Great channel!! So knowledgeable, i wish they could make a show using you as an on set reference. Like the 'Vikings' show on history Channel but about the Comanche. I must have watched this 10 times. It never gets old. The Comanche were amazing warriors. I would love to spend weekend after weekend with this guy over a few pints talking about history. He is a treasure of knowledge...
Very, very well researched and narrated. Thank you sir! The fact that the Comanche had named themselves as "the people", and therefore "anyone else didn't qualify" -- 29:39 -- is actually a very common thing among different peoples, ancient and modern. It is quite a routine thing for tribal or ethnic groups to name themselves The People. So, it's us, 'the people', vs. everyone else, who are 'not people', 'not us'. It's yet another expression of human nature, the language of insiders and outsiders, humanising ourselves and demoting others.
100% It is probably not half but a ton of native translations for their own names breaks down to something like “the people.” It’s one of the things that made it so difficult for tribes to organize against Europeans. Their customs didn’t make it easy, their languages outside of their culture group (tribe) were different, they had long standing blood feuds with others tribes (not the people). I am not doing it just here but just this little naming structure alone is present in a ton of culture.
The instant the chiefs understood their position they attacked..How can you not admire that kind of dedication to their beliefs and ways of life..Keep these coming chief !! I can never get enough of native history..APPRECIATE YOU !!!!
Agreed, although I have to say I think I have a type. I watch a gaming UA-camr called Rhadamant who could literally be D&DG's brother lol. Right down to the voice, the calm but concise manner of talking 😍 He really draws me into Native American history.
@@datesanddeadguys Fully intended as a compliment 😁 Thank you for all your wonderful content. As a non-American I was never interested in Native American history until I stumbled across your channel.
@@datesanddeadguys absolutely, it's like the 4th time I'm watching this marathon and I still remain impressed with what you describe in it, also because of the way you do it. Keep up the good work and best of luck👍. maybe let us hear a little more about the lakota next? I'd eat that up.
Excellent video, thanks for producing this compilation. All my favorites on the Comanche Indians and Texas History in the early days of the Texas Rangers and life on the frontier of Texas. 👍👍
Thank you! I thoroughly enjoyed this collection of stories. I appreciate the effort you must have put into your research. Clear pronunciation, and a human voice, makes a great difference. ❤
This is super interesting but it’s almost tough to listen to because of how brutal the Comanches were it’s absolutely terrifying. Those Rangers had balls of steel
There are a few famous artists I lean on for stories about the Comanche. George Catlin is probably the most notable for them specifically but I take a lot of Charles Marion Russell. If you want to see an awesome Modern Artist take a look at Jason Lee Tako. The man makes awesome stuff. What I can’t source from the internet I use AI to supplement, usually using the western painter Frederic Remington as the style source.
@@datesanddeadguys Thanks for the comment! Also thanks for all these great history lessons with such a vivid picture of all the lost stories not appreciated by this new generation of people who have no idea what true real history is!! Also wondering if u could maybe do a video on the indian wars of 1812 in Canada, or also maybe some wars between settlers in Ontario and the Native Americans, its something not taught in schools here most Canadians have absolutely no clue what our past is. Thanks !
@@datesanddeadguys looking forward to them your rare not many have the ability to tell a story that's factual and at the same time be interesting great delivery thank you for taking the time to respond have a great day
Thanks alot , it's what I asked for , a video more then the typical 30min, rly mean it. This is gonna be my go to when going to bed... Thanks for the work
Empire of the Summer Moon is awesome. The gold standard for most people on Comanche history. Especially their downfall. My favorite though is Comanches: A history of a people by T.R. Fehrenbach. The first third especially goes into a ton of fascinating Comanche Culture. My favorite truly primary source is Nine Years Among the Indians by Herman Lehman. It is short but it written by a man who as a child was captured by the Apache and later became a Comanche warrior. It’s fantastic.
This is great the way you have put these stories together. I have had to stop watching then come back and that is just fine with me. All your stories have been great. keep up the good work.
This is very well researched, presented and produced content. You’ve earned yourself a new subscriber in me. Do you suppose you will also do videos eventually about tribes such as the Sioux, Blackfoot, Haida and Cree? I’m from Western Canada so I have some familiarity with these cultures. Will be looking forward to a deep dive into your library!!
The battle of Blanco Canyon would make for an excellent movie or tv series. Talk about an expedition into hell from the perspective of the Americans, and the eluding of the chase from the surprise appearance of the white man into the Comanche heartland. Riveting story the way you told it, and would love for it to be visualized.
This is a good accountability comment. I haven’t touched it in probably six months. I bought a less than high quality draw knife. It is very quick to dull which has me discouraged. It is a project that needs finishing. But I will probably stick to rifle hunting this year.
