The Sounds of Presidents - The Voice of 24 US Presidents
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- čas přidán 5. 08. 2024
- this is a compilations of the voices of United States presidents. the earliest recording of a US presidents being Benjamin Harrison in 1889, recorded on a wax cylinder to the current US president as of 2022 being Joe Biden. Thanks for Watching.
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/ @historicalnonsense7526
Video Chapters
0:00 Benjamin Harrison
0:29 Grover Cleveland
1:07 William McKinley
1:58 Theodore Roosevelt
2:49 William Howard Taft
3:42 Woodrow Wilson
4:19 Warren G. Harding
4:57 Calvin Coolidge
5:27 Herbert Hoover
6:04 Franklin D. Roosevelt
7:00 Harry S. Truman
7:31 Dwight D. Eisenhower
8:03 John F. Kennedy
8:31 Lyndon B. Johnson
8:58 Richard Nixon
9:33 Gerald R. Ford
10:03 Jimmy Carter
10:45 Ronald Regan
11:51 George H. W. Bush
12:29 Bill Clinton
13:03 George W. Bush
13:33 Barrack Obama
14:43 Donald J. Trump
15:26 Joe Biden
⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⡿⠿⠿⠿⠿⢿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿
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George Washington 🇺🇸
John Adams 🇺🇸
Thomas Jefferson 🇺🇸
James Madison 🇺🇸
James Monroe 🇺🇸
John Quincy Adams 🇺🇸
Andrew Jackson 🇺🇸
Martin Van Buren 🇺🇸
William Henry Harrison 🇺🇸
John Tyler 🇺🇸
James K. Polk 🇺🇸
Zachary Taylor 🇺🇸
Millard Fillmore 🇺🇸
Franklin Pierce 🇺🇸
James Buchanan 🇺🇸
Abraham Lincoln 🇺🇸
Andrew Johnson 🇺🇸
Ulysses S. Grant 🇺🇸
Rutherford B. Hayes 🇺🇸
James A. Garfield 🇺🇸
Chester A. Arthur 🇺🇸
0:29 Grover Cleveland 🇺🇸
0:00 Benjamin Harrison 🇺🇸
0:29 Grover Cleveland 🇺🇸
1:07 William McKinley 🇺🇸
1:58 Theodore Roosevelt 🇺🇸
2:49 William Howard Taft 🇺🇸
3:42 Woodrow Wilson 🇺🇸
4:19 Warren G. Harding 🇺🇸
4:57 Calvin Coolidge 🇺🇸
5:26 Herbert Hoover 🇺🇸
6:04 Franklin D. Roosevelt 🇺🇸
7:00 Harry S. Truman 🇺🇸
7:31 Dwight D. Eisenhower 🇺🇸
8:03 John F. Kennedy 🇺🇸
8:31 Lyndon B. Johnson 🇺🇸
8:59 Richard M. Nixon 🇺🇸
9:33 Gerald R. Ford 🇺🇸
10:03 Jimmy Carter 🇺🇸
10:45 Ronald Reagan 🇺🇸
11:51 George H.W. Bush 🇺🇸
12:30 Bill Clinton 🇺🇸
13:03 George W. Bush 🇺🇸
13:33 Barack Obama 🇺🇸
14:43 Donald Trump 🇺🇸
15:26 Joe Biden 🇺🇸
Joe biden🇨🇳
No voice recording of Grover Cleveland exists. That recording is actually of William Jennings Bryan.
@@user-yc1kj9xc2b correct
@@user-yc1kj9xc2bDonald Trump 🇷🇺
@@SomeRamdomAhole true
I love how Theodore Roosevelt sounds exactly like I imagined him sounding.
I was thinking he had a low-pitched voice!
