Halifax, Nova Scotia. Oldest Photographs, Mi’kmaq, Norumbega, Citadel Hill, Star Forts Everywhere

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  • Опубліковано 30 лис 2024

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  • @Yosetime
    @Yosetime 10 місяців тому +2

    Wow! What a wonderful surprise! I was doing some research about Indigenous orphans from the Halifax explosion, in one of my first attempts at unveiling the unknown parents of my Grandpa John, when I came across this video. It went far beyond my expectations! Going back through history in such detail and with attention paid to each of the different narratives and proofs, really struck me as a top-level creation. Intelligent on every level. You are a gifted story-teller and historian with a keen eye for detail and common sense.
    So you have a new sub now! I will have to indulge in more of your video's, even if they take me away from my original goal for a bit. Very, very, well done! Thanks again for this thoughtful and informative creation!
    BTW: My Grandpa John was adopted by a white family after the explosion and subsequently never, ever left Nova Scotia in his lifetime except to fight in WW2. I was born there. We still have Grandpa John's land by a small river that leads to the Bay of Fundy in but a few minutes. To my knowledge, no-one has ever found his biological parents and my family has never considered ourselves 'indigenous' as Grandpa John is the only family member that we believe was . I intend to do a DNA test and further investigate this mystery. Thanks again!

  • @Sassyfreq
    @Sassyfreq Рік тому +3

    Super great video 👌🏼
    More ppl need to start to see

  • @vijaysuryaaditya9860
    @vijaysuryaaditya9860 Рік тому +19

    A truly excellent channel. Thanks so much for your hard work & dedication.

  • @joyreinhardt7621
    @joyreinhardt7621 Рік тому +2

    Am glad to have found your site, as it adds to the places where I can find new info !

  • @EveRoissy
    @EveRoissy Рік тому +24

    It seems that a lot of these structures were, again, already there, and like with many of the narratives we see, there is some great and sudden DESTRUCTION that takes a lot of them down... VERY interesting, as usual, about the Tarantine, of whom I had never heard, despite all my years of studying history and art history!

    • @EveRoissy
      @EveRoissy Рік тому +2

      @What.sapp.. I doubt this is the real Jarid. I've been seeing this happen on a lot of pages lately. Sigh...

    • @beaverbank9823
      @beaverbank9823 Рік тому

      Ya mom

  • @sandymacdonald3866
    @sandymacdonald3866 Рік тому +4

    Nova Scotia got some deep deep history.

  • @notemachinist2314
    @notemachinist2314 Рік тому +10

    Nice city, very interesting 🙏🏼

  • @bobetteturbo1549
    @bobetteturbo1549 Рік тому +3

    tanx a lot for your video Jarid !

  • @maryalison5173
    @maryalison5173 Рік тому +2

    Makes me think of Anne of Green Gables...the orphan trains, etc. Another aspect of the strange history we are told.

  • @bunnyfoofoo9695
    @bunnyfoofoo9695 Рік тому +4

    I felt so sad when I got to the end of your playlist, I have to start over again.

  • @matthewsullivan4171
    @matthewsullivan4171 Рік тому +9

    great video Jarid good work

  • @donavenhagle5284
    @donavenhagle5284 Рік тому +11

    Incredible work! This is the best deep dive of Halifax I've seen.

  • @erinbeamish9389
    @erinbeamish9389 Рік тому +4

    Thank-you again Jarid, I always love seeing your informative presentations, and the pictures with music which follow to the end of each,

  • @mickguadagnoli8779
    @mickguadagnoli8779 Рік тому +10

    Wowowow...the God damn syncrnicities.......I am reading a book (like literally this second) called Algonquin Legends of New England. Now- I should have waited for the video to be done as I am only a few minutes in but I can't contain my excitement. these are the Algonquin I'm about to talk about which are a HUGE mix of people so I'm going to try and keep it brief. The wabanaki are one of them.
    All of what you theorized is absolutely true. Their physical description and customs are an odd, strange mix of norse/Scandinavian (kind of the same)/Icelandic/Greenland/Eskimo/Tartar/Scythian/and a few other cultures!! Being so close to the St Lawrence. From what I read, in certain traditions Glooskap is basically the equivalent to Qutetzacoatl/Viracocha/Bochicha/Kukulcan, a culture bearer who came from a distance land to help them. I guess not all of the tribes have this exact story, however I wouldn't be surprised. The story of a cultured/divine man coming and brining arts and culture with them is boarder line universal.
    I can't even tell you how many times this has happened d lately where these odd things happen where the matrix is almost glitiching. I was literally reading a sentence that Glooskaps name was in while you said hid name...now really...out of all God damn words in the known world, Glooskap is probably the last one I'd ever think somebody would repeat at the same time as me.