How did you come out on your boat I made a few of them Comanche bows out of bodark or otherwise Osage Orange by the way I love what you are doing thank you
I read the journals of Lewis and Clark and they said the Buffalo herds were enormous. The group wanted to cross a wide valley but had to wait until a Buffalo herd passed thru..3 days! It took 3 days for the Buffalo Herd to pass by! Lewis said he could have walked across the backs of the Buffalo to reach the other side of the valley
My favorite theory about the size of the buffalo herds for the 1800s is that they were not the norm. The great dying caused by European diseases may have reached west far faster than Europeans. With the Native American tribes decimated by disease the bison populations may have exploded the way that herbivores typically do when you take a predator out of the environment. Anyway. Long story short. The millions of buffalo may have been a temporary aboration. Regardless, It is something I can’t fathom in my mind. Like accounts for German soldiers in WWI taking days without break to travel through towns as they moved to the front.
@@datesanddeadguys I hadn't even crossed my mind. Thousands of native Americans in the east getting wiped out from diseases and if there's not enough to cull the Buffalo herds then the Buffalo herds might have grown exponentially. I had read that there were Buffalo in the eastern states but they migrated west once the east began developing And many native american tribes (what was left of them) migrated west as well...I'm no historian but your theory provokes deeper thought.
I've often wondered if the native peoples settled where they did (prior to the incursion of the Europeans, and forced resettlement) because as more and more people arrived in "North America ' there simply wasn't a vast amount of land. For example why on earth did the Inuit peoples not keep moving south, or anywhere that had a less inhospitable environment. They certainly didn't come from a similar environment. Just imagine having to invent the igloo and the inunnguag (those stone in a sort of human form). What must it have taken. It's easy to think there was a huge amount of land all over North America devoid of tribes but that isn't the case. So many different peoples where utterly wiped out. They no longer exists and no one even knows their names, and this was brought amount by genocide. Not accidentally having gained immunity to small pox and the like, but the deliberate spreading of disease. Later alcohol was used to great affect and still is. Native peoples do not have the ability to process alcohol unlike Europeans who would have gone through a similar period thousands of years ago!❤❤
This is Grandma from Texas. Ya know when I was a kid I was proud that I had Indian blood in me The more I listen to these stories about Indians I’m ashamed. I’m glad that in the end they lost and civilization won.
?? Rachel Parker Plummer lived to be 120 years,?? she was 17 years old when the fort was raided in 1836, right, that meant her birth was in 1819, and she passed in 1939. but no record was found as a supercentenarian list of the oldest women. But Jeanne Calment is the only person whose age has been verified to have reached 120 years: born in 1875 in Arles, France died in 1997, and lived to be 122. The years need to be reinterred in the case of Rachel Parker Plummer.
Great channel!! So knowledgeable, i wish they could make a show using you as an on set reference. Like the 'Vikings' show on history Channel but about the Comanche. I must have watched this 10 times. It never gets old. The Comanche were amazing warriors. I would love to spend weekend after weekend with this guy over a few pints talking about history. He is a treasure of knowledge...
Love and greetings from Germany. This makes me appreciate my easy and safe life.
Very, very well researched and narrated. Thank you sir!
The fact that the Comanche had named themselves as "the people", and therefore "anyone else didn't qualify" -- 29:39 -- is actually a very common thing among different peoples, ancient and modern. It is quite a routine thing for tribal or ethnic groups to name themselves The People. So, it's us, 'the people', vs. everyone else, who are 'not people', 'not us'. It's yet another expression of human nature, the language of insiders and outsiders, humanising ourselves and demoting others.
100% It is probably not half but a ton of native translations for their own names breaks down to something like “the people.” It’s one of the things that made it so difficult for tribes to organize against Europeans. Their customs didn’t make it easy, their languages outside of their culture group (tribe) were different, they had long standing blood feuds with others tribes (not the people). I am not doing it just here but just this little naming structure alone is present in a ton of culture.
You know the greatest thing about this Channel??? I can watch the same videos multiple times... and that's a rarity...
That’s awesome. Thank you.
The instant the chiefs understood their position they attacked..How can you not admire that kind of dedication to their beliefs and ways of life..Keep these coming chief !! I can never get enough of native history..APPRECIATE YOU !!!!
Man I can watch date and dead guys Comanche videos for days.
Great stuff!
Thank you, sir! You walk a higher path, and you are greatly appreciated, sir. ❤👏👊🙌🇺🇲
Honestly man this stuff brings me so much joy compared to other channels, amazing work
This channel is gold pure gold
Agreed, although I have to say I think I have a type. I watch a gaming UA-camr called Rhadamant who could literally be D&DG's brother lol. Right down to the voice, the calm but concise manner of talking 😍 He really draws me into Native American history.
