Winters in Colonial America

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 6 гру 2017
  • New Instagram - @18thcenturycooking
    A few excerpts from Peter Kalm's "Travels in North America."
    Click here to get the book ▶ amzn.to/2BJGbV9 ▶▶
    Visit Our Website! ▶ www.townsends.us/ ▶▶
    Help support the channel with Patreon ▶ / townsend ▶▶
    Sign up for the UA-cam Mailing List! ▶ www.townsends.us/youtube_list.htm ▶▶
    Twitter ▶ @Jas_Townsend
    Facebook ▶ jas.townsend
    Instagram ▶ townsends_official

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @warmweeniesdoxiesweaters2884
    @warmweeniesdoxiesweaters2884 5 років тому +389

    I was one of the fortunate to experience living like this in the middle of the 20th century. I had no idea it was "unusual" to live like that by this "modern" time. My Scots-Irish Grandpa (born 1895) built a one room log cabin in the Northern Michigan woods to shelter his family. By the time I came along (mid 20th) the cabin was well used and not very well maintained. He had a wood burning stove that he fired up each morning early and when he did so it would get so hot in that cabin that sleeping was impossible when on the top bunk. Time to get up and go out to the outhouse and then the pump in the yard for water. Best water ever! Breakfast was pancakes (with bacon grease for Grandpa), eggs, bacon, coffee and toast with raspberry jam that you scraped the mold off of that was under the wax seal before using. Grandma melted brown sugar for syrup and we could have either butter or syrup for our pancakes, but not both... choose one or the other (I never did try the bacon grease like Grandpa did). I don't know how many different wild critters I ate for supper but I did learn to be careful chewing in case there was buckshot in the meat. Watching out for fish bones was also a concern. I am so grateful for the many wonderful memories of living history.

    • @heidithomas5455
      @heidithomas5455 4 роки тому +43

      Your response is one of few that I read through. Highly interesting and greatly detailed. Maybe you should write a book. You lived the history, knew the ins and outs of survival all year round. Wow. I would read your story.

    • @adamhonestyanddecency5054
      @adamhonestyanddecency5054 4 роки тому +18

      Might seem odd, but I’d like to congratulate you on not saying “Scotch.”

    • @maadam5503
      @maadam5503 4 роки тому +3

      What part of michigan

    • @jennhill8708
      @jennhill8708 4 роки тому +7

      I freeze during Winter & when we have to use the swamp cooler, too! It's tough when your feet are chunks of ice.
      But, when I walked to school thru the Winter, (I walked, all the time, as it was a small town.), I was fortunate to have warm clothing. As a child, I loved sledding on a western flyer sled from western auto. (My parents bought my bike there, too.) That was what Saturdays were for! 😉
      Wool is your friend in the Winter.
      Now, why weren't the cabins chinked? Had they not had an opportunity to do so? Was the owner slothful? In our part of the country, moss is still found in high Mtn streams, but there wouldn't be enough to fill the gaps. I think one would have to use a mud mix of some kind, but with some sort of binder. Not everywhere has clay. I really don't know WHAT people used. Must research.

    • @warmweeniesdoxiesweaters2884
      @warmweeniesdoxiesweaters2884 4 роки тому +10

      @@adamhonestyanddecency5054 I work very hard at saying/writing this correctly. I'm not an alcohol beverage, I'm a Scot lol.

  • @IronheartStudios
    @IronheartStudios 5 років тому +188

    Hi John, I'm a blacksmith at a 1914 heritage village, and we have winter shoes for horses with screw-on studs and blades. These are probably what Kalm was referring to.

    • @u.s.militia7682
      @u.s.militia7682 3 роки тому +10

      Sharp toed means keen of foot. Doesn’t have anything to do with a horses shoes.

    • @tjlovesrachel
      @tjlovesrachel 2 роки тому +3

      You make snow tires for horses lollll

  • @greyforge27
    @greyforge27 4 роки тому +17

    "Now they all found something else to do besides enjoy themselves" is the politest description of a disaster I've ever heard

  • @justdoingitjim7095
    @justdoingitjim7095 6 років тому +3

    During January and February is when we make sausage. We make it in an unheated garage or shed and didn't have to worry about the meat going bad because it got too warm. We smoked them in an old smokehouse with a smudgepot fire that didn't heat the smokehouse up but produced lots of smoke. Lots of good memories while we made sausages in assembly line fashion with a party atmosphere. The beer flowed freely, as did the hot spiced cider!

  • @oliviagomez815
    @oliviagomez815 6 років тому +55

    I like that you included the paintings of people skating.

  • @alfredpeasant5980
    @alfredpeasant5980 Рік тому +3

    The most enjoyable thing about this content, is how much you are enjoying yourself. God bless my friend.

  • @Tsiri09
    @Tsiri09 6 років тому +383

    With all our modern luxuries, many people wonder how anyone survived then. I was homeless for nearly 3 years- winter is survivable, but it's HARD.

    • @sMASHsound
      @sMASHsound 5 років тому +4

      living in a car on on the street?

