Bozeman Trail

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  • Опубліковано 4 бер 2019
  • The Bozeman Trail was a shortcut to the newly discovered gold fields of Montana Territory. Cutting through the heart of Indian country, it provoked a clash of cultures that exploded into warfare, destruction and tragedy. It was a singular road that changed this part of the American west forever.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 429

  • @millieatr
    @millieatr Рік тому +17

    I was reading my Great Great Great Gransmother's diary of her experience on the Bozeman Trail . .One sentence caught my attention on page 94 " I am getting a little tired of my daughter Nellie asking "Are we there yet?""

  • @lindakay9552
    @lindakay9552 Рік тому +25

    The Bozeman Trail went RIGHT THROUGH my great grandfather's property in Montana. They housed thousands of passersby.

    • @kirkgriffin3336
      @kirkgriffin3336 11 місяців тому

      Sure, Jan.

    • @lindakay9552
      @lindakay9552 11 місяців тому

      @@kirkgriffin3336 what?

    • @paleface4404
      @paleface4404 11 місяців тому +1

      That's lovely

    • @charlene5461
      @charlene5461 10 місяців тому +4

      I can only imagine the stories your Grandfather passed on!! My Grandmother was the storyteller of days past,.... births, deaths, marriages, fights, cheating and succeeding!! I and my brother would sit at her feet as she slowly rocked back and forth. In the summer, the linoleum was cool and Mamaw kept it clean as any plate in the kitchen cabinet! Her and Granddads beginnings were hard. They were share croppers in early years, there was always work to do. Harvested and made sugar cane, my mothers fond memories of riding the pony round and round while Granddad fed the cane stalk is her favorite memory. Our children and grandchildren know not the human strength and faith of God that molded this great country. Hard work builds character and faith builds strength...not purple hair or nose piercing🤦 Have a blessed week!

  • @alfredpambuena6874
    @alfredpambuena6874 4 роки тому +379

    if you ever go to some of these historic sights...and stand in the very wagon ruts where these people traveled.....you think to yourself how did they do it...and survive...knowing that every day they had to endure almost impossible odds....and then look at people today that become angry at some of the most idiotic things....and become offended by the most stupidest things…..and become helpless over things that people hundreds of years ago would have laughed at....

    • @TheBandit7613
      @TheBandit7613 3 роки тому +12

      I get cranky waiting in line at the bank. Hahaha!

    • @felicitybraxx9394
      @felicitybraxx9394 3 роки тому +5

      Sad but true.Alfred Pambuena.✌🏼

    • @1PITIFULDUDE
      @1PITIFULDUDE 3 роки тому +12

      Some people rise to the occasion, others parish.

    • @portlandpatriot7784
      @portlandpatriot7784 2 роки тому +10

      Yes,right up on Mt Hood there's still wagon wheel ruts, burns on trees from lowering the wagons down cliffs with rope. Ol Perry Vickars buried up in the mountain. At Pioneer Cemetery, Summit Meadows.

    • @rainmanjr2007
      @rainmanjr2007 2 роки тому +3

      @@WYO_Cowboy_Joe That's what you want to count on? Just asking because IDC how many or who die for any reason. Humans have no greater right to survive than the animals we kill. Tao takes zero notice. Counting on an impromptu rescue, dependent on a single person's luck in surviving at all, seems to me kind of desperate. More so than a prepared and funded agency tasked with saving people.

  • @Niveaufriedhofchef
    @Niveaufriedhofchef 28 днів тому

    Thank you so much for uploading this and providing the public with this free and incredible information!

  • @michaelwilson5346
    @michaelwilson5346 Рік тому +24

    I have always had a deep interest in history. My grandfather was a Texas Ranger and my father served on a Heavy Cruiser during World War II, and ended up living in Japan after the war. Hearing their stories, combined with trips I took 3 summers in a row as a kid to the American West with an organization called "Myers Mountain Men (out of Austin, TX in the 70s), fueled my keen fascination with history. Growing up in Latin America, Brazil to be specific, also gave me experiences that most young people my age didn't necessarily have. In College, I realized that history came easily to me because I enjoyed it so much. As a result, I ended up receiving a minor in history while working towards my MA in International Relations at the University of Texas. It wasn't even something that I planned, but as it turned out I had enough credit hours to qualify for the additional degree. My love of history and such interrelated fields as anthropology, archaeology, paleontology, and social studies, to name a few, have given me a whole new perspective on life that I might otherwise never had. I love to travel as much as possible and explore new places, whether they be in some hard-to-reach, far-off country, or just down the road from where I live. For example, I recently moved to Florida and I am fascinated by the history that exists in this part of the world, whether it be the founding of St. Augustine by Spain long before English pilgrims landed in Jamestown or Plymouth Rock, or exploring for fossilized Megalodon teeth, the largest shark ever to live in our planet's oceans. Finding these fossils, some of which can be up to 20 million years old, and reach 6 inches in length, is an amazing experience. They belonged the to the largest sharks ever to swim in our oceans, some reaching 60 feet in length and having the strongest bite force of any creature ever to live on Earth, and now it is in your hand. That, my friends, is one of the coolest parts of history and how it interelates with other areas of interest or study.

  • @deborahjackson6108
    @deborahjackson6108 7 місяців тому +7

    Fun fact: my ancestors on my moms side of the family, the Gage family, were the first family to homestead in Montana. In sweetgrass county. There is a monument on the side of the highway with their names on it.

  • @bluecollarvet2759
    @bluecollarvet2759 Рік тому +12

    My family is from Big Horn Wyoming. My mom went to high school in billings. My great grandma went through Yellowstone in a covered wagon. I grew up going around these areas. From Missoula montana to sheridan/big horn, Laramie, cody, Casper, buffalo Wyoming. I love it there. Its beautiful country and a lot of history

  • @rgbwr
    @rgbwr Рік тому +3

    All the way from Manchester, England. I have a fascination with the immigrants who gave all for a new life, the native people who owned the country and has an ex British soldier, the common American soldier. Brilliant documentary.

  • @zuzannawisniewska4464
    @zuzannawisniewska4464 Рік тому +5

    Respected history. Amazing story. Such unreliable detalis . I love Montana, that's why I listen to it to the end. I love it, I just can't get enough of this story theme.Thank you very much for this video.

  • @midnightrun2764
    @midnightrun2764 2 роки тому +30

    Our Grandfather did the covered wagon thing, from Quebec, to Edmonton. So many lost stories! Thanks for these videos!..✌🏼🇨🇦

  • @jorgebarranco4200
    @jorgebarranco4200 Рік тому +11

    All the history that the land of the dreams kept, I can imagine all the people who walked through the land, long time ago, and the mountains witnessed all that. from themselves. Bless you all from whenever you are right now around the World!!!!

  • @cowboygeologist7772
    @cowboygeologist7772 Рік тому +1

    Interesting video; thanks for posting.

  • @robertshorthill6836
    @robertshorthill6836 Рік тому +5

    I was born and raised in Livingston. I now live in Belgrade, which has become almost unlivable within the last 30 years with people moving into the area

    • @gary-rw1is
      @gary-rw1is Рік тому +1

      30 years haf canned her too

  • @chrisxx3375
    @chrisxx3375 2 роки тому +6

    Amazing storytelling! Such incredible detail. Thank you for this.🙏

  • @philipmendisco6656
    @philipmendisco6656 2 роки тому +56

    I've heard stories of my great-great-great-grandparents traveling the trail in the covered wagon. They brought along two dozen chickens. Most of them were egg layers. They did not want to take up space in the wagon with cages, so they chained each Chicken around its neck, similair to a chain gang. They forced them to march single file all the way from St Louis to Oregon. It was a long miserable walk for the chickens

    • @Al........
      @Al........ Рік тому +10

      I'm laughing at the 13 people like what you have said, Phil it's a tall tale made to entertain children! 24 chickens on a chain.

    • @TheSnoopindaweb
      @TheSnoopindaweb Рік тому

      🤨🤔⛓🐓🐔🥚🍳🍗🍲🥟Etc‼🤗😁Yup❗

    • @butchcassidy3373
      @butchcassidy3373 Рік тому +5

      What most people don't know if the chickens were made to pick up trash the whole way there.

    • @Liberalcali
      @Liberalcali 10 місяців тому

      That’s cool

    • @melschevelle
      @melschevelle 7 місяців тому

      I’m going to have a dream about this tonight after reading ,I just know it😂

  • @robsniffen7597
    @robsniffen7597 2 роки тому +2

    Outstanding!

