200 Year Old Message Hidden in the Ohio Woods

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  • čas přidán 19. 07. 2017
  • Lewis Wetzel was a legendary frontiersman, and he left a hidden message for those who came after him.
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Komentáře • 2,4K

  • @micjam1986
    @micjam1986 Před 4 lety +685

    Big shout out to the land owner who was willing to share this!

    • @MrPlemke50
      @MrPlemke50 Před 4 lety +7

      It is nice.

    • @MrDeterministicchaos
      @MrDeterministicchaos Před 4 lety +3

      Thanku

    • @thomashocker2792
      @thomashocker2792 Před 4 lety +8

      Great actual story. Thanks. I have always loved the Forrest of southeast Ohio. Now I live here.

    • @marcuslaker5876
      @marcuslaker5876 Před 4 lety +20

      No I mean the slave holding, native tribes that were too busy fighting and enslaving each other to unify. You’d rather murder innocent women children. That’s why you lost...

    • @Chris-jm4zk
      @Chris-jm4zk Před 4 lety +4

      Dude no “time has come” lol !

  • @keitherichampton7954
    @keitherichampton7954 Před 6 lety +526

    I learned of Lewis Wetzel from my father's school paper, that ended:" Wetzel's brother Jacob was my great, great, great, grandfather." My father is Robert Wetzel Hampton, born in Salt Lake City, in 1918.

    • @scotttyson8661
      @scotttyson8661 Před 4 lety +23

      So cool

    • @jayonez137
      @jayonez137 Před 4 lety +11

      Awesome man!

    • @matttackett5743
      @matttackett5743 Před 4 lety +7

      What great history

    • @fiafia5802
      @fiafia5802 Před 4 lety +4

      WOW!!! That’s so cool!!

    • @sassmacfru
      @sassmacfru Před 4 lety +38

      Keith Eric Hampton I’m a descendant of Jacob and Lewis’s brother Martin. The family is still in the Ohio Valley area.

  • @catranger01
    @catranger01 Před 2 lety +22

    Hats off to the property owner who so graciously allowed you to pursue your quest on his land.

    • @daginn896
      @daginn896 Před 8 měsíci

      Thank god I live in Europe where historical places like this belongs to the nations

    • @FRDOMFGTHR
      @FRDOMFGTHR Před 8 měsíci

      @@daginn896besides all those privately owned historical castles yeah totally 😂😂 and we kinda fought a war so the government couldn’t just say hey theres a rock here that we like so fuck off yeah

    • @Nick-li3ut
      @Nick-li3ut Před 5 měsíci +1

      ​@@daginn896you mean where regular people can't own land?

    • @daginn896
      @daginn896 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Nick-li3ut Regular people do own land. I own my property. What have you been smoking?

    • @Nick-li3ut
      @Nick-li3ut Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@daginn896 I don't live in Europe but obviously in the past regular citizens didn't own land in Europe, of course I'm sure you still have to be rich to afford it. Regardless in this case this site is on private property and you said thank God you live in Europe where this would be public property, I guess they would wait for the property to come up for sale and make a strong offer for it? Also there's plenty of obscure historical sites in Europe and I feel like your comment is asinine. How much land do you own?

  • @stereodreamer23
    @stereodreamer23 Před 2 lety +19

    I grew up in WV, about 100 miles east of Zanesville, in Wetzel County--named after Lewis Wetzel. The history of the Wetzels and other pioneers and explorers of that era were a big part of my education, and this video was a real treasure to watch. Thank you for this wonderful story!

  • @iluvpittys242
    @iluvpittys242 Před 4 lety +973

    Interesting, anyone else here from Ohio clicking on this ?

    • @delethastevens460
      @delethastevens460 Před 4 lety +34

      Near Dayton Ohio here

    • @suleskos.2743
      @suleskos.2743 Před 4 lety +14

      Well, I was born there if that counts for anything lol

    • @iluvpittys242
      @iluvpittys242 Před 4 lety +6

      @@suleskos.2743 Sure why not ! Lol... Norwalk, Ohio here.

    • @cindyvining7866
      @cindyvining7866 Před 4 lety +17

      Delaware, Ohio

    • @looptylou6287
      @looptylou6287 Před 4 lety +21

      Highland & Ross county. We have the Serpent, Seip, Mound city, part of the Erie Canal + much much more history, surrounding me within 15-60 miles in any direction. Born in Jackson:) May the love of Christ redeem our country!

  • @L70s
    @L70s Před 4 lety +342

    For those complaining "this isnt taught in schools", which i agree is a shame, there's nothing stopping you from teaching your own children. There's plenty of info online, libraries, and historical societies. Ohio is full of caves, caverns, castles, nature glens, bogs, indian mounds, pioneer villages, as well as a vast list of historical persons and their homes.

    • @Warlanda
      @Warlanda Před 4 lety +10

      great comment!

    • @orbs1062
      @orbs1062 Před 4 lety +17

      Never has a truer word been spoken. The education of children has been outsourced for decades. You get out what you put in. And right now, it's GIGO.

    • @DavidVanmeterDutch
      @DavidVanmeterDutch Před 4 lety +7

      Great point. Plus, they just cant teach everything in school. There just is not enough time in school to cover all the events and people of history. Plus, there has definitely been a shift in how most parents view the responsibility of schools and themselves. With modern technology and school available to nearly everyone in the country, the role of parents has shifted, but does not have to be that way. Parents just need to spend the time!

    • @ispartacus1337
      @ispartacus1337 Před 4 lety +9

      I dont care about the kids! I'm mad I didnt get to learn about it in school and I'm from Ohio!

    • @elisebarthalow6075
      @elisebarthalow6075 Před 4 lety +12

      Right this minute I am sitting in Gnadenhutten Ohio. This area is where the Moravian missionaries converted the local American Indians to Christianity and eventually were massacred and are buried just 2 blocks from where I sit.My nephew us one of the last of the Delaware Lanape Indians. So much rich history in Tuscarawas and Coshocton counties and worth reading up on.

  • @Dingomush
    @Dingomush Před 3 lety +35

    Thank you for taking us on this trip in history with you. I am no longer able to hike the trails to look for the treasures the past has left for us, but I’m glad I can tag along with others such as yourself who care enough to share your experience. Thank you again.

  • @whitebread7009
    @whitebread7009 Před 4 lety +9

    I was born and raised not far from Blue Rock Ohio. I grew up hunting, fishing and foraging for moral mushrooms in the local wildlife areas. Unfortunately I had never heard of this. I really enjoyed the story and the video of your adventure. Thank you for sharing this bit of history with the world....much appreciated.