    • @akatsukiawsome13
      @akatsukiawsome13 5 років тому +36

      Ashmeed Mohammed You can actually be quite warm in a car in winter. Too hot, even. Cars are well insulated, and from experience car camping/living out of a car summer is horrible, but winter is doable (eastern seaboard, US). With a sleeping bag rated 4 season, and the body heat you produce, you can get by. Even better with two people, which is what I dealt with. Warming a bottle of water and putting it in the sleeping bag overnight is a well known tip for camping in cold weather. Get yourself a stainless steel canteen you can heat over/by the fire and you're set, just make sure it isn't too hot before you put it in the sleeping bag, or you'll have more fire than you want. Stay away from burning charcoal broquettes in your car or anything else, you can and will die of carbon monoxide poisoning due to lack of ventilation. Even just sleeping in the car normally, you will want to ventilate regularly.
      People are always amazed by how much cold you can survive given the smallest protection. You can make a "sweat lodge" to survive cold winters with tree bark, leaves, and small saplings cut town and tied with twine. Dig a pit in the center of it, and put heated rocks in that you heated up outside the shelter- you can even use it as a sweat lodge by pouring water onto the rocks to create steam. Sleeping bags and coats, and the knowledge that extra extra pairs of socks are always needed, along with safe ways to dry your clothing/bedding, is enough to get you by if you need not worry for food and water.

    • @juansierralonche9864
      @juansierralonche9864 5 років тому +26

      Tina Gallagher
      I personally found it seriously depressing. I wonder if that was ever an issue for people back then, or if they just accepted that they would be permanently and uncomfortably cold for long periods of time

    • @Jaqen-HGhar
      @Jaqen-HGhar 5 років тому +25

      from me to you, so sorry you had to go through those day/nights here's to you never going through them again...

    • @anniefannycharles9951
      @anniefannycharles9951 5 років тому +10

      Glad life is warmer for you now Tina!

  • @mrs.g.9816
    @mrs.g.9816 3 роки тому +2

    My Dad said that when he was a child in 1930's Ossining NY, he used to see iceboats sailing on the ice on the Hudson River!

  • @johnschools6617
    @johnschools6617 6 років тому +51

    The town of "Raccoon" mentioned in the reading is now named Swedesboro.

    • @MarysPanheadPub
      @MarysPanheadPub 5 років тому +5

      Wow! I live in a couple towns over in Gibbstown NJ. Near the Raccoon Creak. Lots of history on the Delaware River!

    • @jameshorn270
      @jameshorn270 5 років тому +5

      Near Philly. A lot of my Amazon packages seem to go through there.

    • @an-tm3250
      @an-tm3250 4 роки тому +5

      @@jameshorn270 Amazon just opened a warehouse in Pureland on the edge of Swedesboro. Lots of history in NJ. Racoon Creek makes lots of sense now. Tidal marsh by our home here.

    • @SongbirdAlom
      @SongbirdAlom 4 роки тому +4

      Oooh. Great blueberries there.

  • @elizabeththequeen943
    @elizabeththequeen943 6 років тому +31

    Being a member of the 11th generation to live in New England, I have to say that preparing for winter in the north means preparing wood for heat more than anything else. After that, it's shelter repairs for man and beast. Once that wood is "in," though, we heave a sigh of relief and get out the shovels.

    • @RT-qd8yl
      @RT-qd8yl 9 місяців тому +1

      You can say goodbye to that soon enough thanks to our government...

  • @alaskankare
    @alaskankare 6 років тому +197

    There is a reason people wore stocking caps to bed and had hot pots for the beds. :)

    • @Ektalon
      @Ektalon 6 років тому +18

      alaskankare Right! Like those covered pans you'd stick hot rocks from the fire & put them under the covers to warm up the sheets before you went to bed . . .

    • @koshar44
      @koshar44 5 років тому +7

      I wear one here & now in bed.

    • @jpowell180
      @jpowell180 5 років тому +9

      The house where I live in isn't very well insulated, so in the winter it's pretty cold (at least it's in the South!); I will often shut off a couple of rooms and use a small space heater, but still need to wear a hoodie over my head to keep it warm.

    • @nopejoeandangie
      @nopejoeandangie 5 років тому +3

      @@Ektalon Is that was those are? I remember seeing one of those in a Spanish language film in 1992 called Belle Epoque. I honestly thought it was warm in Spain so I didn't understand why she was preparing the bed in that way.

    • @antilogism
      @antilogism 4 роки тому +4

      @@koshar44 When the temps drop to like -5, -10, -20, -30 F outside, and the room is c-c-c-coooold, I wear my tuke like a night-cap and sleep well.

  • @stormqueen29
    @stormqueen29 6 років тому +261

    I think that is something most people don't realize. People who live in extremely cold areas, or who deal with cold or heat for long periods, have many ways of adapting to the climate. Like Peter said, shutters over the windows, all the cracks filled with moss to keep out cold and drafts, fires or stoves in every room, I can imagine their rooms were quite cozy. Thank you for bringing this wonderful account to light.

    • @krb5292
      @krb5292 6 років тому +23

      I wouldn't call them "cozy"; tolerable, maybe. Fireplaces loose a good percentage of their heat up the chimney and metal was expensive (not to mention heavy to transport), so I don't think many had stoves during this timeframe. They came later.

    • @SgtSnausages
      @SgtSnausages 6 років тому +18

      If by "cozy" you mean blazing fires barely keeping 'em 45-50 degrees then ... sure... Cozy

    • @machintelligence
      @machintelligence 6 років тому +46

      Wood warms you three times: first when you cut it, then when you split it, and finally when you burn it.

    • @annewiegle6875
      @annewiegle6875 6 років тому +21

      In Europe they had ceramic "stoves" that would when heated up radiate heat all over the room. They had glazed surfaces and could be built any size. They still have them today. I saw them at a Home Show in Frankfurt. You buy the pieces and mortar it together. Much better then a fireplace where all the heat goes up the chimney.

    • @readhistory2023
      @readhistory2023 6 років тому +27

      I been there and done that, it's not that bad nor is it that dirty. However considering the low T of men today I imagine it would be a bit too tough for most, including "modern" Swedes. They might break a nail.

  • @anonymouscrank
    @anonymouscrank 6 років тому +57

    The heat went out in my house last night and this morning the temperature indoors was 45 degrees. My first thought was how our ancestors lived in the time before central heating--unless you were directly in front of the fire you were cold. No complaints from me. Great video!

