Speaking of liam neeson, if you haven't seen a movie called next of kin made back in 1989 watch it. Liam Neeson is funny as hell in this movie. And the best part of this movie is right in the half way point. Trust me it's so funny your stomach will hurt cause you will laugh that hard.
"At my challenge, by the ancient laws of combat, we are met at this chosen ground, to settle for good and all who holds sway over the five points: us natives, born rightwise to this fine land, or the foreign hordes defiling it." Best movie line ever.
Worst snubs in Oscar history: Edward Norton- "Primal Fear" Billy Bob Thornton- "Sling Blade" Val Kilmer-"Tombstone Daniel Day Lewis- "Gangs of New York"
I sure wish Daniel Day-Lewis would make another movie, that dude is one hell of an actor, and he sticks to his morals, rare breed indeed! One of the few actors I respect.
Yeah I really enjoyed that movie and almost every movie I've seen him do He gets into the character like nobody else. Most these actors even some of the older ones are all the same character in every movie but not Daniel Day Lewis
Daniel Day-Lewis has retired 4 previous times just to come out of retirement when reading a script he wanted to be a part of, so don't count him out yet.
With this performance alone DDL stands alone with the greatest movie villain performance of all time. To think that he didn't win for this is absolutely disgusting. As heinous an act as not giving kilmer the award for doc holliday
Sir Daniel Day-Lewis is the best character actor of all time. We should all consider ourselves fortunate to have lived with and enjoyed his works throughout his career. There may never be another like him.
Anyone else find it remotely hilarious that in the 1800’s in NYC, gangs of opposing fire fighters would show up to fight each other for “fire fighter supremacy” instead of putting out the actual fire? 👩🚒 👨🚒
As said already still goes on today. One of the reasons 9/11 fallout was not handled to well. Fire, police, ambulance didn't fully speak to each other because they came from different districts. Crazy world we live in
This is the first time I've heard a YT documentary with a Scottish accent. I can *feel* the effort to pronounciate the words in a way non-Scots will understand. Reminds me of phone conversations with English admins after they claim I'm "mumbling". Good job.
Appreciate the support. I have slowed it down as much as possible and trying to speak clearly for the Americans. Still sound like I'm talking Japanese apparently. If I talked as rapid as I do in my normal voice I'd sound like an alien to them.
@dontfearthereaper2887 Throughout history there have been people who caused a great deal of pain for what they believed was for the greater good. Let's say they are misguided and they actually aren't fulfilling any greater good but are simply creating unnecessary misery and death. Are they evil? Well if evil is about intentions they might not be. Codes of honor are not automatically good things. They can be horribly misguided things. Yet they can also be the subject of a powerful belief. So powerful that a person will live and die by them. This might prove that this person, who is willing to take risks and sacrifice their own greater interests in the name of this system of honor, actually has a strong moral character, even though they do things that we consider to be the height of evil and cruelty.
We can try and imagine what it was like back in those days in NYC with these gangs, but I don't think we can fathom the ruthless violence that took place. These people were scary & Tough.
The American Civil War started in 1861, in the film 'Gangs of New York' drafting for the Civil War was depicted as Irish immigrants were disembarking the ships that brought them over to the USA. Bill the Butcher died six years before the Civil War started!
@@lonnieweddington2883 Yes, point taken. Gangs of New York was of course a film not a documentary and it depicted true events, but for obvious narrative reasons, the events weren't necessarily in the correct chronological order. Doesn't matter, it doesn't stop it from being an enjoyable film and it certainly brought that particular era in New York's history to life and to the attention of a modern audience. Films like this also hopefully prompt more people to become historians, like yourself, and learn more about their past
@@stevewhite8059 You mentioned a character in the movie not mentioned in my comment, and for no apparent reason. I repeated what was in my comment which is a factual event.
Fun fact: boxers from back then used that funny stance with their hands very low because there were few punches to the head. Without gloves or even your hands wrapped it was very easy to break your hands on someone's head. Fighters generally stuck to body shots and tried to chop each other down. That's why you would get 40 round fights that lasted 3 hours. Fucking savage.
It is said that Daniel Day Lewis stayed in character for the duration of the filming of GONY. Off set,he retained the spirit and composure of Bill The Butcher so well,that people were scared shitless of him. True story.
Acting was a second hobby to him ...truly amazing and eccentric man.... He retired from acting all together... he said that with each movie it took part of his soul from him
Mike Fantasia hey Mike - if you ever get the chance read Tycoon’s War. During the same period after Mexican American war but before revolution. Wild story and well referenced from historic archives.