  • @suecave7139
    @suecave7139 Před 4 lety +139

    I’ve lived in Ohio all my life. My introduction to this era was Allen Eckert’s The Frontiersman. I’m a grandma now and not up to much exploring, but I’m always reminded of the rich history of central Ohio when I drive past Zanesfield. I believe Simon Kenton ran the gauntlet in that area at least once. It’s not hard to imagine yourself back in those times when you stray off the beaten path a little bit.

    • @tommyg5095
      @tommyg5095 Před 4 lety +10

      @Sue Cave
      Allen W. Eckert's books, especially the Frontiersmen, are the best books I have ever read... Since I too live in Southeastern Ohio, and with family along That Dark and Bloody River, these glimpses into the past are profound. Anyone wanting a great understanding of the life and times of the first settlers to cross over the Ohio River should read the Frontiersmen. Best book I have ever read.

    • @ernestclements7398
      @ernestclements7398 Před 4 lety +11

      The town of Zanesville is where Betty Zane daughter of the town's founder and great great grand mother of author Zane Grey, made her famous " Gun powder run" trapped in a stout cabin outside the walls of the main fort she and others were making a strong stand against a sizeable war party, they were running out of powder, and being the youngest person there, ( she was seventeen) and noted for being fleet of foot, she volunteered to go for more, at the right moment she ran for it with her companions giving her covering fire, she made it, and grabbed every small container she could find with powder loading them into her apron and dress, ran back to the cabin, under heavy fire, and out running several warriors trying to catch her.

    • @sassmacfru
      @sassmacfru Před 4 lety +2

      Ernest Clements except it happened in Wheeling WVA not Zanesville OH. Fort Henry is where the run took place and her brothers house was very close by.

    • @jbolin105
      @jbolin105 Před 4 lety +5

      I live in Scioto County. I love the book The Frontiersman. Down at the end of the road where I live was a large Shawnee Indian village. There is a place called Raven rock, it was a lookout for the Shawnee Indians. It overlooked the village. The village was on the banks of the Ohio and Scioto rivers.

    • @marktheiss9357
      @marktheiss9357 Před 4 lety +6

      I grew up in Meigs county Ohio and the Frontiersman is my favorite book ever. Just about a mile below the Ravenswood bridge on the Ohio side down on the lower bank of the river is a frontier graveyard I found as a kid dating to the 1770s

  • @georgeadcock2347
    @georgeadcock2347 Před 4 lety +141

    As a young teenager growing up in Western Kentucky I would spend weeks at my great Uncle's farm. I admired Native Amerands so much I wanted to be one. I would ride my pony in the woods without shirt or shoes bareback grasping the pony's mane. My uncle would get upset when I would sleep in the woods with a primative lean-to. Those were some of the best days of life. The solitude and knowledge I could survive there for at least a few days. That forest brought back great memories.

    • @carolynevers7924
      @carolynevers7924 Před 4 lety +9

      @George- Maybe in a prior life you WERE a Native American and that is why this is so familiar to you and why you were/are, so drawn to this time of life. Something to think about~

    • @alecfleming373
      @alecfleming373 Před 4 lety +9

      @@carolynevers7924 Funny you bring reincarnation into this. The Natives also believed in a form of this.

    • @Earthether
      @Earthether Před 4 lety +5

      I did same even had name running deer given to me by friend s because I ran a lot in the woods . Free up near hackers creek Wv where many Indian massacres occurred. Not proud of that but those times
      I’m sure we’re difficult

    • @peety6323
      @peety6323 Před 3 lety

      How wonderful.

    • @lishalou761
      @lishalou761 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Earthether Indian tribes never massacred people, never broke treaties, never conquered others?

  • @hobbyhermit66
    @hobbyhermit66 Před 2 lety +26

    There's 3 novels featuring Lewis Wetzel, written by Zane Grey, called
    "Betty Zane"
    "Spirit of the Border"
    " The Last Trail"
    All written about the early frontier days of the Zanesville Ohio area. Not for the faint of heart.

    • @kdworak4754
      @kdworak4754 Před 2 lety

      Ty, needed some suggestions.

    • @jerryweiser1145
      @jerryweiser1145 Před 2 lety +1

      I live in zanesville

    • @dyates6380
      @dyates6380 Před 2 lety +2

      I've read The Spirit of the Border at least ten times. I love that book.

    • @pauldurrah3777
      @pauldurrah3777 Před 2 lety +3

      that dark and bloody river by Alan Eckart is a great book out the history up and down the Ohio river.

    • @georgecollord7650
      @georgecollord7650 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Those three Zane Grey books were like Bibles to me when I was a kid. Read them all, multiple times, from fourth grade on. Thrilling to say the least.

  • @philstone3859
    @philstone3859 Před 4 lety +61

    If that dude was still alive he’d be shaking his head, and probably be reloading.

  • @titsup4u
    @titsup4u Před 4 lety +143

    It took me until I was 45 to realize there wasn't a high demand for frontiersman. Damn shame.

    • @scottbradentx
      @scottbradentx Před 4 lety +3

      the market size only needs to be 1 (you)

    • @k.w.churchill4397
      @k.w.churchill4397 Před 4 lety +8

      @larry johnson America is stronger then ever. We are fine. Dont spread fear and falsehoods. No doubt a Pelosi fan.

    • @ghostlyimageoffear6210
      @ghostlyimageoffear6210 Před 4 lety +12

      @@k.w.churchill4397 False. Larry is correct. No Pelosi fan here, but the "new" Americans forsake our history and heritage because they do not identify with it.

    • @highcloud530
      @highcloud530 Před 4 lety +4

      Me too man made its time we came back to it, I’m not joking either brother

    • @angelaprater2679
      @angelaprater2679 Před 4 lety +1

      John here love it all my life 65 yrs old still hunting deer, coyotes.

  • @kentuckywindage222
    @kentuckywindage222 Před 4 lety +75

    As a young man with my dad I was in the outdoors a lot. Deep in the back woods ,cliffs and caves. I've seen dry wood stashes, dead falls, carvings and some beautiful scenery. Artifacts that I still have.
    Also moonshine stills and pot crops. So be aware, you never know who or what you'll run into in the deep backwoods, but then again isn't that part of the adventure?!
    Nice video!
    Keep'em coming!

    • @k.w.churchill4397
      @k.w.churchill4397 Před 4 lety +6

      In the words of SunTzu.....Stay strapped or get Clapped. Deep woods, alone? Carry a full sized handgun. In public, keep it in your pocket.! Open carry in public is little more then show off B.S. and a target painted on your back. Anyone walk up behind you with a wine bottle or something like that, and just kill you with one swipe. Then the crazy guy has your gun. Life member of the NRA here, please keep that in your pocket or out of sight until it is needed.

    • @kentuckywindage222
      @kentuckywindage222 Před 4 lety +6

      @@k.w.churchill4397
      I was raised in those deep woods. We always had a weapon. A pistol, whether full size or not is a defensive weapon. As taught by my father and the training I received from the government. A long gun in my neck of the woods is your best choice. Again as I was taught a long gun is an offensive weapon. Honestly though, if someone really wants you dead, unless you know it there isn't a lot you can do. Especially if they are determined and trained.
      Just saying.

    • @matthewblethen7771
      @matthewblethen7771 Před 4 lety +2

      Any Bigfoot sightings?

    • @ohwhatelse
      @ohwhatelse Před 3 lety

      lol. it is sometimes part of the danger!!!

    • @kentuckywindage222
      @kentuckywindage222 Před 3 lety +2

      @@matthewblethen7771
      Most of the time it was just happening up on people doing the thing I previously mentioned, pot, shine etc..
      Most folks who have spent lots of time in the bush will tell you. There is always those couple of times where things aren't quite right or you see something you aren't sure what it was.
      I try to stay in tune with my surroundings when venturing out into the deep back woods. If I feel something is off, I check closely or make a change up of some sort. In my years on this planet, if I haven't learned nothing. I know there are things that sometimes just can't be explained or made sense of. Piece of advise for you. If you ever just feel in the pit of your stomach or the feeling of hair sticking up on yourself. Make a change of some sort. We all have this. You know, like the times you turn to find someone staring at you?

  • @noahhess4955
    @noahhess4955 Před 4 lety +35

    This guy probably just worked a 12-14 hour shift as a nurse (assuming nurse idk) and went out there to make this video for us. Thank you for documenting your adventure, awesome piece of history you’ve captured

  • @merlebush11
    @merlebush11 Před 2 lety +12

    I loved this video. I was born in Illinois hunting and finding arrowheads and a tomahawk head in my sand box. This is a perfect example of what a little research can do to help us remember the trail blazers that made America a great place to live. Thanks!

  • @laurie4275
    @laurie4275 Před 4 lety +375

    On the mountaintop where I live there are many remnants of the Oregon Trail. Lots of graves, Initials and dates carved into rocks, deep ruts from the wagon wheels can still be followed through the now dense woods. Its all known well to locals, but no way are we gonna make it public! That would surely bring it all to vandalism and ruin. Too many careless, stupid people in todays world.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Před 4 lety +17

      The bodies would be buried directly under the wagon wheel ruts. They would bury the dead and then run them over to conceal them from scavengers.

    • @Wildfire86872
      @Wildfire86872 Před 4 lety +9

      It's like that in eastern Kansas too. There's some places you can still see ruts on the Santa Fe Trail.

    • @jazzyjems3458
      @jazzyjems3458 Před 4 lety +24

      Take pictures of the evidence that remains so it won't be lost.

    • @bru1015
      @bru1015 Před 3 lety +8

      That’s unfortunate, the world is getting worse and worse 😢

    • @williamiannucci2740
      @williamiannucci2740 Před 3 lety +1

      👍

  • @cplrey
    @cplrey Před 4 lety +54

    I have been fascinated by Lewis Wetzel and Simon Girty since I was about 10 years old (which was close to 70 years ago). From about the age of 14, I spent a lot of time running through the forest here in Tuscarawas County, Ohio with my ancestor's 36 cal. full stock Kentucky Long rifle and his powder horn filled with black powder and a bullet pouch full of hand cast lead balls. Years later after serving in the U.S. Marines I resumed those adventures for a couple of years before going to college to begin my journey to become a professional archaeologist. After about 8-10 years, I decided that being an archaeologist was not a good way to support a family so I retrained in another field but still fantasize about running the the forest when the leaves have changed in the Fall. I often wondered what would have happened if we had encountered one another on the Tuscarawas or Muskingum River.
    I just found your channel and will be with you to journey's end. Thank you for posting!

    • @gordonhazel697
      @gordonhazel697 Před 4 lety +1

      I trust you still have your ancestors rifle?

    • @AnthemBassMan
      @AnthemBassMan Před 4 lety +3

      Another T-County resident here. Grew up in the big city of Tusky and the Tusky river bottoms were my playground. Love my T-County upbringing and all the character building I had to do on my Grandparent’s 197 acre farm on 416 between Tusky and Goshen.

    • @ohiohomesteader4207
      @ohiohomesteader4207 Před 4 lety

      Coshocton county here!!!

    • @catherder6
      @catherder6 Před 4 lety +2

      @@AnthemBassMan I know the area well , use to go fishing at the old state dam. I did know some Desseckers but that was 65 years ago.

    • @AnthemBassMan
      @AnthemBassMan Před 4 lety

      @catherder6 My Grandparents were Russell and Nora. My Dad is Dave. His brothers and sisters were Russ, Bill, Donna, Velma, Alice, and Sandy. Dad, Aunt Alice, and Aunt Sandy are the only three left now. Spent a lot of time in the bottoms either just playing around, hunting arrowheads, or catfishing the river just up from the old state dam.

  • @saltcityhustlin3152
    @saltcityhustlin3152 Před 4 lety +69

    That message is powerful. He didn’t choose that life, that life chose him. Awesome video. Thank you.

    • @schris413
      @schris413 Před 3 lety +14

      @Galeria De Somnis Did you miss the part where they kidnapped him? It's a myth that Native Americans were innocent and peaceful.

    • @android61242
      @android61242 Před 3 lety +7

      @Galeria De Somnis I can't even imagine how much false historical narrative drivel you have consumed over the course of your life.

    • @RozarSmacco
      @RozarSmacco Před 3 lety +6

      Rousseau first promulgated the myth of the ‘noble savage’ out of whole cloth and academic leftists have been spewing that false narrative to their students ever since. Read N. Chagnon’s book on the “Fierce People”, his firsthand account of tribal cultures in the Amazon evinces how men who committed the most killings on raids fathered the most offspring. Steven Pinker’s books Angels of our better half and the Blank Slate prove with hard data how violent the natives were. Settlers had to fight for every square inch of land for 400 years. Then they let them live on reservations with schools hospitals etc...I wonder if the Indians ever spared an enemy?

    • @DebiSunset
      @DebiSunset Před 3 lety +2

      @@RozarSmacco it is all about survival...

    • @ZekeMan62
      @ZekeMan62 Před 3 lety

      @Gal De Som
      Lay off the soy.

  • @phillip1beer
    @phillip1beer Před 4 lety +58

    The Indians called him the man whose gun was always loaded. I immensely enjoyed this video.

  • @rodmiller5122
    @rodmiller5122 Před 4 lety +131

    There is also a rock with his initials in the Barkcamp State Park Campground that was found about 5 miles from where it is preserved

  • @thesecatsarecrazy567
    @thesecatsarecrazy567 Před 4 lety +43

    When ever I take my family to the Adirondack park to hike the trails , my kids always have to say" how hard the hike is." Then I remind them of what the settlers had to go through and how they used the water to travel and transport. Then I try to make them imagine that they have to help push the horse drawn carriages so they can get over the rocks, and up and down the hills. To get my point across I always bring at least 50 ft of rope and have them move the backpacks up the steepest terrain. This usually stops the grumbling for a little while, that's when I start pointing out other things.
    I really liked this and hope to see more in the future, very well done.

    • @thesecatsarecrazy567
      @thesecatsarecrazy567 Před 4 lety +2

      @rob hooper that only made it worse for my wife. So I went back to what the Army did when we complained. Plus they get an education on how to climb steep cliffs and repelling which they seem to like the most. I find that a reward at the end makes it easier to get them to do something, then a beating because they never worked on me.

    • @thesecatsarecrazy567
      @thesecatsarecrazy567 Před 4 lety +1

      @rob hooper by the way thay are 8 an 10 and have more survival skills than I dod at their age!

    • @ohwhatelse
      @ohwhatelse Před 3 lety +1

      @@thesecatsarecrazy567 "then a beating"? what? who got the beating & why? no one should be getting a beating!!!

  • @TheBuckeyJoe
    @TheBuckeyJoe Před rokem +4

    Simply incredible! I live in Ohio and have read of Eckert's books. Lew Wetzel is a character of history I will never forget!

  • @karieward5764
    @karieward5764 Před 3 lety +5

    I'm from Ohio and never knew this little peice of history existed. Thank you for sharing.

  • @stevewilson7857
    @stevewilson7857 Před 4 lety +90

    Glad that the rock is a boulder that cannot be stolen.

    • @LiveRealEnt
      @LiveRealEnt Před 3 lety +5

      I'm sure BLM or red lives matter will come and desecrate it someday

    • @ohwhatelse
      @ohwhatelse Před 3 lety +2

      if that rock was on my land i'd pour bleach on it every cpl yrs so the moss couldn't cover the writing as it's beginning to. that would be sad.

    • @jamescarolan96
      @jamescarolan96 Před 2 lety

      Don't be so sure the Narragansett stone was remove and hidden in a museum. It was plucked from the bay and transported in less than a day. It did not fit accepted history. It had carvings from the Templars.

  • @graceandglory1948
    @graceandglory1948 Před 4 lety +22

    No doubt his childhood traumatic experience influenced his life path greatly. His message sounds to me like he didn't want anyone to go through what he had as a kid.

    • @repetemyname842
      @repetemyname842 Před 2 lety +1

      PD: No doubt, many call him a brutal man but people forget he lived in brutal times and saw brutal things. Its bound to have an affect on a young lad.

    • @michellehawkins1027
      @michellehawkins1027 Před 3 měsíci

      Sad cycle...The Indians were probably doing what they did for the same reasons.

  • @larryroberts1470
    @larryroberts1470 Před 3 lety +2

    Grew up in Wetzel county West Virginia. Knew the stories but never had the privilege of seeing Wetzels rock. Thank you

  • @aapp953
    @aapp953 Před 3 lety +4

    Nice to hear you use words about this history that coincide with reality instead of the ones used in public schools.

  • @fukcg00gle95
    @fukcg00gle95 Před 4 lety +13

    I've never heard this man's story before. Thank you for sharing.

  • @johngoerger8996
    @johngoerger8996 Před 4 lety +70

    Wish my Wife Karen was still with me. She was born in Ohio March 4 1954.
    We met on the 'net, Spring 2001. She lived her whole life up to the time we met in St Paris Ohio.
    She always joked about there being only 2 traffic lights in St Paris when she was born & still only 2 lights.
    She took care of both her parents, her father dying first then her mother. She decided to leave Ohio and move to Nevada as there was nothing keeping her in St Paris Ohio.
    In early December I asked her to marry me and she agreed (whe sent emails and txts to each other but had never met, physically.
    At the time I was employed with the Orange County Sheriff's Department (volunteer Reserve Deputy and paid full time Range Clerk, Orange CA.
    She agreed and flew to OC 12/21/2001. Friends of mine drove us to Las Vegas & got married.
    (I was born Apr 2 1951 in MN).
    Karen always told me how grateful and happy she wss married to me (I told her the same).
    One year we flew back to Ohio & she was thrilled showing me around.
    Her madien Name was Holeton & her parents are buried in the St. Paris cemetery.
    Karen had some medical issues but we both thought it would still be many yrs away.
    I retired from the Sheriff's Office & we moved to Mesa AZ to take care of my 100 yr mom (born ND Rugby 8/2/1911).
    Ma passed Apr 9 2013.
    Unfortunately Karen & I were both wrong has her medical issues speed up quicker then her Doctors thought.
    This coming July 31 2020 will be three yrs that my Beloved Wife, Karen passed away.
    Several yrs before she told me she did not to be buried but created and placed in a Stainless Steel Urn, which I did. I had it painted Lavender with a sliver butterfly etched into it. I have her in the living room on a table that had been in her family.
    Next to her Urn our two small dogs that Karen loved; her small b/w poodle named LittleBit (14) & PinHead an b/w Italian Greyhound (17.5).
    Both i had creamated & each sealed in their own cedar box, next to Karen.
    Karen Loved Ohio so much..

    • @mattbastubee5255
      @mattbastubee5255 Před 4 lety +17

      John Goerger thanks for sharing your wifes story. Peace be with you John.

    • @notimportant3914
      @notimportant3914 Před 4 lety +14

      Your story was very touching.
      Thank you for sharing it with us.

    • @70sfred1
      @70sfred1 Před 4 lety +13

      May your wife's memory be eternal! Your roots and where you are from are always a part of you and with you.

    • @johngoerger8996
      @johngoerger8996 Před 4 lety +13

      Thank You, Everyone. I commented on the original story concerning OHIO because Karen Loved Ohio. Thank You Again.
      When we flew back for a visit I got to walk through an enclosed red bridge for the first time!

    • @snickelfritz4179
      @snickelfritz4179 Před 4 lety +9

      Thanks for your story John and I am sorry for your loss. Ohio women are some good ones indeed. I am writing this from Ohio about a 23 mile drive from St. Paris. I currently live in Troy, Ohio.

  • @m1ssd1tz
    @m1ssd1tz Před 3 lety +3

    I loved this story. It is cool that you left it up to the viewer to form their own opinion on Wetzel. Great job.

  • @Jayo___
    @Jayo___ Před 2 lety +6

    My grandfather for the last 10 years before his death in 2016 researched his ancestry and he told me so many stories, but one of the stories was Martin Wetzel is my 9th great grandfather. My grandfather's name was Robert Whestsel. Im not sure why the spelling changed, but he told me we were descendants of Lewis Wetzel.

  • @bobknob5819
    @bobknob5819 Před 4 lety +7

    That was great. Born and raised in Ohio. Loved my times in the woods.

  • @horsehide3039
    @horsehide3039 Před 4 lety +12

    Excellent. That old fella was rough and tough and hard to bluff.

  • @georgewhitehead8185
    @georgewhitehead8185 Před 2 lety +1

    This is great American history, and it should be preserved.

  • @jvon3885
    @jvon3885 Před 3 lety +17

    I've found some amazing things on my expeditions through different wooded areas. One was in what they call no man's land. It's in the panhandle of Oklahoma close to the New Mexican border. I found some mud huts and different tools and caves where burial ceremonies took place. This area was never looked at because it was private property until my grandmother who was full blood Shoshone Native. W found buffalo runs and camps. It was amazing. I never told anyone for fear of pillaging. We like to leave the past where it lays as it's just the right thing to do.

  • @bettyb1313
    @bettyb1313 Před 4 lety +23

    What a magical story... My grandparents always told me when in doubt go right... That rock is alive;-)

  • @timdixon3391
    @timdixon3391 Před 4 lety +6

    Glad to see people still interested in history

  • @bsrk3170
    @bsrk3170 Před 4 lety +26

    I live less than 20 miles from this place
    There are many Wetzel families nearby. Interesting! I’ve never heard this story.

  • @joanettebrantley730
    @joanettebrantley730 Před 3 lety +11

    Lewis Wetzel’s Mother was a Bonnette. Bonnette is my maiden name. I have many stories from my Uncle handed down through our family.

    • @lorieller8882
      @lorieller8882 Před 3 lety +2

      I live fairly close to the cemetery where Lewis Wetzel and his parents are buried. I noticed several stones there with the Bonnette name.

    • @elenavaccaro339
      @elenavaccaro339 Před 3 lety

      Greetings distant cousin. One of my ancestral grandmothers was a Wetzel daughter who married a Roddenheffer (sp?).

  • @babyrazor6887
    @babyrazor6887 Před 4 lety +171

    Living in Eastern PA I like to photograph abandoned colonial homes seeing as how my great grandparents had actually lived in one. As time goes by I witnessed them vanishing one by one for new developments. It strikes me a sad, seeing the past vanish. Recently one of my favorites, a large home built in 1734, completely covered in vegetation and a home for a nice fox was demolished for a new car wash. It had a nice tiny pond full of croaking frogs and the trees on the property were ancient. Now they're all bulldozed. Ah....progress, I'd rather have the old house.

    • @CatalinaThePirate
      @CatalinaThePirate Před 4 lety +6

      I mourn with you the loss of history, the old growth trees, the fox, and the frog pond... We really need to be more active towards preserving our history. I grew up in a suburb of Chicago, and our backyard neighbor had the most incredibly HUGE tree in their yard. You (well, an adult-sized human) could not put your arms around it's trunk. I think it's still there, from a view of Google maps... An amazing sight. When I became an adult, I lived in Chicago proper, and became an admirer of the conservation of wonderful old architecture in the city. Later, when I moved to Los Angeles, I was heartsick to see marvelous old (and beautiful!) Victorian homes with yards full of bamboo, avocado trees, and a huge stance of cacti *razed* to build a parking lot! 😩 Los Angeles has preservation societies to protect our historical properties, but big construction monies tend to win any approval to *bulldoze* because they "improve" property values... 😕
      I miss Chicago... 😔

    • @wmcbarker4155
      @wmcbarker4155 Před 4 lety +12

      @@CatalinaThePirate many have been destroyed for highways, some have been moved. lost history makes me sad.

    • @mypainispleasure
      @mypainispleasure Před 4 lety +7

      I"ve never been to PA, and as I get older, I doubt I'll ever get there. But my grandfather was from PA, a good man. Over the years I've met people from PA, and I have to say, they have all been good people. I remember my grandfather saying that when he was a child the house they lived in was on top of a coal mine.... I wonder if that house is still standing.

    • @mypainispleasure
      @mypainispleasure Před 4 lety +14

      @@CatalinaThePirate The way things are going these days, with the tearing down of statues and such, there won't be any history left for future generations to even inquire about. And all in the name of what?

    • @babyrazor6887
      @babyrazor6887 Před 4 lety

      @@mypainispleasure Do a Google Earth view if you know the address

  • @bigindian5555
    @bigindian5555 Před 4 lety +14

    Thanks for your efforts, exposing this part of history, a couple of centuries old and with a beautiful message of peace 👍

  • @metalmeddling
    @metalmeddling Před 3 lety +6

    Wow! Awesome! I was born in Ohio and love it's history. I thought I knew most of the frontiersmen that roamed the landscape, like Simon Kenton, but somehow I missed this one. Thanks for your passion and taking us back to see a glimpse of our amazing forgotten history.

  • @SueGirling68
    @SueGirling68 Před 3 lety +4

    What an awesome thing to find and such a great message to leave for posterity, thank you for sharing.

  • @kevinquist
    @kevinquist Před 4 lety +92

    wow. that should be protected. real piece of history there.