    • @jasonbigdog2808
      @jasonbigdog2808 Рік тому +5

      I know when spanish catholic priest spoke to native americans about a flood and a man sacrificed to save humanity...their reply was yeah, we know,our ancestors taught us of that and a giant flood...also many native language symbols(somehow) are identical to ancient Hebrew...

    • @aaronlohr8477
      @aaronlohr8477 9 місяців тому

      I’m from Nova Scotia. I went to Glooscap elementary school. Glooscap was a giant, not that similar to Quetzalcoatl.

  • @pacoshep1142
    @pacoshep1142 10 місяців тому +1

    Scotia Equipment, now called Parts for Trucks, was to the right of the town clock on Brunswick St.

  • @jessecerasus9621
    @jessecerasus9621 Рік тому +8

    The relation between the Acadians and the Mcmaks is way deeper than what the history books say

    • @beaverbank9823
      @beaverbank9823 Рік тому +3

      They were bros and they teamed up against the British for 100+ years which stalled the colonization of ova scotia

    • @deniseelalala85
      @deniseelalala85 6 місяців тому

      Well, these white french folks were the first to help themselves to the first people land. I dont think so. Fighting a more armed and established group of white guys doesn't make thdm friends. It makes them comrades for a time in battle. Mikmaw and Acadians are mot friends now in fishing. Acadians were also racist in my lifetime.

  • @Пекинка-с9х
    @Пекинка-с9х Рік тому +1

    Very interesting! Thank you, Jarid!

  • @lynnbb
    @lynnbb Рік тому +3

    25:33 power lines & poles fine.. experience counts.

  • @benwebber248
    @benwebber248 Рік тому +5

    Nice. Thanks!!

  • @robo6118
    @robo6118 Рік тому +5

    Very interesting video Jarid. Thank you for sharing your amazing research.

  • @mrs.mcnamara1669
    @mrs.mcnamara1669 Рік тому +32

    “Mick-Mack” is how those of us who grew up in Toronto called them. A people with a very different history than those tribes found inland.

    • @ishcon9966
      @ishcon9966 Рік тому +14

      Mic mac. Mac being son in Scottish and mc or meic is son in Irish gaelic. Maybe same group divided after flood. One British isle territory other nova scotia.

    • @skxj
      @skxj Рік тому +10

      Its Meeg- mah.
      Not mic mac. LoL.

    • @GingerStone
      @GingerStone Рік тому +9

      That's what we were told growing up in Nova Scotia. It sounded like and was spelled "Mic Mac". We had landmarks like the Mic Mac Mall nearby Mic Mac Rotary. The locals complained about the four leaf clover shaped roundabout. It's gone and long since renamed sometime after I relocated in 1984.

    • @skxj
      @skxj Рік тому +5

      @@GingerStone I get that, but unfortunately how you were taught to pronounce it, is wrong and ultimately it is disrespectful to those people. If a person makes the effort to say it correctly it makes a difference .

    • @GingerStone
      @GingerStone Рік тому +14

      @skxj we said it with respect, as we were taught. Everything changed sometime after I left in the early 80s. NOBODY had this knowledge, including the "Mi'kmaq" who called themselves, MicMac.
      The Micmac language is an Algonquin one, related to that of the Micmacs' southern neighbors, the Maliseets, Passamaquoddy, Penobscot and Abenaki. All these northeastern tribes are culturally and linguistically related. Collectively, this group is called the "Wabanaki", which means "People of the Daybreak", or "Dawn land People" (wabun meaning "light" or "white", aki meaning "earth"

  • @ouik
    @ouik Рік тому +1

    Excellent

  • @bookofrevelation4924
    @bookofrevelation4924 Рік тому +3

    The poles sticking out of walls in picture asking what device is (14:00), are same diameter at bases as pole standing up, which are quite large not for weight and likely to carry very high voltage safely as possible.
    Notice fire escape near that end of building for quick escape.

  • @shanehiggins4983
    @shanehiggins4983 Рік тому +2

    I'm from Nova Scotia! Awesome video

  • @sirbaronvoncount4147
    @sirbaronvoncount4147 Рік тому +6

    Thanks this is my hometown. Check out Shubenacadie Canal sometime. A series of 9 locks that were flooded to allow ships to get from Halifax Harbour to The Bay of Fundy. It was a massive project and only operated for a decade. I walk there daily and it has never made any sense to me

    • @cragglerock2815
      @cragglerock2815 Рік тому +5

      Going through the Nova scotia archive website, I came across a picture dated 1890 I think. The Locke was already in overgrown ruins at this time. That got my spidey-senses tingling. None of the time-lines match up if you scratch the surface.