Bill the Butcher died like a true American gangster. And he said thank God. I died like a true American. What a classic quote ever. That is why everyone should like Bill the Butcher.
@@angelofdeathmichael673 Well if that is the case China should say thank God I died like a true Chinese. Cause time's like this we all are in it together. But I am not Chinese I am white native American. My mom's dad was white her mom is full blooded native American my dad has native American too. So I must be a white native American person.
And why I think Bill the butcher. Let the kid take is life. Maybe he felt bad for the kid. He tooked him under his wing. What the poor dead rabbit bastard do. Acting like a real dead rabbit as a snake he was.
"He was a hero of the Bowery, a prince of lawless times, then was battered by the butcherman in 1849. He knew the game of fistacuffs he knew the game of might, but no one knew the men who came and took his life one night." Les Claypool,
So the movie took a lot of liberties. He died before the Civil War. It had that in the movie where they were recruiting to join the Civil War. And he did not die in the street he died in a bar because he got shot while on the ground. That should’ve been in the movie
@@taylorjeremy71 Actually do a quick google search and you will see what is different. America and the world in general is way more peaceful than it was in the past.
Embarrassingly enough he is an ancestor of mines. I am a Poole of Scotland. We came from Suffolk, Sussex, Lincolnshire and various other parts of the UK. Bill the Butcher is my so many removed grandfather’s Son. Making him one of my uncles. Many of the Poole’s settled around New York, Louisiana and Salt Lake City Utah. Still looking into this more but will keep everyone posted.
Bill was even better in this movie than he was in real life. Never seen a better person than D.D. Lewis to actually become one of those people from way back then. He's the best 👌
Daniel Day Lewis has be one the best actors ever. My Left Foot, In the name of the Father just brilliant acting. I met him in Roundwood near Bray in Co Wicklow few years back when Rep of Ireland beat Germany 1 nil in the soccer. Nice man loves Ireland.
My fore fathers from Ireland and Scotland or what was called Scotland back then got off the boat and suffered all the indiginities as portrayed in Gangs of New York. Oral history says moving to hills of North Carolina, spreading out a bit and just surviving mostly except for an occasional success story. I liked Gangs of New York but it was difficult to watch knowing I could have been born in those violent, really shitty times.
Yeah I think the Irish even got a hard time when they came to Scotland. Gangs of New York esq protestant vs catholic gangs fights that still affects Scotland today.
There any films for us outsiders that don’t understand that animosity? It starting to sound like it’s rooted in tribal conflict, like India and Pakistan.
The scottish were the british just as much as the English were. For good and bad. The scottish were also the ones who were sent to ireland by the scottish king james to displace the natives there. If your ancestry is scotch/irish, your people were colonisers in Ireland. And remain in the North to this day.
This was freaking excellent. Thank you for this extremely well put together video. If you happen to read this I am curious if any bad luck has befallen you after making such a video. There are some things that seem to draw ill fate in this country since the late forties or early fifties and speaking of the United States' anti-catholic and anti-religion history is one of those things. another is speaking of the true beliefs of our forefathers the majority of whom were only slave owners on the paper of others and did more than anyone else for their extended families or what most Americans call their slaves these days. Speaking of our forefathers true abolitionist agenda which what they considered to be a self-evident truth "all men are created equal" attest to but our ignorant Church educated populace does not believe today.
Thank you, much appreciated. Cant say I have experienced any ill fate in particular other than being on lockdown with everyone else. Fingers crossed nothing bad happens.
Fire fighters at that time were mainly recruited from gangs and the reason they were paid well "per-fire" was because they would loot the belongings of the burning property after the fire was instantly put out... thus they would be given the moniker of "land pirates"... a terminology used to describe highway men and men who would "Shanghai" other men.
The Bowery boys were part of the know nothing group. They were an old political group in nyc, which employed the american guard, on little water street. Tammany hall was there before the Irish, around the time of French immigration. But again this is a great video. Very accurate.
While bill the butcher is often credited as being a boxer, his only reported fight was with john morrissey. Morrissey was american champion at the time and poole made him quit This was not a championship fight and was probably, like the rest of pooles fights a 'rough and tumble' where anything short of weapons were allowed. I have looked and looked but have never found any mention of an organized prize fight for poole. I would say its safe to say all of bill the butchers fights were rough and tumbles
@tony You will not find any proof of an organized prize fight for any of these as the *Horton law* which legalized prize fighting in New York was not passed until 1896. Most of these folks were long dead before that happened.
