Pottery and Revolution

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  • Опубліковано 12 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 149

  • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
    @TheHistoryGuyChannel  2 роки тому +19

    I hope that you enjoyed the episode! Click this link to make some cash for giving your opinion! www.inflcr.co/SHFo7 #YouGovPartner

    • @suetrunnell9524
      @suetrunnell9524 2 роки тому +1

      Interesting. Speaking of pottery, the Sebring family might be a good subject.

    • @steveshoemaker6347
      @steveshoemaker6347 2 роки тому +1

      The poor Potter = What a deal......A special thanks to THG🎀....Bye for now

    • @jackwest3282
      @jackwest3282 2 роки тому +2

      Just FYI there is some sort of static sound in the video. Thank you for another wonderful and informative video!

    • @rikijett310
      @rikijett310 Рік тому

      Red Wing Pottery of Red Wing Minnesota has a long history. It might be an interesting idea for a video. There's a place in Red Wing called Clay City that the pottery clay was mined from.

  • @davidhovde9996
    @davidhovde9996 2 роки тому +40

    As a former archaeologist, academic, and now potter, I enjoyed this episode. The French had similar restrictions in New France. However, kilns have been discovered in Canada and Louisiana as well as pottery that was clearly made in New France. Thanks again.

  • @georgecristiancripcia4819
    @georgecristiancripcia4819 2 роки тому +17

    I love how each intro of an episode is somehow linked with the subject of that video and each intro is unique.

  • @kimhohlmayer7018
    @kimhohlmayer7018 2 роки тому +20

    As a potter and history fiend I loved this episode. I knew somewhat about covering up pottery production in the colonies but had no idea that we believed there had been no production to speak of. Was also shocked that idea persisted through the 1970s! Always fun to learn the truth!

  • @nancynewman6592
    @nancynewman6592 2 роки тому +11

    Loved this video. I am a descendant of Captain John Norton, who created his own pottery line, Norton pottery,( under many family names during its run). It is now better known as Bennington Pottery, as that is where he lived. I have a piece of Norton pottery, now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NY on loan from our family . I am assuming that they went through the same process in Vermont, but will see what I can now find with this new slant on history. Thanks :)

  • @philliptree1742
    @philliptree1742 2 роки тому +8

    I worked for Wedgwood for 20 years and found this very interesting 🙏🙏

  • @HM2SGT
    @HM2SGT 2 роки тому +8

    *This episode reminds me of my childhood and Youth in New Hampshire, visiting various New Hampshire and New England Colonial sites as part of school trips, and visiting Mid-Atlantic Colonial historical places on family trips.* 😊

  • @juliecoates4993
    @juliecoates4993 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for showcasing our Poor Potter! We live in Yorktown and are very proud of the role it played in the Revolution. More people should come and explore Where Freedom was Won!

  • @marie_h1104
    @marie_h1104 2 роки тому +6

    I loved this episode, especially since I used to live near Yorktown/Williamsburg/Jamestown. The entire area is filled with historical significance! I especially loved visiting the battlefield; the tour guides know how to spin a yarn!

  • @JCResDoc94
    @JCResDoc94 2 роки тому +7

    *sometimes thing just pop in and out of ones feed.* welcome back! _JC

  • @bryanparkhurst17
    @bryanparkhurst17 2 роки тому +10

    I think this episode was absolutely fantastic. I love cast iron and earthenware and pottery. I have gone so far as to create a 18th century outdoor kitchen in my backyard. There is nothing like cooking with earthenware. And to learn a small tidbit of History that shows how we used Pottery to essentially give the mother country the middle finger is absolutely awesome!

  • @IDNHANTU2day
    @IDNHANTU2day 2 роки тому +3

    We take containers for granted until you need one. Bring able to transport water was an advancement for our species. Years ago before cars used a closed engine cooling radiator that used coolant/anti-freeze, my father's car overheated for lack of water. To make things worse, we had no container to bring water from a nearby source. Thank God the car had hubcaps. But I realized then that even a woven basket lined with pitch like The locals did hundreds of years ago, would have been great.

  • @fearthehoneybadger
    @fearthehoneybadger 2 роки тому +70

    Pottery is a major source for historical knowledge. Archeologists go crazy whenever they find it at a site.

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 2 роки тому +1

      It used to be. UA-cam, Facebook, Twitter at Al will lay everything bare and spell everything out plainly. Sociologists, archeologists and historians of the future won't have to work very hard or discover many Mysteries from the 21st century on!

