I have always been fascinated by the old wild West and its outlaws, the sheriffs,the native Americans, and being able to see their face is mesmerising! Thank you for sharing these pictures!!! Ciao from Italy 🇮🇹
My favourite one yet. I am drawn to the American wild west like a moth to a flame (even thought I live in the UK) Watching this video was quiet emotion for me...I think maybe I lived there in a past life. Thank you yet again Scoop for making my day! X
I live in northern Arizona, I'm sure it's not what it was 100 years ago, but I still find wild places to hike & explore where I see no people, only wildlife...
@@johnganshow5536 oh wow lucky you. I have a favourite book that I have re-read so many times that is set in 1880s Arizona territory. Near Tucson. I would LOVE to visit some day. 🙏
@@Goodstuff74 I lived in Tucson for awhile ( Sonoran desert ) But you can drive up to the top of Mt Lemon, in Tucson, into pine forests and there's even a ski area up there, and an excellent restaurant ( The Sawmill ) Would love to have you visit!!!
All very atmospheric and strangely familiar-must’ve had an incarnation back then! Another winner, Mystery Scoop. Thank you for sharing 👏. This is surely one of the most enchanting channels on UA-cam ❤️🥀
2.03. The sod house dug out, yet these people look so clean and pristine, taking pride in themselves. They must have worked hard . Not a lot of space in there. Can you imagine, yet they did it. Bless them.
Fascinating study, thanks for that. Pictures truly are worth thousands of words, thanks also for helping keep history alive and relevant with technology.
I'm a 44 year old Australian and have been obsessed with the old west since I was little even rode western saddles when we had horses, I love Native Americans and been obsessed with them too and I am very lucky to be married to one she is Mayan/Pipil and super nice💓❤️
One thing that strikes me: as rough and tough as this time period was for the humans, it was a lot more brutal for the animals! Great pictures, I had not seen any of these previously.
I’m glad you included pictures from the early 1900s as the Wild West. Because people act like it was over 1899. But that was only the start of the twilight days and it would only end in 1920.
Really reminds me of the Time Life Old West book series, but in Cliff Notes🙂. Living in Colorado, we're surrounded by that era of history around here. Seeing some of these pics "colorized" really brings them to the present, making the folks even more relatable~ Thanks again MS❤️
MS, I must say I'm very impressed with the video, narration, and all the Colorized Images along with the interesting people and how they posed for the camera like models. RCJ/LEO
Thank you very much Yankee Mystery Scoop! 😝 I never knew what a cabinet card was. Want to know? It's a thin photo one would adhere to a thick card and displayed, that's right, in a cabinet! I'm 60 and still learning! Cheers from Ireland. ☘
Outstanding photos!. By the way..I loved Centennial tv mini serie when I was very young!. This Saga was inspired by true events between the colonists and the natives. Cheers from the Basque country.
Alrighty, glad to see U.S. past brought into life! Oftentimes European and various Western and Far Eastern countries showcase their history. Happy to see U.S. history well represented !
Notice how the real cowboys don't resemble those on TV shows at all. In saloons, poker was not the most popular game in town. Very few played cards. They play Faro, a board game similar to what you would find in Vegas today only a more primitive version.
Fascinating! I had relatives in Oklahoma and some that moved from Ohio ending up in Colorado. I have a few pictures of some of them. I wouldn't give them up for anything.
1869, and many many people had lost relatives in the civil war, were upset about how cities were run, and wanted the freedom and LIBERTY that we all cherish. So they took their civil war revolvers, bought powder and ammo, and a wagon. At the time a gun was cheapcheap, a few dollars at most, there were so many. And they set out to change the world. What most people don't understand is that many of these settlers were civil war veterans, and were not looking for more fighting, they were looking for peace. Just like veterans today.
@4:55 you'll see a group photo, and the shirts the men were wearing were former military uniforms. The blue shirt with the patch in the center was a Union Calvary Officers shirt, and the grey was the same for Confederate officers. These men trained, shot at each other, and then worked together to raise, herd, and make money from cattle. Jesse James COULD have worked with these men, but he was not welcomed in most places, because his service to the Confederate resulted in many civilian casualties. He was known as a Bushwacker, which meant something really nasty then. It was a soldier that would be ordered to go into a town with Union sympathizers, find then, kill them and sometimes their families, to sent a message.