@@merccadoosis8847 you mistake 'legal' for 'organized' Bareknuckle prize fighting was well organized from the middle 1840's on. Tom hyer vs yankee sullivan was a national event with people coming from as far away as new orleans to new york to watch it Prize fighting was organized, just not legal
Exactly… the right wants adherence to the law, constitution and personal responsibility. The left wants anarchy, protests and endless chaos so the people are always dependent on the government. Solid point…l
The term would have been "misfired" instead of "jammed". Back then they didn't have semi-automatic pistols only revolvers... And revolvers don't jam. Thank you for this awesome video it was quite enjoyable!!!
Grammatically correct for the period, however I have experienced my blackpowder revolvers (Colt's 3rd Mdl Dragoon & 1860 Army) cylinders jam on occasion from a brass cap, after firing get wedged between the cylinder & frame as the cylinder rotated. This has also been the occasional experiences of other black powder revolver shooters that I personally know, so I would imagine revolver jams were occasionally experienced during the mid-19th century as well as the more frequent misfires.
Ya except that ejector rods could effectively Jam the cylinder against the frame. So Ya they can jam. Typical mope on the internet who knows nothing about firearms.
One can imagine the utter relief for the victim of a fire at the arrival of two fire fighting companies at the scene... Only to turn to horrified disbelief as both companies completely ignored the blaze and instead set about violently fighting each other for the percieved prestige of being the ones that successfully fought the fire! Unsurprisingly, whilst they fought, the blaze raged further out of control, razing buildings to the ground and frequently igniting adjoining buildings too! Quite what the despairing victims thought of this state of affairs remains unknown, but given the violence that these crews meted out to one another, it is doubtful that many voiced complaints! That apart, for gangs of heavily armed men to face one another and engage in hand to hand combat took courage! The fearsome weapons each side carried and their readiness to use them would deter all but the bravest of men. The severity and range of injuries and the medical services at that time made the prospect of be injured much more dangerous than today. Throughout history, edged weapons and blunt force trauma weapons have taken more lives and inflicted more injuries than ballistic weapons.
Me ancestor was a dead rabbit. Hes where i got my drinking from my anger from and my hatred for anyone or anything harming my way of life. My ancestors were irish,Native American, and some American. My dead rabbit ancestor went to marry a Cherokee squal. And their children went off to mary up in new york.
I really enjoy the movie. Of course the time lines are off but who cares, it's a movie. It certainly seems to capture the feeling of being there. One of my favorites.👍
if any of you remember those old cartoons where the guy with the mustache and the top hat tied girls to the railroad tracks ? guess who that was based on?
@@lukegriffiths7234 an American? What is American, did they not come from another land like everyone else, the native Indian is a true American, this butcher was just a radical anti Catholic nob head.
Love when DDL starts fake crying over that poor defenseless rabbit. Sounds like a bunch of screw ups. Glad i didnt live back then i like being clean too much.
Another interesting topic of the movie to cover is how people lived underground. One of the scenes takes place under a sidewalk (bar scene) based on historical photos. And there is another scene where a cross section of the many underground floors can be seen. None of this was well built, causing cave ins. That would ultimately lead to modern day strick building codes in NYC.
I'll look into it. Did you ever see the documentary where homeless people were living under the city in their own crazy community? Plugging into the cities electricity lines for free power. It was like in the film demolition man.
Interesting, in the movie the Civil War had started, Infact they had Dead lining the streets But The Butcher was dead in 1855, 1/2 decade before the Civil War started..I also see this is 2nd movie they just Added Dicapero or however you spell his name..He wasnt really in this Or Titanic, but stillness was great movie😁
Lewis, in my opinion played this role to the extent of the most believable portrayal of a real man I have ever seen.
Well technically Lewis is in fact a real man. No cgi used for him I don't believe.
I completely agree with you. He is an amazing actor.
Only a few people could kill Liam Neeson. But no one kills him in the opening scene. Legend
Loved that doc
Speaking of liam neeson, if you haven't seen a movie called next of kin made back in 1989 watch it. Liam Neeson is funny as hell in this movie. And the best part of this movie is right in the half way point. Trust me it's so funny your stomach will hurt cause you will laugh that hard.
@@mattjacobson3616 I used to have that video. It’s one of my favorites. He is awesome in that movie.
@@shananalexander9789 yes it is a good movie. The mob guy hanging outside the window still makes lol.
@nedkelly3436 always a classic line from old gary get me two.
"At my challenge, by the ancient laws of combat, we are met at this chosen ground, to settle for good and all who holds sway over the five points: us natives, born rightwise to this fine land, or the foreign hordes defiling it." Best movie line ever.
Here is Los Angeles its called a case.....
May the Christian Lord guide my hand against your roman popery
@@stephengrahn9361 prepare to meet the true lord
@沒有人的天空 absolutley. Never more true
Coming true again.