    • @peterparker9286
      @peterparker9286 Рік тому +1

      ​@@cragglerock2815You correct they say that the st. Lawrence was constructed in the 50's all them Lochs.

    • @beaverbank9823
      @beaverbank9823 Рік тому

      @@cragglerock2815 the locks were created by the Horne brothers who helped found the town of enfield nova scotia, which is where 3 of the locks are

  • @machinehead6961
    @machinehead6961 Рік тому +7

    Norembega,ya, likely , I did fort pulaski tunnels, I had a few on my channel and another to upload. It was at the other end of the landmass

  • @bookofrevelation4924
    @bookofrevelation4924 Рік тому +3

    As in Mackinac Bridge at Mackinaw City Michigan, and Mackinac Island where Michigan elected officials meet annually to plan things?
    The Mackinac Bridge is a suspension bridge spanning the Straits of Mackinac, connecting the Upper and Lower peninsulas of the U.S. state of Michigan. Opened in 1957, the 26,372-foot-long bridge is the world's 27th-longest main span and the longest suspension bridge between anchorages in the Western Hemisphere.

  • @jeffreybarry4694
    @jeffreybarry4694 Рік тому +13

    I asked a university professor of linguistics if they thought the Micmac language came from ancient Egyptian language and she replied "without a doubt."

    • @beaverbank9823
      @beaverbank9823 Рік тому +2

      They are descendants of the ancient Egyptians that's why they skin dark but the blood line been torm down

    • @coryskizm
      @coryskizm 7 місяців тому

      ​@@beaverbank9823My family are MIKMAW, I spent years doing research on the tribe and found out so much about myself. Firstly I grew up in Massachusetts and Mikmaq people regularly migrated down from Canada and all over New England, NYC. Come to realize I naturally did the same thing. My family has all the family tree connection and connections to the tribe,,I really want to get dual citizenship to Canada and reclaim my family roots.

  • @raypratt3611
    @raypratt3611 Рік тому +7

    So as I was watching the end photos it dawned on me,I thought possible TORNADO damage??but as I'm looking at the damage,with each passing photo I'm noticing that all the poles are still standing with most what would be right in front of the damage!!And most are not only still standing but they look untouched,with all ofcthem being in front of or in between the match sticks that were homes!?!?Well it seems they were up to their old tricks then as well,cuz there is loads of doubt in my mind with their ENTIRE STORY from get go!!

  • @TammySanfranciso
    @TammySanfranciso Рік тому +3

    “That explodee story’s detarded”~ Ricky

  • @sheilacape4794
    @sheilacape4794 Рік тому +1

    Wow! Ty

  • @jasonbigdog2808
    @jasonbigdog2808 Рік тому +2

    ...used to be large fort(maybe starfort) on other side of harbour-lg oil refinery on top now

  • @bigdaddyfab
    @bigdaddyfab Рік тому +5

    Bro, have you looked into the NYC water system? I haven't seen anything on it but things just don't add up. A large distance of tunnels done, I think in only 4 years, from the city up to Kingston upstate NY. Would love to hear your take on it.

  • @nunyobusinnes
    @nunyobusinnes Рік тому +4

    I think it would have been very interesting to your audience to cover the expulsion of the Acadians from Nova Scotia to stop their refusal to participate in the war between the English and French, they refused to take sides and were working in cooperation with the Mi'kMaq for a very long time before the aggressions. The people were treated terribly, and put to sea with nothing, their land, homes and farms taken from them, many of their men murdered. Some drifted down the coast to American shores and settled in places along the coasts and inland to the swamps. Later some families made their way back, other's stayed. It's an amazing and brutal piece of history and the first anti-war revolt in North America.

  • @PoliceStateRadio
    @PoliceStateRadio Рік тому +6

    all right.. you're getting closer to home now. could you please cover Montreal? i've looked high and low for old pictures of this place but it's getting harder and harder to find things. you seem to be really good at finding old world pictures of cities so i'm hoping one day that you'll cover Montreal and even Quebec city where there lies a huge star fort on the Plains of Abraham. I haven't been to any us cities yet but i've been to Quebec and it seemed to me that Quebec would have been settled by the french Jesuits a little after Halifax and then slowly migrated south down the St Laurence river, then on into the Mississippi all the way down to Louisiana. it's interesting that the emblem of Quebec and Louisiana are the Fleur de Lis. almost like symbolically saying the French were the beginning and the end, the alpha and the omega

  • @missdavid8976
    @missdavid8976 Рік тому +4

    The demolished buildings lack any charring from the explosion in the Harbour. Seems more like wind destruction....
    Where is the charred remains? Maybe it was similar to volcano eruptions? Where there is a hot shock wave that comes right after explosion?