    • @daemonjeep
      @daemonjeep Před 4 lety +10

      it has been protected, nobody knows where it is really.

    • @littleshepherdfarm2128
      @littleshepherdfarm2128 Před 4 lety +20

      Never involve the government in something like this or it'll end up serving only their purposes and the land will eventually be taken over and corrupted in some way to serve some idiotic political agenda. This is a land mark that should stay private ...or at least on private land. I've seen way too many awesome pieces of our history and land marks get wiped away for my liking. No thank you.

    • @DeathSnacker
      @DeathSnacker Před 4 lety +10

      On private property. No government please

    • @rbspider
      @rbspider Před 4 lety +24

      That should be kept a secret or the cancel culture will be out there trying to blow it up.

    • @jameshill2450
      @jameshill2450 Před 4 lety +1

      @@rbspider Don't be an idiot. Nobody is trying to blow up history because a guy was violent 350 years ago.

  • @slatecreations8193
    @slatecreations8193 Před 4 lety +88

    Should’ve marked the rock with GPS so it’ll never be lost.

    • @karlheeren8727
      @karlheeren8727 Před 4 lety +20

      I agree with the GPS idea. It does need protecting, so even if just the property owner has the record of it and understands to preserve the information for the future.

    • @babayaga9362
      @babayaga9362 Před 4 lety +51

      With the way statues and monuments have been burned and destroyed today. Maybe its best to leave some things hidden from nefarious purposes.

    • @zarroth
      @zarroth Před 4 lety +20

      @@babayaga9362 those pansies aren't going to go out into a forested park, much less the actual countryside. It's safe from them. Besides, people that live in the farmlands actually know how to use their guns.

    • @slatecreations8193
      @slatecreations8193 Před 4 lety +3

      Ellissandra Billings I don’t mean for the public. Just documented somewhere for our later generations ya know what I mean

    • @travisrowe7697
      @travisrowe7697 Před 4 lety +2

      J Money that’ll be passed down thru word of mouth, experience and exploration. No need for technology when you have that appreciation for nature and history

  • @TherapyWithWind
    @TherapyWithWind Před 3 lety

    Thank you very much for sharing and taking time to create and upload this video!

  • @csluau5913
    @csluau5913 Před 3 lety +2

    Remarkable. I remember discovering the history of this country when I was a child stepping on an Indian arrowhead in a river while I was wading in the shallow water of a Sandbar. My curiosity was excited and just began a lifelong fascination with the history of my country, the explorers and the Indians.

  • @RagtimeAnnie
    @RagtimeAnnie Před 4 lety +9

    Great Adventure - Thank You - I sure do miss the woods and fields of my childhood, filled with green, and ghosts, and tales of long ago wherever we went.

  • @jimgriffiths9071
    @jimgriffiths9071 Před 4 lety +64

    Zane Grey often wrote about Wetzel. He was a legend in his own time.

    • @tallen4520
      @tallen4520 Před 4 lety +8

      I believe Joseph Altsheler did, also. His many books about the Ohio and Ky. frontier days refer to Wetzel by an Indian-given name; "Death Wind". There are Wetzels in/around the Chilicothe (Ohio)area to this day.

    • @r.d.fisher5839
      @r.d.fisher5839 Před 4 lety +13

      Zane Gray was born about 12 miles from Blue Rock Oh. ,If you have a chance to go to Zanesville Oh. check out the Zane Grey museum . That verse on the rock is a Bible verse Christs word of the peace he left for us.

    • @linnymaemullins3319
      @linnymaemullins3319 Před 4 lety

      Yep😍

    • @sophiamayaK9
      @sophiamayaK9 Před 4 lety

      Jim Griffiths I have the complete set of volumes of Zane Grey, left to me by my mother...
      We were Kentucky folk; with a city & family cemetery in “Liletown, Kentucky”. A book was written on us: John C. Rowland family,Missouri Pioneers.

    • @sassmacfru
      @sassmacfru Před 4 lety +1

      T Allen they are in Martin Ferry area still as well.

  • @edfederoff2679
    @edfederoff2679 Před 2 lety +1

    I just learned about Lewis Wetzel yesterday, here on the internet. This is so cool! Thanks for sharing.

  • @daveh7720
    @daveh7720 Před 3 lety +2

    I just stumbled onto your video, but this hits close to home. I grew up in Athens County, Ohio, about 25 miles from the map location you showed. And my family owned property in Wetzel County in what is now West Virginia from after the American Revolution into the 20th Century. My nephew even found what's left of a family cemetery there.
    It was a rough-and-tumble time between conflict with the natives, French colonists, and later the British army during the American Revolution. (My fiancee is Canadian so I get to hear all about the War of 1812.) Lewis Wetzel may have thought, or at least hoped, he had built a peaceful existence for his contemporaries, but history tells a different story.

  • @JoshuaPaulHollenbeck
    @JoshuaPaulHollenbeck Před 4 lety +6

    Beautiful story , never heard of Lewis Wetzel until now , thank you for that !

  • @thelong-hairedleapinggnome7939

    As a fellow Buckeye I must say job well done.

  • @alexadams9644
    @alexadams9644 Před 3 lety +2

    I have an uncle who told me the story of Lewis wezel. How there was a frontier black powder shooter who could run and reload his black powder. Very nice. Thank you.😁👍

    • @victorhopper6774
      @victorhopper6774 Před 2 lety

      that was some feat. not light guns. its said he used that ability to kill many.

  • @Tonyklco
    @Tonyklco Před 3 lety +1

    Born & raised in Willoughby ( which I loved), now in Columbus.
    My late wife, Gracie, was from Gallipolis on the Ohio River.
    Mound Hill Cemetery, also known as Fortification Hill, lends an inspiring view of the winding Ohio!

  • @BushcraftingBogan
    @BushcraftingBogan Před 4 lety +14

    I love doing this same type of exploring. I’ve found some interesting things over the years. I stumbled upon a confederate cemetery in Columbus Ohio, a large and unvisited and mostly unknown paupers cemetery in Dayton Ohio. In the middle of nowhere I found a railroad crossing and the tracks were rusted and the line was clearly abandoned. Not far from the crossing I could see Engines and Boxcars still on the line. They were over grown. I’m still miffed by all that equipment that is just left there. Unfortunately this was years ago and I can’t remember where it is.