Worst snubs in Oscar history: Edward Norton- "Primal Fear"
Billy Bob Thornton- "Sling Blade"
Val Kilmer-"Tombstone
Daniel Day Lewis- "Gangs of New York"
1980 ordinary people over Raging Bull.
I tend to agree
- Bricks , bats , axes , knives , pistols ?
- No pistols.
- Good boy.
Here u go
ua-cam.com/video/KTGxqyfLpOQ/v-deo.html
Challenge!
I'm the 60th like!
One thing I've never been able to figure out is. What a brickbat is?
@@schweinfurterrory8030 A bat made from bricks?
DDL portrayal of Bill the Butcher was one of the most terrifying on-screen villains of all time. Absolutely brilliant
Bryan B Bill the Butcher is my favorite movie gangster.
@@jeremymadden8008
He was so brilliantly believable.
I think that's what made him so frightening
My type of villain
Bryan B the patties that defied
DDL is one of the best character actors ever
I sure wish Daniel Day-Lewis would make another movie, that dude is one hell of an actor, and he sticks to his morals, rare breed indeed! One of the few actors I respect.
The man deserves a video of his own for his mental method acting tactics.
Yeah I really enjoyed that movie and almost every movie I've seen him do He gets into the character like nobody else. Most these actors even some of the older ones are all the same character in every movie but not Daniel Day Lewis
He was great in "There will be Blood"
I thought Phanton Thread was fantastic, looks like that will be his final film
Daniel Day-Lewis has retired 4 previous times just to come out of retirement when reading a script he wanted to be a part of, so don't count him out yet.
Daniel day lewis portrayal of bill the butcher was Genius..it was robbed and didn't give credit at the oscars
cause the Butcher was racist and the oscars are too woke
@@nickf2861 it's acting..bro
@James Vickers so that's so
@@chewcab8008 no man it's that recognitiy that artist deserve what does to them
@@nickf2861 What about Christoph Waltz as Hans Landa in Inglorious Basterds? That character was pretty racist and he won an Oscar.
Bill the Butcher. I knew his cousin, Bob the Builder.
Dont forget their long lost cousin, Dora-The Explorer
I think Bob got his famous one liner from his Cousin Bill “Can we fix him? No he’s F....ed.”
Hahahaha
Also his grandson Leon the professional
And their method of transportation? THOMAS THE TANK ENGINE!!!
With this performance alone DDL stands alone with the greatest movie villain performance of all time. To think that he didn't win for this is absolutely disgusting. As heinous an act as not giving kilmer the award for doc holliday
Kilmer stole the show in Tombstone. Such a great portrayal! “ You’re no daisy” love that line to the dying Johnny Ringo 😂
DDL doing Daniel Plainview was a movie villain on par with DDL doing Bill The Butcher
he was better in there will be blood. as a villain
I agree whole-heartedly!
@@americanwelder9865 "I was just foolin about
I wasn't."
awesome
Sir Daniel Day-Lewis is the best character actor of all time. We should all consider ourselves fortunate to have lived with and enjoyed his works throughout his career. There may never be another like him.
Anyone else find it remotely hilarious that in the 1800’s in NYC, gangs of opposing fire fighters would show up to fight each other for “fire fighter supremacy” instead of putting out the actual fire? 👩🚒 👨🚒
Look at today's FDNY and you can still see the various factions represented. Today though they're all on the same side
Crazy right. I believe not long ago frances firefighters were starting fires and fighting the police in protest.
As said already still goes on today. One of the reasons 9/11 fallout was not handled to well. Fire, police, ambulance didn't fully speak to each other because they came from different districts. Crazy world we live in
Government ineffectiveness on display since the beginning of this fucked up nation
@Euphoric Moto Films there's loads more to it. But yes u see where you are coming from
It was tough old shit in them days
Carl_Marks no difference now
Barry aLLen very
@@BarryaLLen-ik8bq u fool
@@BarryaLLen-ik8bq LOL 😆 😂 🤣
Bill the butcher was terrifying because he was totally brutal but also smart
What makes someone smart ?
Wait, wut? A barfight with guns? Wouldn't that be a gunfight in a bar...
No it's still fighting in a bar so barfight is more accurate. Lol
Better to bring a gun to a barfight than a bar to a gunfight.
well back then folks werent sissys and gun fights in bars were not frowned upon
@@moreygloss9248 that's some deep shit
Yes, the dead rabbits were pussies
“I’ll festoon my bed chamber with his guts” “heart? This boy has no heart” Two of my favourite lines from the movie
“I’m going to paint paradise square in his blood. Two coats!”
Orange blossom. Delicious.