    • @slingbladefrenchfries3007
      @slingbladefrenchfries3007 6 років тому +2

      Adrian Van Vorhees one room cabins or if wealthy, fireplace in most rooms

    • @garcalej
      @garcalej 4 роки тому +1

      Blankets.

    • @Delicious_J
      @Delicious_J 4 роки тому +2

      In the past you would've often had a fire in your hearth from dawn till you slept, and most people's homes then were small huts or hovels of some kind, so it probably wasnt too bad because of the combination of the high temperature of fire and a small area for the heat to disperse into.

  • @echosackett4757
    @echosackett4757 2 роки тому +4

    Thank you so much! I remember sitting down with my Granny and her telling me about growing up in the mountains of Virginia. It’s amazing how people were still living in those old fashioned ways even when she was a girl. Any young people lucky enough to have great grandparents around, ask them questions about their life. It’s information you will treasure.

    • @jasonvoorhees7288
      @jasonvoorhees7288 Рік тому

      Did she tell you about the warm bricks under their pillows in the winter?

  • @mrtumness9463
    @mrtumness9463 6 років тому +35

    If I'm ever as positive and happy as John I think I can die a happy and content man

  • @myenchantedlife5262
    @myenchantedlife5262 6 років тому +18

    We own a house built in 1890 and love to watch your videos for the kids to get to see history come to life and to get a peek at what life was like when people first built our home

    • @queerdor
      @queerdor 6 років тому +4

      Your about 100 years off

    • @rosemcguinn5301
      @rosemcguinn5301 6 років тому +2

      He's about 60 years ahead of you, even at a place such as Connor Prairie, but I think that I see what you mean.

    • @jasonvoorhees7288
      @jasonvoorhees7288 Рік тому

      @@rosemcguinn5301 ......you do realize they didn't have central in 1890 right? So yeah actually the heating style would be relatively the same even when there's a time gap.

    • @jasonvoorhees7288
      @jasonvoorhees7288 Рік тому

      @@queerdor Did they have central in 1890? I must have missed that.

    • @rosemcguinn5301
      @rosemcguinn5301 Рік тому

      @@jasonvoorhees7288 Connor Prairie is1830, not 1890.

  • @jloomis7
    @jloomis7 6 років тому +53

    The cooking is probably always going to be my favorite topic on this channel, but I do really enjoy hearing about subjects of the past in a specific place in time. Do more of these too!

  • @userunavailable3095
    @userunavailable3095 6 років тому +52

    He's probably talking about having caulks on the horse's shoes, a practice that continues to this day. Having grown up in Lancaster County, not far from Philly, I can tell you that the practice continues to this day, although with modern materials. The Amish and Mennonites use Drilltech on the toes of the horse's shoes for grip on the pavement year round, and the snow and ice in winter.

    • @vballdumbbunny13
      @vballdumbbunny13 4 роки тому +2

      Do they really still use the old style of caulks or are they just using screw in studs? Those are also common in performance horses working on turf, but you can adjust the stud size as required (track and field shoes also have removable studs). Borium I think is used more for traction on pavement than ice or other more natural surfaces.

  • @sandrabush1232
    @sandrabush1232 Рік тому +2

    Your videos are so helpful. Americans need to know what our ancestors went through to make life and freedom possible for us today. Thank you so much.

  • @amandachristian895
    @amandachristian895 6 років тому +32

    I'm on page 158 of that book and I'm so amazed! Interesting how he references the water line up to the blue mountains by evidence of shells in limestone. Going as far to say that the shells are not even the same as the receded sea. Interesting about the giants bowls and caves too. Thanks for sharing this book. A very good read, best one in years.

    • @ErikBramsen
      @ErikBramsen 6 років тому

      Interesting how he references...ect.
      Yes. He is so close...

  • @georgecogswellBitz78
    @georgecogswellBitz78 5 років тому +8

    I absolutely love your videos. You bring history to life and educate us about Colonial life. Thank you !

  • @Melissa.Garrett
    @Melissa.Garrett 5 років тому +5

    It’s hard to imagine being cold all the time for a lot of us today. I live in England, and yes, it’s bloody cold outside in the winter, especially near the coast - but we hardly need much in the way of heating in the house because of cavity insulation. Such a simple thing, and yet without it we’d be either freezing or burning up twice as much ‘fuel’ (albeit electricity) just to stay warm.

  • @ancapjack1837
    @ancapjack1837 6 років тому +2

    Thanks for the perspective Jon. As a fellow winter wimp I resonate with your closing statement. Will be LONG term camping on some property in wyoming next year to see if I can make an 18th century homestead from scratch. I'll remember these wise words while I'm bundled up in my layers and marshmallow jacket.
    Love the videos, keep doing what your doing. Much respect

  • @graphguy
    @graphguy 6 років тому +20

    A great accounting of a Colonial winter.

  • @CranberryEssentialTarot
    @CranberryEssentialTarot 6 років тому +4

    When I am doing genealogy about this period I will often google to see if I can find any reference as to what the whether was like. When you find those references they become very useful to me to understand that part of what they were up against at the time.

  • @u.hinson6300
    @u.hinson6300 3 роки тому +4

    I love how you love what you do. Being a history major myself, I know exactly why you do.

  • @joncannon9990
    @joncannon9990 6 років тому +1

    That is one impeccable hat Sir!OUTSTANDING!

  • @tweezerjam
    @tweezerjam 4 роки тому +1

    Wow the Delaware river never freezes anymore. I’m 39 and I can’t ever recall such a thing. 🧊

  • @jimivey6462
    @jimivey6462 5 років тому +51

    The Earth was experiencing the Little Ice Age from about 1300 to 1850. So, winters were more severe than they are now.