    • @mR-dc4oq
      @mR-dc4oq Před 4 lety +2

      I found an early settlers cemetery in Oakland, Ca that is also neglected and forgotten! I don’t believe anyone even knows it’s there- it’s on a hill, behind a cyclone fence, and inaccessible. We have all become caught up in the ‘busy- ness’ of our lives and have lost the connection to the lives that have come before us. There’s no opportunity to respect the sacrifices or hardships others endured before us. It is because of their endeavors we enjoy the lives and conditions we have now .

    • @maxshafran3796
      @maxshafran3796 Před 3 lety +1

      Camp chase! Beautiful place, in a dangerous area of the city though. I’ve been many times

  • @Thedaleb1
    @Thedaleb1 Před 4 lety +10

    Really cool when I was a kid I loved wandering around I in the woods.

  • @Lanedar68
    @Lanedar68 Před 3 lety

    Very cool!! Thanks for taking us along.

  • @FindersKeepers88
    @FindersKeepers88 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow, great effort and story, glad you took the time to vid this and share it with all, Thx much

  • @cerwyddi
    @cerwyddi Před 4 lety +15

    FYI you could keep a spare set of clothes and hiking shoes in a bag in your car so you can take advantage of opportunity when it crops up. Thanks for sharing

    • @fjb4932
      @fjb4932 Před 4 lety +2

      Along with a wide brimmed hat, stout knife and a wide mouthed revolver ( holstered ) on a sturdy belt, all ready to go in a knapsack. Good suggestion there, Janine !

    • @beezertwelvewashingbeard8703
      @beezertwelvewashingbeard8703 Před 4 lety

      That's crazy talk.

    • @amazinggrace5692
      @amazinggrace5692 Před 4 lety +2

      As well as water and bug spray

    • @tomkiefaber4297
      @tomkiefaber4297 Před 3 lety

      @@amazinggrace5692 And a small portable bong...

  • @solarnaut
    @solarnaut Před 4 lety +7

    DUDE ! Well Done . 10:20 "Enjoy the peace which I prepared for you."

  • @glennbrymer4065
    @glennbrymer4065 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for posting this.

  • @mikethomas6408
    @mikethomas6408 Před 4 lety +1

    From Australia I thoroughly enjoyed learning a bit more of your rich history. Many thanks to the land owner for allowing you access to share this wonderful history lesson. God Bless.

  • @organicinohio5398
    @organicinohio5398 Před 4 lety +18

    "Betty Zane" by Zane Grey....read that book when I was 12 years old.

  • @JWheeler331
    @JWheeler331 Před 3 lety +4

    Love historic things such as this. What a special thing to find.

  • @johnlusher5772
    @johnlusher5772 Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for making this..

  • @1001Hobbies
    @1001Hobbies Před 4 lety +1

    That's a fantastic story. Thank you for sharing it and bringing us along with you.

  • @TheJerryRN
    @TheJerryRN Před 3 lety +6

    Very impressed and jealous! Another great individual from that same time frame is Simon Kenton. Simon might be the best frontiersman that walked the earth. Allan Eckert wrote a book that should be required reading titled “ The Frontiersman” chronicling his life dealing with mostly the Shawnee Indians. He has a fantastic looking tombstone in Urbana Ohio that is well worth the trip.

    • @victorhopper6774
      @victorhopper6774 Před 2 lety +1

      i lived on some simon kenton land for a couple years, 40 years ago. sadly the cabin i lived in burned a few years ago. 24 inch logs hewed to 7 inches, oak. i should have took pictures.

    • @olentangy74
      @olentangy74 Před rokem +2

      The Frontiersman is my all-time favorite historical literature. Absolutely epic.

  • @jrunyon9593
    @jrunyon9593 Před 4 lety +4

    I've lived in south central Ohio all my life and i've never heard of Wetzle, or his story. Great history !

  • @sheldonhatch8255
    @sheldonhatch8255 Před 3 lety +1

    @American Mythology
    GREAT video. Never stop with your passion

  • @landrecce
    @landrecce Před 3 lety

    Holy crap that was good! Subscribed and will sign up for the newsletter!

  • @gregeliason2536
    @gregeliason2536 Před 4 lety +3

    Thank you for sharing! And thank you for finding the rock that Wetzel carved with his hands!

  • @ClickClack_Bam
    @ClickClack_Bam Před 4 lety +4

    This was awesome.
    I live in Pittsburgh, PA & we have a lot of history around us.
    Allegheny Cemetery has an undocumented clearing (overgrown now) in the woods of it's couple hundred acre untapped woods.
    Somehow they cleared away half of a hill in the woods down to the bedrock & then carved seats & what I think is a stage or altar.

  • @Phoenix-dq2uo
    @Phoenix-dq2uo Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the time and the video!

  • @Balefulmoon
    @Balefulmoon Před 3 lety

    Excellent vid. Thanks for posting this.

  • @Pwrcritter
    @Pwrcritter Před 5 lety +14

    Very nice. My brother In law has a farm connecting onto big wheeling creek near the old Wetsell farmstead. Lewis is buried a few miles out the creek. I get chills sometimes while hunting there in the twilight, thinking he roamed those same hills..

  • @Seabeagle10
    @Seabeagle10 Před 4 lety +7

    Daniel Boone is one of my father's relatives. Love hearing these history stories. KCMO

  • @Ariiannaclp
    @Ariiannaclp Před 4 lety +1

    This is my first of your videos I've seen here, thank you for sharing this awesome experience!

  • @docauch5938
    @docauch5938 Před 4 lety

    Loved this. Please keep posting this sort of content.

  • @annespery7970
    @annespery7970 Před 4 lety +19

    To read more about Lew Whetzel...Zane Grey's "Spirit of the Border"
    How I miss those beautiful green WV woods...my home.

  • @coindigger5392
    @coindigger5392 Před 4 lety +16

    A Preacher in brookville,Pa..in 1870s went to live his life in the woods and chiseled scriptures from the good book in boulder's that where by the hundreds...still there today perfect reading condition and perfectly straight...

    • @KennyRider137
      @KennyRider137 Před 4 lety

      Where are they?

    • @coindigger5392
      @coindigger5392 Před 4 lety +1

      @@KennyRider137 Go to the dam, cross the swing bridge and follow the path/river that Goes into the woods for 1.5 miles

    • @coindigger5392
      @coindigger5392 Před 4 lety +1

      @@KennyRider137 it's well known as Scripture Rocks, but few people take time to acknowledge or seek it out..A Shame that it's not registered as a monument...