    • @danfruzzetti7604
      @danfruzzetti7604 2 роки тому +6

      @@HM2SGT now that's an interesting point. Future archeology will be much more like what we call data forensics - though after viewing through that lens, i guess technically traditional archaeology is a kind of data forensics as well, just with lots more interpolation

    • @septembersurprise5178
      @septembersurprise5178 2 роки тому +3

      @@HM2SGT "Herodotus says, "Very few things happen at the right time, and the rest do not happen at all: The conscientious historian will correct these defects."
      - Mark Twain

    • @guytansbariva2295
      @guytansbariva2295 2 роки тому +2

      @@HM2SGT There's still the fun and hard work of actually going on a dig though. I went on one in college for 3 months in the Yucatan. What's sad is there are so many archaeological treasures around the world which are protected by local laws or countries which forbid excavation.

    • @jenna9300
      @jenna9300 2 роки тому +3

      Hi history friends! I am an archaeologist 🎉 and I thought it’d be fun to respond 🙋‍♀️I go crazy for pottery because it’s so fragile. The earth and time loves to break and degrade pottery, so it’s rare (and exciting!) to find intact pieces bigger than an inch or two.
      And yes! It’s really fun to go out to an established site. But most archaeologists are phase 1 travel gigs, aka tons of shovel testing and hiking around looking at the ground. it’s a 10 hour/day, often 10 days/week labor intensive job, where we don’t find much of anything. But when we do, it’s really exciting! Worth the hundreds of negative holes I’ve dug in just last year alone.

  • @ronalddevine9587
    @ronalddevine9587 2 роки тому +15

    The Yorktown and Williamsburg area is truly fascinating. You really feel how real history is there. The restoration of Williamsburg might make a nice video.

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  2 роки тому +10

      We got to go film in 2021 sponsored by Visit Williamsburg. We've done several episodes on history there, and plan many more. Of course Colonial Williamsburg and Jamestown Settlement are great, but there are a number of smaller museums, like the Waterman's museum in Yorktown to visit as well.

    • @michaelmanning5379
      @michaelmanning5379 2 роки тому +6

      @@TheHistoryGuyChannel Virginia is my favourite state. In addition to natural beauty you cannot go 5 miles without running into something of historical interest.

  • @twillison8824
    @twillison8824 2 роки тому +15

    My wife and I do quite a bit of artifact lookin. In one nearby creek we find a lot of pieces of woodland period native American pottery.

  • @williamharris8367
    @williamharris8367 2 роки тому +1

    Industrial history is a topic that deserves more attention, thank-you for helping to address that deficiency.
    More broadly, the lack of records for the Colonial period makes historical research challenging. It never would have occurred to me that there is intentional falsification and misrepresentation in the official reports.

  • @lgaines4086
    @lgaines4086 2 роки тому +23

    My family settled in northeast Texas in 1822 after landing in Georgia from England in 1777. There were lots of pottery makers in this corner of Texas, as many pieces still exist today. I have a salt glazed pitcher that my family brought from Georgia to Texas that is from back in the late 1700's.

  • @MrScott1171
    @MrScott1171 2 роки тому +6

    When I was stationed at Langley AFB, VA, I visited Yorktown Battlefield. But not Yorktown itself. Another great video.

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  2 роки тому +5

      Neat town, well worth a visit. It is worth your time to get a local tour, and visit the Waterman's museum . I highly recommend the YorkTown Pub and Mobjack Bay Coffee Roasters and Petite Cafe. (They didn't pay me for endorsement, they just treated us very well. )

    • @SusanWojcickiTheBolshevik
      @SusanWojcickiTheBolshevik 2 роки тому +2

      @@TheHistoryGuyChannelsn’t it neat how a good experience can make you tell others? I have the same experience when I visit Columbus Ohio. It’s cool getting to stay in the hotel across the street from our states Supreme Court.

  • @samanthab1923
    @samanthab1923 2 роки тому +5

    Our old neighborhood in NJ had an old Dutch cemetery in it. Behind it were trails in the woods that we found and old wagon. Pieces of Delft & old bottles.

  • @maxcorey8144
    @maxcorey8144 2 роки тому +5

    Interesting how much better your presentations look due to scanning across or zooming slowly in on photographs rather than just showing them stationary. Same photo but for some reason, more interesting to look at. Big fan here.