    • @lotstolearn5350
      @lotstolearn5350 4 роки тому +4

      1645 to 1725 was the Maunder grand solar minimum. The river Thames froze over, as did the Baltic sea, permitting the Swedish to march across it to invade Finland.

    • @montanamountainmen6104
      @montanamountainmen6104 3 роки тому

      Well not quite, here in Montana our winters are harsh. Temp can and do get - 35 or more ( I've seen -50 that lasted a week) The Billings Gazette noted from 1900 to the early 60's temps were recorded at -60 or more.

    • @MarvinT0606
      @MarvinT0606 3 роки тому

      so you're telling me Napoleon invaded Russia in 1812 *during the Little Ice Age* ?

    • @mrbranson73
      @mrbranson73 2 роки тому +1

      And started warming gradually after that. Long before combustion engines

  • @camgood2437
    @camgood2437 6 років тому +5

    Very interesting. I've lived in Massachusetts all my life, so I definitely understand what he's talking about lol. Thank God for modern insulation and heating..

  • @limeykl
    @limeykl 6 років тому +2

    I think it’s amazing how much and how quickly we complain about the slightest things yet settlers managed to survive such harsh conditions. Love your videos;)

  • @laurasmusings1865
    @laurasmusings1865 6 років тому

    Brrrrrr!! Weather prediction it will be Snowy and ice Cold!! Very early periods of quilts and/or blankets (indeed, the poor) were sometimes made of a paper substance, stitched together as quilt squares, stuffing of anything on hand, feathers, rags, etc. Perfect common sense as paper would not be as porous or let in drafts as any fabric substance. Stay warm, friends! Even I, a native of the wonderful state of Indiana, re-entrenched in the deep southern state of Alabama, endure the coldest of seasons with exasperating frustration, eternally longing for Spring and daffodils!! I always have UA-cam Townsends videos to inform, enlighten and entertain, thank goodness!! 😄❤❤

  • @wfldfire
    @wfldfire 6 років тому +14

    What a great look at Colonial life. I'm going to read some to my kids so they can appreciate the house at 60 degrees.

    • @soslothful
      @soslothful 6 років тому

      Should they also appreciate whooping cough, small pox, assorted fevers, poor medical care and hunger?

  • @the-chillian
    @the-chillian 6 років тому +6

    I grew up in New Jersey and had never heard of Raccoon. But in Peter Kalm's Wikipedia article they kindly explain that it's now known as Swedesboro -- unsurprisingly, as it was originally settled by Swedes and Finns. This is in South Jersey, in Gloucester county, and the nearby waterway is still called Raccoon Creek.

  • @markcaselius5993
    @markcaselius5993 6 років тому +1

    Being from Minnesota I know about cold. I am always in awe when I read about how early settlers to the area survived and even more so the native peoples who survived and thrived.

  • @JohnWellingtonWells
    @JohnWellingtonWells 6 років тому +20

    As a Swede it would be pretty interesting to see a recipe that was carried over by some of the Scandinavian settlers. It's always fascinating to hear of some of the ways Sweden and the other Nordic countries have influenced America, no matter how insignificant it may be.

    • @campcrafter4613
      @campcrafter4613 6 років тому +5

      Many of us love the Nordic influences in the states I know I do!

    • @mrdanforth3744
      @mrdanforth3744 6 років тому +2

      Not many people know about the Swedish colony in New Jersey but Kalm gives some description of it in his book.

    • @81iand
      @81iand 6 років тому +5

      The area this video is about in NJ was just once called New Sweden. Even though there isn’t much left but some place names to link it to the Swedes and Finns that settled the area, its an interesting bit of colonial history

    • @an-tm3250
      @an-tm3250 4 роки тому +1

      Not insignificant, I assure you. Still a Swedish cabin in Swedesboro proper.

    • @an-tm3250
      @an-tm3250 4 роки тому +2

      @@81iand The Swedesboro Inn in Swedesboro NJ is supposed to be a great place to dine. Kids have little appreciation for history. Swedesboro has many historic houses, Victorian era, snd a Swedish log cabin. The town is about 10 blocks long and very quaint.

  • @Jarlemoore1
    @Jarlemoore1 6 років тому +139

    They were brutal considering they were still in the that period called the Little Ice Age back then.

    • @randyhebb9272
      @randyhebb9272 6 років тому +64

      Technically, we are still in that "little ice age" . Right up until the global warming fad started, all climatologists talked about how we were just coming out of the little ice age and that the earth would keep warming up until it reached the same temps that there were back before it started. Now all "scientists" are in the global warming boat and they are telling us that we are causing it...don't believe them.

    • @Jarlemoore1
      @Jarlemoore1 6 років тому +35

      Yep climate change happens and there's nothing we do about it and as for the global warming politics just follow the money.

    • @rosemcguinn5301
      @rosemcguinn5301 6 років тому +43

      Please. Enough already with the modern politics! Jon has already stated his feelings on the subject. No politics, please

    • @Jarlemoore1
      @Jarlemoore1 6 років тому

      Yes.

    • @rosemcguinn5301
      @rosemcguinn5301 6 років тому +8

      Sons of NO. More. Politics. Please. Jon has spoken. Thank you

  • @charlesmandrell3369
    @charlesmandrell3369 6 років тому +37

    Wow great video, would love to see more like this one. I love the little tidbits of everyday feelings!