  • @alexcovarrubias5232
    @alexcovarrubias5232 Před 4 lety

    Great work making this video. And thanks for the hard work.

  • @Cisco3Pancho
    @Cisco3Pancho Před 4 lety +1

    I wasn’t expecting this to be so well put together

  • @robertganther3695
    @robertganther3695 Před 4 lety +11

    He sounds a lot like Sam Brady of Pittsburgh Pa. Sam was not as wild but is a legend in these parts, and has quite the story also.

  • @terrysickels9348
    @terrysickels9348 Před 4 lety +79

    Wetzel was also known as whispering winds,,,,,,
    Indians were truly afraid of him,,, the ghost wind ,,,whispering winds ,,,,just a couple of that i know of,,,,

    • @sp0oksfn
      @sp0oksfn Před 4 lety +10

      And death wind

    • @alecfleming373
      @alecfleming373 Před 4 lety +2

      That implys he was not only fast, but used silence to close the gap. Interesting fighting style.

    • @mrsdoyle6828
      @mrsdoyle6828 Před 3 lety +2

      Sounds like a genocidal maniac.

    • @alecfleming373
      @alecfleming373 Před 3 lety

      @@mrsdoyle6828 Not wrong in thinking that. In fact, when ever is horrible acts like this not driven by this mind set?

    • @stevegiu4232
      @stevegiu4232 Před 3 lety +6

      What about the indians who shot and kidnapped the two young boys?

  • @alabastardmasterson
    @alabastardmasterson Před 4 lety

    Well done. Great format and subject

  • @nessunodorme3888
    @nessunodorme3888 Před 2 lety

    Wow! That is an extremely cool thing you did, buddy! Thank you so much for sharing your accomplishment and some beautiful footage of the area with us!

  • @camerrill
    @camerrill Před 4 lety +50

    Let us not forget that he and his brother were shot at and kidnapped by persons who had invaded and ransacked his home, stealing their weapons. Who knows what slavery or torture they may have suffered had they not escaped? This makes him a survivor of war, not a "bad" person.

    • @mikehenson819
      @mikehenson819 Před 4 lety +8

      Not to mention there were NO police, or Virtue signaling LEFTIST around to make bad people aware of how bad they are by their standards of course.

    • @9xxxxxxxxx
      @9xxxxxxxxx Před 4 lety +11

      Whose land was it? Had anyone done anything to the Indians who were there first.

    • @mikehenson819
      @mikehenson819 Před 4 lety +7

      @@9xxxxxxxxx How do you know they were there first??? Just because they lived on or hunted the land doesn't mean they owned it.
      But what the hell: I suppose in your World, inclusion and tolerance is only to be practiced by White Settlers.
      Where is your expectation for the Rightous Native Americans, who had no concept of ownership, but attacked the Settlers in the most vicious way imaginable?

    • @9xxxxxxxxx
      @9xxxxxxxxx Před 4 lety +9

      Mike Henson People are funny. So you go on to the land of other people and ignore that they are or were there after you kill them. There is plenty of correspondence between indigenous Chiefs and the "Settlers" read it and get back to me. They gave them lands and created treaties all 600 of which the Settlers broke. They killed them, ate their dead ancestors when they were starving, stole there food, raped their women and children. You simply prefer the mythology over the truth.

    • @cyraxkkcb2mo10
      @cyraxkkcb2mo10 Před 4 lety

      @@mikehenson819 June 1876...😂😂😂

  • @clarezajac3276
    @clarezajac3276 Před 3 lety +3

    I grew up in Ohio and my best friend's last name was Wetzel. We were out in the middle of nowhere land and it was great growing up there played in the woods a lot

  • @jefflanham1080
    @jefflanham1080 Před 4 lety

    Glad you stayed with it! Very cool...

  • @marcybrooks3425
    @marcybrooks3425 Před rokem

    I am so impressed! Thanks for being willing to follow the call - Lewis Wetzel would be lost without people like us. I have hiked many places and old cemeteries to rediscover heroes from the past. We need their example.

  • @WedgeLife
    @WedgeLife Před 3 lety +3

    "follow the foot steps of a frontiersmen" This is why we become Land Surveyors

  • @8Scorpions
    @8Scorpions Před 3 lety +3

    What a great story, and a personal adventure. It was like following a scavenger hunt with an historical prize at the end...

  • @chrispileski6640
    @chrispileski6640 Před 4 lety

    Very cool. Thanks for posting.

  • @paulgrimm6850
    @paulgrimm6850 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for sharing your adventures

  • @muddypalmsera
    @muddypalmsera Před 4 lety +7

    That was a cool story/adventure.

  • @FeedScrn
    @FeedScrn Před 4 lety +13

    It's weird to think that right in those woods, right where you were walking... that Indians used to run around and live in them.

    • @jchavez53
      @jchavez53 Před 3 lety +4

      Almost anywhere in America that you walk, Native Americans walked first.

    • @christophersmith2871
      @christophersmith2871 Před 3 lety +2

      @Tammy Slade It's not theirs anymore. They lost it.

    • @jhart7304
      @jhart7304 Před 3 lety +1

      @Tammy Slade entirely incorrect

    • @suburbanbanshee
      @suburbanbanshee Před 3 lety +1

      First of all, there are plenty of local Native Americans who still live in Ohio because their families never left and went West. They have farms and lives, just like anybody else, and they spend a lot of time in the woods, just like anybody else. Second, of course there was land ownership among the tribes. All of Ohio and Kentucky was part of the great Iroquois land grab, when they drove away every tribe in order to trap more fur and sell it to European markets. The Shawnee, Wyandot, Lenape, etc. were driven as far as Virginia, Tennessee, and Georgia to escape the marauding Six Nations. They got back to Ohio only in the late 1700's. History is there for you to learn; look it up.

    • @jhart7304
      @jhart7304 Před 3 lety

      @Tammy Slade read Book of the Hopi and get back to me.
      Even they were waiting on the return of their 'Great White Brother'.
      The tribes that did not complete the migration know their line is haunted.
      Why do you see pyramids all over the world?
      Who do you think built such things?
      Why were the mummies of leaders in Egypt red haired?
      Why does Budha have blue eyes?
      Your history has been manipulated.
      You can research the rest on your own.

  • @Richard0292
    @Richard0292 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for taking the time. This was pretty cool.

  • @Peppersfirst
    @Peppersfirst Před 4 lety +2

    Truly amazing. Thank you for sharing this with us. And thanks to the land owner for sharing it with you.