  • @amadeusamwater
    @amadeusamwater 2 роки тому +3

    Paper was another commodity made locally in quantity. Ben Franklin was said to have owned several mills. Nathaniel Greene was a noted ironmonger and Anthony Wayne's family ran a tannery. So, there was a fair amount of local industry.

  • @AndyFromBeaverton
    @AndyFromBeaverton 2 роки тому +5

    So who else in the USA watched The Great Pottery Throw Down? A new season just started and I'm addicted to the show.

  • @detroitredneckdetroitredne6674
    @detroitredneckdetroitredne6674 2 роки тому +8

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge and expertise and for taking us on your adventure through time and space and hello from Detroit Michigan brother 94/275

  • @bullettube9863
    @bullettube9863 2 роки тому +2

    I've always known that the colonists made fine furniture, silverware and iron tools but never realized the they made pottery on a large scale. But it makes sense as while the colonists living in port cities had easy access to goods made in England the inland colonists had to make do with local manufacturer. I mean all a potter needed was a good source of clay of reasonable quality and his wheel and he could make and sell pottery. If he had help, he could run a pretty good business!

  • @waltergeorge
    @waltergeorge 2 роки тому +2

    Thank for a great episode on the pottery on the American Colonies. Just further history to back up information I have been reading about Franklin & Washington by Edward Larson , The Founding Partnership. THANKS FOR THE HISTORY!

  • @markusmackay1961
    @markusmackay1961 2 роки тому +5

    Love your videos!!

  • @lisakilmer2667
    @lisakilmer2667 2 роки тому +4

    Very interesting story that elucidates the foolishness of colonial restrictions on the production of goods. I have heard pottery described as early take-away containers - with a short life and needed by the thousands. So it was sensible that Lt. Gov. Gooch decided to ignore/belittle the pottery work's activities. I wonder how many other businesses he protected?

  • @ajg617
    @ajg617 2 роки тому +2

    Williamsburg pottery - went there every time we visited relatives in Gloucester which is also a neat town - spent too much time at the pottery!

  • @be6715
    @be6715 2 роки тому +1

    As a past hobby potter, I very much approve and enjoy this episode. As a lover of history, even more so! The salt glazed mugs at 6:47 show just how 'poor' the quality of pottery was. They look like gloriously straight handles - and it takes some practice to get this. Also the salt glaze is just gorgeous! I would be proud to have them in my collection. :)

  • @daryljohnson3945
    @daryljohnson3945 2 роки тому +3

    I really appreciate your content and your unique delivery. Best wishes from Tennessee.

  • @christopherfisher128
    @christopherfisher128 2 роки тому +2

    Glad to see well made videos like this! I think too many Americans are missing the importance of being a captive market for Europe played in the Revolutionary mindset. Too many have bought into taxation as the primary reason mentality and it is giving a skewed perspective on our history.

  • @mattgeorge90
    @mattgeorge90 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you for sharing!

  • @katmandudawn8417
    @katmandudawn8417 2 роки тому +1

    Virginia has many deposits of good quality clay leading to a long history of pottery and brick manufacture.
    Think of all the stately brick buildings in Williamsburg.
    We also still have Goochland and Spotswood counties named after our early Governors along with many other counties.
    Being land settled by people with a drive and a hunger it should be no surprise that silly rules would not stop them from following their dreams to success.
    Besides Gooch had only to look back to Gov Sir William Berkeley and Bacon’s Rebellion to decide that keeping the local settlers happy was a good idea.

  • @dougalexander7204
    @dougalexander7204 Рік тому +1

    Thank you. Always a class act.

  • @shawnharrington9548
    @shawnharrington9548 2 роки тому +2

    You make the smallest thing interesting.
    Thank you.

  • @fbcpraise
    @fbcpraise 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you, History Guy!

  • @kennyhagan5781
    @kennyhagan5781 2 роки тому +1

    While Cromwell was in power in England, the colonies were left pretty much to their own devices. Very little oversight, as it were.
    The colonists kind of liked this, and it went on long enough for them to get accustomed to it.
    Boy,did they get used to it.

  • @xsagemasterx
    @xsagemasterx 2 роки тому

    great story, i'd like to point out that green paint on the walls @ 10:57 is arsenic also used to make green dresses in that time period.

  • @davidbenner2289
    @davidbenner2289 2 роки тому +1

    Look up John Henry Benner (Johan Heinrich Benner), brought in from a German state pre French and Indian War, and his sons Christopher and Peter, born in the Colonies. Great x4 and 5 grandfathers of mine. Peter a great uncle. Potters. You'll find John Henry's work in museums. John Henry Benner was brought in to set up pottery kilns and make high end pottery. Hingham Colony in Massachusetts. You'll potters were in the Battles of Lexington and Concord.

  • @tinahildenbrand1477
    @tinahildenbrand1477 2 роки тому +1

    Love seeing Williamsburg!

  • @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt
    @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt 2 роки тому +3

    thanks

  • @Doodle1776
    @Doodle1776 2 роки тому

    I am not going to lie, it's neat to hear about William Gooch on the show. My wife is related to him. Her maiden name is Gooch and her family moved from Virginia to Missouri in the 1840s.

  • @constipatedinsincity4424
    @constipatedinsincity4424 2 роки тому +5

    📣BACK IN THE SADDLE AGAIN NATURALLY

  • @Jem777-1
    @Jem777-1 2 роки тому +3

    Excellent 👍

  • @51WCDodge
    @51WCDodge 2 роки тому +5

    Lance Southwark is pronounced Suth -uk. 😁It was rather more famous for it's geese. Being south of the river (A whole diffrent world from them up north) it was outside the City. And in Rogers time was famous as 'A place of Entertainment'. The area was under the Diocise of Winchester . Hence winchester Geese, liccensed ladies of the night.

  • @BasicDrumming
    @BasicDrumming 2 роки тому +1

    I appreciate you, thank you for making content.

  • @constipatedinsincity4424
    @constipatedinsincity4424 2 роки тому +4

    Governor Douche! This sounds like a clean sweep !👌

    • @lisakilmer2667
      @lisakilmer2667 2 роки тому +2

      THat's funny. But unfortunately the name was Gooch. He was a relatively good guy.

    • @markcantemail8018
      @markcantemail8018 2 роки тому +2

      const sincity . great ha ha . I do not think he was related to Lord Douche .

  • @georgehartshorn9018
    @georgehartshorn9018 2 роки тому

    Another great segment. I’m learning more from every one of your videos. Thanks. G.

  • @phillipallen3259
    @phillipallen3259 2 роки тому +1

    The seeds of revelation were carried in pottery.

  • @RetiredSailor60
    @RetiredSailor60 2 роки тому +4

    Toured Jamestown and Williamsburg while stationed in Norfolk/Virginia Beach from 1989-2003.

  • @glencrandall7051
    @glencrandall7051 2 роки тому +7

    Interesting as usual. I don't know why England thought it could run the Americas from so far away. Thank you for sharing. Have a great new year and stay safe.🙂🙂

    • @51WCDodge
      @51WCDodge 2 роки тому +3

      Oh how times change! A lot of English people talk about the US in that manner now. 🤣

    • @goldgeologist5320
      @goldgeologist5320 2 роки тому +4

      British arrogance. Still exists. Lucky for them we came to their rescue in two World Wars considering the history. Never underestimate a common language!

    • @Cypresssina
      @Cypresssina 2 роки тому +2

      It was possibly because they had been doing similar things for hundreds of years. Remember that whole thing where the sun never set on the British empire?

  • @brianburton1843
    @brianburton1843 2 роки тому +4

    I did enjoy this episode. I don't believe, when it comes to The American Revolution, that economic ideas are discussed enough. The early founders of this nation were not just the men who went to Philadelphia. They were also entrepreneurs like William Rodgers. Although all the men at Independence Hall were entrepreneurs. Ben Franklin might have come up with the idea of "franchising" a business.
    (That might be an idea for a "History Guy" episode).
    The Revolutionaries were not just fighting to break away politically from Great Britain but economically as well. Why should they really on manufactured goods from across an ocean. Sometimes of poor quality. When the can make them here.
    Makes you think about current day issues.

  • @kellywalker1664
    @kellywalker1664 2 роки тому

    A separate dive into American glass would also be cool, even if it didn't really pick up steam until after the revolution, like Boston & Sandwich and New Jersey.

  • @georgeclark7208
    @georgeclark7208 2 роки тому +4

    I wonder how Colonists would be expected to have money to buy anything from England without any local merchants or manufacturing.

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  2 роки тому +3

      The idea was that they sell raw materials and buy manufactured ones.

  • @BluespotKneeClinic
    @BluespotKneeClinic 2 роки тому

    The beginnings of the American Dream. Hats off to “The Poor Potter”

  • @pamelamays4186
    @pamelamays4186 2 роки тому +2

    "Poor potter", indeed!

  • @custodialmark
    @custodialmark 2 роки тому +3

    ' i/me am so too poor that am unable to afford a pot to pee in ! '

    • @51WCDodge
      @51WCDodge 2 роки тому

      So you have to waste a valuable resourse! A lot of money in pee,! Cleaning agent, mordicant to fix dyes, mix with the right soil to make Saltpetere .

  • @roberttaylor7637
    @roberttaylor7637 2 роки тому +5

    Another intresting tidbit. I love it. Can we get the history of chimneys

  • @markcantemail8018
    @markcantemail8018 2 роки тому +1

    Lance is there any modern Records pointing to locations from Maine down thru New England giving locations of Broadaxe Blaze on White Pines . That would be another Exciting Video . Thank you for your work .

  • @andysimkin5200
    @andysimkin5200 2 роки тому +3

    There's a lot of poor potters in Stoke-on-Trent now most of our work has migrated to china

  • @danjohnston9037
    @danjohnston9037 2 роки тому +1

    And I bet the kitties love the toy 😏

  • @LongTrout
    @LongTrout 2 роки тому +5

    Nice.

  • @jomiddleton9729
    @jomiddleton9729 2 роки тому

    I didn't know that pottery was made this country thank you for letting me know about the history of pottery

  • @mcRydes
    @mcRydes Рік тому +1

    If anyone is still wondering why the Royal colonial government would be so quick to look the other way when it came to colonial manufacturers, it's worth remembering officials were paid from local tax revenue. And mercantilist policies meant there was such a shortage of money in Virginia they often had to be paid very inconveniently with tobacco leaves. . . but if some enterprising subject offerd to pay his taxes in kind with another good, say some lovely stoneware, why certainly the lieutenant wouldn't complain!

  • @mikeholzwarth3289
    @mikeholzwarth3289 2 роки тому

    I’d love to see a segment on Dangerous Dan Tucker

  • @andyandyfrogy1113
    @andyandyfrogy1113 2 роки тому +1

    Congrats! Can you do one on lamps?

  • @romad275
    @romad275 Рік тому +1

    Interesting that Britain required trade be carried in British registered ships was one of the reasons that led to the American Revolution. These United States still does the same thing in some cases. Of course the Federal government is even more tyrannical now than that of King George III in the 18th Century was and Americans are even more heavily taxed now than they were before the Revolution. Where are John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, et al now when we need them more than before?

  • @FuzzyMarineVet
    @FuzzyMarineVet 2 роки тому +4

    Lance, is there any relationship between "the Poor Potter of Yorktown" and the other famous Americans with the surname Rogers?

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  2 роки тому +3

      We know little about William Rogers as a person, even his birthplace is a matter of speculation. Thus it is difficult to tie him to other people with the same surname.

  • @karlbrundage7472
    @karlbrundage7472 2 роки тому +1

    So... The concept of "Sticking it to the Man" started with the nascent Revolutionaries who informed our Founding Fathers............

  • @jillatherton4660
    @jillatherton4660 2 роки тому +2

    Honest vessels.

  • @RolloTonéBrownTown
    @RolloTonéBrownTown 2 роки тому +1

    Imagine having your last name being Gooch lol

  • @slevinchannel7589
    @slevinchannel7589 Рік тому

    I like Isekai and Time-Travel so i wonder
    oddly-specific this: Whats the best production-method for porcellan that is do-able if you get transported with modern knowledge into ancient Time??

  • @goodun2974
    @goodun2974 2 роки тому +2

    It can't have been an easy feat to hide a sophisticated pottery manufacturing factory right under the noses of British government officials. For one thing, the smoke and the smell of a kiln; when I was tooling around the Greek Islands on a small motorcycle you could smell the charcoal and sulfurous coal of an operational kiln from a half-mile away. And then there's the fact that you have to mine or obtain large quantities of clay of a certain type or quality depending on the type of pottery and ceramic goods you are producing. Did the clay come from local mining operations or was some of it being imported from elsewhere in the colonies?

    • @scottabc72
      @scottabc72 2 роки тому +3

      It wasnt hidden at all, local government officials were protecting it as described in the video.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 2 роки тому +1

      @@scottabc72 , well yes, but surely there were some Crown loyalists in the area.....

    • @scottabc72
      @scottabc72 2 роки тому

      @@goodun2974 This was decades before the revolution, probably everyone involved considered themselves 'loyal' to the crown. In legal terms it was basically just corruption.

  • @SkeeterMcBeater
    @SkeeterMcBeater 2 роки тому +1

    The creation of parallel institutions is necessary for secession.

  • @RolloTonéBrownTown
    @RolloTonéBrownTown 2 роки тому +1

    So was this basically his way of tax evasion? Was Gooch getting a cut of the profits in exchange for under-reporting the pottery business to the crown?

  • @alexchaussette
    @alexchaussette 2 роки тому

    Hello! There's a bit of audio artifacts in this one.

  • @johnmorykwas2343
    @johnmorykwas2343 2 роки тому +1

    Who was the "Mad Potter of Biloxi"? Some artist state he was the world's greatest potter.

    • @STho205
      @STho205 2 роки тому +3

      That was George Ohr. Turn of the 20th Century. A hermit artist of the late Reconstruction and SpanAm to Teddy Roosevelt era

  • @kiwibonsai2355
    @kiwibonsai2355 2 роки тому +3

    Like the poor Billionaires of today.

  • @211212112
    @211212112 2 роки тому

    I think a shovel maker had a role in the revolution too.
    Watch it be this channel I learned that on. Lol

  • @scottdoesntmatter4409
    @scottdoesntmatter4409 Рік тому +1

    And yet, those asinine Brits to this day think of the USA as "the colonies" STILL, and take pride in that.

  • @211212112
    @211212112 2 роки тому

    I think the Potter missing from the record and the quality and scale is his business were arranged that way by the “poor potter.” likely he didn't realize he’d be important to the history and nearly forgot by history so well did he throw Britain off his scent. Likely he wouldn't care much. He seems an immensely practical man much more concerned with the day's chores and profit than with posterity.

  • @jefffoutz4024
    @jefffoutz4024 2 роки тому +2

    Perhaps proving that it is never too early "speak a wee bit o treason" . Borrowed from the movie The Quiet Man

  • @joanhuffman2166
    @joanhuffman2166 Рік тому

    Perhaps Gooch disparaged the potter in order to prevent the British government from putting an end to it.

  • @jimbob3332
    @jimbob3332 2 роки тому

    For some reason I thought this was about a pottery revolution, like how pottery changed us as a species.

  • @gtbkts
    @gtbkts 2 роки тому +1

    Anyone else hearing a hiss and pop in the audio?

  • @georgesheffield1580
    @georgesheffield1580 2 роки тому

    One of the oldest technologies and still up there as an important technology.

  • @gregwall6553
    @gregwall6553 2 роки тому +1

    Wooden shovels, would have been enough BS, for me to paint Red Coats red all over....

  • @SpyGeorgilis
    @SpyGeorgilis 2 роки тому +1

    This is not the pottery you are looking for.

  • @ziggyinta
    @ziggyinta 2 роки тому

    heads up your videos are huge, something to do with the format uploaded before youtube compression

  • @MyMy-tv7fd
    @MyMy-tv7fd 2 роки тому +2

    you are very prolific, so I skip a lot, but this I had to hear

  • @zerentheunskilled
    @zerentheunskilled 2 роки тому +3

    I don't care what you've done or haven't done, with a name like that you only being remembered for one thing.

  • @Dreadwinner
    @Dreadwinner Рік тому

    💚

  • @douglassauvageau7262
    @douglassauvageau7262 Рік тому

    I relish all evidence of the brewers and their art which sparked the 'spirit' of 1776.

  • @kevinquist
    @kevinquist 2 роки тому +1

    fantastic. love your show.

  • @ManuelGarcia-ww7gj
    @ManuelGarcia-ww7gj 2 роки тому

    Be wary of the Waltons in life. They sneak up on you.

  • @korbell1089
    @korbell1089 2 роки тому +1

    So, he was dirt poor?😃

  • @jabbertwardy
    @jabbertwardy 2 роки тому +2

    Falsified reports: When history deserves to be misremembered 😂

  • @CaliMeatWagon
    @CaliMeatWagon 2 роки тому +4

    I think it would be interesting to have you cover cannabis. It has such a long history. And it is intertwined into American history.

  • @merlinwizard1000
    @merlinwizard1000 2 роки тому +1

    46th, 9 January 2023

  • @jeffbangkok
    @jeffbangkok 2 роки тому

    Good night 24 hours later