  • @joellenbroetzmann9053
    @joellenbroetzmann9053 6 років тому +1

    As I was watching this, my husband informed me that a man who was intending an ice fishing trip fell through today in NW Wisconsin. We af one time lived on a spring fed lake. During those years more than a couple young men made their way to our door because they fell in. One year we saw a father and son who broke through in their truck. The truck later had to be hooked to a chain by a diver, then a track was sawed by chain saw and a hole by shore so we could get the truck out. We love to ice fish but wait until we see several brave folks fishing before we venture out.

  • @davidhussell8581
    @davidhussell8581 3 роки тому +4

    Once again, thank you for your insightful and always interesting commentary, reflecting American life during the colonial era.
    Best wishes and Christmas greetings to all in America,
    from Suffolk, England.

  • @KickNine
    @KickNine 3 роки тому +3

    I love your dedication, Jon! It’s been such a hot summer here in the Midwest, I’m so excited for Fall and Winter!

  • @Dovid2000
    @Dovid2000 2 роки тому

    God bless you, Mr. Townsend, for reading these excerpts from the Swede's diary.

  • @rogneid
    @rogneid 6 років тому +1

    What would spring cleaning be like? I can imagine that with closed windows, wood fires, different bathing practices and things like whale oil in lamps, by the time spring came, many houses probably had interesting aromas, not to mention critters that came in and hid to get out of the cold.

  • @JasonZeppelin1
    @JasonZeppelin1 5 років тому +6

    I really like these historical (non-food) talks!

  • @agingerbeard
    @agingerbeard 6 років тому +40

    Simply wonderful.

  • @JesusIsMySaviorILoveJesus
    @JesusIsMySaviorILoveJesus 3 роки тому +1

    This channel makes me feel so relaxed

  • @carolwickenkamp4603
    @carolwickenkamp4603 5 років тому +2

    Thank you! Most interesting indeed. I was surprised to learn that they did not build barns for the cattle.

  • @michalurbanful
    @michalurbanful 5 років тому +24

    Even though I'm from Czech Republic, I really like your channel and all the valuable historical info you provide! Thank you! :-)
    Anyway - I got the Kalm's book from Archive and I do have trouble reading the Ss printed as Fs. How long did it take you to stop having consciously "translate" those, please? :-)

    • @seirbhiseach
      @seirbhiseach 2 роки тому +3

      The Czech history in America is quite amazing, the state in which I live has the fingerprints of the Moravians all over it! As for the long S, it often depends on the font in which you're reading, but with repeated practice, you get past with quickly. The same with how some older texts replace the "v" with a "u"

    • @michalurbanful
      @michalurbanful 2 роки тому +2

      @@seirbhiseach Thank you for your answer! :)
      And it's nice to hear how long distance travel can connect influence people at such a long distance. Take care! :)

  • @Xazzax666
    @Xazzax666 6 років тому +165

    More 18th century personal accounts please :)

  • @maxallister66
    @maxallister66 6 років тому +1

    A Colonial Christmas with the Townsends. Love it. I really appreciate these little snapshots in time you present. Thank you so much & looking forward to more story time.

  • @jamesvoigt7275
    @jamesvoigt7275 2 роки тому

    After having been outdoors for some time in winter, I come indoors and feast upon the miracle of warmth that we take so easily for granted.

  • @showtale8325
    @showtale8325 5 років тому +4

    I was attracted to your videos,due to your belief that real history is best discerned from actual anecdotal writing.because what people really want to know about the past...generally involve how people actually lived in those times

  • @LabRat10101
    @LabRat10101 6 років тому +297

    Here in Norway this would be a sunny day, the sun is not out but we call it that. A day to wash in the local stream and tend to the polar bear heard.

    • @thelordchancellor3454
      @thelordchancellor3454 6 років тому +11

      This is why I’m moving to Norway.

    • @AvailableUsernameTed
      @AvailableUsernameTed 6 років тому +14

      Yes, it sounds nice and warm in Norway.

    • @kathywolf4558
      @kathywolf4558 6 років тому +33

      In interior Alaska it is a really nice day to go moose riding!

    • @rosemcguinn5301
      @rosemcguinn5301 6 років тому +18

      Kathy That would have to wait for the muskoxen hair braiding contest, though, am I right? ;)

    • @anitaares7240
      @anitaares7240 6 років тому +18

      Bikini weather in MN.

  • @asdf85581
    @asdf85581 6 років тому +1

    I love the way you make the day to day life of Colonial America come alive. This definitely one of my favorite periods in history. Keep up the good work. P. S. The recipes are great too!

  • @vonbiron
    @vonbiron 6 років тому +1

    Love listening to you! Best wishes from Canada! ............ and yes, the winter is coming! :)

  • @duallove6909
    @duallove6909 6 років тому +6

    Nice stories. Thank you. It looks like the air is so crisp and fresh and clean in your place. I envy you. Take a deep breath for me please.

  • @92bagder
    @92bagder 6 років тому +52

    winter time was to time to make lager beers as they could tolerate the colder weather, also applejack and ice beers via ice distillation

    • @IrishLincoln
      @IrishLincoln 6 років тому +8

      Staying drunk is one way to get through the winter. Works for me. :)

    • @snowboardman420
      @snowboardman420 5 років тому

      I actually brewed my first lager a couple weeks ago... used my kegerator to keep it cold

    • @eric5906
      @eric5906 5 років тому

      Mmmmmmmm, beer.🍺🍻😀

    • @QuantumRift
      @QuantumRift 5 років тому +1

      Making beer was one of the best ways to 'preserve' grain....

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 5 років тому

      @@IrishLincoln - Very unsafe thing to do in the cold. You won't feel the reality of the icy weather and your decision-making suffers.

  • @dennism5565
    @dennism5565 6 років тому +1

    Thanks for your generous effort in setting the stage for this video's production by baring the snow and wind to bring authenticity.