This is the first time I've heard a YT documentary with a Scottish accent. I can *feel* the effort to pronounciate the words in a way non-Scots will understand. Reminds me of phone conversations with English admins after they claim I'm "mumbling".
Good job.
Appreciate the support. I have slowed it down as much as possible and trying to speak clearly for the Americans. Still sound like I'm talking Japanese apparently. If I talked as rapid as I do in my normal voice I'd sound like an alien to them.
Bill had guts, I'll give him that. Terrible human being but he had guts and a code of honor that he genuinely followed.
@dontfearthereaper2887 Guess it depends on one's definition of evil.
@dontfearthereaper2887 Throughout history there have been people who caused a great deal of pain for what they believed was for the greater good. Let's say they are misguided and they actually aren't fulfilling any greater good but are simply creating unnecessary misery and death. Are they evil? Well if evil is about intentions they might not be. Codes of honor are not automatically good things. They can be horribly misguided things. Yet they can also be the subject of a powerful belief. So powerful that a person will live and die by them. This might prove that this person, who is willing to take risks and sacrifice their own greater interests in the name of this system of honor, actually has a strong moral character, even though they do things that we consider to be the height of evil and cruelty.
Put playback speed to 1.25 you'll notice the difference immediately
We can try and imagine what it was like back in those days in NYC with these gangs, but I don't think we can fathom the ruthless violence that took place. These people were scary & Tough.
Such a great movie, if only they'd release a version that edits out the whole romance subplot.
Yeah, I wasn’t into the whole “Bill licks a bunch of knives and blades”, stuff either
Absolutely the romantic melodrama destroyed that movie
A romantic plot with a whore? Please
I kinda liked it 🤷♂️
Yeah,I thought that love story was a waste of time in the movie.
The draft riots were also a historical fact depicted in the movie, they were put down by the military.
The American Civil War started in 1861, in the film 'Gangs of New York' drafting for the Civil War was depicted as Irish immigrants were disembarking the ships that brought them over to the USA.
Bill the Butcher died six years before the Civil War started!
@@stevewhite8059 I said nothing about any characters, the draft riots were real and the military utilized to put them down.
@@lonnieweddington2883 Yes, point taken.
Gangs of New York was of course a film not a documentary and it depicted true events, but for obvious narrative reasons, the events weren't necessarily in the correct chronological order. Doesn't matter, it doesn't stop it from being an enjoyable film and it certainly brought that particular era in New York's history to life and to the attention of a modern audience.
Films like this also hopefully prompt more people to become historians, like yourself, and learn more about their past
@@stevewhite8059 You mentioned a character in the movie not mentioned in my comment, and for no apparent reason. I repeated what was in my comment which is a factual event.
5:50 the longest reach in all of boxing history
Go go gadget arms😂
Got a killer left hook.
Fun fact: boxers from back then used that funny stance with their hands very low because there were few punches to the head. Without gloves or even your hands wrapped it was very easy to break your hands on someone's head. Fighters generally stuck to body shots and tried to chop each other down. That's why you would get 40 round fights that lasted 3 hours. Fucking savage.
@@mjwbulich pure brutality
That is copy of the original lithograph using Silly Putty .
It is said that Daniel Day Lewis stayed in character for the duration of the filming of GONY. Off set,he retained the spirit and composure of Bill The Butcher so well,that people were scared shitless of him. True story.
Yeah he listened to nothing but Eminem so he'd always be pissed off. I always thought that was 😎
Actually it wasn’t Eminem it was Matchbox 20 on a continuous loop
@@darrelsmith1380 lol
Acting was a second hobby to him ...truly amazing and eccentric man.... He retired from acting all together... he said that with each movie it took part of his soul from him
Arnez Willis 🤣🤣🤣
The reason many were firefighters is because many would loot some homes plus be paid financially 💪😎. Great video 🙏
Play it at 1.25 and your good to go
Thank you for this information man! That Bill the Butcher character made the entire film.
Such an incredibly interesting time in history.
I agree and recommend the original book: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gangs_of_New_York_(book)
Yeah if you were white!
Mike Fantasia hey Mike - if you ever get the chance read Tycoon’s War. During the same period after Mexican American war but before revolution. Wild story and well referenced from historic archives.
@@andresmiguel2573 Ok, Karen....
Most patriotic last words 🇺🇲 R.I.P Poole
A complete master piece. Brilliant and very very convincing role Daniel day louis is electrifying
Thank god I died like a true American. That was a classic quote I ever heard.
Bill the Butcher died like a true American gangster. And he said thank God. I died like a true American. What a classic quote ever. That is why everyone should like Bill the Butcher.
