in justification. This is a very good video about the ship, not its supposed symbolism, which you address very clearly as lacking in justification. It was not the first ship taking immigrants from the Caribbean, it did it once but it was the one that got the publicity. That is a lot like how history is written. Great video, keep it up, Chap.😊
Thanks for your comments & for watching my video
Great Story Chris...
History is a Bitch ...we may not like what reflection she shows us...but we should learn from Her
Glad you enjoyed it.
Excelent story. It was Max Manus and Gregers Gram who put limpet mines on her in Oslo. They later sank the "Donau" the same way. It's covered in the movie, "Max Manus", which is quite viewable, though slightly exagerated....
Thanks for watching my video & for your informative comment
Some time referred to as Empire Flatulance must have had something to do with wind ..
You missed your calling on stage -:)
I was a passenger (11 months old), travelling with my mother from Hong Kong to Southampton in 1954, on that fateful voyage when the engine room exploded and caught fire. Four crew members died, but of course that story is never told because no-one has been interested since “The Windrush Generation” was created. True, they and their descendants were cruelly treated by successive UK governments, but whether it is fair that the only voyage to the West Indies continues to be the one story the ship is known for some would disagree with. My story is virtually unknown.
Thank for sharing your tory. Not quite as unknown now.
Pictures of the Frozen Arsehole Brigade sailing for Korea
Thanks for your feedback.
I was on this ship with my mum in 1952,on our way to join my dad in Malaya
Thanks for sharing.
Whole story completely new to me. I was afraid it would end in tragedy, to be honest. Thank God all of her last batch of passengers made it safely home.
Thanks for watching & taking the time to comment.
Absolutely love your stuff. But am sick to the back teeth about the Windrush ?
So have you watched the video or are you just guessing about the content?
D-Day
Didn't participate in D-Day, she was stuck in the Baltic.
The 1947 Polish resettlement was a grear example of immigrant integration.
The 1948 Nationality Act was a far far less useful idea. If the government hadn't sent so many soldiers abroad in the late 40s and 1950s there would have been no need for immigrant labour. The UK should have dissolved the Commonwealth after Indian independence.
Thanks for taking the time to comment.
"They (the Poles) had been detained by the Soviets after Stalin's occupation of Poland in 1939"
I thought it was Hitler's attack and occupation of Poland in 1939 that marked the start of WW2. Or do I need to watch another one of your educational videos to correct my thinking?
Thanks for watching my video.
What a pity there were no icebergs around
Did you actually watch the video or are you just shouting your mouth off?
Can't wait for the Gurkhas
I think a lot of people don’t realise how the relationship started
@@TheHistoryChap I'm not 100% but I think the British tried to conquer them for more land but they couldn't beat them in the end, I think the British just asked them to join us as mercenaries?.. I'm not good on military history that's why I rely on you 🤣
Shouldn’t that have been emigrants on the voice over?
Maybe
Chris, I love your videos, but the Windrush narrative is pure propaganda and I won't be watching this one.
How on earth can you judge my video without watching it? The whole story includes it being a British troopship, attending the Queen's coronation review at Spithead and being in the Kriegsmarine during WW2.
Very little of this video covers that voyage, this is the history of the boat, not the migration from the Caribbean.
@@TheHistoryChapWe don’t need racists like Alfonzridesagain on here.
@TheHistoryChap in his defense it is the only proper reaction to have these days as the lives of Western Europeans are filled with revisionist history, replacement & propaganda
The video is pretty good I'm about half way through but when one of us hears "Windrush" we know what to expect 99.9% of the time
Sometimes I despair for humanity... all it takes to trigger a negative attitude is the mention of the name Windrush?
Thanks for an excellently informative story that few would have heard about.
i'm at an age (i originally learned by reading so many long books🤫), that i kinda envy the youngers who are just learning such fond history tales.
tyvm again, Chris.
🫎🇨🇦😁
I’m glad you’re enjoying my stories.
Plenty more coming your way
Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? Did you know ... ? If that was a quiz, I got an F-.
Ha ha, I will try to make it easier next time! -:)