  • @lesahanners5057
    @lesahanners5057 6 років тому

    I have no insulation in my house, no heating, and no cooling, but I live in Hawaii so it never freezes. However, I am here to tell you it does get cold and with the high humidity it can make your bones ache. This morning I sat wrapped in a blanket and thought of the long cold winter in a log cabin I lived in when I was a child and how the ice sickles hung a foot thick on the eaves. I turned in my chair, looked out the open door, and smiled at my garden of palm tree's and pineapple's and felt blessed.
    Stay warm Jon and if you ever get tired of the cold come for a visit to Hawaii. You are always welcome. Thanks for sharing yet another great video adventure.

  • @Barb6106
    @Barb6106 4 роки тому +3

    So interesting! Thanks! I wish this book weren’t so expensive because right now it would be a great diversion! But I do appreciate you doing all the research and it was fascinating

  • @Cheezumz002
    @Cheezumz002 6 років тому +6

    Congrats on 400k! Always love watching your videos.

  • @trishrader102
    @trishrader102 5 років тому +2

    Thank you for reading these stories to us I can close my eyes and imagine actually being there.

  • @jimmyshrimbe9361
    @jimmyshrimbe9361 5 років тому +2

    Closest thing to time travel we may ever have! Thank you so much!

  • @pricegavin
    @pricegavin 6 років тому +20

    Your channel is so awesome. Thank you for sharing your passions with us all!

  • @AHagridLookalike
    @AHagridLookalike 6 років тому +14

    Great video! Very informative and interesting, as always.

  • @GeckoHiker
    @GeckoHiker 6 років тому +1

    We are getting a 1/4 inch of wet, drippy snow in Missouri right now. Ten years ago it would have been a foot of powder and we'd worry about the pipes freezing. Haven't worried about the pipes freezing for about five years now.

  • @AlasdairGR
    @AlasdairGR 4 роки тому

    The surprise doggo made an already interesting video even better.

  • @garyklafta3411
    @garyklafta3411 5 років тому +6

    It was colder and wetter back then- Little Ice Age during 1700's.

  • @mrleedra
    @mrleedra 6 років тому +8

    On the subject of contemporary books, I encourage all viewers to check their local public libraries and historical societies. Local historians and antiquaries have devoted enormous time to searching through primary documents for information and illustrative accounts of local history, and you may be amazed at what you find. I came across a contemporary record of a skirmish between Hessians and militia just a short distance from my home, for example. Often, these records were compiled by historians many decades ago, when less of early America had been obliterated by development, and they reveal not only worthwhile facts but places of interest that are "hiding in plain sight," as it were.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 5 років тому

      @meleedra - Excellent suggestion. May I add that most of the public libraries in New York have Local History Rooms where such information could be found as well as historical societies. I hope that other states have such a program, too.

  • @AlexA121890
    @AlexA121890 5 років тому +1

    It's difficult to communicate how valuable this channel is.

  • @jaredcarilerch6663
    @jaredcarilerch6663 6 років тому +2

    Love your videos! Please do more like this between the awesome cooking, it's nice to hear from the books

  • @reinhardsmirnofsky2507
    @reinhardsmirnofsky2507 5 років тому +3

    Hello Mr. Townsend, just wanted to say love the way you've diversified your content; gives us an insight into the 18th life in general which makes the recipes even more interesting to watch, completes the picture in a way!! Thanks and keep up the great work!!! :)

  • @janecollette9504
    @janecollette9504 6 років тому +38

    I really enjoyed your reading us this mans experience with winter here in America in those early times, sounds very coooooooold.

    • @GeekyGarden
      @GeekyGarden 6 років тому +4

      There is an historic precedent that winters were worse then. The Little Ice Age is a period between about 1300 and 1870 during which Europe and North America were subjected to much colder winters than during the 20th century.

    • @joellenbroetzmann9053
      @joellenbroetzmann9053 6 років тому +6

      My paternal grandma cooked for a logging crew up by Ashland, WI in the early 1900s. It was so cold even with a fire and cooking she cooked with mittens on.

  • @THExMADxHATT3R
    @THExMADxHATT3R 6 років тому +1

    Just want to thank you for these videos. As an American History major is college, I always mention these videos in my class and my teacher has actually started using these as teaching tools. The books you’ve recommended I’ve picked up too and they are fantastic reads, cookbooks included. Keep up the good work and please don’t stop making these amazingly informative videos

  • @itsokaytobeclownpilled5937
    @itsokaytobeclownpilled5937 5 років тому +2

    As a polar vortex consumes the US with snow and ice, I am so very thankful for the comforts created by my ancestors.

  • @JoeyHerbz
    @JoeyHerbz 6 років тому +8

    Such an awesome video..

  • @Zigge
    @Zigge 6 років тому +60

    A sharp shod horse, is shod with horseshoes that has hooks bend in the back and sometimes a downward nose is upset in the front of the shoe as well. Still used today... So when are you going to make an episode on riding in the colonial time (he he)

    • @janecollette9504
      @janecollette9504 6 років тому +1

      Jens Sigurdson

    • @RealHankShill
      @RealHankShill 5 років тому

      18th century studs, the precursor to Blizzaks

    • @elliottwilltry9293
      @elliottwilltry9293 5 років тому +3

      also, many modern horseshoes for winter have tough rubber non-slip inserts for traction (but my horse is barefoot) also, rubber hoof boots can be worn for general year round extra protection as well as traction (especially for barefoot horses)

    • @sarahallegra6239
      @sarahallegra6239 5 років тому +1

      Thank you for answering this question for me! I was hoping someone in the comments would be able to tell me what that meant. :)

  • @spazzmomma
    @spazzmomma 6 років тому +1

    Love your videos and the things I learn as you teach about the 18th century. We have it so good now. Its romantic to dream about the "good ole days" but I am sure I couldn't "cut it." You are a delight to follow.