    • @mdorn6592
      @mdorn6592 Рік тому +1

      Too bad we can't ask the top-hatted bankster/industrialist looking fellas in the destruction pictures...boy, do they look out of place. Within a 20 year period of time there certainly were quite a few 'catastrophic events' in major cities...San Francisco, Galveston TX, Chicago...and the list goes on. But there is always photographic evidence of the industrialist/banksters in photos after the destruction

    • @dancostello6465
      @dancostello6465 Рік тому +5

      Blast forces similar to a nuclear detonation just after 9 am in the morning. Many fires in stoves were lit, broke out, ruptured gas lines, blast forces and then a massive snow storm descended. Likely a lot of houses lifted and then dropped back onto foundations.

  • @valeriegoulet
    @valeriegoulet 5 місяців тому +1

    ❤today would have been my grandparents honey moon 1919

  • @eileenmacdougall8945
    @eileenmacdougall8945 Рік тому +2

    Wow. Thank you for your work.

  • @Ice_Queen_Empress
    @Ice_Queen_Empress Рік тому +15

    My family is part of that first French expedition at Port Royal an has a graveyard there. Pierre Morin. The english forced most out and thus became the Cajun ppls. Im always watching then Curse of Oak Island to see what they will find! Thank you for this history lesson much enjoyed!

    • @random2829
      @random2829 Рік тому +3

      There was an episode of "Curse of Oak Island" where they visited a star fort and showed drawings of the underground tunnels. And, yes, the term "Acadian" morphed into what is now known as "Cajun". Most have forgotten the story of "Evangeline". 😮‍💨

    • @Ice_Queen_Empress
      @Ice_Queen_Empress Рік тому +2

      @@random2829 Your reply is very gracious. Yes I saw that episode you referenced. I'm always teasing the boys that's my treasure! Going further back I've traced Morin back to a small town northwest coastal France "Morinni."

    • @bookofrevelation4924
      @bookofrevelation4924 Рік тому +4

      @@Ice_Queen_Empress thank you both for great information.
      Made me look into Moors in Morocco with France and Americas traveling and ruling over all coastal areas of Atlantic Ocean, causing mixing.
      Morano is Spanish (between France and Morocco) for "dark skin, as from the south.
      Perhaps Morinni is related to these other words and meaning?
      Seems to me people traveled from Africa to South America, and then back from North America to Europe easily on natural currents for millenia.

    • @alexandercove1194
      @alexandercove1194 Рік тому +3

      Ullanor, could you tell about Evangeline?

    • @random2829
      @random2829 Рік тому +7

      @@alexandercove1194 Evangeline is an epic tale of the "Cajuns" (Acadians) as they were expelled from the region of Maine, Nova Scotia (New Scotland) and Newfoundland (New Found Land) and shipped off to be resettled - mostly - in the area of the Atchafalaya Swamp in south-central Louisiana. Many could not make the transition to the hot, muggy, insect-infested area and died as a result. IMHO (OPINION only!) Acadia was an area that was already built up with ("Old World" or "Tartarian") cities and structures that did not support the "new land" narrative. Remember, this expulsion took place around 1755 so a bunch of "people" and "old structures" did not make sense at the time. To "correct" the situation, the vast majority of the people were expelled and many of the cities were burned down to the ground. The Louisiana Purchase did not happen until 1803 so these people COULD have been resettled in the New Orleans area instead of being hauled off to the swamps to be "disappeared".
      Sorry for the "ramble" but you can find a link to this sad story at: poets.org/poem/evangeline-tale-acadie

  • @cragglerock2815
    @cragglerock2815 Рік тому +3

    Richmond, the epicenter of the blast, was a German town. The Hansiatic league, of Germany, had outposts in many European cities in the Middle ages. it could be that Richmond was one of these outposts trading with the French and Micmaq before the British showed up.

  • @lisavisetticabello695
    @lisavisetticabello695 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for digging up the truth🙏🏻

  • @MrDeamon1
    @MrDeamon1 Рік тому +2

    Then, the great fire of Saint John.

  • @aaronlohr8477
    @aaronlohr8477 9 місяців тому +2

    If you use Google earth to look at the tantramar plains near Amherst, Nova Scotia you can see what appears to be ancient roads and infrastructure. Some of the more undeniable old roads are attributed to the French, much in the same way old forts in the rest of the world are attributed to the Spanish. But we know they are not. They are from a previous civilization that was destroyed.