Robin Williams did a good job replicating his voice in Night at the Museum
@@dixiebrown7721 I always have too! 😁
Man that looks a Chad, has a smooth voice
same for me lol
Benjamin Harrison still somehow has a better microphone than most people on Discord 💀
He has a better mic than doober43
Fr
Ye
@@Gold20427chip
No he doesn’t
JFK’s voice is so damn iconic
I immediately think of Clone High every time he’s mentioned
“But I WANT it!”
Vote Quimby
Lisser!!
Most overrated president in US history
there’s something so crazy about hearing the voices of people who were born damn near 200 years ago.
America just sounded like a bunch of Brits, until the late 1940s. According to this, then the American transatlantic twang started to kick in from Eisenhower onwards. Imagine how these early presidents would react listening to George Bush Jr and Joe Biden, they would be shocked :-D
@@Rowlph8888 Not really, the American accents has been distinct from the British accents since the first settlement on Jamestown. Even by the Revolution, multiple American regions already had their own distinct accents from the British.
Instead what you are hearing are, from the early 1900s onwards to the 1930s are mostly Mid-Atlantic accents, or the “newsman” accent of the day.
@@sunshineimperials1600 Mate, I don't know if you're exercising some kind of stubborn patriotism, in the face of clear auditory evidence, because I'm English and I speak with an accent close to British received pronunciation, and all of these guys, up to Eisenhower, speak almost pure RP, with the exception of Taft, who has a slight transatlantic twang and the 1st 3 guys, in the 19th-century, who speak "posh" effete, aristocratic British. You may have researched that somewhere about sounds changing right from Jamestown, but you cannot hold onto, what you hear in theory, which is subject to propaganda, in the face of "CLEAR STARK EVIDENCE" in front of your ears. I've listened to Congress members speaking when Churchill went to ask for help during the Second World War and all of these guys up until Eisenhower, speaking here and these accnts are no different from what you. would hear in educated circles in the south of England, right now.
@@Rowlph8888 Received Pronunciation and the “Trans-Atlantic” accents are just variants of each other, and nobody spoke this accent outside of the upper class or in official function, such as when Congress was in session. Wasn’t aware that the average Briton spoke with the RP accent without any sort of regional differentiation.
Noted that you’re from South England, which certainly explains things as they definitely have their superiority complexes.
@@sunshineimperials1600 Hey, I was objectively reasoning and there are another couple of videos of these presidents speaking and I didn't hear the lunacy of this video here, so that's why I made the comment about these guys speaking close to RP, precisely because that is what they are doing, I didn't make any comment about the generral population.
I just call out hypocrisy where I see it, and on this video Plenty of people's comments were referring to these guys accents as if they were clear regional accents, which couldnt be further from the truth
If you think the general population with a clear regional accent, then just say That, but don't come out with some BS, that these guys we can hear with our own ears are Speaking with a transatlantic accent, like someone like George Bush, or Obama or Clinton are on the same video, because you're propagating a delusion. If that is what you are Saying.There is a clear distinction and obviously the transatlantic twang has got much stronger and more prominent in The last 70 years, than before that time
This has FA to do with a superiority complex.what has people speaking with a British accent got to do with feeling superior, it's not like I'm saying anything about being tthe best, it's just an accent
I searched online and actually found a transcript of what Benjamin Harrison said in his recording.
"As president of the United States, I was present at the first Pan-American congress in Washington DC. I believe that with God's help, our two countries shall continue to live side-by-side in peace and prosperity" - Benjamin Harrison
This helps a lot
pan 🥘
@@agentorange5167yes
It is so crazy how much subtitles can help you understand what they are saying
@@nameredacted6221 Ikr
Fun fact: after leaving politics, Benjamin Harrison had a career as the voice actor for all the adult characters in the Charlie Brown movies.
😂
Lol
😂😂😂😂
Wah wah wah, wah wah wah wah!
😂
Always remember the words of Benjamin Harrison “oughfegerthtyoupoeransen”
What an amazing man
over a century later and the current president says the same thing xD
@@SsbPrimeWe’ve come a long way, baby!
He was just quoting Benjamin Harrison @@SsbPrime
@@SMoCOcoa I'm able to read
Over 100 years later, and those words still stand every bit as strong as the day they were first spoken. Oughfegerththtyoupoeransen FOREVER!!!! USA USA USA!! 🇺🇸
For those that wonder why the earlier Presidents in this list talked in that strange cadence and seemed to emphasize every word. It was actually a speaking technique that was taught called "Oratory". Basically, in days before microphones and amplified sound, to be heard in a crowd of thousands, you had to speak from deep in your chest so your voice kind of boomed and also had to emphasize every word so your voice would carry to the farthest corners of wherever you were speaking.
This should be a top comment. Common in theatre back then as well (and then carried over into movies).
It kinda sounds like church preaching (especially in black American churches), which also makes sense.
I'm not even sure what I expected Calvin Coolidge to sound like, but I'm still surprised
im surprised that he sounds just like Jfk
One of his most defining features on his face is his nose so him having a nasally voice just made sense to me.
Coolidge had a sharp Vermont twang to his speech, but I find it fitting to his appearance
Pepperidge Farm remembers
I mean, no offense but, "less manly" is what I'd say
Fun Fact: Rutherford B Hayes also had his voice recorded. Unfortunately, that recording was lost, so we'll never know what his voice sounded like.
L to the guy who lost hayes voice
I'd imagine it'd be the same with Garfield and Arthur too.
If only microphones and recordings were invented before George Washington became President.
I found it
czcams.com/video/X8piwAWJxCw/video.html
@@DAVID-xb7ov It was the tech of the time. You record notes by cutting notches or grooves into a material using a vibrating instrument, yeah? Well, downside of that, the very property of the materials that allows them to be so carved also allows them to warp and distort easily. The earliest recordings were actually done on wax, of all things.
Harrison was born in 1833…190 years ago and here we are hearing his voice.
Dude come on lol. I’d hardly call it “hearing his voice”. More like hearing static trying to record it
I could only make out the first few sentences tbh.
@@jd0879Grovey’s wasn’t too bad and born in 1837.
@@jd0879What? It’s a recording of his voice on wax probably, of course there will be static 🙄
If you think that's crazy we have photographs of soldiers from the Revolutionary War
The first half of Taft's speech got a sick beat.
Fr
You know that someone out there is going to make a FnF mode about that, because there’s a mod for pretty much anything nowadays
@@PunishedKrab I hope somebody will do that.
WHO'S FARTING
lul I started grooving to it after like 10 seconds
I’ve often thought about how no living person knows what leaders like Abraham Lincoln’s or George Washington’s voices sounded like and never will again.
We usually just slap a deep and wise voice on them
@@thebasedspectre3048 According to contemporary testimony, Washington was apparently very soft spoken, especially in his later years. And Lincoln was reported to have a higher pitched voice than you’d expect for his face.
@@TheNightWatcher1385 really holy shit I was going to write how funny it would've been if Lincoln had a high pitched voice
Washington’s voice was so quiet because he has some problems with his larynx even before his presidency.
@@thebasedspectre3048 Daniel Day Lewis’ portrayal of Lincoln’s voice is pretty close to the real thing I imagine.
Hats off to Benjamin Harrison for recording inside a pipe
Nah, he was zoom calling someone
The reason why his recording sounds so bad is because of his beard believe it or not. His beard kept on interfering with the mic.
@@C_white8really?
WOW!! Sound technology has come a long way in 130 years! Pres. Taft's voice sounds remarkably good and clear for the early 1910's!
Possibly. Taft died in 1930. By that time the sound era of motion pictures had begun. The recording technology--while still growing--was much better than it had been in the 1910s. (The Bela Lugosi version of "Dracula" was filmed in late 1930 for a sound quality comparison.) This Taft speech might have been recorded a little later in his life.
@@davidgradwell8830 Thanx! Makes sense!