  • @sincerelylavender6147
    @sincerelylavender6147 4 роки тому +1

    I'm very happy that these journals were made as we get so much real life history information from them. And I know the people who wrote these journals had no idea the degree of importance of what they were writing for future generations. Glad that they kept writing if their quill pen became frozen...they worked around it. The seasons were something that effected their lives drastically. Amazing at how they adjusted and worked around it. Such perservance they had. You had to be strong and tough. Great video!!!! Love from New Jersey 😀🌲🌲🌲💔

  • @rollinpatrolin6218
    @rollinpatrolin6218 6 років тому +5

    Love the visuals with this video! Awesome! Definitely not ready for the winter or snow though, today was the first day in the 30's where I live. It's too much for me lol.

  • @tenaynayy
    @tenaynayy 6 років тому +8

    bless your heart for going outside for this. anything colder than 72° and I'm dieing of frostbite. bless!

  • @lambree4947
    @lambree4947 6 років тому +1

    It's snowing where your at, but it's windy, dry, and on fire where I'm at.... Thomas fire.

  • @slingbladefrenchfries3007
    @slingbladefrenchfries3007 6 років тому

    I love the woods in the winter

  • @msoda8516
    @msoda8516 6 років тому +3

    I’m from New Jersey and most people don’t know in early America parts of New Jersey were New Sweden and was a colony of Sweden.
    Makes you wonder what life would be like had they not lost the colony.

  • @bertaglen
    @bertaglen 7 місяців тому

    I grew up in upstate NY near Poughkeepsie. As a young boy we had a 90+ yr old neighbor who befriended me. I would always bring him the Sunday newspaper snd in return he would make me some buckwheat pancakes for breakfast. Although he was deaf, he could read lips and we would spend the mornings chatting. He had so many fascinating stories about my town’s history. One lesson I’ll never forget. He taught me that all those NY villages were roughly 15 miles apart…why? The distance a horse could travel in a day. What a blessing he was to me.

  • @garlicgirl3149
    @garlicgirl3149 6 років тому +43

    All I know is in the 20th century my parents talking of how there was only the pot belly stove. That was it. No central heating. A house with cracks?! EEEK!

    • @krb5292
      @krb5292 6 років тому +16

      An older gentleman I used to work with tells of being a kid in the late 20's, early 30's and the house had a stove at one end of the hall upstairs and a vent at the bottom of the door in the bed rooms. He slept with multiple blankets and quilts on in the winter. He was warm, but the contents of his chamber pot in the morning were frozen solid.

    • @garlicgirl3149
      @garlicgirl3149 6 років тому +4

      KRB52 mercy Lord!!!

    • @IrishLincoln
      @IrishLincoln 6 років тому +14

      My grandfather lived in a 2 room cabin as a child (born in 1910 0 died 2004). he said they'd fill cracks with mud and rock mixture, like adobe. he said sometimes the wind would break off the filler and snow would blow in when he was asleep. he'd wake up and his boots would be frozen to the floor. My great-grandmother would put his clothes and boots near the stove to warm up before he got out of bed.

    • @beegnome7610
      @beegnome7610 6 років тому +14

      I grew up in an old house with no a.c or central heat and brick floors.We had a fire place in one room and a wood stove in another.We used kerosene heaters and piled on the blankets in winter.In summer we opened windows and had fans.

    • @tangle70
      @tangle70 6 років тому +8

      My dad was born in a cabin in West Virginia and he would talk about putting cardboard on the walls to keep the wind and snow out.

  • @brendadrew834
    @brendadrew834 5 років тому +1

    Excellent presentation and fascinating! Of particular interest to me as my paternal forbears came here from western Germany, the Lower Palatinate from Rotterdam on a ship called "The Charming Nancy" and landed in Philadelphia in 1738! They became the Pennsylvania Dutch and three of them were generals in the Revolutionary War. On my maternal side I have a forebear from Scotland who was wounded at the Battle of Bunker Hill! Always interested in how they lived back then and love eating at the taverns and pubs they ate and drank in which still exist today on the east coast, Boston,MA, Sudbury's famous Wayside Inn, NYC, Phillie and Williamsburg VA! I had a cocktail at the Wayside , recipe from 1664 which was LETHAL! Had to be to keep them all warm against those freezing cold winters and blizzards they all suffered through! No jumping into an already pre-heated car and taking off with snow tires!! lol

  • @jimivey6462
    @jimivey6462 6 років тому +1

    In 2012 historic Jamestown archaeologist discovered the bones of a 14-year-old girl that had apparently been eaten by settlers during a horrific winter. In 2015, PBS did a documentary on this called “Jamestown’s dark winter”.

  • @suem6004
    @suem6004 6 років тому +10

    Thanks. Ordered it. Am preparing for my new channel about historical spinning and weaving.

    • @michelleackerson4524
      @michelleackerson4524 6 років тому +5

      Sue M....I hope you will put a link to your new channel. I spin and weave too so would love to have a look at what you are doing.

    • @rosemcguinn5301
      @rosemcguinn5301 6 років тому +2

      Oh yes a link please!

    • @C.L.Hinton
      @C.L.Hinton 6 років тому +1

      Yes, please let us know here so that we can support your channel, as well.

    • @RaechelleJ
      @RaechelleJ 6 років тому +1

      I would be interested in being a subscriber

    • @suem6004
      @suem6004 6 років тому +2

      Rae Jen Hopefully intro video within a week.

  • @paulmerrill8291
    @paulmerrill8291 6 років тому +6

    How about a video on winter wear?