  • @peterparker9286
    @peterparker9286 Рік тому +2

    Mic-mac is Algonquian any member of a tribe of Indians in New Found land and the Maritime Provinces of Canada. Their Algonquian language. Also a number of N. American Indian tribes Arapaho, Cheyenne, Blackfoot, Chippewa, Fox, Shawnee, Ottawa and others...

  • @machinehead6961
    @machinehead6961 Рік тому +9

    36:18 lower right men standing there ,I feel I've seen them before in other cities with disaster relief.

    • @raypratt3611
      @raypratt3611 Рік тому +5

      Freed minds think alike,I was justf saying this about another vid I watched the other day!!I'm gonna start tryin to get a detailed look at these groups of men and women who are at EVERY catastrophic event it seems??I've seen them laighing,posing atop ruins!!But usually theres a couple women as well with Umbrellas!?But it does seem like there are some that most definately look very similar and If so that is downright CREEPY AS HELL,so these people could literally be anything,

    • @pinkiesue849
      @pinkiesue849 Рік тому +1

      @@raypratt3611 wow..hope they are human. An old vid of San Fran, one dressed as a nun sure doesn't look like a woman.

    • @aaronlohr8477
      @aaronlohr8477 9 місяців тому

      Standing next to a pile of clean bricks, with no soot or ash on them, that allegedly burnt down the night before. It’s an obvious coverup!

  • @aljawisa
    @aljawisa Рік тому +4

    This explosion seems to have had the power of a nuclear device. The damage of this 'Lucitania' seems to spread far to wide. It would he nice to see a comparison between the supposed explosive potential of these ships, the Lucitania and all those explosive events that happened from some Texan refineries over the years.

  • @thestonecanoe3159
    @thestonecanoe3159 Рік тому +9

    I'm mikmaq from Cape Breton, glad you posted this nitup (friend) I been on a journey of truth and the info you posted is correlating with my findings. Good job friend

    • @danbrown8256
      @danbrown8256 5 місяців тому +1

      I have to confess as a lifelong resident of Halifax I have never heard such a full account of the mikmag people in Halifax. Didn't know that whole side of the history of citadel hill. Also didn't realize tufts cove was such an important mikmag site. Very enlightening, I finally have a bit of understanding of the large statue of Glooscap in Truro. Lastly there was a photo of long rows of tents set up by the mikmag to provide shelter for homeless after the great explosion. Just great to see this account.

  • @murielfinster3758
    @murielfinster3758 Рік тому +1

    Great presentation 👏 Thank you. I can only think that my history lessons in the 70s were nothing more than romanticized fantasy. I appreciate that indigenous accounts are bein g brought more and more into the public forum, thanks to hard work from people like you.

  • @hello15848
    @hello15848 Рік тому +5

    Makes me wonder what the frank slide in NS 1903 was really about.

    • @notthestrawman3005
      @notthestrawman3005 Рік тому +2

      1902 is an Archaix channel Pheonix reset date. Lots of cataclysmic, strange events happened on this year.

    • @cds3716
      @cds3716 Рік тому +1

      The Frank Slide happened in Alberta.

  • @pepeshadilay
    @pepeshadilay Рік тому +10

    No matter the place or who discovered it they all built the same star forts

    • @cardimars757
      @cardimars757 Рік тому +2

      IIRC, there was an architectural gate in Japan & Germany that looked pretty identical. Makes you wonder if perhaps it was used for teleportation when Earth was still alive?

    • @beaverbank9823
      @beaverbank9823 Рік тому

      @@cardimars757 when earth was still alive? The planet never died

  • @NovaScotiaProud
    @NovaScotiaProud Рік тому +1

    You forgot to mention the massive blizzard that struck the city the next day after the explosion.

  • @PoliceStateRadio
    @PoliceStateRadio Рік тому +12

    wow! this was interesting on so many levels. the Halifax explosion took place as it just so happened, right at the bottle neck/ mouth of Halifax Harbor. It pretty much marked the end of wwi and then famously, wwiii ended with two similar explosions. coincidentally, Hiroshima and Nagasaki both feature the same bottle neck leading into their respective Harbors. I've long suspected that Atomic Bombs were a myth because Los Alamos was an abject failure or shame at the time. Pure Hollywood!! and was never meant to actually achieve the stated goal, just the psyop. it was about as likely as Man flying to the moon in a tin can. talking back to Huston with a ham radio. and like everything else that they're bullshit rides on, they had to fake it. what better way to repeat what was already tried and true with twin Explosions of the caliber, at two port cites in Japan.