Just an aside: when I first returned to Seattle-- guest at Ivan’s acres of clams… horrible photos of many of my ancestors in pitiful scrappy teepees, obviously conquered. It hurt my soul, because inner restaurant had hanging war canoes of my ancestors… as decoration. Hurt my soul.
I wonder who and where these people of the past reincarnated to on their next life. Could be someone you knew or still know today. Incredible images, hope to see more of the Old West down the road....thank you.
Too bad the Native Americans could not hold onto their land, but they had no organized way of claiming the land and traveled around spontaneously, probably usurping other lands that another tribe claimed was theirs. No way did they have the knowledge or power to keep their land. To think that those relatively few people could lay total claim to such a vast amount of land was very unlikely. Someone was going to come along and disrupt their lives one way or the other. Time marches on, and everything changes.
Yeah sure but the only difference was they lived a completely natural lifestyle for thousands of years and then the governments and kingdoms took everything. Natives respect the land much more then we do but oh well time marches on right?
The Rosebud river boat must have had a difficult time travelling West on the Missouri from Bismark to Montana. The river runs only to the East from Montana and then South. To reach Montana the boat would need to travel West against the flow.
I'm in awe of the work you guys do with these photos. I feel such a shame of beeing white when you hear the stories of how the nativ americans (Indians as I grew up knowing them as), were placed in reservations. Beeing stripped of their land. The same happened in Australia too 🥺🥺. I just think it's horrendous.
There are no Native Americans. They didn't just spring up out of the ground. They were from Asia and traveled the land bridge between Asia/Russia and N America. What they were are descendants of Mongols and lived the same nomadic life. Guess what they found when they got to N America? It was already populated and had been for 15000 years by the Clovis. Guess what happened? The new arrivals from Eastern Asia massacred every last one. Take your "white guilt" elsewhere.
Así es! Cuando llegaron las colonias migrantes pidieron establecerse en tierra mexicana, se les dejó establecerse con la condición de que acatarán las reglas, pero no fue así, inventando independencia, argumentos falsos, y después el robo de 3 Estados por ese país que actualmente lo tienen ya poblado, eso es lo que pasó antes!!!
You are only showing photos from the post Civil War era. The "Old West" / "Wild West" era in U.S. history started many years beforehand, roughly as the first "fur trappers / mountain men" passed Westbound, passed the Eastbound Lewis & Clark Expedition in 1805. Photography was developed around 1839, so by the time of the Mexican-American War in 1846-48, photos were being taken of historical events. Beginning in 1848, the California Gold rush is well photographed for example, and the Gold Rush is arguably the event that caused the "Old West" to launch from the initial small trickle of fur trappers and wagon trains, 1805-1848 into the flood of new comers that became the "Wild West". Colt's Revolving Belt Pistol (AKA 1851 Colt Navy .36 caliber) ushered in the era of practical self defense / offense easily carried on the person in a handgun and caliber with power, range, accuracy and capability well beyond the single shot pistols that preceded it, beginning the era of the "shootist . pistolero". As gold prospectors spread throughout the Western Frontier post 1848, new wild mining camps and towns grew as the prospectors blazed new trails off the earlier trails of the Mountain Men. The "Cowboy Era" so over dramatized by Hollywood was only a tiny side show to the Wild West" in reality, starting with the first cattle drives in 1866-67. Far more wild and dangerous than cow towns like Dodge City and Abilene, were the mining towns like Virginia City, Tombstone and Deadwood. Wild Bill Hickok was not a cowboy; he was a gambler, wagon freighter, Army Scout, and sometimes town marshal, who was killed in the mining town of Deadwood, Dakota Territory. The "Wild West" was Mountain Men, Wagon Trains, Gold Rushes, and Indian Battles, long before "cowboys" arrived near the end of the Western Frontier. Mountain Men and Gold Prospectors were who blazed the trails, built the camps and towns, and established the trade routes, and their stories are far more interesting, and important than the little cowboy sideshow that happened at the end!
They didn't exactly treat the pioneers with respect either. They attacked them, scalped them, killed them and kidnapped women and children. They did not welcome "aliens" invading their land. Sound familiar?
@@sallysmith8081 Perhaps the pioneers should have not presumed they could take the land, it didn't belong to them!Yes I am aware that awful, evil, things happened to them.You saying 'sounds familiar' well that could encapsulate a lot of the world's countries through the ages...
@@sallysmith8081 Our government systematically abused, lied, raped, and murdered these people!!!! Our government actively and knowingly committed genocide against the First Nation people!!!! They justly angry about it!!!!! The raids were unfortunately due to retaliation against our government’s evil actions against them(not saying it was right, but it IS understandable considering), maybe research the treatment that our First Nations brothers and sisters were given, BEFORE commenting would be a better action for you!!! You truly need educating on this topic at hand!!!!
The picture shown at 0:53 is actually a picture of the RKO back-lot and shows the set build for the movie Cimarron (1931) - so NOT a genuine Old West Photo!
At 1:07 How the hell are they getting drone type photos in the 1800s? There isn’t a hill or tree in sight for miles and yet this photo is taken from a 30 foot elevation above ground!
Fantastic photos ,when you think about it was not that long ago this was happening 🤔those poor native tribes must have so shocked when they witnessed all the wagon trains and people coming on to their nation little did they know the devistation to come 😟
As often as not, the natives were welcoming of the settlers, until the military got involved. And few know this, but one of the biggest issues, and one of the reasons so many wars were fought, was over plural marriage. See, the military saw it as an abomination, and demanded that the tribes walk away from the practice, but in their culture, that's almost like killing a woman, and in some ways, it would have been kinder to kill her outright. Now, most of you have never heard this, and a few are saying, this guy's crazy, but it's the truth. Taking the kids from the reservation and putting them into training camps (schools) was the solution, they separated the elders from the kids, and made it a felony to speak the language... all to erase plural marriage from the minds of the new generation... then they burned the elders or medicine man's teepee, because the history of the tribe was written on the inner walls as pictographs. THIS is who did all the atrocities to the Natives, not the settlers. There were tensions, and occasional shootings, but generally these were Civil War veterans and had no interest in killing.
Jesse James was a guerilla for the Confederate Army. He watched union soldiers hang his step-dad, and ran raids for the confederate army under the command of William Quantrill. After the war, a soldier shot Jesse in the chest, and he survived the gunshot, but was extremely bitter toward the Union.
I wish the colorization of the photos didn't look so tie-died. It would be nice to see the colors more realistic. I do appreciate your presentation, nevertheless. Thank you!
I let the machine colorize using artificial intelligence for quick jobs, otherwise manual colorization would have been a tedious task... and yeah, ai colorization is not always accurate but it gives some ambience! Thanks!
What we did to the indigenous people is unconscionable. Everyone applauds the hardiness and resilience of the White man coming west, but forgets how the Native Americans suffered and died at the White man’s hands. I wish I could have asked them, “What part of ‘this land is already inhabited’ do you not understand? Great photos nonetheless. Thanks for posting!
I have always been fascinated by the old wild West and its outlaws, the sheriffs,the native Americans, and being able to see their face is mesmerising! Thank you for sharing these pictures!!! Ciao from Italy 🇮🇹
These photos are breath taking! I wish I could go back in time for just one day just to see what they saw!
Facts
My favourite one yet. I am drawn to the American wild west like a moth to a flame (even thought I live in the UK) Watching this video was quiet emotion for me...I think maybe I lived there in a past life. Thank you yet again Scoop for making my day! X
Wonderful!
I live in northern Arizona, I'm sure it's not what it was 100 years ago, but I still find wild places to hike & explore where I see no people, only wildlife...
@@johnganshow5536 oh wow lucky you. I have a favourite book that I have re-read so many times that is set in 1880s Arizona territory. Near Tucson. I would LOVE to visit some day. 🙏
@@Goodstuff74 I lived in Tucson for awhile ( Sonoran desert ) But you can drive up to the top of Mt Lemon, in Tucson, into pine forests and there's even a ski area up there, and an excellent restaurant ( The Sawmill ) Would love to have you visit!!!
@@Goodstuff74 Life among the Apaches by John Cremony?
All very atmospheric and strangely familiar-must’ve had an incarnation back then! Another winner, Mystery Scoop. Thank you for sharing 👏. This is surely one of the most enchanting channels on UA-cam ❤️🥀
Excellent I enjoyed the colorization
2.03. The sod house dug out, yet these people look so clean and pristine, taking pride in themselves. They must have worked hard . Not a lot of space in there. Can you imagine, yet they did it. Bless them.
They look that way because of the photograph being taken! Or do you really think they actually lived like that?
Thank you for a great video
Glad you enjoyed it
Como siempre, magníficas fotografías! es fascinante
Si.
i think it’s great that not only we get to see the pictures of the people who lived during those times but also backstories ☺️
Y cual fue la realidad? Invasión, trampa y robo!?
Love the style of the old west,such great looking photos,fascinating.
They look such stylish characters in the old west photos,
Fascinating study, thanks for that. Pictures truly are worth thousands of words, thanks also for helping keep history alive and relevant with technology.
Groovy video
Wonderful old photographs,great job and thanks for posting videos!
My absolute favorite Era thank you for this 💓
I'm a 44 year old Australian and have been obsessed with the old west since I was little even rode western saddles when we had horses, I love Native Americans and been obsessed with them too and I am very lucky to be married to one she is Mayan/Pipil and super nice💓❤️
One thing that strikes me: as rough and tough as this time period was for the humans, it was a lot more brutal for the animals!
Great pictures, I had not seen any of these previously.
I’m glad you included pictures from the early 1900s as the Wild West. Because people act like it was over 1899. But that was only the start of the twilight days and it would only end in 1920.
A lot of nostalgic feelings..woww, love it.
really bro? u've been there?
I bet none of those people spent their days whining about being offended by something.
I agree with you! 👍🏻
& here you are whining about the whining lol
You know there was probably the few who did. Human nature.
They had better things to do!
They just killed whomever it was that offended them……
Really reminds me of the Time Life Old West book series, but in Cliff Notes🙂. Living in Colorado, we're surrounded by that era of history around here. Seeing some of these pics "colorized" really brings them to the present, making the folks even more relatable~ Thanks again MS❤️
Thanks for sharing Scoop 💯👍🏻
Great as always, Scoop!💖
Thanks again!
great photos, and i like the music to. thank you.
MS,
I must say I'm very impressed with
the video, narration, and all the
Colorized Images along with the
interesting people and how they
posed for the camera like models.
RCJ/LEO
Billy the Kid's photo was gold
These are haunting and beautiful!! Thank you for sharing!!
Loved those photos fantastic 👍🏼👍🏼
It's very Fascinating too see vintage photos from the past, it would been cool if they camera during the BC&AD era 🤨🤨😊😊
Très beaux documents ! Merci, from Angoulême, France
Thank you very much Yankee Mystery Scoop! 😝 I never knew what a cabinet card was. Want to know? It's a thin photo one would adhere to a thick card and displayed, that's right, in a cabinet! I'm 60 and still learning! Cheers from Ireland. ☘
Love these!
Nice Job.
Love it.
Wow..... Amazing! 😀🇬🇧
I like the old west photos good job.👍
Thanks 👍
An era gone by. Awesome!
Beautiful
Loved the photo of the 20 Mule Team.
Loved It!
Outstanding photos!. By the way..I loved Centennial tv mini serie when I was very young!. This Saga was inspired by true events between the colonists and the natives. Cheers from the Basque country.
Alrighty, glad to see U.S. past brought into life! Oftentimes European and various Western and Far Eastern countries showcase their history. Happy to see U.S. history well represented !
Si seguramente, pura mentira e invasión!?
"TOMBSTONE" the film overall got the attire right for thee 1st time.
TOMBSTONE sure is a mighty quiet town I give 'em that as Doc Holiday would say !!!!
0:58 Both so handsome lol
I know, total hunks ❤️
The guy on the left especially!! Kinda like Chris Pratt!??
Crossed with Paul Newman!
@@Kenna198 I wonder if there is any clue who they were.
Notice how the real cowboys don't resemble those on TV shows at all. In saloons, poker was not the most popular game in town. Very few played cards. They play Faro, a board game similar to what you would find in Vegas today only a more primitive version.
De dónde es el vaquero originario o? Claro que de México!!
Yeah, doc Holliday had to pay people to play. We’ve all seen Tombstone
Fascinating! I had relatives in Oklahoma and some that moved from Ohio ending up in Colorado. I have a few pictures of some of them. I wouldn't give them up for anything.
Great photos and I like the colonization, looks more like real life.
1869, and many many people had lost relatives in the civil war, were upset about how cities were run, and wanted the freedom and LIBERTY that we all cherish. So they took their civil war revolvers, bought powder and ammo, and a wagon. At the time a gun was cheapcheap, a few dollars at most, there were so many. And they set out to change the world. What most people don't understand is that many of these settlers were civil war veterans, and were not looking for more fighting, they were looking for peace. Just like veterans today.
@4:55 you'll see a group photo, and the shirts the men were wearing were former military uniforms. The blue shirt with the patch in the center was a Union Calvary Officers shirt, and the grey was the same for Confederate officers. These men trained, shot at each other, and then worked together to raise, herd, and make money from cattle. Jesse James COULD have worked with these men, but he was not welcomed in most places, because his service to the Confederate resulted in many civilian casualties. He was known as a Bushwacker, which meant something really nasty then. It was a soldier that would be ordered to go into a town with Union sympathizers, find then, kill them and sometimes their families, to sent a message.
Great i feel like a pioneer now! that's what you tube is made for. And the cats also
Love the one of the kids on the cow!
Indigenous people were not "hostile." They were trying to protect their way of life
Depends on which Tribe. And they are not indigenous.
0:57 I like the animation, posted separately, of the tall cowboy. Next, animate the photo of the man in the top hat.
Just an aside: when I first returned to Seattle-- guest at Ivan’s acres of clams… horrible photos of many of my ancestors in pitiful scrappy teepees, obviously conquered. It hurt my soul, because inner restaurant had hanging war canoes of my ancestors… as decoration. Hurt my soul.
I wonder who and where these people of the past reincarnated to on their next life. Could be someone you knew or still know today. Incredible images, hope to see more of the Old West down the road....thank you.
00:21 this picture , i have finded always sublim with the indians at horses and the dog at side in walk with the background the big rocks /falaise
I Love Traditional and Typical America...!
can it be that Mystery Scoop has a new speaker? It sounds different somehow
I know, right ⁉️ I much prefer the British lad over the Yankee! 😝
@@bobbygrey6722 I miss the old speaker, even if the new one does a good job too.
repost this without the "lets look at some of them" caption blocking alot of the wording so i can tell what some of those photos were about
Just turn caption off CC, i’ll fix it, it’s YT doing auto sync wrong..,
Billy the Kid and Jesse James were the best ones. 🤠
3:29 Custer’s last caravan, before his last stand
Too bad the Native Americans could not hold onto their land, but they had no organized way of claiming the land and traveled around spontaneously, probably usurping other lands that another tribe claimed was theirs. No way did they have the knowledge or power to keep their land. To think that those relatively few people could lay total claim to such a vast amount of land was very unlikely. Someone was going to come along and disrupt their lives one way or the other. Time marches on, and everything changes.
Yeah sure but the only difference was they lived a completely natural lifestyle for thousands of years and then the governments and kingdoms took everything. Natives respect the land much more then we do but oh well time marches on right?
Get a life!
I would have fit right in the gold rush era since I love to gold prospect as my hobby today or the last 20 years !!!
The Rosebud river boat must have had a difficult time travelling West on the Missouri from Bismark to Montana. The river runs only to the East from Montana and then South. To reach Montana the boat would need to travel West against the flow.
Are those the real colors or is it wild guessing?
I'm in awe of the work you guys do with these photos. I feel such a shame of beeing white when you hear the stories of how the nativ americans (Indians as I grew up knowing them as), were placed in reservations. Beeing stripped of their land. The same happened in Australia too 🥺🥺. I just think it's horrendous.
There are no Native Americans. They didn't just spring up out of the ground. They were from Asia and traveled the land bridge between Asia/Russia and N America. What they were are descendants of Mongols and lived the same nomadic life. Guess what they found when they got to N America? It was already populated and had been for 15000 years by the Clovis. Guess what happened? The new arrivals from Eastern Asia massacred every last one. Take your "white guilt" elsewhere.
@@bobwallace9814 Are the Clovis people extinct or does the blood line continue?
@@susanmccormick6022 As far as I know they were all eliminated. The Asian/Russian immigrants spared no one.
Y aparte esas tierras eran de México y los nativos eran mexicanos..!
Así es! Cuando llegaron las colonias migrantes pidieron establecerse en tierra mexicana, se les dejó establecerse con la condición de que acatarán las reglas, pero no fue así, inventando independencia, argumentos falsos, y después el robo de 3 Estados por ese país que actualmente lo tienen ya poblado, eso es lo que pasó antes!!!
You are only showing photos from the post Civil War era. The "Old West" / "Wild West" era in U.S. history started many years beforehand, roughly as the first "fur trappers / mountain men" passed Westbound, passed the Eastbound Lewis & Clark Expedition in 1805. Photography was developed around 1839, so by the time of the Mexican-American War in 1846-48, photos were being taken of historical events. Beginning in 1848, the California Gold rush is well photographed for example, and the Gold Rush is arguably the event that caused the "Old West" to launch from the initial small trickle of fur trappers and wagon trains, 1805-1848 into the flood of new comers that became the "Wild West". Colt's Revolving Belt Pistol (AKA 1851 Colt Navy .36 caliber) ushered in the era of practical self defense / offense easily carried on the person in a handgun and caliber with power, range, accuracy and capability well beyond the single shot pistols that preceded it, beginning the era of the "shootist . pistolero". As gold prospectors spread throughout the Western Frontier post 1848, new wild mining camps and towns grew as the prospectors blazed new trails off the earlier trails of the Mountain Men. The "Cowboy Era" so over dramatized by Hollywood was only a tiny side show to the Wild West" in reality, starting with the first cattle drives in 1866-67. Far more wild and dangerous than cow towns like Dodge City and Abilene, were the mining towns like Virginia City, Tombstone and Deadwood. Wild Bill Hickok was not a cowboy; he was a gambler, wagon freighter, Army Scout, and sometimes town marshal, who was killed in the mining town of Deadwood, Dakota Territory. The "Wild West" was Mountain Men, Wagon Trains, Gold Rushes, and Indian Battles, long before "cowboys" arrived near the end of the Western Frontier. Mountain Men and Gold Prospectors were who blazed the trails, built the camps and towns, and established the trade routes, and their stories are far more interesting, and important than the little cowboy sideshow that happened at the end!
O colorido dá vida👏👏👏👏👏muito bem❤❤💚💛💚💛💚🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
❤❤❤
Bewitching as always...my heart goes out to the native Americans more. They were not treated with respect, consideration or humanity!
Agree💝💝
They didn't exactly treat the pioneers with respect either. They attacked them, scalped them, killed them and kidnapped women and children. They did not welcome "aliens" invading their land. Sound familiar?
@@sallysmith8081 Perhaps the pioneers should have not presumed they could take the land, it didn't belong to them!Yes I am aware that awful, evil, things happened to them.You saying 'sounds familiar' well that could encapsulate a lot of the world's countries through the ages...
@@sallysmith8081 Our government systematically abused, lied, raped, and murdered these people!!!! Our government actively and knowingly committed genocide against the First Nation people!!!! They justly angry about it!!!!! The raids were unfortunately due to retaliation against our government’s evil actions against them(not saying it was right, but it IS understandable considering), maybe research the treatment that our First Nations brothers and sisters were given, BEFORE commenting would be a better action for you!!! You truly need educating on this topic at hand!!!!
The picture shown at 0:53 is actually a picture of the RKO back-lot and shows the set build for the movie Cimarron (1931) - so NOT a genuine Old West Photo!
The natives has the right to defend themselves against the European invaders
At 1:07
How the hell are they getting drone type photos in the 1800s? There isn’t a hill or tree in sight for miles and yet this photo is taken from a 30 foot elevation above ground!
Perhaps there was a hill on the side the photograph was taken from, add that the photograph might've been taken on top of a wagon or cart.
It’s a great photo! Wow!
There are 24 mules hauling 2 wagons of Borax or salt and one water tank for the men and the mules to get across the Mojave.
The plight of the Native Americans having their land taken from them is an important part of history.
You won't hear that mentioned much by 'muricans.
Fantastic photos ,when you think about it was not that long ago this was happening 🤔those poor native tribes must have so shocked when they witnessed all the wagon trains and people coming on to their nation little did they know the devistation to come 😟
Yes, very sad. The exact same thing is happening in the United States today: Aggressive immigration by people with different languages and cultures.
@@howtubeable Karma.
"Sadly, much of their land was taken from them, often by force." This is called war
That wasn't a war, rather an invasion and often times a massacre. It's almost like saying the Nazis fought a war against the Jews.
@@jor-el1298 Their incompetence as a fighting force was their undoing. Your knowledge of war and warfare points to your ignorance
These folks were the true builders of America.
You can’t mention the old west without mentioning Billy The Kid
I love these old photos.. breaks my heart ♥️ what they did to the Native Americans.
Nice video. Suggestion: Video on famous American Indians doing a reverse age enhancement.
As often as not, the natives were welcoming of the settlers, until the military got involved. And few know this, but one of the biggest issues, and one of the reasons so many wars were fought, was over plural marriage. See, the military saw it as an abomination, and demanded that the tribes walk away from the practice, but in their culture, that's almost like killing a woman, and in some ways, it would have been kinder to kill her outright. Now, most of you have never heard this, and a few are saying, this guy's crazy, but it's the truth. Taking the kids from the reservation and putting them into training camps (schools) was the solution, they separated the elders from the kids, and made it a felony to speak the language... all to erase plural marriage from the minds of the new generation... then they burned the elders or medicine man's teepee, because the history of the tribe was written on the inner walls as pictographs. THIS is who did all the atrocities to the Natives, not the settlers. There were tensions, and occasional shootings, but generally these were Civil War veterans and had no interest in killing.
There were many many Black and Mexican cowboys... shame they weren't represented here. 😖
🤩🙂👍🏻🇸🇪
Please bring us together with thankfulness stop all ungratefulness and add full love❤❤❤
Everyone should read "An owl on every post" by Sanora Babb. Her family lived in a dugout. Even gave birth one.
* in
Is Matthew McConaughey great grandfather?
Life sure was harsh back then, I don’t think I would’ve made it
Just the trip to get there would be near deadly.
Jesse James was a guerilla for the Confederate Army. He watched union soldiers hang his step-dad, and ran raids for the confederate army under the command of William Quantrill. After the war, a soldier shot Jesse in the chest, and he survived the gunshot, but was extremely bitter toward the Union.
It was really an alien planet
I wish the colorization of the photos didn't look so tie-died. It would be nice to see the colors more realistic. I do appreciate your presentation, nevertheless. Thank you!
I let the machine colorize using artificial intelligence for quick jobs, otherwise manual colorization would have been a tedious task... and yeah, ai colorization is not always accurate but it gives some ambience! Thanks!
Sorry, but the IA Coloring puts me off.
This Photo are beautyfull!
But I would to see -women n beautyfull dress 😊
remember that there was a notorious masscare toward Chinese railroad labors in Wyoming around 1850's it was a shameful history ever.
If'n we only knew where we where heading 🤔 I'd grab a teepee and some seeds and tell em all"you can have it" destroy it yourselves 😔
1:20, Geronimo was a Mexican Native.
Nice? Good.
Jesse James looks like Milan Škriniar.
The Jesse James pic was taken in Nebraska City in 1875. Please get your facts right
The "lawless" West didn't last more than a few years.
What we did to the indigenous people is unconscionable. Everyone applauds the hardiness and resilience of the White man coming west, but forgets how the Native Americans suffered and died at the White man’s hands. I wish I could have asked them, “What part of ‘this land is already inhabited’ do you not understand? Great photos nonetheless. Thanks for posting!
@Johnny Angel Buzzy…
@Johnny Angel Buzzy…
@Johnny Angel Please don’t eat Piglet.
Better to leave them in black and white
Not the usual quality, I am sorry. The colorization is just not good, faces and whole areas missing and colors look unnatural.