@@richardtaylor1062 in these times right now we should look at him as an inspiration. Thank God I died a true American.
@@angelofdeathmichael673 Well if that is the case China should say thank God I died like a true Chinese. Cause time's like this we all are in it together. But I am not Chinese I am white native American. My mom's dad was white her mom is full blooded native American my dad has native American too. So I must be a white native American person.
@michael french I thought he called himself the Native's. Cause he was Native American.
And why I think Bill the butcher. Let the kid take is life. Maybe he felt bad for the kid. He tooked him under his wing. What the poor dead rabbit bastard do. Acting like a real dead rabbit as a snake he was.
"See this knife, I'm going to teach you to speak English with this knife"
@Jack Burton I know, but didn't wanna swear.. incase there are snowflakes reading it
"thats a wound!"
One of my favorite quotes
Starts carving alphabet into wood plank
"So as you can see we begin with thee letter A..."
@@buzzkillington7725 well there's your problem- you care what snowflakes think
"He was a hero of the Bowery, a prince of lawless times,
then was battered by the butcherman in 1849.
He knew the game of fistacuffs he knew the game of might,
but no one knew the men who came and took his life one night."
Les Claypool,
Primus Sucks! 😉
Shut up Flanders
@@lionelhutz5137 Yo, dummy, "Primus sucks" is a badge of honor to the band. Do some research.
Yup
This is one of my favorite movies of all time! Very interesting to actually learn the backstory. Great video!!!
So the movie took a lot of liberties. He died before the Civil War. It had that in the movie where they were recruiting to join the Civil War. And he did not die in the street he died in a bar because he got shot while on the ground. That should’ve been in the movie
It's amazing anyone survived that era at all. Constant carnage and murder and the police being totally impotent and currupt.
What's the difference from today? Your Dunning Kruger effect is showing
@@taylorjeremy71 Actually do a quick google search and you will see what is different. America and the world in general is way more peaceful than it was in the past.
The book by Herbert asbury (gangs of ny is a fabulous book there’s at least a half a dozen movies in there
That's WILD that old hacksaw in his hands that has not changed a bit. That hacksaw still looks the same today in design
Most of the footage can now be seen in 3D and in color ;)
The Butcher was a real Beast i wish i could've met him, the Natives had alot of heart.
You wanna meet a 19th century xenophobic phychotic killer? Don't think it would go well 😂
5:42 I wouldn’t want to box someone with a left arm like a giraffe’s neck.
I did a history presentation on William Poole (Bill the butcher) when I was at school! Very underrated piece of history!
Superb, I love that. If only History presentations were as interesting when I was at school.
Embarrassingly enough he is an ancestor of mines. I am a Poole of Scotland. We came from Suffolk, Sussex, Lincolnshire and various other parts of the UK. Bill the Butcher is my so many removed grandfather’s Son. Making him one of my uncles. Many of the Poole’s settled around New York, Louisiana and Salt Lake City Utah. Still looking into this more but will keep everyone posted.
Small world :)
why Embarrassingly? he was a badass mofo.
Why is it embarrassing ?
@@jamess2664 He was a pretty messed up guy who did some messed up things.
There's a Scotland tours video that talks about this very subject. We're all related to someone famous.
Great job and research. The Libravox audio account of his funeral is eerie and felt like I was there in NYC.
Thanks mate.
Very interesting mini-documentary.
I wish you rainbows.
Thanks dude, glad you enjoyed it.
The movie captured this really well it seems
he was actually a undercover nyc pd & worked 4 vanderbuilts..
he got a piece of everything came
through long island new york
At that time there really was only one Vanderbilt
Thanks for the education and history.
Thanks for the support Gavin
Old bill would roll in his grave if he could see America now..👳♂️
Bill was even better in this movie than he was in real life. Never seen a better person than D.D. Lewis to actually become one of those people from way back then. He's the best 👌
Daniel Day Lewis has be one the best actors ever.
My Left Foot, In the name of the Father just brilliant acting.
I met him in Roundwood near Bray in Co Wicklow few years back when Rep of Ireland beat Germany 1 nil in the soccer.
Nice man loves Ireland.
My fore fathers from Ireland and Scotland or what was called Scotland back then got off the boat and suffered all the indiginities as portrayed in Gangs of New York. Oral history says moving to hills of North Carolina, spreading out a bit and just surviving mostly except for an occasional success story. I liked Gangs of New York but it was difficult to watch knowing I could have been born in those violent, really shitty times.
Yeah I think the Irish even got a hard time when they came to Scotland. Gangs of New York esq protestant vs catholic gangs fights that still affects Scotland today.