    • @jasonbigdog2808
      @jasonbigdog2808 Рік тому +4

      Me as well...i know japanese were in the streets cleaning sweeping and selling flowers the day after...would have thot radiation would have kept them away for a bit...however also saw pics and spoke to a man who worked security for ages nites at a nuclear power plant, he swam in the water right next to tanks,in the water used for cooling,should die in minutes they say...strange...also a tombstone in halifax dated 793...strange...

    • @beaverbank9823
      @beaverbank9823 Рік тому

      Hollywood is the holly-tree. Search up the the wood from the holly tree, it is used I'm sorcery and witchcraft/warlocks

    • @johnt8636
      @johnt8636 10 місяців тому +1

      Yeah, no. The mouth of Halifax Harbour is approx 15 kms from The Narrows, or, bottleneck as you call it. The rest of your comment makes me wonder what's wrong with you.

  • @SheepNWolfclotnin
    @SheepNWolfclotnin Рік тому +6

    Citadel Hill is Citadel Capital at the NYSE lol #matrix life

  • @derickburke-lj9jm
    @derickburke-lj9jm Рік тому +1

    You should check out Sydney Nova Scotia

  • @mdorn6592
    @mdorn6592 Рік тому +10

    Taurintines? or Tartarians...The giant in the legend of the Mi'kmaq was most likely a nephilim. Also, The Curse of Oak Island that runs on The History Channel sits right off of Nova Scotia...the earliest European artifact found on the island to date is dated between 1100's - 1200's...all very interesting. Funny how cannons are put in the star forts to make it look like they are defense fortresses - ridiculous. They were probably power stations - Curiouser and curiouser. None of the history makes any sense

    • @mdorn6592
      @mdorn6592 Рік тому

      Mont Blanc 'accident' just another method of destroying the people and the history of the area...I smell a well-known secret societies fingerprints all over this one...

    • @beaverbank9823
      @beaverbank9823 Рік тому

      That's interesting af

    • @beaverbank9823
      @beaverbank9823 Рік тому

      What u know say more

  • @juliemahoney9342
    @juliemahoney9342 Рік тому +4

    Have you compared the big old map to the current google map of Canada? There are many differences. Some land got bigger,some smaller, same thing for the lakes.... Makes me wonder 🤔🧐

    • @beaverbank9823
      @beaverbank9823 Рік тому

      How they find out the exact frame of the land 🤣

  • @sebawagosh2356
    @sebawagosh2356 Рік тому +5

    What are the years included in this video documentary or report? At Minute 32"23 ... can you pls explain why they had, electric, telegram or phone poles in the wreckage back then - already? Or was that picture mistakenly placed in the list? Thank you for your channel.

    • @bookofrevelation4924
      @bookofrevelation4924 Рік тому +1

      I think picture is after 1917 explosion, and poles are electric with large ones for very much higher voltage in picture prior around 32:11,
      likely working with the device to collect lightning pointed out with arrow asking what it is.
      Seems lightning electricity was used long before oil companies waged worldwide wars to destroy lightning electricity operated world and set up oil company electricity operated world.

    • @Ed-ym4tu
      @Ed-ym4tu Рік тому +2

      The explosion was in 1917. Telegraph was in use as early as 1840.

  • @kingswayguitar
    @kingswayguitar 8 місяців тому

    thanks for putting this together

  • @tedburycombo2178
    @tedburycombo2178 Рік тому +4

    Australia has a story of tiddilik the 🐸 frog that drank up all the water...

  • @jasonbigdog2808
    @jasonbigdog2808 Рік тому +4

    Im from the area for my whole life,right in halifax for last 15yrs. Been very interested in our hidden and fake history for ages now...know the oldest, buried old city loCation and first used burial cite...city established in 1749. But i found a tombstone,still erect and plainly dated in the late 700s. J793...the j for christ,the number after meaning after him- ad... used to do books that way too. An i or a j. Eventually it became thot of as a 1...when they added many yrs to our time line. Also well aware that our 3 story star fort is 15 stories or more deep, right down to sea level

    • @beaverbank9823
      @beaverbank9823 Рік тому

      I live 30 mins from downtown Halifax and I'm learning about the fake history too. What u say about burial city(cite), all governments build their important towns or villages overtop of where important stuff used to be, ALOT of the times its burial sites

  • @UraTrowelie
    @UraTrowelie Рік тому +3

    I think I can tell when you get back to work after you burn one 🔥

  • @MsRexsmurphy
    @MsRexsmurphy Рік тому +10

    I was born in an orphanage in Nova Scotia and thought I could get a lil of my ol history but it looks like they blowed it all up. Impossibly sad and then it snowed. I think those were my people. 🤔

  • @chrislindsay60
    @chrislindsay60 Рік тому +1

    Ps thsnk you , i live in halifax , constantly wondering .