I checked him out. I see what you see.
@@datesanddeadguys Fully intended as a compliment 😁 Thank you for all your wonderful content. As a non-American I was never interested in Native American history until I stumbled across your channel.
That's the rest of my Saturday gone then
I hope time well spent. Thanks for watching.
@@datesanddeadguys absolutely, it's like the 4th time I'm watching this marathon and I still remain impressed with what you describe in it, also because of the way you do it. Keep up the good work and best of luck👍. maybe let us hear a little more about the lakota next? I'd eat that up.
I feel like crap but it's a good day when dates and dead guys post
Feel better, bud. Thanks for watching.
Extraordinary retelling! Fascinating A+++! You earned my following. Thank you.
Thanks for watching
Damn, this is a great channel. Well done.
Excellent video, thanks for producing this compilation. All my favorites on the Comanche Indians and Texas History in the early days of the Texas Rangers and life on the frontier of Texas. 👍👍
Thank you! I thoroughly enjoyed this collection of stories. I appreciate the effort you must have put into your research. Clear pronunciation, and a human voice, makes a great difference. ❤
Thank you. A ton of time goes into research. It’s my favorite part. I am happy people like how it comes out.
This is super interesting but it’s almost tough to listen to because of how brutal the Comanches were it’s absolutely terrifying. Those Rangers had balls of steel
Thank you much for taking us back in time. Who is your artist?
If im not mistaken most of his background pictures are from different artists from the old west who painted these portraits of the Great Indians
There are a few famous artists I lean on for stories about the Comanche. George Catlin is probably the most notable for them specifically but I take a lot of Charles Marion Russell. If you want to see an awesome Modern Artist take a look at Jason Lee Tako. The man makes awesome stuff. What I can’t source from the internet I use AI to supplement, usually using the western painter Frederic Remington as the style source.
@@datesanddeadguys Thanks for the comment! Also thanks for all these great history lessons with such a vivid picture of all the lost stories not appreciated by this new generation of people who have no idea what true real history is!! Also wondering if u could maybe do a video on the indian wars of 1812 in Canada, or also maybe some wars between settlers in Ontario and the Native Americans, its something not taught in schools here most Canadians have absolutely no clue what our past is. Thanks !
Any videos you want to put out on history retold is always great with your abilities of telling them I've watched every one you've done at least twice
I happy you like them. I am working on some stories right now I am very excited about.
@@datesanddeadguys looking forward to them your rare not many have the ability to tell a story that's factual and at the same time be interesting great delivery thank you for taking the time to respond have a great day
Great compilation! Thanks!
Can't wait to see the Sioux( Sue ) documentary. Great documentary, well done. Respect.
Thanks alot , it's what I asked for , a video more then the typical 30min, rly mean it. This is gonna be my go to when going to bed... Thanks for the work
Best channel ever
This channel inspired a historical fiction book in writing about the Comanche
Excellent stuff. Thanks for making these. Chronicle the old west without wokeness. Nobody is doing this.
@@tylermoulton7294 Read it man. Awesome book. Catch the Joe Rogan podcast with S. C. Gwynne. Great interview.
Back then there was no wokeness & only 2 sexes lol
Indigenous PEOPLE are literally doing this.
-COMANCHE NATION
@@thechiefwildhorse4651Glad to see you’re still causing trouble.😊 Haven’t seen you in a few.
Learn another tune Jesus Christ
Will you an video Yamasee tribes of South Carolina please.
Love these videos
I’m on a tour bus
Great for passing time
Btw ….i did read Empire of the summer moon
Empire of the Summer Moon is awesome. The gold standard for most people on Comanche history. Especially their downfall. My favorite though is Comanches: A history of a people by T.R. Fehrenbach. The first third especially goes into a ton of fascinating Comanche Culture. My favorite truly primary source is Nine Years Among the Indians by Herman Lehman. It is short but it written by a man who as a child was captured by the Apache and later became a Comanche warrior. It’s fantastic.
This is great the way you have put these stories together. I have had to stop watching then come back and that is just fine with me. All your stories have been great. keep up the good work.
Absolutely. Thank you for taking the time.
3hrs , great idea 👍👍 tya
Simply outstanding Sir. Your research and delivery is 2nd too none. I enjoy your material and channel emeansly.
More Please & Thank You.
Great job!!
This is very well researched, presented and produced content. You’ve earned yourself a new subscriber in me. Do you suppose you will also do videos eventually about tribes such as the Sioux, Blackfoot, Haida and Cree? I’m from Western Canada so I have some familiarity with these cultures. Will be looking forward to a deep dive into your library!!
You’re a good writer. It makes your videos. SO many creators are not.