  • @shawnwilliams3597
    @shawnwilliams3597 5 років тому +2

    I'm really enjoying this video I love to hear the stories. I find this kind of history on the everyday life's of our ancestors very interesting I could listen for hours. Thank you very much for sharing your wonderful videos they are always interesting and educational . This is Ivana from Blue Mountains Ontario Canada.

  • @joeyfisher3838
    @joeyfisher3838 4 роки тому

    I love people that love history like this

  • @appalachiashomesteadwithpatara
    @appalachiashomesteadwithpatara 6 років тому +4

    Fantastic! Thank you! xo

  • @Jenjane55
    @Jenjane55 2 роки тому +3

    Would you read more from this book please? This is very interesting.

  • @slingbladefrenchfries3007
    @slingbladefrenchfries3007 6 років тому

    just fished in a creek today that hasn't froze over yet. out in the woods, snow on the ground. relaxing. caught a small pike

  • @deannastevens1217
    @deannastevens1217 6 років тому +1

    My fab husband bought me a Christmas present today>>> a 1965 reprint of the 1879 Housekeeping in Old Virginia. LOVE IT!!!! There's even a recipe or 5 for Mushroom catsup and sauces.

    • @townsends
      @townsends  6 років тому +1

      Sounds like you're going to have fun!

    • @deannastevens1217
      @deannastevens1217 6 років тому

      Yes. There's interesting cakes, and marmalades, and a bunch of meat recipes that sound interesting. I'm so glad I've been watching your videos. I wouldn't know what a Paste is if I hadn't been. Thank You!.

  • @highkingthorgrimgrudgebear7468
    @highkingthorgrimgrudgebear7468 6 років тому +12

    I'm from New Jersey, are you telling me we have worse winters than Sweden? Because if so, I will begin bragging now.

    • @jameshorn270
      @jameshorn270 5 років тому +7

      It was definitely colder in colonial days than it is now, but also remember that coastal western Europe benefits from heat carried north by the Gulf Stream whereas the states north of Cape Hatteras get colder weather due to the Labrador Current bringing cold water down from the west coast of Greenland. Inland Sweden is likely to have been far colder.

  • @rosemcguinn5301
    @rosemcguinn5301 6 років тому +33

    --First?-- :) Jon, Your winter theme brings something to mind. *Dec 19th is an important anniversary in our nation's history as concerns Valley Forge.* I've often wondered about *Valley Forge*, especially since my family history has a connection to events with Geo. Washington there. Could you do a special show about rations and scant food supplies at Valley Forge please? What sorts of survival things (food, etc) did they have to use there during that bleak winter at Valley Forge? (Edited) Could some ad hoc improvised cooking be done out of doors that would evoke some of the reality of the harsh conditions there, for example? This might be especially instructive for students along with being of general interest to this group. P.S. Your uniform would be a real asset to such a show.

    • @paulmckenzie5155
      @paulmckenzie5155 6 років тому +3

      Rose McGuinn I live very close so I might be able to answer some questions. Anything specific?

    • @rosemcguinn5301
      @rosemcguinn5301 6 років тому +2

      Paul, just as you would like Jon's take and info on our favorite wild game recipe idea, so do I wish to see his take on the Valley Forge idea. Could some ad hoc improvised cooking be done out of doors that would evoke some of the reality of Valley Forge, for example? He probably does have resources galore on this subject. I'd like to learn about that, too.

    • @paulmckenzie5155
      @paulmckenzie5155 6 років тому +7

      Rose McGuinn ok cool I know they had cooking fires, and some large ovens, and they got most of their food from the surrounding area, so it couldn't have been that different. Also at one point a native tribe brought them supplies of corn and some other things, so I think that this topic would make a really cool episode!

    • @rosemcguinn5301
      @rosemcguinn5301 6 років тому +4

      Paul Yes I thought as much as well. It's a topic that's been discussed less and less often in many public schools, imho. I'd like to learn more about the interaction with the Native people there during that difficult winter, as well as to see _how it might have looked and been experienced for them to be cooking out of doors in a tough winter_. I think it's a subject that is under-taught. Kids need to see things more from a soldier's perspective. Jon has not worn his uniform in quite a while, too, so that would add to the flavor of anything he might choose to teach.

    • @paulmckenzie5155
      @paulmckenzie5155 6 років тому +2

      Rose McGuinn are you going to start commenting "could you please do some valley forge?"😂

  • @jameshorn270
    @jameshorn270 5 років тому +2

    Dealing with cracks. Chinking space between logs with mud. Let dry and maybe white wash. Hang blankets on walls (origin of tapestry.) Many of the houses of the period have low ceilings which reduces the volume of air to be warmed. Further, they usually had a sleeping loft over part of the main room which slowed the escape of the heat, and the floor of the loft would be relatively warm around bed time .
    Surprising how much body heat can raise the temperature. I have been out in subzero weather in a tent with a couple of sleeping bags and a foam mat, after about a half hour, a pop-up tent can be warm enough to stick your head out of the sleeping bag without freezing your ears off, and actually feel a bit cozy.
    Bear in mind that they would have had fairly ready access to deer, bear and wolf hides to line the walls and floors. Add a cooking fire and you can be fine as long as you don't have a lot of opening and closing of doors. It does also explain why they were not really keen on baths in winter.
    Note that if the temperature is -7.5 F, it is minus 22 Celsius. Note also that before William Penn and friends showed up in 1682, the area from around Philadelphia down to the Delaware Bay was a Swedish colony and known as New Sweden.

  • @coltm4a186
    @coltm4a186 6 років тому

    It just snowed 4 inches in San Antonio, Texas!!!! It was so amazing!