There any films for us outsiders that don’t understand that animosity? It starting to sound like it’s rooted in tribal conflict, like India and Pakistan.
The scottish were the british just as much as the English were. For good and bad.
The scottish were also the ones who were sent to ireland by the scottish king james to displace the natives there. If your ancestry is scotch/irish, your people were colonisers in Ireland. And remain in the North to this day.
This was freaking excellent. Thank you for this extremely well put together video.
If you happen to read this I am curious if any bad luck has befallen you after making such a video.
There are some things that seem to draw ill fate in this country since the late forties or early fifties and speaking of the United States' anti-catholic and anti-religion history is one of those things.
another is speaking of the true beliefs of our forefathers the majority of whom were only slave owners on the paper of others and did more than anyone else for their extended families or what most Americans call their slaves these days.
Speaking of our forefathers true abolitionist agenda which what they considered to be a self-evident truth
"all men are created equal"
attest to but our ignorant Church educated populace does not believe today.
Thank you, much appreciated. Cant say I have experienced any ill fate in particular other than being on lockdown with everyone else. Fingers crossed nothing bad happens.
@@CriminalHistory1 thank you and good luck.
screwball psyche good to hear👍🙏 thanks for this really interesting video, and hello from way over in Royal Oak, Michigan👋
@@evanabbott2737 Cheers man, hello from Scotland
Great musical sound track.
I actually learned something new
Fire fighters at that time were mainly recruited from gangs and the reason they were paid well "per-fire" was because they would loot the belongings of the burning property after the fire was instantly put out... thus they would be given the moniker of "land pirates"... a terminology used to describe highway men and men who would "Shanghai" other men.
Well made & informative production
Thanks man, appreciate it
The Bowery boys were part of the know nothing group. They were an old political group in nyc, which employed the american guard, on little water street. Tammany hall was there before the Irish, around the time of French immigration. But again this is a great video. Very accurate.
While bill the butcher is often credited as being a boxer, his only reported fight was with john morrissey. Morrissey was american champion at the time and poole made him quit
This was not a championship fight and was probably, like the rest of pooles fights a 'rough and tumble' where anything short of weapons were allowed. I have looked and looked but have never found any mention of an organized prize fight for poole. I would say its safe to say all of bill the butchers fights were rough and tumbles
@tony
You will not find any proof of an organized prize fight for any of these as the *Horton law* which legalized prize fighting in New York was not passed until 1896. Most of these folks were long dead before that happened.
@@merccadoosis8847 you mistake 'legal' for 'organized'
Bareknuckle prize fighting was well organized from the middle 1840's on.
Tom hyer vs yankee sullivan was a national event with people coming from as far away as new orleans to new york to watch it
Prize fighting was organized, just not legal
he was a street fighter not a prize fighter boxer ..lol street fighter win everytime
"New York wasn't a city, it was a furnace where someday a city might be forged."- Amsterdam, Gangs of New York
I thought everyone knew gangs of New York was based on real history.
I know, where the fuck is that coming from
Not so much “based on” as it was “inspired by”.
Great video thanks for putting it together.
My pleasure. Any suggestions for the next one?
Huh I just thought Gangs of New York was a period piece didn’t realize it was closer to being based off a true story
Thank you for using CC. I appreciate it.
So here's the true origin of Police vs Firemen rivalry 😁
Awesome. 🇺🇸
And now extremists on both sides want us to go back to these times.
Exactly… the right wants adherence to the law, constitution and personal responsibility. The left wants anarchy, protests and endless chaos so the people are always dependent on the government. Solid point…l
No one cares about the Irish conflict, nationalists care about maintaining a White country, that includes the Irish.
The five points or hella kitchen has a wild history.
9171paladin I walked through a few years ago at dawn, it was like Disney :(
The term would have been "misfired" instead of "jammed". Back then they didn't have semi-automatic pistols only revolvers... And revolvers don't jam. Thank you for this awesome video it was quite enjoyable!!!
Settle down. Geez
Grammatically correct for the period, however I have experienced my blackpowder revolvers (Colt's 3rd Mdl Dragoon & 1860 Army) cylinders jam on occasion from a brass cap, after firing get wedged between the cylinder & frame as the cylinder rotated. This has also been the occasional experiences of other black powder revolver shooters that I personally know, so I would imagine revolver jams were occasionally experienced during the mid-19th century as well as the more frequent misfires.
Thanks for the buzz kill. Always has to be one i guess
@@dogstarstudios718 the cylinders can also jam up when they get out of time
Ya except that ejector rods could effectively Jam the cylinder against the frame. So Ya they can jam. Typical mope on the internet who knows nothing about firearms.