I really enjoyed this. 👍✌️
The battle of Blanco Canyon would make for an excellent movie or tv series. Talk about an expedition into hell from the perspective of the Americans, and the eluding of the chase from the surprise appearance of the white man into the Comanche heartland. Riveting story the way you told it, and would love for it to be visualized.
Justice looks different when $$$
Benefits one side 🎉
3 hours?? don't mind if i do ...
glad you upgraded the mic - tell me, how is that bow coming along?
This is a good accountability comment. I haven’t touched it in probably six months. I bought a less than high quality draw knife. It is very quick to dull which has me discouraged. It is a project that needs finishing. But I will probably stick to rifle hunting this year.
@@datesanddeadguys look into a good ceramic knife
How could have a mutual agreement on both sides, changed our current relationship...
Sad, sad, sad..
Yess🔥🔥🔥🔥
Kiowa here . Only 1-/ 8th. My grandmother talks to me
Hard to explain
Live in Wyoming. Shashone.
Sounds fishy
How did you come out on your boat I made a few of them Comanche bows out of bodark or otherwise Osage Orange by the way I love what you are doing thank you
I read the journals of Lewis and Clark and they said the Buffalo herds were enormous.
The group wanted to cross a wide valley but had to wait until a Buffalo herd passed thru..3 days! It took 3 days for the Buffalo Herd to pass by! Lewis said he could have walked across the backs of the Buffalo to reach the other side of the valley
My favorite theory about the size of the buffalo herds for the 1800s is that they were not the norm. The great dying caused by European diseases may have reached west far faster than Europeans. With the Native American tribes decimated by disease the bison populations may have exploded the way that herbivores typically do when you take a predator out of the environment.
Anyway. Long story short. The millions of buffalo may have been a temporary aboration. Regardless, It is something I can’t fathom in my mind. Like accounts for German soldiers in WWI taking days without break to travel through towns as they moved to the front.
@@datesanddeadguys I hadn't even crossed my mind.
Thousands of native Americans in the east getting wiped out from diseases and if there's not enough to cull the Buffalo herds then the Buffalo herds might have grown exponentially.
I had read that there were Buffalo in the eastern states but they migrated west once the east began developing
And many native american tribes (what was left of them) migrated west as well...I'm no historian but your theory provokes deeper thought.
Yeah I'd like to hear about bad 😔 bad hand McKenzie .
Yes pla tell the whole story
At 12900 seems like supplies supplied to all involved would have a major outcome.
Obviously none of the officers had a copy of "the Art of War" in their library.......these aren't tragedies, but blatant stupidity.
"KNOW YOUR ENAMY"
Pls do a Mongol version.
I've often wondered if the native peoples settled where they did (prior to the incursion of the Europeans, and forced resettlement) because as more and more people arrived in "North America ' there simply wasn't a vast amount of land. For example why on earth did the Inuit peoples not keep moving south, or anywhere that had a less inhospitable environment. They certainly didn't come from a similar environment. Just imagine having to invent the igloo and the inunnguag (those stone in a sort of human form). What must it have taken.
It's easy to think there was a huge amount of land all over North America devoid of tribes but that isn't the case. So many different peoples where utterly wiped out. They no longer exists and no one even knows their names, and this was brought amount by genocide. Not accidentally having gained immunity to small pox and the like, but the deliberate spreading of disease. Later alcohol was used to great affect and still is. Native peoples do not have the ability to process alcohol unlike Europeans who would have gone through a similar period thousands of years ago!❤❤
This is Grandma from Texas. Ya know when I was a kid I was proud that I had Indian blood in me The more I listen to these stories about Indians I’m ashamed. I’m glad that in the end they lost and civilization won.
Why you scare the shit out of me with rhetorical question like this? 02:04:33
👍🏻
Kiowa sum beach 😅
Ya it is cr3
Fngh spell check
?? Rachel Parker Plummer lived to be 120 years,?? she was 17 years old when the fort was raided in 1836, right, that meant her birth was in 1819, and she passed in 1939. but no record was found as a supercentenarian list of the oldest women. But Jeanne Calment is the only person whose age has been verified to have reached 120 years: born in 1875 in Arles, France died in 1997, and lived to be 122. The years need to be reinterred in the case of Rachel Parker Plummer.
He meant 1839.😊
Tell ALL the stories. Do not give in to woke politics. Knowledge is NEVER bad.
They were granted a plot that didn't belong to the United States.
Can we agree/ land was taken by force, not responsibility 🤔.
Smithwick....Old English name,pronounced ....Smithick.The "w" is silent.Common in many English words.Great video.
Why did we let any of them live
Literally any of them
IT'S TIME FOR BLOOD🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸🩸