The First Appalachians

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  • Опубліковано 12 чер 2024
  • The First Appalachians were Scotch Irish and arrived in Appalachia with their love for God, Guns, and Liquor. These Appalachians survived in the Appalachian Mountains because of their Appalachian customs, traditions, and help from nature. The Chestnut tree, moonshine and the primitive baptist church were vital to their survival. The Appalachian Storyteller presents The First Appalachians #thefirstappalachians #appalachia #appalachian #appalachianmountains #theappalachianstoryteller #peopleofappalachia #appalachianhistory
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    Photos Courtesy of Lee County Historical Commission
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  • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
    @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +117

    Support the preservation of Appalachian History by Subscribing to this channel. Like, Comment, and Share!
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    • @desirreemarlenaclonch7593
      @desirreemarlenaclonch7593 Рік тому +1

      LoL I already did those 😜🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂😜
      I will pass it on but not much control for somethings can not be done through the cell phone yah see

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +4

      @@desirreemarlenaclonch7593 Thank you my friend

    • @hetrodoxly1203
      @hetrodoxly1203 Рік тому +9

      The 1790 - 1810 census states the majority of settlers to the Appalachians were English, followed by Scottish, some households state English and Scottish, 10 Welsh households, 8 German household, 1 French, No Irish, the term Scots/Irish is a bad term for the English and Scottish planters that went via Northern Ireland, most went from Northern England and lowland Scotland, a sizeable group went from Suffolk/Norfolk and the west country, that's where the accent comes from, English man Daniel Boone cut his way through the wilderness, English man Walker built the first log cabin, there's nothing more English than clogging.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +2

      @@hetrodoxly1203 thanks for sharing your thoughts

    • @marywegrzyn506
      @marywegrzyn506 Рік тому +2

      Thank you for creating this wonderful Video. I love seeing real History in story form complete with real photographs!!!

  • @raquellucas2202
    @raquellucas2202 Рік тому +329

    I am so proud of our history. I’m from very southwestern WV. We “ hillbillies “ usually get a bad rap. We come from strong, smart and self resilient ancestors. We were so isolated for so long that we had to be strong and self sufficient. Independent! Especially after the civil war, no schools for generations. Still we stand proud, we made it. Love this and thank you!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +24

      Indeed- the people of Appalachia are a strong proud people

    • @Nimrodbodeinejr
      @Nimrodbodeinejr Рік тому +6

      I’m from Logan county myself

    • @okgroomer1966
      @okgroomer1966 Рік тому +15

      I miss W Virginia. Moved to CT at 13 and have always wanted to go back. A damn shame what drugs have done to that special place.

    • @joshbradley6841
      @joshbradley6841 Рік тому +9

      Lucas? From SW WV? Yup, we are related👍

    • @woodsboy444
      @woodsboy444 Рік тому +18

      Im from Northern Ireland, the home of the ulster scots. Very interesting to see how many of my people went to live in such a rugged place. Hard people living in a hard land. The ulster scots here today still have the same values, god fearing, family driven and conservative views.

  • @FlashyVic
    @FlashyVic Рік тому +432

    Hello from an Ulster Scot (what you call Scotch/Irish) whose ancestors stayed in Northern Ireland and who stumbled on this video by accident. Just a little example of shared roots separated by centuries and thousands of miles. My wife's maiden name is an uncommon old Scots surname and when her brother did a genealogy search he found out there are only 2 areas on the planet where the surname is found in any numbers. Here in the northern part of County Down and in Eastern Tennessee but not in Scotland. Seems that the entire original family migrated to Ulster from Scotland in the early 1600s and then half of them made the further leap across the pond a century or so later.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +67

      I am always amazed at how far these videos travel and the stories that folks like yourself share. Thanks so much for your story, I enjoyed reading it very much

    • @elioraimmanuel
      @elioraimmanuel Рік тому +8

      Wow!

    • @patriciameany1238
      @patriciameany1238 Рік тому +25

      What's the name?

    • @WhispersFromTheDark
      @WhispersFromTheDark Рік тому +16

      Hello, from Texas. I had forefathers that came over from the Isle of Man who landed in North Carolina, and Tennessee. What is the name of your family?

    • @FlashyVic
      @FlashyVic Рік тому +37

      @@WhispersFromTheDark Thanks for the reply but I'd rather not say the name openly online. By the way I can see the Isle of Man from the top of the hill my home is on most days it's not raining. Though it usually is.😁

  • @Nannada1212
    @Nannada1212 Рік тому +47

    "Good men, who were patient, calm, and reserved... Were also men who were courageous, prompt, and thorough." That's such a good line, man!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +3

      Thank you for that!

    • @TheChadPad
      @TheChadPad Рік тому +3

      Yes, we have men who are fickle, impulsive, and selfish today, not with an ounce of integrity in them, and do not know when to stand for something righteous

    • @Nannada1212
      @Nannada1212 Рік тому

      @@TheChadPad what men are you talking about? All the veterans I've met are calm, patient, mature, and don't wanna go back. Some do, but they love killing. That's a thing. Most people don't have that.

    • @TheChadPad
      @TheChadPad Рік тому +1

      @@Nannada1212 Some young people of my generation. I am 28

    • @Nannada1212
      @Nannada1212 Рік тому

      @@TheChadPad I'm 31. I knew we were from the same time.

  • @karenashton5053
    @karenashton5053 Рік тому +173

    My great grandma was scot Irish from Tennessee and came to Texas after the Civil War on a covered wagon. Her married name was Steele and the women were strong and proud. I have her cast iron boiling pot and I proudly can hunt, fish, and can fruits. I’m damn proud to continue the strong tradition.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +7

      Well said

    • @jacquelynjohnson9486
      @jacquelynjohnson9486 Рік тому +7

      I'm glad you have the pot from grandma

    • @delagum1
      @delagum1 Рік тому +7

      My granny got married around 1900 and they walked down to the 5&10 store and bought a pot. On the bottom of the pot has the price and date. Before she died she gave me that pot and I still have it. One of my prized possessions. God rest her soul. 😢. Peace and Love

    • @Zesmbei2
      @Zesmbei2 Рік тому +2

      That sounds so cool ❣️💯
      I'd love to have something that special from my ancestors.

    • @mawi1172
      @mawi1172 Рік тому

      That's funny. A covered wagon? After the Civil War? Some one blew smoke up your butt! 😂🤣😂🤣😂

  • @alisonmary1443
    @alisonmary1443 Рік тому +80

    I am sitting in my Scottish home watching this and had no idea of this history. Thank you, that was so good.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +5

      Thanks 🙏

    • @frasermurray850
      @frasermurray850 Рік тому +7

      Likewise, watching from Scotland. Great channel and info. Keep it up 👍

    • @dennistrull1475
      @dennistrull1475 Рік тому +6

      The Highland games are at Grandfather MTN. Was annual until Covid.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +1

      @Opal Allen ❤

    • @kenihow
      @kenihow Рік тому

      This is just a glorified story. Do your research and you will get an in-depth story of the horrible and disgusting things that happened.

  • @terrylyons3577
    @terrylyons3577 Рік тому +23

    My grandpa told me how devastating it was when all the chestnut trees died. He said there was such bountiful food for people and animals that came from the trees. He said they were as thick as the hickory trees in the Appalachian hills. The ground would be covered in chestnuts like you can find hickory nuts and acorns now. He said that was one of the biggest losses in his entire life. It changed life forever in the mountains.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +4

      Thank you for that beautiful testimony of your grandfather

    • @cac2821
      @cac2821 7 місяців тому

      How did the trees die?

    • @terrylyons3577
      @terrylyons3577 7 місяців тому +4

      @@cac2821 there was a blight introduced to North America in the early 1900s believed to have came from Asia. It attacked the Eastern Chestnut, and would damage the trunk and the bark near the ground, causing the trees to die. Interestingly, the roots of these huge trees lived for many years, and some of the root systems are still alive today, and will put up sprouts. These trees grow to three or four inches in diameter, then die from the blight. They have found one Eastern Chestnut tree in Talladega county Alabama that is over 12 inchrs in diameter that is believed to have come from some of that old rootstock. The tree is alive, healthy, and has started bearing chestnuts. Biologists are studying trees like this one, as well as if you more Eastern chestnuts that have somehow survived. The total number of trees that have survived is less than 25 that are large enough to bear fruit.

    • @terrylyons3577
      @terrylyons3577 7 місяців тому +1

      @@cac2821 I would encourage you to look up the Eastern Chestnut. You can find a lot of information online about the demise of this species. The Eastern Chestnut made up 25 to 35% of all the timber in the Appalachian mountains before 1900. Literally tons of chestnuts that were rich in protein or available for wildlife, as well as for people to eat. They were very nutritious, and at times poor mountain people would actually live off eating these chestnuts when they did not have anything else to eat.

    • @cac2821
      @cac2821 7 місяців тому +1

      @@terrylyons3577 thank you for explaining it to me. That’s devastating

  • @user-vp6lf3qo3p
    @user-vp6lf3qo3p 4 місяці тому +3

    Hello from australia people up in mountains back then had it hard. I love listening to the history stories. Moonshine.. way to go.

  • @phyllispitts6656
    @phyllispitts6656 Рік тому +81

    I have a high respect for the folks of Appalachian. I enjoy hearing their stories.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +5

      Yes ma'am, so do I. There are plenty of their stories on this channel. I hope you enjoy my friend

    • @renaestevenson1361
      @renaestevenson1361 Рік тому +1

      Yes, me too. Amazingly strong people that is for sure.

    • @kenihow
      @kenihow Рік тому

      People believe anything they hear on the internet

    • @SeemsFutileNow
      @SeemsFutileNow Рік тому

      ​@@TheAppalachianStorytellerborn and raised here in the Smokies except for my Army Time and our culture is under attack from these Florida Alabama etc rich ppl bought up our land where we locals can't afford it. Change our laws etc.

    • @donnaaddington193
      @donnaaddington193 Рік тому

      ​@Keni How being from the appalachian mountains 99.9% of these are very real and true.

  • @bradlane3662
    @bradlane3662 Рік тому +332

    My grandmother, my Dad's mom had 16. She was born in 1893 here in southern WV. She married at 14 and had her first at 15. In 1908. She had 14 straight boys! Then finally a daughter in 1930. Then my Dad, the last, in 1933. She had one set of twins. 15 pregnancies over a 25 year span. That's over 11 years of her life pregnant! They farmed and made liquor for a living. Some of the boys stole a few of her chickens to boil over a campfire while they drank one night. She offered them a choice of jail or a beating at her hands! She was in her 50s by then. They all opted for a beating, even though some of them were crying! (grown men!) She died at 78 when I was 13. What a woman! They literally don't make people, not just women, like this anymore. And that's why our country is collapsing. A generation of "IT'S ALL ABOUT ME!" self entitled wimps!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +31

      That’s a hell of a woman- I enjoyed reading that!

    • @SJ-ni6iy
      @SJ-ni6iy Рік тому +6

      I’m from southern West Virginia.❤️

    • @bradlane3662
      @bradlane3662 Рік тому +19

      @@SJ-ni6iy We are in McDowell County but only about a mile from the Wyoming County line just off of Rt 16. Browns Creek. My family has been here at least 170 years according to what I've learned on Ancestry. But I think much longer. My fourth great grandfather received a land grant in 1858 from the governor of Va for 200 acres that crosses from the head of this creek into the head of Pinnacle Creek in Wyoming County. The hand written document mentions certain trees as boundary markers! Chestnut oaks, Sycamores, etc.

    • @SJ-ni6iy
      @SJ-ni6iy Рік тому +11

      @@bradlane3662 I’m from Raleigh County but it’s near the Boone County line. I’m from where the Upper Big Branch Mining disaster happened, that’s my community. My family has traced relatives, that have been here before the Civil War.

    • @bradlane3662
      @bradlane3662 Рік тому +8

      @@SJ-ni6iy I know your home area very well. For the last 34 years of my working life I drove a delivery truck all over southern WV and southwest VA. Including Boone and Raleigh Counties. Our warehouse was actually in Beckley for the last 15 years of that time. I delivered to accounts in Madison and Danville.

  • @morganlivington3446
    @morganlivington3446 11 місяців тому +14

    I watch another channel called celebrating Appalachia,It’s Tipper Pressley and she’s doing the same,she is educating the world about the culture of Appalachia and her family is participating in this journey with her!Amazing people doing amazing work! I want to Ty also!

  • @esotericsolitaire
    @esotericsolitaire Рік тому +37

    German settlers from PA who migrated by way of the Shenandoah Valley into VA were also integral to the culture. I'm of strong German-Irish descent from SW VA. It's a unique culture and sadly, a dying one. I'm so glad to have been part of it. Those people were amazing.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +2

      💜

    • @reneegiven910
      @reneegiven910 Рік тому +1

      My great grandfather once owned land I the Shenandoah valley,then to Pocahontas Co.,riders gap,then cross lanes,wv,family graves in VA. And wv.some of the first there besides the indians.i an proud that I inherited these bloodlines.

    • @kilo21swp
      @kilo21swp Рік тому +4

      Yup, from the Rhineland to NewJersey then Pennsylvania, Virginia through the Cumberland Gap.

    • @mrs.darcyscottage1752
      @mrs.darcyscottage1752 Рік тому +2

      I'm Irish-German too. I agree ❤

    • @EpochUnlocked
      @EpochUnlocked 7 місяців тому

      There were a few. Not many. I live in the ridgeline parts and only 2% of my ancestry is German. 96% came by way of Britain.

  • @jeanlinton1726
    @jeanlinton1726 2 місяці тому +5

    I'm of Scots decent on both my mum an dad's side of family tree! So I'm ever so grateful to have found this! Thank you so much for sharing!

  • @Big88Country
    @Big88Country Рік тому +41

    I am proud to be a descendant of these strong, God fearing Scott-Irish people! Thank you Lord for the blessing!

  • @rhondabuce8348
    @rhondabuce8348 Рік тому +33

    I felt like crying when you spoke of the chestnut tree's destruction.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +4

      It’s one of great tragedy’s in the history of planter earth

    • @eunicestone838
      @eunicestone838 Рік тому +1

      A guy on Vermont UA-camr Gold Shaw Farms attempting to grow chestnuts.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +3

      @@eunicestone838 there are lots of folks trying to alter their genetic makeup to become resistant to the asian fungus. Even if successful, it will take 10,000 years for them to dominate the Appalachian Mountain tops like they once did.

  • @ritajernigan-md4jo
    @ritajernigan-md4jo 8 місяців тому +4

    I'm so blessed to be a part of this. I enjoyed this so much that there was no place like home. Absolutely love this.

  • @deborahvretis3195
    @deborahvretis3195 Рік тому +29

    I am happy to be of Scotch-Irish stock. Thank you for this beautiful video.

  • @tracicomstock6525
    @tracicomstock6525 Рік тому +23

    I love this video. I am Scottish on daddy's side and Presbyterian. On moma's side Cherokee and Southern Baptist and SDA. Since my dog Spooner died 3 months ago today I have been smitten with intense grief. Spoon was the best friend I ever had! Well, your videos are helping me to find myself again. Thank you!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +1

      Thank you Traci

    • @ponyboy2323
      @ponyboy2323 Рік тому

      ur dog died dude

    • @riffle8883
      @riffle8883 Рік тому +2

      Get another dog soon as possible they are your best friend. Thay will not use you like people do. Am I right.

    • @sandym8787
      @sandym8787 Рік тому

      @@riffle8883 Right , treat them right and you get forever love .... and they are out there waiting for a life with a decent person ..

  • @sambarnard9628
    @sambarnard9628 Рік тому +123

    I love this channel. The story of the chestnut tree, which is one I've heard before, is one of the saddest stories around. If people don't learn from history's mistakes, our planet will one day soon not be fit for an old country boy like myself. Keep up the awesome story, sir.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +16

      Indeed, I have to admit, It broke my heart to tell the story of the Chestnut, one of the greatest tragedies in the history of Earth.

    • @davids6533
      @davids6533 Рік тому +13

      I'm only 60 years old, and already I hardly recognize where I grew up. It saddens me down to my bones.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +6

      @@davids6533 the world is changing so fast, at warp speed

    • @slidenapps
      @slidenapps Рік тому +7

      @@TheAppalachianStoryteller has no one tried to replant the chestnut trees now

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +16

      @@slidenapps well, scientists are currently crossbreeding the asian chestnut (which has resistance to the fungus) with American Chestnut (which produces superior wood) to create a species that would essentially be about 95% American Chestnut. Hopefully, they succeed.

  • @zachsparkman5252
    @zachsparkman5252 Рік тому +61

    I’m 30 years old and it’s crazy to me how little changed by the time I was a kid. Most of these traditions, teachings, and preaching we’re still that way so I was probably 15 years old. We didn’t get pavement down my holler till I was a teenager. It breaks my heart to see how much things have changed so fast for my community. That being said I don’t agree with preachers drinking.

  • @samuelschick8813
    @samuelschick8813 Рік тому +9

    TAS, You talking about the woman having a baby while picking berries. My great mammaw was out in the fields helping great pappaw plow the fields when she went into labor. She went back to the cabin, delivered the baby on her own, cleaned it, fed it, wrapped it in blankets and set it on the front porch and went right back into the field. She would listen for the baby to cry then tend to it. One tough woman.
    That baby was born in 1909 and he passed in 1966. Great mammaw buried one son and two husbands. When asked why she never remarried she would always say in her Kentucky draw " Well they just kept dyin on me and after 2 did not see a reason to go for number 3."

  • @VivaCristoRei9
    @VivaCristoRei9 Рік тому +65

    I am from Brazil ✝️🇧🇷✌️
    I found this very fascinating, in a way it is kind of like the Amazon with the honest and isolated lives the people of Appalachia live

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +9

      That’s cool, i never thought about that

    • @kenihow
      @kenihow Рік тому

      It's just a glorified story. They live a horrible incestual life. Fathers and Brothers raping their daughters/sister while the mother listen in the same room.

    • @VivaCristoRei9
      @VivaCristoRei9 Рік тому +2

      @@kenihow the story of the people of the Amazon is a tragic one, too. They are a people ignorant of the wonders of the civilised world and live in a dark violence, untouched by the light of Christ and civilisation.

    • @TEM14411
      @TEM14411 2 місяці тому

      There were a lot of secrets too. Isolation bred some unhealthy generational traumas. May we all learn and heal.

    • @agneslong2323
      @agneslong2323 29 днів тому

      @@VivaCristoRei9 As in some urban areas.

  • @KathysTube
    @KathysTube Рік тому +61

    I'm so proud to be from Appalachia! This was a beautiful story of our history...
    My uncle in S.E. Kentucky had a big farm and every summer he would have a "tent revival" where folks would travel and camp for a week in the campground he set up with nice outhouses and running water...we even set up a concession stand with Pepsi and some candy bars and chips....He even had electricity run for lights. Preachers would come from other places to preach a night or two and then someone else would come in to preach...not Baptist, they were from the Christian Church..... this was in the early '60s... great memories! Would you have any stories about these revivals?
    Thanks JD, for keeping our great heritage alive 🤗❤️

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +10

      I actually do remember and have things to share about these revivals. I almost covered it in this video since it was closely related. Im sure ill post something soon :)

    • @KathysTube
      @KathysTube Рік тому +4

      @@TheAppalachianStoryteller I look forward to it! Thanks 🤗

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +3

      @@KathysTube yes ma'am, stay tuned

    • @blumobean
      @blumobean Рік тому +5

      Please explain what a Christian Church is as opposed to a Baptist. I am confused by that statement.

    • @KathysTube
      @KathysTube Рік тому +5

      @@blumobean Since I've only visited Baptist churches, I can't really explain the difference... from what I know, not that much...I think there are more "rules" in Baptist but..? I'm sure you could find out from doing a search online...btw, there are differences within the Baptist churches too 🤗❤️

  • @audiemccall5332
    @audiemccall5332 Рік тому +42

    My ancestors jumped off the ship in 1768 and settled in western Nc . We’ve been here and fought for this country with a passion and by god we still will.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +4

      Good people

    • @zeleboba2619
      @zeleboba2619 Рік тому +9

      Yeah and this is how you destroyed local Indians who lived there much longer than you

    • @soisaidtogod4248
      @soisaidtogod4248 Рік тому

      Proud of destroying what the natives had so as your Sky Fairy cult could stay? Another arrogant usa outlook.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +2

      @@soisaidtogod4248 💜

    • @audiemccall5332
      @audiemccall5332 Рік тому +6

      @@zeleboba2619 The Cherokee people that were native to this region were wronged by the Government . However my family came here from the Ulster region of Northern Ireland where they were wronged there and forced to leave . They came here in search of freedom and a better life. When attacked by anyone or anything they would naturally fight back but didn’t come to harm or fight . They had quite enough of it and didn’t want to fight but if called to do their part they would.

  • @Adam-nv9zo
    @Adam-nv9zo 9 місяців тому +3

    Amazing video. Thank you. 👏 👏 👏

  • @Streghamay
    @Streghamay Рік тому +21

    My father's people were some of the first settlers to Pike Co KY, and his mothers side were also early settlers there. I always enjoy videos and stories of Appalachia people, it makes me feel closer to my origins.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +1

      Thank you for sharing my friend

    • @darcylett486
      @darcylett486 Рік тому

      My daughter is married to a Mccoy. He's from pike County Kentucky!

    • @robertbevins5961
      @robertbevins5961 Рік тому +1

      Any chance they were of the Leslie/Lesley clan? That would be my dad's family, back a few generations, first permanent European settlers of the Big Sandy Valley.

  • @hannahbotanica3311
    @hannahbotanica3311 Рік тому +8

    An Eastern Tennessee/Western Carolina mountain girl here. I've been enjoying your videos, love the storytelling & pics! I know one thing for certain, these old mountains become a part of your soul. I had to move away to the Midwest for a few years when my mom remarried, but everytime I came back home I just felt whole again, down to my bones. As soon as I was old enough to be on my own, I headed back down to be cradled by these mountains. I can never stray for too long.

  • @morgainedepolloc4161
    @morgainedepolloc4161 Рік тому +14

    My dad's family are from Western NC. I assumed for years we were Scotch-Irish. My grandmother was even one of the last Scots-Gaelic speakers in NC. But...as I did more family research, I found many Swiss, German, and Austrian ancestors that settled in Western NC and intermarried with my family, some Quakers --- dating back to before the Revolutionary War. As well as a branch of the family that migrated from the Charles City/Williamsburg VA, the Harrison family! What a mixture!!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +2

      What a rich family history, thanks for sharing my friend

    • @harolddenton6031
      @harolddenton6031 Рік тому +5

      Lots of Germans settled along with scots and Irish up in them western nc and east tennessee hillsides by the mid to late 1700's. I have plenty bloodlines from them groups of immigrants.

    • @smartacus88
      @smartacus88 8 місяців тому +1

      It is said that in Southern Appalachia the Germans built barns, the English built churches, and the Scots Irish built whiskey stills.

  • @johnelliott4521
    @johnelliott4521 Рік тому +16

    My family settled in French indian territory in what is now eastern kentucky three brothers moved across cumberland gap. Visted the area, once the locals learned who I was it was like the boys never left. Heard stories from my great grand dad of his childhood. Hard times hard men.

  • @EastTennesseeDingos
    @EastTennesseeDingos Рік тому +7

    Proud of my Appalachian American roots! I see a picture of one of my ancestors in this video that I didn't know was public. I have that same & similar pics in old family albums, and have seen copies of it in museums/displays in Tennessee Appalachia.

  • @jonahbrown7540
    @jonahbrown7540 Рік тому +10

    i have just discovered this channel and it is already one of my favorites. I have lived in NC my whole life and love this state!

  • @user-fe9hp9qf4h
    @user-fe9hp9qf4h 2 місяці тому +1

    Amazing ‼️ loved chestnuts as a child growing up in my home england don't get them in south Africa! Miss them. Thank you love Julie south Africa 😁🙏💙

  • @Str8Bidness
    @Str8Bidness Рік тому +10

    I'm here because my ancestor was one of the first Apalachans, moving west of the "Fall Line" to Allen's Creek Va. in the 1720's. Our Clan of Meeks' and Hoppers would eventually spread across the country, to Georgia, Tennessee, and Tipah Mississippi, with our branch finally landing in Texas in the 1850's.

  • @drtom5936
    @drtom5936 Рік тому +30

    Love your stories of Appalachia. Keep up the wonderful history lessons.

  • @loisbruce
    @loisbruce Рік тому +9

    Greetings from the UK! I love your channel and your voice is so warm and resonant for these wonderful stories - thank you.

  • @mikeoneil5770
    @mikeoneil5770 Рік тому +6

    “Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without”
    My Grandma from Kentucky used to say this all the time..

  • @hildakane9600
    @hildakane9600 Рік тому +11

    Thank you so much for sharing this beautiful video, I love this channel ❤ much love and respect to you all from Ireland 🇮🇪 🌻 ❤

  • @jenniferhook7106
    @jenniferhook7106 10 місяців тому +4

    I would love to hear the narrator tell more stories. He has a great voice.

  • @Davidf8L
    @Davidf8L Рік тому +1

    From Fort Loudon, East Tennessee first families of Tennessee thanks you, and I ,Mr Cassidy, thank you for your time

  • @bigiron8831
    @bigiron8831 Рік тому +29

    My grandfather told me stories of chestnut trees so tall he had to lay flat on his back to see the top of them and my cousin has had the same still for over 50 years now making some fine shine. Love your videos and stories J.D.
    Stay safe my friend 🙏

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +5

      Man, I would have love to have seen a 600 year old Chestnut tree with my own eyes. Sometimes I feel like I was born in the wrong generation.

  • @sweetteagrits3822
    @sweetteagrits3822 Рік тому +8

    My ENTIRE family on maternal side is from here W NC, TN, GA. 1700’s traced back to. Oh the stories! My Mama is 92 I’m savoring them one by one I recorded some. I’m still young (long story I was a surprise) and hope stories these last more generations…my Grandpa helped build Chimney Rock, NC. Crazy!

  • @timmyblaylock3024
    @timmyblaylock3024 Рік тому +7

    My family, the Blaylocks, followed the cotton down through Mississippi and then across to Arkansas as share croppers. I now live in the Ozark Mountain region. Even after all of the generations, the education, and modernization, our attitudes remain unchanged. Amazing.

  • @missysixx9996
    @missysixx9996 16 днів тому

    I'm in the Appalachian mountains, and I'm feeling the spirit of Appalachia!

  • @bryanestes8558
    @bryanestes8558 День тому +1

    I am so greatful for your work and the stories you tell. Im a descendant of Sheman Hensley, love hearing all your stories, thank you.

  • @cadeevans4623
    @cadeevans4623 Рік тому +8

    Awesome video thanks for sharing love herring about the Appalachian

  • @susancannon6379
    @susancannon6379 Рік тому +6

    In the Western NC mountains here and I have a new favorite channel to binge!! Not only are the stories great, you are wonderful at telling them and the production quality is chef's kiss!! 🤌

  • @robfla6471
    @robfla6471 9 місяців тому +2

    The Irish ☘️ used whiskey for all kinds of ailments too. They called it”The Water of Life.”

  • @annieseaside
    @annieseaside 6 місяців тому +2

    Fabulous! Just stumbled upon this channel. One teeny bone to pick, Scottish men knew all about fighting, no Native taught that. The Scot’s melted up into the Highlands or vanished to islands yet could reappear at Will and were fearsome alone or in force.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  6 місяців тому

      thanks for sharing and welcome to the channel!

    • @agneslong2323
      @agneslong2323 29 днів тому

      I have always considered Scots to be the originators of the Rebel Yell.

  • @ThePapawhisky
    @ThePapawhisky Рік тому +18

    I live in the west NC mountains and have roots in this heritage. Enjoyed the video. One quibble-there was a pictured titled “polecat”. It looked like a ferret. Here, a polecat is a skunk.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +3

      Yup, good catch

    • @jasonc3522
      @jasonc3522 Рік тому +2

      I got a kick out of that as well.

    • @larryspoonamore7812
      @larryspoonamore7812 Рік тому

      Had a place at the Tellico head waters the Tellico was about 8/10 inches wide still caught some trout then the Yankees came I left

    • @itsabrandnewday1072
      @itsabrandnewday1072 Рік тому +1

      Pole cats and skunks are two different things. There are pole cars and there are skunks. Avoid both at all costs! 😂
      One way to tell the difference is that a pole cat has one solid stripe down and that’s how it got the name pole cat.

    • @Charliedanielsband77
      @Charliedanielsband77 Рік тому

      Indeed. There are several more inaccuracies by this uneducated person.

  • @MikeJJustice-eo6yx
    @MikeJJustice-eo6yx 9 місяців тому +3

    I'm from Kentucky the Appalachian Mountains off grid ready for the apocalypse !!!

  • @paulacribb56
    @paulacribb56 9 місяців тому +2

    My roots run deep in Appalachia. This one made me want to get in the car and drive 5 hours

  • @audreytempleton4415
    @audreytempleton4415 Рік тому +19

    I enjoyed this video very much.I have lived in west Virginia all my life and have and still do know people much like what Ive seen in this video..Times have changed..but a way of life is taught and still remains in some families and places.we can still learn from them and be better off for it ..Thanks for the video.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +3

      Indeed- thanks for watching and sharing

    • @timlaxtonsr3729
      @timlaxtonsr3729 Рік тому +1

      With todays crazy stuff happening..we would survive knowing all the old ways..just think we ave abit of an advantage with better equipment or supplies..

  • @tinylichau1529
    @tinylichau1529 Рік тому +6

    Love love these stories. I was born in Kentucky

  • @kevinbruce2776
    @kevinbruce2776 Рік тому +7

    That's crazy huge the way those Chestnut trees get so huge. When I see the pictures of giant redwoods it is amazing as well. It's sad to here the story of how they were infected and so many died off.

  • @aussieausbourne1
    @aussieausbourne1 10 місяців тому +7

    The American Chestnut is making a comeback either native trees are growing resistant to the fungus or the trees I've seen are hybrids but finally they are showing up in the cherokee and Nantahala forests hopefully they'll get the chance to grow to their full potential

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  10 місяців тому +3

      fingers crossed!

    • @beereal2514
      @beereal2514 8 місяців тому +1

      I have a chestnut tree in my yard in the NC Smoky Mountains. We gather chestnuts from it every year and leave some for the bears.

  • @tennesse_courier
    @tennesse_courier Рік тому +20

    I really enjoyed this one especially about the primitive churches and preachers. The way justice was handled by the Appalachian folks has some interesting stories. Really enjoyed all the different churches you showed. Excellently done!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +2

      Thanks Jim, a bit of trivia for you? Im sure you know the answer- What was the name of the first church in the section talking about the Primitive Baptist Church?

    • @tennesse_courier
      @tennesse_courier Рік тому +2

      @@TheAppalachianStoryteller was it the Cades Cove Primitive Baptist church in Cades Cove...

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +3

      @@tennesse_courier I knew you knew :)

  • @invicta_vita
    @invicta_vita Рік тому +17

    I love these old pioneer stories. Great Job, JD!

  • @figgiefigueroa7372
    @figgiefigueroa7372 Рік тому +3

    I just found this Chanel and I simply love it.
    Where anyone believe it or not in the Caribbean, there's an Island called Puerto Rico is a territory of the USA.
    The deal is that has I look and I listen to this stories it reminds me of my grandfather who lives in the country in the mountain ⛰ of Puerto Rico 🇵🇷.
    They call us Hillbillies, but we got to live the best life for decades.
    It was my Great Grandfather who came from Spain 🇪🇸 had 4 wife's and was a wealthy landowner.
    My grandfather was his son, and my dad was his grandsons.
    The similarities are unbelievable the same.
    They work at the sugar plantations but my great grandfather had land has far has your eyes can see.
    The have the coconut,tobacco, coffee, 🥭 Mango and the herds of animals of all kinds.
    They have their own distilleries and drink moonshine out of the sugar cane squeeze and fermentation.
    I mean looking at this is giving me a blast from the past.
    Thank you for having such an amazing Chanel and the great information you put out for us to enjoy.
    And yes Family has always been first.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +2

      Thanks for sharing I enjoyed reading your story

    • @phredro1731
      @phredro1731 Рік тому

      I had never had a conversation with anyone from south america or mexico until my sister married a first generation born american man of mexican descent. Come to learn from him that his cultural attitudes and many norms and taboos were a close match to my eastern ky upbringing. A great lesson for me.

  • @lmoore155
    @lmoore155 Рік тому +3

    As an Irish/Scottish child from PEI and Nova Scotia, and now an American, I fount this fascinating! Thank you for this excellent presentation!!!

  • @sherylarnold2083
    @sherylarnold2083 Рік тому +7

    What I LOVE about going to the Appalachian mountains is when I’m there I feel like I’m home. Living in the city has its perks but going to the mountains has a feeling of comfort and security. Nothing better then filling one’s stomach with real southern cooking, the best food anywhere.

  • @mookerimungeri
    @mookerimungeri 4 місяці тому +1

    I love my mountaints. I come from the Northeaster PA coal region of the mountains and while our heritage is different, we also have so much more in common with other parts. We are proud Appalachians as well!

  • @WOAM-zk3lb
    @WOAM-zk3lb Рік тому +5

    Hello. I’m new to this channel. Born and raised in Southern California, submitted my DNA and learned my paternal ancestors are heavily rooted in Eastern Kentucky. Learning as much as I can about a culture foreign to me. Look forward to watching your videos.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +2

      Thank you and welcome!

    • @DD-wx3ho
      @DD-wx3ho Рік тому

      Everything sane for me, too! My adopted Mother wondered how and why I learned to love bluegrass and country music so much!

  • @Trust3
    @Trust3 Рік тому +16

    My parents have a Beautiful chestnut tree in hilly Southern Ohio, it's always filled with chestnuts, but it's not like the huge ones described here, love the hill country and my mountains!

  • @eliotoole
    @eliotoole Рік тому +7

    So many memories of picking up chestnuts as a young child in Eastern Kentucky

  • @lisalane5808
    @lisalane5808 23 дні тому +1

    My maternal great grandfather McAllister married great grandmother McKinley (both Presbyterian). Both their families moved off the mountain to the foothills in NC. I can remember granddaddy always carried a chestnut in his pocket for good luck.

  • @ryvirkelley5047
    @ryvirkelley5047 Місяць тому +1

    I love this channel! I have a German grandma and an Irish grandpa who both came from Kentucky.

  • @philipdubuque9596
    @philipdubuque9596 Рік тому +4

    Brilliant presentation. My first love musically was "Old Time" eventually, Bluegrass, a style of music born in the Appalachian mountains. There is an unaffected directness in your presentation that reflects the simple nobility these early settlers and this storied place. Well done!

  • @dont.wilson2121
    @dont.wilson2121 Рік тому +9

    My Mom and Dad were raised in central West Virginia, Clay County. Such a rich heritage.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +1

      Great country

    • @richardrogers156
      @richardrogers156 Рік тому +2

      You related to Clarence Wilson.My grandfather was from Clay county.Roy Rogers last lived in Webster springs miss that trip in the holler.💪😇🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏

    • @dont.wilson2121
      @dont.wilson2121 Рік тому +1

      @@richardrogers156 good morning, I don’t remember Clarence Wilson. My grandfather’s name was Vernon Wilson. My dad was James Reed Jordan Wilson.

    • @timlaxtonsr3729
      @timlaxtonsr3729 Рік тому

      You'll never recognize the area now..its lil bad lots of drugs and unsolved disappearances .

    • @dont.wilson2121
      @dont.wilson2121 Рік тому

      @@timlaxtonsr3729 I know Tim. I grew up in Huntington, not the city now that I remember. But you know what? Prayer changes things.

  • @judithadams7873
    @judithadams7873 4 місяці тому +1

    These are some of my Ancestors. I’m from Southeastern Kentucky in the deep Appalachian Mountains. I come from Irish/Scottish decent. Very interesting to learn more of my culture. I’m a proud Hilllbilly!!

  • @amypaparone55
    @amypaparone55 Рік тому +48

    I wonder if it was accidental, our chestnut trees here in Pennsylvania have died in abundance this year. You can actually see them dead in the middle of forests where all other trees are growing strong. Anyway it’s amazing how strong these people were to start a new in a strange country. Keep these wonderful stories coming please!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +23

      The American Chestnut was killed from a fungus that was imported from Asia. The Chestnut trees in Asia had built immunity from the fungus, but the American trees had never encountered it before and had no defense. The fungus was imported to NY and within 10 years it spread all the way across Appalachia and killed every Chestnut Tree. Now, the root systems of these Chestnut trees still exists and are still alive since the fungus cant penetrate the acidic soil. So the roots continuously sprout new twigs and the fungus kills them again. However, in recent years, scientists have been cross breading the Asian and American Chestnuts DNA to try to build resistance to the fungus here in America. That said, even if the Chestnut reappeared today, it would take 1000 years for it to return to its former glory in Appalachia.

    • @lesliebright3860
      @lesliebright3860 Рік тому +11

      The chestnuts have died long ago... they'll still try to sprout off of old trunks, but once the saplings get to a certain size, their bark opens up, the blight enters, and kills it off before it's of a size to produce nuts.
      Now, the emerald ash borer is killing off the ash trees. Right now, driving around the region, many of the trees you see dead are ash.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +5

      @@lesliebright3860 exactly, you can see some dead ash in the opening scene in this video.

    • @amypaparone55
      @amypaparone55 Рік тому +5

      @@TheAppalachianStoryteller how very sad that is! 😫

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +3

      @@amypaparone55 indeed, its a very sad reality

  • @cjod33
    @cjod33 Рік тому +20

    Being a proud Australian of Irish/Scottish n Aboriginal blood, I've always found it interesting how our accents now are nothing like those who first settled places like the Appalachian's n parts of Australia.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +2

      Very interesting

    • @ebogar42
      @ebogar42 Рік тому +4

      That's because it's a mix of accents over time. In the Appalachians we had many different cultures living there and how things like bluegrass music came about. It's very similar to old Irish music with mix of different instruments from other areas or countries.

    • @redtobertshateshandles
      @redtobertshateshandles Рік тому +2

      Immigrants become locals. Early convicts and soldiers were Londoners and I guess teachers were too. Aussies have a variety of London accent. My great grandfather was a London soldier. His medical record shows VD, which I guess didn't help his family. Scots and Irish from the countryside hopefully had less city diseases. Interestingly, Hitler mentions VD being a big problem in his book ' Mein Kampf'. And no, I'm not a Nazi.

    • @patriciafisher1170
      @patriciafisher1170 Рік тому +2

      Cjod33. I am Australian too and have the same heritage I think that anyone whose ancestors have been here since the beginning have some aboriginal heritage even if it is hidden. I haven’t been able to find it in records but know my grandfather had a grandparent who was indigenous. My dna came back as almost 90 percent Irish although two of my children look aboriginal. But it was explained to me that our dna can Conley express so much. Going back 13 generations we have one million grandparents

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +3

      @@patriciafisher1170 wow! 1 million?

  • @nancyyonce2906
    @nancyyonce2906 Рік тому +3

    Beautiful stories -beautiful people . Thank you !!

  • @Joe-wo7rg
    @Joe-wo7rg Рік тому +3

    Proud to have Appalachian roots. My mom was born and raised in W. Virginia.

  • @ashleybuckland3181
    @ashleybuckland3181 Рік тому +3

    love your stories, never stop you have a gift.

  • @suzannecrum9702
    @suzannecrum9702 Рік тому +6

    Your drone footage is so beautifully done! Love the pics of Devil Anse Hatfield and clan.Thank you for your words of "wisdom' retold!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +2

      Thank you my friend. The drone footage on the opening scene is Big South Fork Cumberland River near where Kentucky and Tennessee join, there is other footage from the Great Smoky Mountains, Hillsville, VA, Karns, TN, and several other areas in Appalachia

  • @janrandles8683
    @janrandles8683 Рік тому +7

    So interesting as I have recently researched my genealogy and found that I am more Irish than Scottish. My family surname of my great-grandfather was McRandles and is a surname that was common from what I understand in Northern Ireland. At some point it was changed to just Randles. Grew up in Knoxville and moved back to this area after retiring. I hike in the Smokies frequently, both TN and NC side. One of my favorite things is walking through the many small cemeteries in the Smokies and seeing the family names of that area. Glad to have found your videos as I have been away for over 20 years and find this all fascinating.

  • @kevdimo6459
    @kevdimo6459 Рік тому +2

    Thanks for your channel it just popped up in UA-cam, after the first story I was hooked on it and subscribed straight away. I’ve watched about a dozen of them now and enjoy everyone of them. Thanks again from Australia.

  • @smokintee117
    @smokintee117 9 місяців тому +1

    My family name is Freeman. My family came from Ireland during the start of the civil war. And fought for the south in the Appalachians. Thank you for this podcast that shows my family history.

  • @WhispersFromTheDark
    @WhispersFromTheDark Рік тому +8

    Good morning from North Texas! My ancestors came from Wales to North Carolina, In 1700 then some moved into Virginia, Georgia, Tennessee and then into Texas. So some of the pioneers we're my people, I'm proud to say. Crane/Crain, Young were some of their names.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +2

      💪 strong bloodlines

    • @rhondabuce8348
      @rhondabuce8348 Рік тому +2

      My Irish ancestry came here in 1700s, but I don't know where they were, except Oklahoma. My Irish great-great-grandfather's name was John O'May.

    • @WhispersFromTheDark
      @WhispersFromTheDark Рік тому

      @@rhondabuce8348 I joined a geneaology page called My Heritage and although it's kinda expensive, it has quite the database to be able to find your ancestors. Matter of fact they'll find them for you and suggest them as 'Smart Matches' for you to look at and confirm or deny. You can start there by adding your parents and their parents and they'll do the rest. They even have links to marriages and immigration from other Countries as well as photos on some of them. I have well over 5,000 in my tree thus far and I work on adding names and checking their smart matches several times a week. That's how I have been able to find out so much on my line. I also have ancestors that lived and died in Oklahoma, and I don't live that far from there now.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +4

      @@rhondabuce8348 thats an Irish name for sure, if I run across it in my research, ill let ya know

    • @rhondabuce8348
      @rhondabuce8348 Рік тому

      @@TheAppalachianStoryteller thank you!!

  • @rogerironhide4220
    @rogerironhide4220 Рік тому +3

    I love watching outstanding videos of this great channel. I enjoy learning any & everything about my culture, heritage, etc....
    I have family all over Appalachia & every time I get to listen/watch/read regarding the above, I can feel it in my blood, the excitement, the pride 💯.... Keep up the outstanding good work you put out into your channel. Love it 👍🏻🍻. We truly need to go back to our ol ways, today's world, society is sick & downright demented. All this mass tech is hurting us in general & in every aspect of living as people, Humans. We are ALL bound of this great earth & we oughta go back to living as we should. I could never leave the mountains.

  • @4Score747
    @4Score747 Рік тому +2

    That’s interesting about the Chestnut trees. Good video.

  • @neats5815
    @neats5815 11 місяців тому +2

    I am Catholic Irish from the South Coast of Ireland. Mise Éire. This is fascinating. A home from home! Is breah liom é

  • @67whitestang33
    @67whitestang33 Рік тому +12

    OMG just beautiful. So much history so many stories. Absolutely amazing. Love it.

  • @victoriagriffith7832
    @victoriagriffith7832 Рік тому +3

    Another awesome story! Thank You

  • @Redstagwsmnp
    @Redstagwsmnp Рік тому +7

    We have been in that area since mid late 1700's

  • @esmewitch
    @esmewitch Рік тому +1

    I love the old photos and the music.

  • @georgewebb8176
    @georgewebb8176 Рік тому +2

    I too am scotch Irish from isle of sky to smoky mountains in1730 and very proud of my heritage

  • @johnlockhart2674
    @johnlockhart2674 Рік тому +8

    Twice I have been to Cade’s Cove and the Cling-man’s Dome , it is truly God’s county , I really appreciate the great Smoky Mountains!