  • @HibernusMortis1
    @HibernusMortis1 5 років тому +16

    Learned some new history tonight :)

  • @lindakay9552
    @lindakay9552 Місяць тому

    I wonder if John White is related to me. My 3rd great grandma was named Margaret Ellen White. In 1862, when she was 13, she and her family set out from Independence, MO., heeded for Walla Walla, WA. She and her 11 year old brother were driving the team of oxen that their parents were leading, they were attacked on the Snake River by hostile Indians. Their train made it all the way to Walla Walla however.
    In December of 1864, Margaret Ellen White married my 3rd great grandfather, William Periman, at Whiskey Creek, Wa. Their first son was born there in December 1865. In April of 1866, William left to prospect at Beartown, Mt. Then in August of the same year, at at 17, Margaret Ellen Perriman hired 2 boys about age 18, and rode with her infant, Luther Frank Periman, in the saddle in front of her. They drove 17 head of cattle and 11 head of horses.
    After settling near Dear Lodge at New Chicago, when William was away mining, other settlers came and told Margaret she needed to flee to the fort because the Nez Perce were coming. Margaret refused to leave. When the 12 Indian braves dismounted, she invited them in for tea. They wanted "tamoniwick" which was tobacco. One of the men recognized Margaret from her wedding at Wisky Creek. They all shared a peace pipe.
    Before departing, once of the Indian men patted Margaret's daughter Mary Jane on the head and said, "skookum papoose" (good girl.)
    There is SO MUCH MORE to tell about my White/ Periman relatives. But, that's another story for another time!

  • @craigdutton6072
    @craigdutton6072 Рік тому +1

    Great story ❤I really enjoyed it 🎉

  • @dannycorsaro546
    @dannycorsaro546 Рік тому +3

    I love wagon train series 😃

  • @iuriecristea7058
    @iuriecristea7058 Рік тому

    I fall in love for this video

  • @hettyjames5111
    @hettyjames5111 Рік тому

    Very interesting - thank you!

  • @mtbalpinecounty
    @mtbalpinecounty Рік тому +4

    I find and follow California trails via foot or mtb. Always amazed by what was then the only option. Then was led by a trail blazer. A reclaim some of those in my backyard. Saving History!

    • @kirkgriffin3336
      @kirkgriffin3336 11 місяців тому

      Oh, I don’t believe a word of that.

  • @ScoopDogg
    @ScoopDogg 2 роки тому +41

    Loved this , I just cant get enough of this history subject.. Stuck in UK i need all i can get until I hopefully move to USA, God Bless my American Cousins : )

    • @ghostlyimageoffear6210
      @ghostlyimageoffear6210 2 роки тому +4

      I hope you do get to move here. I also thrill in our history and my ancestors, some of whom were from Britain, lived it.

    • @ScoopDogg
      @ScoopDogg 2 роки тому +3

      @@ghostlyimageoffear6210 thanks mate

    • @robertbjgvch190
      @robertbjgvch190 2 роки тому +5

      Come to Canada. We have better health care and legal Cannabis

    • @franklynrizzo8328
      @franklynrizzo8328 2 роки тому +2

      @@robertbjgvch190 Cheaper is not always better.

    • @robertbjgvch190
      @robertbjgvch190 2 роки тому +1

      @@franklynrizzo8328 Better as in FREE. Id rather be broke and dead then healthy and in serious debt.. Pros and Cons

  • @guanacocruz765
    @guanacocruz765 5 років тому +12

    I love Montana

  • @tchegutu4808
    @tchegutu4808 2 роки тому +14

    If you enjoyed this Documentary, suggest you take a look at one called uncharted territory about David Thompson who mapped 1.5 million sq miles of NW Canada along with another one about Alexander Mckenzie same sort of can do attitude.

  • @calgal7828
    @calgal7828 2 роки тому +24

    It amazes me how brave they were. Leaving everything behind and striking out to unknown places, through harsh weather and waring tribes.

  • @SAR9331
    @SAR9331 Рік тому +3

    My grandmother came across on the Oregon trail.

  • @vowelsounds6312
    @vowelsounds6312 10 місяців тому +1

    Vast landscapes without a trace that a human being had ever walked there.