@@davidgradwell8830 Harrison’s voice is the equivalent of one bit
It may have been recorded later on in his life. Keep in mind, after his presidency, Taft would return to Washington D.C., moving from the executive branch to the judicial branch of government. He was a Chief Justice of the Supreme Court later on in life.
@@hgodvilla00 Thanx for the update! 😊
In The early recordings The presidents have a British esque accent, it's fascinating how the general
American accent changed over the years
I caught that as well. It's very interesting!
@@Dranwulf it confused me but I guess thats just the early mid atlantic accent good thing we shed the British elements
@@bezllama3325 Believe it or not, we can still find a colonial English accent if you know the right secluded places in the United States. And colonial isn't close to modern British accents!
This is what I just said. Listen to Queen Elizabeth II, for a "posh" British accent and the 1st 3 presidents here iin the 19th-century, have that accent - It sounds effete and a bit artificial.Then notice all of these presidents in the 20th-century, up to Eisenhower, have an "RP" middle-class, neutral, educated Brit accent, like,Tom Hiddleston or Benedict Cumberbatch and had "lost" the posh elements.Then from Eisenhower onwards. there is a Gradual emergence of the distinct American twang. It's safe to say that the founding fathers all spoke "Posh" British
Isn’t it called TransAtlantic accent?
I find it fascinating how not just the accents subtly change, but the entire manner of speaking does. Not that it becomes more 'casual', but that our perceptions of oratory in politics have shifted so much. Compare for instance Reagan's simple but effective speech, to Harding's use of various pompous metaphors.
It's basically "initially"(Late 19th century) from "posh" British, through "RP" middle-class British in the 1st half of the 20th century(e.g. Tom Hiddleston)… and from Eisenhower onwards there is the clear Transatlantic North American accent begins to emerge "distinctly" and then becomes predominant through the 70s … I'm surprised it took so long and then after the 60s changed so rapidly, at least to the common ear.
I guess this could signify how USA kicked off big time in population growth, marketing and so many other genres after the Second World War and a stronger identity emerged as a result
Consider how oratory used to be slow and deliberate, distinct words needing to be heard over large crowds without amplification. That requires frequent pauses, something which disappears as amplification technology improves.
I always thought that the turn of the century would be about as far back as you could go without being able to have natural conservations. (Because of slang, style, etc).
But listen to William Howard Taft. Assuming his parents and grandparents were born in the 1700s/1800s, and he could speak with them naturally, I bet we would too.
Reagan was the one who turned American political discourse into incoherent slobbering and sticking to one-syllable words. I found his attitude that the American people are all idiots and need to be spoken to like children pretty condescending. Unfortunately this approach has more and more backers every year, especially in the Trump faction
Honestly didn’t expect Coolidge’s voice to sound as deep as it did
True I thought it would have been higher pitched
I was NOT expecting Calvin Coolidge to have such a voice….
SAME BRO?
FR
Same thing
Same
He looks kinda like a soyboy but I wasn't expecting him to sound like Squidward
Benjamin Harrison sounds like a Skype call with grandparents
He was talking through Skype with his granddad
Facts
His grandfather was president too!!
@@PrisPringle this is correct!
william henry harrison, the 8th president, is benjamin harrison’s grandfather!
@@photonbee1932 w h Harrison was number 9
TR not only was a gigachad, but he had a voice of a gigachad
Spot of tea.
Fr agreed
@@Humanresouces ☕️☕️
TR was a beta
@@stratinolampino and one of the best presidents we ever had. On top of the fact he was also a former soldier who rode on horseback.
There’s something about FDR’s voice that just draws you in. I don’t know how to describe it.
Which is probably why millions of Americans tuned in to hear his fireside chats.
@@briankady1456 Also why he won 4 elections
Also why he prolonged the Great Depression with his utterly stupid " New Deal ".
Let me answer your question, it draws you in because it sounds British. Listen to how he says “prepare, danger, covers, etc.”
@@royale7620 yeah, it only saved our country but whatever, idiot.
Imagine 100 years in the future they create another video like this and it includes:
“Obamna”
“SODAAAA!!!”
"corn pop"
@@JerryKosloski yes corn pop, but also obamna. The last two presidents are walking gaff machines and it’s embarrassing we elected them
?
I cried in laughter when they had the troll face on Nixon when he said “Well I’m not a crook” 😂😂 Also the troll face on Clinton. 😂 Y’all are horrible. 😂😂
Of all the speech examples they could have used for them. Lol
I mean, are they wrong 😂😂😂
Love when the uploader has a sense of humor 😂
Should have put it over biden babbling too
😂 trump’s was good too.
8:20 “We choose to go to the moon...” God I love that speech, historical, inspirational, it is perhaps the best speech an American president ever gave
Why does Rice play Texas😂😂
@@dmpdagamer he knew how to get the audience’s attention 😂
and then he got the CIA angry at him...
@@nomoreschro8381hahahaha No
Who
I like Eisenhower's style, confident and straightforward.
The 1st president to start sounding American.Then it gradually got stronger from there
He was probably one of the most charismatic presidents ever honestly
Being confident, straightforward, and authoritative is pretty much a requirement to be a good general like he was
That's a Kansas accent for ya!
Can’t believe you used the water gate speech for nixon 😂
And Lewinsky speech for Clinton... xD
I know, right? Lol
@@kaymuldoon3575it is funny tho
To me, William Howard Taft sounds more like a regular guy, rather than the formal voices of yesteryear (like McKinley, TR, Harding, Wilson).
I noticed that too. He sounds wealthy and educated but still has a casual style. It’s nice to hear.
I thought the same thing, he dropped that almost British sound and was the first to sound “American”
Very much so. I noticed too.
He sounded very midwestern
Taft is memed as "the fat one," but he really is an underrated president.
Most of them actually sound like I imagined they would
yes
Does Calvin Coolidge?
Yeah, pretty much. I guess if anything else I'd have expected him to sound like Hoover.
My fellow American what do u expect my voice sounded like?
I could make a joke here but I don't know if it should be made
I think the thumping in William tafts speech is his heart pumping as hard as it can to keep the old flea bag alive
And yet he lived nearly another 20 years after that recording.
God damn
In his defense, he lost like 100 pounds before he died in 1930
Dang bro..what did he do to you?
Damn man, what did Taft do to you?
There is audio recordings of Chester Arthur. The brief speech he gave at the opening of the Brooklyn Bridge in New York City in 1883. This recording captures only a few sentences of his voice, but it is a valuable historical artifact nonetheless
link?
I assume this recording is lost to time?
where can i find it?
@@Blockly806the recording was sadly lost
Hayes' recording was also lost. Hayes was the first president to actually do a voice recording, but it was lost.
*Casually playing an online fps game*
That one dude on your team the whole game: 0:01
Benjamin Harrison really said "Ẍ̴̨̨̨̢̨̢̛̛̺͓̘͇͚͓̗͉̗̪͇̝̳͖̙͙̝̜̱̼͔͉̜͙̰̯̫̜̖͉͎͉̠̩͚̦̳͉͎̯̦̪̯̗̤̻̜́̆̀̇̈́́̔̄̐̀̇͆̐͐͛͗͐͒̆̓̏̈́̈́̀̀̎͑̽̆̉̔̊͒͒͆̓̂̅̆̓́͗͛̓̿̈́͆̽͑̋̽̈́̿͘̕̚̕̕͘̕̕̕̚̚̕͘̚̕͜͜͜͝͝͝ģ̴̢̡̨̛̛̺͔̲̻̠̬̠̬̤̠̱̝͎̹͚̜̫̼̠̼̭͕̭̰̞̞͈̬̰̻̜̯͙̟͔̹̙̤̼͕̹̣̘̤̱̼͎̲͍̇̅̊͊̊̍̊͑̀̔̓͋̓̃̈́͋͛̌́͊̋̐̽̿̃̓̑̈͐̅̋̀̉̎̿͌̃̊͌̓̈̋͑̈́̈́̄̿̇̊͐̊̑̓̿́̆͋́͐̃͌̐̌̔̂̀͋͊̆̀̈́͗̀̔̃̎̽͊̓̎̀̈́̊̿̈̀͆̽̾̈́̈͗͂̓͆͋̑̏̓̿̐̅̃͑̈́̈́́̑̽̂̅̏͊̏̾́̌̎̈́̇̀̑̿̽̽̅̊̉̚͘͘̚͘͘̕̚͘̕̚̚͜͝͠͠͝͠͝͠͝͠͝ͅc̶̨̡̛̛̰̀̐͂̆̈̋̏́̆͑̑̀̒̆͒̇̒͐̃͆̽͗̈́͆͑̿̃̈́̈̀͐̈́̌̀̈́͊̂͊̑͌̇͂͑͘̚̕̚͘͘̕͘̕͝"
2:49 I started humming "Do I Wanna Know" to that thumping sound when Taft was talking.
Watching the voice recordings getting smoother and easier to understand shows how far technology has progressed
I definitely understood what Benjamin Harrison said 😂
Fr
the only thing i caught was “washington D.C”
Well i'm not an english fluent, but i cannot be the only one who could not understand him.
It really hit me when he specifically said "As President asdfljkhwq eliuopodflbk xceroi0 ewaskjlfdh..."
@ReportalPlays Ok
Benjamin Harrison sounds like the person who says “WHO TOUCHED MY SPAGHETTI”
Lol that is so true
This is fascinating! I fully expected Teddy Roosevelt's voice to be quite a bit lower and more bombastic! Of all the choice's for Bill Clinton 😂👍!
That's Hollywood for you. All those old movies depicted Theodore Roosevelt with that booming voice ("Bully!") as well as the play (and movie) "Arsenic and Old Lace." Most people were better acquainted with the actual voice of Franklin Roosevelt, rather than the voice of his cousin, Theodore. TR couldn't broadcast to the people every week as FDR was able to. (No radio in the early 1900s!) Hollywood movies filled in the blank for Theodore's voice, just as they had with Lincoln's voice ( a strong, solemn voice for Abe, rather than a high-pitched one, which he reputedly had.)
Robin Williams does a good job at portraying Theodore Roosevelt in Night at the Museum.
@@Benjifan2000 Yes, I'd agree, Robin certainly captured the assertiveness I would expect from accounts of Theodore Roosevelt, I think one of my favorite presidents!
Benjamin Harrison sounds like a incomprehensible horror from another dimension
Benjamin Harrison, Lord of the Forgotten
Fr
He was just a portly grandpa with ptsd
@@thebohemiancowboy2805that description makes me love him
I love how you put that troll face on Nixon for the split second when he said "I'm not a crook" 😂
That was childish
Something about that static sound that I love so much with the recordings of Benjamin Harrison.
0:01 quality was so fire🔥🔥
It's like 140 years old, I'll give it a pass
It sounds like that one bro’s mic
They couldn't have picked a better speech by Reagan. I still get goosebumps when I think of him saying "Mr. Gorbechev, TEAR DOWN THIS WALL!!!"
And he couldn't have picked a worse one for Trump lol
@@alecoram7874 You're right especially since it was taken out of context.
@@alecoram7874nah, I’d say that speech pretty accurately sums up how chaotic Trumps presidency was.
@@Buskeeeeeeee get ready for 4 more years 🤷
@@alecoram7874 unfortunately after Biden’s piss poor performance that might be the case. This country is the shits.
Carter has such a dignified voice.
Yes, he does!
I reminds me of my grandfather reading me a book
Tf you talking bout. He sounded like a 4th grade teacher trying to get you to do your homework
@@Worklikeyoushouldbe
Lol yeah okay Heinrich, how about YOU work for ME forever and I get to sit back and relax.
@@AlexDeLarge1 get back to work!! 😉
Both Coolidge and Hoover sound like if someone was doing a stupid voice for them based on what they look like
I didn’t expect Coolidge’s voice to be quite so nasal.
Thank you for having that clip in full. A lot of people didn’t know what was actually said. ❤
Which clip?
@@EliteKnight97 well there was even more said condemning racism, but which President has been the most attacked by media in US history?
wow I love Theodore Roosevelt’s voice
I was thinking he had a low-pitched voice because of his mustache!
@@dixiebrown7721same, for our most manly president besides Andrew Jackson he had a very high pitch voice
He sounds as soy boy as he was
@@stratinolampino Yeah!
@@stratinolampino small question, why do you hate Roosevelt? As I have seen you twice now speaking against Teddy, honest question.
I like how Nixon had a troll face when he said he wasn’t a criminal
Another one was on Clinton
William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, and William Howard Taft sound exactly as I thought they would.
As an Englishman, I am fascinated by how "British" so many of the accents sounded, up to and including FDR. I've noticed this too in some of the Holywood films of the 1930s and 40s, in which so many American actors have distinctly British vowels and cadences.
It was important for filmmaking so that you could hear the actors clearly on early sound equipment. They called it the “transatlantic” accent. Actors and public speakers were trained to speak that way in the interest of recording.
A good number of those actors were british born.
Not British. It's a mid-Atlantic accent. It's usually affected.
Before world war 2, there was a great sociolinguistic divide between the upper and lower classes in the united states. One of these indicators was rhoticism, and the presidents from more well endowed families and schools tend to demonstrate non-rhoticism. Similarly in England this was the case. Many regional accents in the uk were rhotic, and some still are today, such as the west country dialect. After the war, Americans enjoyed greater levels of prosperity and had access to better education than before. The upper class dialects lost their prestige and regional dialects were able to thrive.
In the UK, prestige dialects maintained their status and it's why the "queen's English" or RP is still used today among the most well off old money Britons.
Presidents like the Roosevelts were from a pretty important New York family. To this day there are still dialectal differences among new yorkers based on status, borough, and ethnicity.
Pretty much saying that presidents didn't always sound like your regular American because of the class divide that existed during that time, not because of a shift away from Britain.
@ladyprudence6 No, it wasn't.
The Northeastern US was predominantly settled by people from Southern England, and so, surprise, they spoke like people from Southern England.
The rest of USA had influx of north England, Scotland, Ireland, plus Germany, Sweden etc. and so mixed American accent(s) developed.
Over time British-sounding Northeast accent steadily became more and more like General American. These recordings(plus people like Hepburn) captured the shifting of the accent from the older, more British-sounding to the modern sounding accent of today. Nothing affected or artificial about it at all.
the way kennedy pronounced 'decade' as 'decayed' made me laugh
Boy is Taft's heart bounding hard during his speech. I have expected him to break out in song.
It’s crazy how different the flags looked back. It shows how far America has came.
"I believe the american people have self control and the ability to learn from their mistakes"
Boy I love teddy, but that quote could not have aged worse.
Fascinating how the language has evolved over the years. The American accent has obviously changed drastically over the decades!
A lot of them, particularly the early ones, were speaking in a very oratory style. Not how a typical American would speak in daily life.
Me personally I think Eisenhower or Truman has the best voice something about it just seems so patriotic
I’ve always liked Harry Truman’s voice. For some reason he sounds like a grandpa to me. It’s very comforting.
That's because,before Eisenhower, you might as well be listening to the British Prime Minister, so it's disconcerting thinking that may be IIndependence will be revoked soon 😁
@@kaymuldoon3575fun fact: he is the only us president from Missouri
When McKinley said "My fellow citizens" I was expecting him to continúe saying "It is I, the great William McKinley"
I love Carter’s calm style
Love his Georgia accent, too.
It's the weak voice of a weak man
Nobody:
Bill Clinton: I did not have sexual relationships with that woman
Monica Lewinsky "
I just wish we could hear the voices of presidents like George Washington and Abe Lincoln
This was very good I loved it, thank you.
President Harrison was the forefather of bad audible calls you get on your cell phone. 😂
Benjamin Harrison is like our teacher on the zoom class
I always wondered what Abraham Lincoln’s voice sounded like.
Though I’ve heard it was described as “floaty” and “annoying”
And higher pitched than you might expect is what I've read.
I've heard that his voice was high pitched and raspy. The movie Lincoln has a fairly accurate approximation of what he sounded like.
I love through out all the years the audio quality gets better and better with each president
Taft and Eisenhower sound very similar both had a great speaking voice.
Wonderful !!!!!
This is a really good video! ♾/10
Woodrow Wilson sounds like the chill introvert narrator that everyone loves.
If only that was an accurate description of him.
Too bad he was an absolute piece of trash
@@Benjifan2000 lol I think we all understand to hate this man for what he did to the lower class
@@GeneralSweeney4224and African Americans
@@GeneralSweeney4224WILSOOOOON!
Benjamin Harrison sounds like he was speaking through one of those tubes at the playground.
I love how you chose the most famous lines of each president
Biden lying is not his most famous speaking moment
damn woodrow wilson's voice sounds very very clear for that time
Cleveland’s is actually William Jennings Bryan giving his Cross of Gold Speech. Still a very cool and historical moment that we can actively witness!
I saw that troll face on Nixon's face when he said "I am not a crook", had a good chuckle
Benjamin Harrison sounded suspiciously like the teacher in the Peanuts cartoon...
"Why does rice play texas"
The conference schedule.
Eisenhower sounds like one of them narrators in those old military documentaries
Why does Rice play Texas? - JFK 😂😂
Fun fact: Benjamin Harrison was the first President to have his voice recorded!
Hello Dixie Brown how are you doing hope you’re doing great with your family.
That's why he was first.
Uhm no it was actually Rutherford B Hayes but it got lost
And apparently he was so excited to be the first that he began speaking in reverse.
the way the the accents have changed over all these years is crazy too
I love how every president has a pre written captions thing except for Benjamin Harrison
I like how each one the audio gets better and better really shows how much humans have evolved
we need the whole presidents playing videogames
"Danger against twitch"
-President of the United States Franklin D. Roosevelt
These all made me feel better. Good quotes from some great men
That was a sneaky little smirk on Clinton's face. Lol! Great stuff!
man you can tell exactly what political alignment this guy is just by the clips he chose 😭😭😭
Exactly 💯
Yep. Cutting the end of the Trump clip which exposes the lies the media spread.
As a professional recording engineer all I can say is this... us Americans really need to hold this L for losing such a regal accent over time.
1:07 fun fact: my neighbor is directly related to william mckinley (he is currently around 86)
I already expected what Bill's voice sample was going to be lol
This needs to be turned into a U.S Presidents Play video
Greedy elders: the sound quality of this voice recording is so much better than your voice recording of George Washington!
The sound quality: 0:00
William McKinley sounds like superman addressing the citizens from the top of a building
Great video, Hoover sounded like he sucked some helium before talking lol
Benjamin Harrison was speaking enchantment table.
William McKinley sounds exactly like he looks.
He really does, doesn't he?
When Benjamin Harrison said "avuaovo of the united states aoovhapvhhejvavjavjoa" a tear came from my eye and turned into a Bald Eagle and then flew away. I felt so proud to an American.
Hoover and Coolidge sounded exactly like how I expected them to, honestly
Woodrow Wilson sounds like he is planning on building a death star