  • @pinkiesue849
    @pinkiesue849 Рік тому +1

    @ 6;56 the girl;s hat looks very Dutch influenced...@ 26:00 see the flat roof buildings? That is what people build when there is no snow to contend with. Were these buildings made during the midevil warm period?

  • @aaronlohr8477
    @aaronlohr8477 9 місяців тому

    14:01 that device is most likely a docking anchor for zeppelins. The flat roof is how you get into the building.

  • @Del-Canada
    @Del-Canada 3 місяці тому +1

    An entire neighborhood that was in Halifax is now gone. Richmond.

  • @chrisleclerc2266
    @chrisleclerc2266 Рік тому +1

    I am a resident of Halifax if you have anything you would like pictures of . Or have ideas of where to look for really old pictures lmk

  • @kurtisbrooks1699
    @kurtisbrooks1699 Рік тому +1

    Jarid where did you find the map of 29:16 mins in to the video?
    I need to secure it for my book.

  • @eastcoastrifraf9101
    @eastcoastrifraf9101 3 місяці тому

    Man.. that's quite the legend and sad stories of wars for no real reason.

  • @otaku1524
    @otaku1524 Рік тому +4

    Guess the Mi'kMaq didn't have cameras , but the rest of the Europeans did. Hence all the pictures of European Halifax.

    • @williamharris8367
      @williamharris8367 3 місяці тому

      The Mi'maq may very well have had the capability of taking photographs, but perhaps the images have been destroyed. There may also have been cultural/religious prohibitions on creating permanent records -- some groups value oral tradition over formal records.

  • @ROCK-vl5yw
    @ROCK-vl5yw Рік тому +2

    First lighthouse was in Florida

  • @ROCK-vl5yw
    @ROCK-vl5yw Рік тому +2

    The Spanish built the star fort check out st Augustine fla I didn't know if either love your stuff

  • @GingerStone
    @GingerStone Рік тому +1

    Mc Mac - Origin name of many Irish and Scottish people

  • @jasonbigdog2808
    @jasonbigdog2808 Рік тому +2

    Look at the whole story of halifax explosion...hate to think this way but too many coincidences to be an accident...not just the explosion...but how the other boat happened to coast to the only spot on either side of the harbour to store mass amounts of explosives, that started the major fires, fire fighters happened to be away for some reason- not a fire, then rescue was hampered too

  • @dk6578
    @dk6578 Рік тому +1

    Norumbega, was all of North America (Norumeica). it is fairly obvious just by the name. That suggests that these were always the Americas, even before the so called "discovery of the new world". Old maps label North America as Norumbega, only with smaller writing.

  • @jasonbigdog2808
    @jasonbigdog2808 Рік тому +2

    14 min. Not many people, there was a massive prison by the dingle that housed lots, prisoners from Napoleonic wars and the war of 1812. Prison big. Must have been more here...??

  • @jasonbigdog2808
    @jasonbigdog2808 Рік тому +2

    Fire burnt the rest of the city, had relatives living here long before then

  • @blazingstar9638
    @blazingstar9638 Рік тому +1

    The first person who ever pronounced migma properly on here lol

  • @jasonbigdog2808
    @jasonbigdog2808 Рік тому +1

    Tuft cove has some of the oldest houses in the area, logging works train track and stations fishing docks etc. Nowhere for natives or reserve...?

  • @NovaScotiaProud
    @NovaScotiaProud Рік тому

    Great video!!!

  • @rodsimonson9175
    @rodsimonson9175 4 місяці тому +1

    What are indigenous ancestoral buildings?

  • @maryalison5173
    @maryalison5173 Рік тому

    so many questions - are those the controllers in their bowler hats, surveying their handiwork, and planning their next steps?

  • @adambomb8324
    @adambomb8324 Рік тому +20

    Im just not buying the destruction levels of this explosion from such a small amount of explosives as claimed. Obviously, there was a mass explosion but it seems to be more of a detonation event to me. It appears that most of the larger buildings' destruction came from a downward trajectory opposed to a horizontal direction. I can see a subsequent tsunami following the blast to wipe out the smaller structures and turn them into piles of rubble, but not so much the larger structures. I just want to question everything at this point after being lied tonabout EVERYTHING under the sun. Im kinda like a hammer and everything is a nail at this point in his-story... 😂🔨🙉🙈🙊💣💥

    • @missdavid8976
      @missdavid8976 Рік тому +6

      I am wondering the same question...
      The destruction of the building doesn't seem to match the explosion from the Harbour. Not much for charring on the direct buildings, and if tsunami, all the trees etc should be tilted in the same direction. Looks more like wind destruction or actually bombing from above.