  • @1stminnsharpshooters341
    @1stminnsharpshooters341 Рік тому +1

    excellent documentary *LIKED* and *SUBSCRIBED* --LT

  • @tilesetter1953
    @tilesetter1953 Рік тому +9

    PBS knows how to make quality documentaries. For example, the background music is very low and unobtrusive, as opposed to the so-called history channel and Nat Geo!
    The only negative aspect is the time spent begging for money.

  • @corinneshinkle
    @corinneshinkle 2 роки тому +7

    i did archaeology at fort fhil Kearney and discovered a gate not on the map to the creek

    • @michaelwilson5346
      @michaelwilson5346 Рік тому

      Now that is awesome beyond imagination. I love history and also love exploring isolated or hard to get to places. Bringing history, archaeology and anthropology altogether is amazing.

  • @milagroscastillo5536
    @milagroscastillo5536 Рік тому

    A great documentary

  • @chuckbowen5024
    @chuckbowen5024 3 роки тому +21

    Some of these soldiers were Galvanized Yankees. They carried 1873 Springfields. Some only had two or three loads for their weapons and had never even fired them for familiarization. I got this information from Dorothy Johnson's book The Bloody Bozeman.

    • @marxalvord6830
      @marxalvord6830 2 роки тому

      More Anti-Americanism crap blah blah? It is evident.

    • @rabeccabozeman2986
      @rabeccabozeman2986 Рік тому +4

      I’m Rabecca Bozeman…John Bozeman i’d my great great grandfather lol

    • @foofookachoo1136
      @foofookachoo1136 Рік тому

      @@rabeccabozeman2986 ❤Hello!! Can u tell us any stories from your GGGrandfather??

  • @christopherclark5604
    @christopherclark5604 3 місяці тому

    Closet I ever got to this area was being the winner of the Marlboro Ranch giveaway. My gf and I spent a week at the Crazy Mountain Ranch. Once in a lifetime trip. Too bad the ranch was sold a few years later and the giveaway ceased.

  • @michaelwoodsmccausland5633
    @michaelwoodsmccausland5633 Рік тому +1

    We had sleazy explored these regions MWM

  • @holdenwell3669
    @holdenwell3669 2 роки тому +3

    I DIDN'T COME HERE TO HEAR YOUR SALES PITCH...I CAME TO SEE A DOCUMENTARY

    • @winnerscreed6767
      @winnerscreed6767 11 місяців тому

      P for Public, B for Broadcasting S for System. They have to raise funds from the public in order to put out documenties. Learn before you criticize.

  • @janetsummerlir1548
    @janetsummerlir1548 2 роки тому

    Nice

  • @connielipp8648
    @connielipp8648 5 років тому +6

    Awesome video! Thanks for sharing : )

    • @davemoore7488
      @davemoore7488 5 років тому

      Is there an in-depth book that covers this trail?

    • @portlandpatriot7784
      @portlandpatriot7784 2 роки тому

      The skills they had to have to survive! Real men back then, and women were just fine letting men be men, and women be women.

  • @amydavis4945
    @amydavis4945 7 місяців тому +1

    It would have been nice to see the REST of this, and not just have it cut off mid-sentence. I appreciate what you showed of it, but I'd like to see the WHOLE thing.

  • @michaeldowney6361
    @michaeldowney6361 2 роки тому +22

    We lived in Casper and loved the area. Standing atop the low level hills and looking off to the north, east, and west the horizon seems to go on uninterrupted forever. Easy to understand why the area is called big sky country. For those poor cramped souls living east of the Mississippi my advice (like that of Horace Greeley) is go west!

  • @bestwishes5060
    @bestwishes5060 3 роки тому +12

    I drove my car past part of that trail I was in history. Respected history .

  • @jerrymoss6650
    @jerrymoss6650 Рік тому

    HD program. Sadly, it is a PBS broadcast with interruptions. Thanks, anyway.

  • @justforfux
    @justforfux 2 роки тому +2

    I somehow managed to watch halfway until I got fed up by the interminable ads.

    • @bettydant6037
      @bettydant6037 Рік тому

      You know you can move the time line and by pass the adds.

  • @kameyeam
    @kameyeam 7 місяців тому

    I first met Gail Lewis on the Bozeman trail. She was breaking ground for a Walmart.

  • @McIntyreBible
    @McIntyreBible 2 роки тому +2

    5:11 , picture of John Bozeman.

  • @damhammergoshdammer1464
    @damhammergoshdammer1464 2 роки тому +5

    It's getting back to those days where ppl actually socialise instead of computer tech.

  • @shoedil812
    @shoedil812 7 місяців тому +1

    If you are into this I suggest you watch the series "1883" and "1923" by Taylor Sheridan.

    • @melschevelle
      @melschevelle 7 місяців тому +1

      1883 has got to be the BEST show or piece of entertainment I have ever seen. Absolutely amazing

    • @shoedil812
      @shoedil812 7 місяців тому

      @@melschevelle I liked them all.... also Yellowstone.

  • @michaelwoodsmccausland5633
    @michaelwoodsmccausland5633 Рік тому +1

    The technology of the horse destroyed the plains

  • @judydouglas9283
    @judydouglas9283 7 місяців тому +1

    We would love to watch this, but we are hearing impaired so the music drowns out the words and there are no captions. I’m sure the documentary is excellent otherwise.

  • @psor9983
    @psor9983 Рік тому +4

    to all you cry babies that complain about PBS fundraising...first of all, that's how they stay in business and provide amazing content. Second, this is youtube, you can just skip ahead instead of complaining.

  • @markmccreary9605
    @markmccreary9605 2 роки тому +28

    Red Cloud, what a legend! Little known fact he took the white name of Robert later in life and helped found The Sundance Film Festival.

  • @horselady4375
    @horselady4375 2 роки тому +4

    Cant help but ask what his family did for food.i dont think highly of him leaving them to struggle

    • @terriaustill2211
      @terriaustill2211 Рік тому

      Hunted and pheasant ducks wild berries edible wild foods plenty

  • @jackstrada5263
    @jackstrada5263 Рік тому

    Why didn’t they simply build a star fort out of stone cut so perfectly you can’t fit paper between it, Corey from hundreds of miles away

  • @TheYeti308
    @TheYeti308 2 роки тому

    Bahh !

  • @2persons
    @2persons 2 роки тому +4

    Dragging Canoe and Tecumseh had it right long before the Bozeman trail. All in favor now say Yea.

  • @stargo2931
    @stargo2931 Рік тому +1

    It's terrible that the husband would leave and never come back leaving the wife and children in a sort of limbo. She was stuck waiting for letters from him and couldn't remarry if he never wrote to her.

  • @easystreet1888
    @easystreet1888 2 роки тому +2

    49:12 How's that work? "Two were quickly buried and the other presumed dead"

  • @jeanettecoleman-mz7ie
    @jeanettecoleman-mz7ie 6 місяців тому +1

    Strength of people bred into them, every day a challenge, you had to work at whatever to survive
    Nothing modern like todays soft life.

  • @texastoadll
    @texastoadll 3 роки тому +12

    So is this about The Bozeman Trail or a fundraiser???????

    • @pedalingthru2719
      @pedalingthru2719 2 роки тому +3

      Both

    • @dbigdad
      @dbigdad 2 роки тому

      No kidding. Couldn't sit through it all. Enough already.

    • @HieronymousLex
      @HieronymousLex Рік тому +9

      @@dbigdad well, luckily this is the internet so you can skip through it. It’s PBS, they need to raise money. This documentary is great, you’re too spoiled if having to skip forward is too much for you. We should be grateful that they even allowed this upload

  • @CrystalMouse1
    @CrystalMouse1 11 місяців тому

    Love 46:11 talking about my stylish tribe

  • @wyominghorseman9172
    @wyominghorseman9172 3 роки тому +8

    The Plainsmen of the Yellowstone: A History of the Yellowstone Basin
    Mark Herbert Brown
    U of Nebraska Press, Jan 1, 1961 - History - 480 pages
    1 Review
    This rich and authoritative chronicle of the Yellowstone Basin covers a span of more than a century and half, from the 1740s, when the Verendryä brothers were seeking a route to the Western Sea, to the late nineteenth century and the days of the settlers who turned the prairie sod "wrong side up."

  • @georgesouthwick7000
    @georgesouthwick7000 2 роки тому +7

    Why is it that the only time PBS has something you would want to watch, is when they are trying to raise money?

    • @loulagregg8468
      @loulagregg8468 Рік тому +1

      As few funds reach public radio and television stations, programs as well produced as this one are prodigiously expensive and require public support for those who enjoy the productions. Do you not want to be paid when YOU work, or do you work for free?

  • @crusader4273
    @crusader4273 4 місяці тому

    God will be the final score keeper.

  • @scottchase8014
    @scottchase8014 Рік тому

    Just take the Oregon trail and you can see the seven temples... And then they were put away in 1883 hope you made it in time

  • @cunderw12
    @cunderw12 Рік тому +3

    The government did so wrong by the native Americans and First Nations. The treaties that were “signed” did wrong by the Natives. I am still confused why settlers wanted to eliminate different languages, strong spirituality, cultures. It’s literally what gives people hope to move forward.
    Any thoughts as to why they didn’t like native culture?

    • @jeanettecoleman-mz7ie
      @jeanettecoleman-mz7ie 6 місяців тому +1

      Superior attitudes towards anyone/ anything they don't recognise, or value, " wipe em out" attitude, First Nation's people, had they been as ruthless as the bully whites would have conquered them, & yes I'm a "whitey!"

    • @HollyMoore-wo2mh
      @HollyMoore-wo2mh 6 місяців тому

      You didn't listen to the video then? There were both sides of the coin in there.

  • @RDF320
    @RDF320 17 днів тому

    2024 let's make sure we never lose these great documents

  • @edwardlobb931
    @edwardlobb931 2 роки тому +6

    Ultimately, it was gold fever that placed civilians in danger, which then led to an over extended military across the region. Ft. Kearny was basically an isolated compound that was built under extreme duress.

    • @MrShamus07
      @MrShamus07 2 роки тому

      I believe you mean Fort Phil Kearny. Fort Kearny is in central Nebraska.

    • @brianjacob8728
      @brianjacob8728 Рік тому

      @@MrShamus07 Fort Kearney, NE

  • @richardlazarus7831
    @richardlazarus7831 Рік тому

    Dance with wolfs ❤❤sad for my Indian brothers and sisters still fighting for their mana.

  • @Waferdicing
    @Waferdicing Рік тому

    🖤

  • @chya9262
    @chya9262 Рік тому +1

    Yahooo!! Who else wants to ride some cowgirls!!

  • @DanielGarcia-gs9sv
    @DanielGarcia-gs9sv 2 роки тому

    Two word's shines out " manifest Destiny * ;)

  • @barkburton1
    @barkburton1 Рік тому +11

    “Hard times create strong men, strong men create good times, good times create weak men, and weak men create hard times.” We unfortunately are in the weak men stage.

    • @starkr111
      @starkr111 Рік тому

      What a load horseshit. Poetry from a pinhead. “Good times create weak men?” Give me a break.

    • @starkr111
      @starkr111 Рік тому

      What a load horseshit. Poetry from a pinhead. “Good times create weak men?” Give me a break.

  • @marcelchagnon4960
    @marcelchagnon4960 Рік тому +4

    God say love other

  • @sonnyjim5268
    @sonnyjim5268 2 роки тому +3

    Does it go through the Yellowstone Dalton Ranch?

  • @claudioagmfilho
    @claudioagmfilho 9 місяців тому +1

    🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷👏🏻

  • @grzlbr
    @grzlbr 2 роки тому +2

    8:01 give us a break.

  • @billfold1837
    @billfold1837 3 роки тому +11

    Cav-alry - soldiers on horesback
    not Cal- vary. ….a religious site Jesus was crucified on

  • @1PITIFULDUDE
    @1PITIFULDUDE 3 роки тому +4

    Too many commercials 😥

  • @chrisjames5577
    @chrisjames5577 8 місяців тому

    The end is cut short. Seek other alternative posts that may have the complete story.

  • @Martin-dg8xy
    @Martin-dg8xy Рік тому +2

    I hope Trudeau ain't watching! He'll be phoning in donations, like a drunken sailor!

  • @scottchase8014
    @scottchase8014 Рік тому

    King David Northeast Oregon and Solomon cross the border in Idaho

  • @DRIFTIN.
    @DRIFTIN. 7 місяців тому

    the background music is ok, but to loud

  • @uwusmolbean
    @uwusmolbean 11 місяців тому

    The very first
    winnebago

  • @chipparker3950
    @chipparker3950 2 роки тому +2

    1.46 it's cavalry not calvary.

    • @margaretsouayah2597
      @margaretsouayah2597 2 роки тому +1

      Thank you, I am glad someone else caught that too. You would think with this being so well produced, they'd have caught that!

  • @unitedwestand5100
    @unitedwestand5100 2 роки тому +2

    58 mins of story, 1 hr of Montana PBS fund raising.....

  • @meineliebling9395
    @meineliebling9395 2 роки тому +4

    Long story.
    My parents live there( Bozeman and other MT towns).
    We all have a variety of native American genealogical history.
    Last time I visited my mom, I found a friend as cashier in a small town grocery store.
    She was so distraught: her sister, missing for a year, was found last night tied to a picnic table and raped 100+ times on meth she never asked for. She had been kidnapped and barely recognized her family.
    🧬 We must protect each other. Bad guys are real.
    Great Falls My is where that happened

    • @koltoncrane3099
      @koltoncrane3099 Рік тому +2

      Ya that one movie with the fish cop and a woman FBI agent and how the oil drillers raped and chased a woman in snow made me look into it. A lot of deaths are on the reservation. It’s sad.

    • @shirleyjenkin8156
      @shirleyjenkin8156 Рік тому +2

      So sorry that happened. Love her good times. Hope the bad guys will go to hell. So sorry. My heart aches for her and you.

    • @BostonsF1nest
      @BostonsF1nest Рік тому +1

      @@koltoncrane3099 Wind River

  • @willemdyck5458
    @willemdyck5458 7 місяців тому

    Why the music constantly . Terribel!! I do not understand why? Its very bad.

  • @camziebowling7788
    @camziebowling7788 2 роки тому

    The same

  • @julioflorsch97
    @julioflorsch97 9 місяців тому

    Friday. October 6 -23

  • @nashgarcia4490
    @nashgarcia4490 2 роки тому +1

    Sounds like not much has changed for wy

  • @brianmoravec773
    @brianmoravec773 7 місяців тому

    A big bear walks into Big Bobs bar in Bozeman Montana......

  • @michaelwoodsmccausland5633
    @michaelwoodsmccausland5633 Рік тому

    William L Manley

  • @roywaidler3741
    @roywaidler3741 Рік тому

    Edit out the donation segments! No wonder this thing is two hours long!

  • @joaquinperez959
    @joaquinperez959 3 роки тому +21

    Lust for gold, greed is what led to the destruction of the native american way of life!!!

    • @MrLawman82
      @MrLawman82 3 роки тому +3

      Indians shouldn’t have gotten in the way unless they planned to fight harder.

    • @emilianozapata2530
      @emilianozapata2530 3 роки тому +5

      @@MrLawman82 Well in the end of the day you are right my blood thirsty American,it is a cruel world we live in,and its the rule of stronger that brings the final word,but it will not be long before such story knocks on your doors aswell.
      Do not wish and do things to people,that you don't want people to do to you.
      Instead of embracing native american culture and building U.S. on such moral foundations,you chose to build your country on blood and bones.
      What starts in blood,ends in blood.
      Best regards from Serbia!

    • @CarlDidur
      @CarlDidur 2 роки тому +3

      @@MrLawman82 Your time might come yet, buddy

    • @iladelproductions8820
      @iladelproductions8820 2 роки тому +1

      @@CarlDidur I doubt it lol...

    • @FlippedNormal
      @FlippedNormal 2 роки тому

      Come knock on my door looking for a fight it'll be the last door you'll knock on. That's a promise.

  • @rexhaney9806
    @rexhaney9806 Рік тому +2

    I'm from Montana it me hurts the way they treated the indian

  • @ShaneHerrick
    @ShaneHerrick Рік тому

    Im 15 minutes in and it just sounds like a story of a bunch of animals.

  • @waynesmith9408
    @waynesmith9408 Рік тому

    Wait . If FEDDERMAN is such a Great Experienced Professional Officer , why did he go over the Ridge ? He got Suckered by the same Tactics as the Mongols used 600 Years Earlier .

  • @arnenelson4495
    @arnenelson4495 Рік тому

    Cavalry not Calvary. Good video though.

  • @tomnscrubs
    @tomnscrubs 2 роки тому

    24min was enough of asking for funding