  • @jimward204
    @jimward204 Рік тому +6

    Thanks! Your video brought back a lot of memories of the stories my Dad used to tell me about life in the Appalachians. My Dad's family lines arrived in Eastern Kentucky in 1800, coming down the Great Wagon Road in Virginia that is now Interstate 81 before moving westward. A few may have arrived in Kentucky even earlier around 1780. They settled along the creeks and waterways in the "hollers" where the sun was rarely seen before ten in the morning peaking over the edge of the ridge. Dad was born in 1920 in a little dirt-poor community in Lawrence County, Kentucky. In 1925, the family moved by train to nearby Logan County, West Virginia, where Dad's father got work in the coal mines. Dad said he never saw indoor plumbing until he joined the US Army in World War II. His youngest brother also never saw indoor plumbing until he joined the US Air Force twenty years later.

  • @judyingram-kh1vm
    @judyingram-kh1vm 4 місяці тому +1

    Great story JD keepum' comin'. Thank you for all you do to tell and write these stories ❤

  • @jmc317
    @jmc317 3 місяці тому +1

    Great story, thank you! I'm so proud of my Scots-Irish heritage!

  • @Dontwlookatthis
    @Dontwlookatthis 11 місяців тому +5

    The University of North Carolina has done a lot to see that one day the Chestnut tree returns to the mountains. They have tried hybrid trees with a resistance to the blight. Over to the west, a few chestnut groves have been found which due to their protected locations, never got the blight and the most promising discovery is that the chestnut blight kill the trunk not the roots and a tree that once was thought dead is still alive sending up shoots that survive until they reach about 5 feet then the shoot dies. Im hoping that one day that problem will be solved. But it won't show in my lifetime. I'm too old.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  11 місяців тому +1

      Well said

    • @beereal2514
      @beereal2514 8 місяців тому +1

      I have a chestnut tree in my yard in the NC Smoky Mountains.

    • @theldawood84
      @theldawood84 8 місяців тому

      I had heard they were doing something along those lines. I'll be buried deep in those hills by the time they'll see how it goes.

  • @hoozerob
    @hoozerob Рік тому +70

    I lived in North East Tennessee for about 10 years in the 2000's. Church was an important staple. I remember visiting a lot of churches outside of the one I'd usually go to. My , then, wife's uncle was a preacher, until recently, at a Baptist Church around there. He even had a Gospel group called the Primitive Quartet. Things were very nice around those parts, and everyone heavy in tradition and the culture there. But with the intrusion, or should I say, near invasion, of the unruly, wild and indecent things made their way through. Such as hollywood, radical and hood dispositions crept in. That, tainted the kids, who, before that, upheld in traditional values, family and God. It all changed. On top of that, all the illegal immigrants sent their by obama, the later and recently, by the biden 'minstruation. Everything is being ghetto-ized. Young people are taken by and romanticize about all things ghetto and thug life. It ruins towns and lives. Just saying, and I said it. God Bless, and have a nice day.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +11

      Thanks for sharing your story, I enjoyed reading it

    • @AlmazB
      @AlmazB Рік тому

      You realise Obama deported more illegals than almost any US president. I didn't like him but facts are facts. Yes the Ghetto Kartrashians permeated lots of places. Moonshiners were considered thugs too.

    • @hauntedmoodylady
      @hauntedmoodylady Рік тому +18

      I grew up in the Eastern KY mountains, I visit usually a couple of times each year. Your comment is virtually a direct quote of mine when I describe the pure pollution which has been dumped upon the people, and culture of the Appalachian mountains by the hellish leftist media, and Hollyweird in its many forms. It's a sad outcome..

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +9

      @@hauntedmoodylady well said

    • @realcanadiangirl64
      @realcanadiangirl64 Рік тому

      @@hauntedmoodylady The left is doing this same thing to my home here in rural Alberta, Canada. The Trudeau government is flooding every corner of our country with immigrants who don't even come close to sharing any of the same values and morals that made life safe and good here

  • @jessicacalderon9010
    @jessicacalderon9010 3 місяці тому +1

    I just came across this beautiful video. My family roots are in SW Virginia and I've been doing research and collecting stories. Everything in this video lines right up with what I've heard and read. My great grandmother wrote about her mom using kerosine, boneset and pennyroyal tea as remedies. My great grandmother X3, Healtha Kennedy, was a midwife and she delivered many children along with my grandmother and great aunt. My grandmother, great aunt, and great grandmother survived their home being washed away after the dam broke at Lick Fork cole mine.

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  3 місяці тому

      you have a wonderful family heritage, im glad you found your way here. Have a blessed day

  • @hikerx9366
    @hikerx9366 Рік тому +2

    So glad to be able to watch such informative information on the Appalachian history. Thanks again my friend.

  • @FloridaManFishing_22
    @FloridaManFishing_22 3 місяці тому +3

    My folks are german american immigrants who somewhere married into the Cherokee Tribe then they moved up to Michigan during The Hillbilly Highway

  • @caseyarchuleta5513
    @caseyarchuleta5513 Рік тому +4

    I truly enjoy listening to the facts and stories of the Appalachians. Thank you for shining a light on the history of the people and the mountains. I'm from east Tennesse myself and hope to return someday. I miss the language, culture and fun those mountains have to offer. God, take me home!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +3

      Thank you my friend- I have lots of history from the East Tennessee area on this channel

  • @edwardh1591
    @edwardh1591 Рік тому +2

    Enjoy your documentaries. Thank you for sharing.

  • @suzanmiller558
    @suzanmiller558 9 місяців тому +2

    My kin folk are Italian that settled in Fayette County West Virginia. They were masons in Italy and continued their trade there. I love the stories of how they settled and brought their traditions here

  • @CherokeeBird
    @CherokeeBird Рік тому +5

    I was blown away by my ancestry. Mostly Scottish on my dad's side. I have royal ancestry from Scotland, and England. But I heard that 60 % of Americans today do. Very interesting!

    • @TheAppalachianStoryteller
      @TheAppalachianStoryteller  Рік тому +1

      ❤️

    • @annscott9268
      @annscott9268 Рік тому +1

      It seems that many of us whose family has been over here for centuries does have "royal" blood......and are related in some way!

    • @sandyfields678
      @sandyfields678 10 місяців тому +1

      I'm proud to know my grma,maternal,has irish,,.stacy,on grfathers side,and scottish,plowman on mother's side. And why I love true crime since a kid,. I'm a sr,plus,and grma had. Mags.. I'm rummaging in bureau ,found blk n white True detective mags in her bureau drawers..in 50s,.why I loved old detective movies, Scotland yard etc..True crime obsessed today. ...