I Saw The Gangs of New York the beginning of that movie my God was it brutal
One can imagine the utter relief for the victim of a fire at the arrival of two fire fighting companies at the scene... Only to turn to horrified disbelief as both companies completely ignored the blaze and instead set about violently fighting each other for the percieved prestige of being the ones that successfully fought the fire!
Unsurprisingly, whilst they fought, the blaze raged further out of control, razing buildings to the ground and frequently igniting adjoining buildings too!
Quite what the despairing victims thought of this state of affairs remains unknown, but given the violence that these crews meted out to one another, it is doubtful that many voiced complaints!
That apart, for gangs of heavily armed men to face one another and engage in hand to hand combat took courage!
The fearsome weapons each side carried and their readiness to use them would deter all but the bravest of men.
The severity and range of injuries and the medical services at that time made the prospect of be injured much more dangerous than today.
Throughout history, edged weapons and blunt force trauma weapons have taken more lives and inflicted more injuries than ballistic weapons.
To this day firearms are not most used weapon to commit homicide. I think it is number 3 or 4 on the list behind bludgeoning, stabbing, and poisoning.
Me ancestor was a dead rabbit. Hes where i got my drinking from my anger from and my hatred for anyone or anything harming my way of life. My ancestors were irish,Native American, and some American. My dead rabbit ancestor went to marry a Cherokee squal. And their children went off to mary up in new york.
this was my mothers great grandfather who carried
slapjack & a barber blade in NYC
Damn
why did u thumbs up
those were the only two things
my father let my mother keep
I really enjoy the movie.
Of course the time lines are off but who cares, it's a movie.
It certainly seems to capture the feeling of being there.
One of my favorites.👍
That first portrait of bill.. that’s exactly how I have my hairstyle 😂 knew I had taste.
Great video.
Great Grandfather of The Butcher of Luverne
I'm 6 foot 4 and weigh 275 I know how he felt everything is made for short people
Holy shit , At 5:46 the bare knuckle boxer Tom Hyer must have been related to Mr Tickle , check out those arms ..😀😀😀😀
This was the movie that really made me like DDL.
Daniel Day Lewis was more Bill the Butcher than Bill the Butcher himself.
Great vid...thank you for the history‼️
One of my favorite people in history
AS THEY SAY....LIVE BY THE SWORD-DIE BY THE SWORD.
In real life he died 5 years before the civil war so the movie is not an accurate portrayal of his life
I strangely learned a few weeks ago that I'm related to this dude,
That was hella cool from one of my favorites
That was amazing thank you.
Pleasure, thanks for the support.
if any of you remember those old cartoons where the guy with the mustache and the top hat tied girls to the railroad tracks ? guess who that was based on?
I give up....
@Usa mabaho lol
Snydley Whiplash? Dick Dastardley?
Fred Schneider!
The gay biker in the Village People.
Bill "the butcher" Cutting's grave is in Brooklyn. Visited once or twice.
I didnt see Bill as a villain in Gangs of New York. He was simply a man that stood by his ideals.
I agree sir. An American.
@@lukegriffiths7234 an American? What is American, did they not come from another land like everyone else, the native Indian is a true American, this butcher was just a radical anti Catholic nob head.
One of My all time favorites just got better🙂
5:45 that's one helluva left
I really enjoyed this, very interesting and I subscribed. Thank you. Can you do the Molly McGuires?
Cheers Priscila, I will look into it.
Love when DDL starts fake crying over that poor defenseless rabbit. Sounds like a bunch of screw ups. Glad i didnt live back then i like being clean too much.
Another interesting topic of the movie to cover is how people lived underground. One of the scenes takes place under a sidewalk (bar scene) based on historical photos. And there is another scene where a cross section of the many underground floors can be seen. None of this was well built, causing cave ins. That would ultimately lead to modern day strick building codes in NYC.
I'll look into it. Did you ever see the documentary where homeless people were living under the city in their own crazy community? Plugging into the cities electricity lines for free power. It was like in the film demolition man.
@@CriminalHistory1 no, sounds interesting. I guess people will do what they have to to survive
@@lperea21 www.imdb.com/title/tt0235327/
thats it there mate. Yeah crazy how people adapt.
Fascinating!
I named my Bull Terrier after him back in 2005.
Interesting, in the movie the Civil War had started, Infact they had Dead lining the streets But The Butcher was dead in 1855, 1/2 decade before the Civil War started..I also see this is 2nd movie they just Added Dicapero or however you spell his name..He wasnt really in this Or Titanic, but stillness was great movie😁
He was a supporting actor not the star
Very informative. Two thumbs up!
Thanks dude