    • @Flowerlanduk
      @Flowerlanduk Рік тому +4

      @@missdavid8976 I just read your comments after making a post, I believe the destruction was a massive earthquake, see my explanation/theory above

    • @tedburycombo2178
      @tedburycombo2178 Рік тому +3

      Adam Bomb perhaps you may like Archiax channel has much on disaster (evil star) the Phoenix phenomenon which mud falls from sky skies are alight with fires.you won't be disappointed

    • @missdavid8976
      @missdavid8976 Рік тому +3

      @@tedburycombo2178
      I will check it out

    • @tedburycombo2178
      @tedburycombo2178 Рік тому +2

      @@missdavid8976 You'll be binging on his 400+ videos...
      You'll know what many don't it's coming 2040 May 15/16 then
      Nibiru in 2046 November
      have fun watching n getting your mind blown 😁

  • @maryalison5173
    @maryalison5173 Рік тому +1

    The same scripted narrative that was used across the realm. The more you know, the more you see the patterns. Thanks for your hard work!

  • @WVF112469
    @WVF112469 9 місяців тому +1

    Cajun society migrated from Acadia to the bayou, the dots are starting to connect.

  • @jasonbigdog2808
    @jasonbigdog2808 Рік тому +1

    Tallest marble faced church in North America in halifax, built on top of old lower down city...

    • @beaverbank9823
      @beaverbank9823 Рік тому

      And on top of giant petrified tree stumps. Major cities are

  • @mickdavis9297
    @mickdavis9297 Рік тому +4

    Yo yo

  • @peterparker9286
    @peterparker9286 Рік тому +1

    Michigan became a State in 1842...

  • @jasonbigdog2808
    @jasonbigdog2808 Рік тому +1

    Also there many old photos. 1800s. Taken from. Way up in the air. Says from a post office. No people then, nothing that tall now even. Strange...

  • @dougfife7956
    @dougfife7956 Рік тому +1

    The remnants of the red paint people?

  • @leeadickes7235
    @leeadickes7235 Рік тому +1

    I feel dumb. I never knew it ment new Scotland.

  • @JeddorianJalapeno
    @JeddorianJalapeno 3 місяці тому

    There's a lot of glib closing over of history and many commonly known things from history in this. The idea that the citadel ib Halifax was on a burial mound is ludicrous as it is a formation caused by glaciers called drumlins which are like ice Cream scoops of Earth left behind by glaciers..

  • @damageincorporatedmetal43v73
    @damageincorporatedmetal43v73 4 місяці тому +1

    That's why they live in a round house, they fear there's a devil in the corner ??? 🤔

  • @GingerStone
    @GingerStone Рік тому +1

    As I see it, the fake canons in one photo of the "citadel" are aimed at tufts cove and not at the mouth of the harbor where no enemies ever attempted to enter the harbor. 🤔

  • @jasonbigdog2808
    @jasonbigdog2808 Рік тому +1

    25:30 discription of other boat went makes no sense, no river between harbour and other bay, also only river is on dartmouth side and ran perpendicular to harbour,cant go over river, harbor in front of it not one side or the other....??

  • @mikekushner9436
    @mikekushner9436 Рік тому +2

    Dna man ……….not features ….the Sami tribe was brought to usa to train Eskimos survival techniques……Sami are indengenious Europeans our connection to the hunters and gatherers we once were thousands of years ago

  • @kabrown3824
    @kabrown3824 6 місяців тому +1

    Born n raised there I don't where your getting this history but not what research. Id say you should have a second look

  • @kurtisbrooks1699
    @kurtisbrooks1699 Рік тому +4

    These are not the Indigenous, they are Europeans. These "Mi'kmaq" were mixing with Europeans since 1604 and are French Europeans with mere drops of the indigenous blood which is called L'nug. I am Lnug and the pure indigenous who love our mixed Mi'kmaq children, whom by and large despise us call for unity, and truth. The "star fort" predates the British incursion, which they claim was built 1749. It is actually called Kuowaqe’jk, (or Big Pine Hill) as the star fort is in the symbolic form of a Pine Tree when viewed from the top.

  • @raypratt3611
    @raypratt3611 Рік тому +1

    I'll tell ya,if I didn't know any better that sure resembles HIGH END EF5 TORNADO damage?!

  • @jasonbigdog2808
    @jasonbigdog2808 Рік тому +1

    Halifax established in 1749!!