Mary Seacole - Mother Seacole in the Crimea - Extra History - Part 2

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 7. 09. 2024
  • 📜 Mary Seacole - Part 2 - Extra History
    Unable to find any official sponsors, Mary Seacole decided to send herself to the Crimea. She recruited her husband's cousin, a fellow business person, and the two of them set off for the war zone. Unlike London, where she'd met a chilly reception, Mary's help was welcomed by the overworked doctors and suffering soldiers. She built a new version of her British Hotel and invited officers to dine or shop there, using their money to buy medical supplies and creature comforts for the poorer soldiers. She had set herself up next to the army camp, and during battles she helped provide emergency care. But when at last the city of Sevastopol fell, Mary's medical services were no longer in much demand. She enjoyed a few months of prosperity as the soldiers celebrated their newfound time off, but in March of 1856, a treaty was signed and troops began returning home. Many of them left unpaid debts, and Mary could no longer sell her supplies, so she and her business partner were forced to return home to London and declare bankruptcy. When that news got out, the soldiers she'd cared for rallied to her aid, donating money to help pay her debts. Although Mary tried to continue serving soldiers in warzones, the government never recognized her and in the end, only her homeland of Jamaica remembered her contributions after her death. In the 2000s, her story came back to light in the United Kingdom and she was recognized in 2004 as the Greatest Black Briton.
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Komentáƙe • 1,6K

  • @swordsmancs
    @swordsmancs Pƙed 5 lety +1283

    “Mother, get down!”
    “You’re alright now, Mother, it didn’t hit”
    Didn’t think I’d feel my heart melting in a war story but here we are

  • @zeroangelmk1
    @zeroangelmk1 Pƙed 8 lety +2539

    Wow. My eyes got legit watery at the end there. Dem feelz.

    • @ranwolf76
      @ranwolf76 Pƙed 8 lety +13

      +zeroangelmk1 you too?

    • @GrandHighdood
      @GrandHighdood Pƙed 8 lety +25

      +zeroangelmk1 LEGIT THO, I'M STILL TRYING NOT TO CRY

    • @blackfirefox666
      @blackfirefox666 Pƙed 8 lety +21

      +zeroangelmk1 Bless your strength. I cried like a baby!

    • @Fatortu
      @Fatortu Pƙed 8 lety +9

      +zeroangelmk1 It was wo cute and yet so unfair ! I couldn't keep it in^^

    • @JulienBrightside
      @JulienBrightside Pƙed 8 lety +6

      +zeroangelmk1 I cried too. Turn on the waterworks for full.

  • @darkmystic7764
    @darkmystic7764 Pƙed 8 lety +3784

    God bless Mary Seacole, what a hero. Thank you for sharing her story.

    • @rasmushansen5055
      @rasmushansen5055 Pƙed 8 lety +46

      Christ, some people are just amazing huh.

    • @paualamar
      @paualamar Pƙed 8 lety +72

      Someone give that lady a movie

    • @rasmushansen5055
      @rasmushansen5055 Pƙed 8 lety +22

      +paualamar Yeah, I mean that was goddamn touching.

    • @ShadowWolfRising
      @ShadowWolfRising Pƙed 8 lety +28

      +paualamar actually yeah, i could easily see this as a movie.

    • @MythlyInari
      @MythlyInari Pƙed 8 lety +30

      +paualamar
      Hopefully, a movie that doesn't butcher her story or remold the message of it all.

  • @LeiosLabs
    @LeiosLabs Pƙed 8 lety +2340

    Between this and John Snow, I love this series!
    I hate how so many people reduce human history to wars and battles, when there is so many more interesting things that happened. Keep up the fantastic work, folks!

    • @lycain4903
      @lycain4903 Pƙed 6 lety +26

      I agree, but the history behind wars is sometimes what brings some of these people to light, and, also, war history is very interesting as well

    • @anotherbigfootwithinternet2044
      @anotherbigfootwithinternet2044 Pƙed 6 lety +2

      Well it’s because everything was war and battles but there was other things

    • @samworrall6789
      @samworrall6789 Pƙed 6 lety +12

      I'm English and we definitely got taught about Mary Seacole, and Florence nightingale. Of course not in this depth. Maybe they don't teach it in America?

    • @pandadubx1936
      @pandadubx1936 Pƙed 6 lety +2

      OMG YASS THANK YOU FOR SAYING THAT, I FEEL THE SAME WAY

    • @angelchronicles9848
      @angelchronicles9848 Pƙed 6 lety +2

      I hope we learn about her more soon, she was, and by every account, is a badass
      May she live in the afterlife and smile with her sons, knowing shes beginning to be remembered

  • @gracevincent4693
    @gracevincent4693 Pƙed 5 lety +44

    Mary Seacole had a very Patch Adams approach, very holistic. To her, you don’t just treat the disease or ailment, you treat the person as a whole. You listen to their dreams, their stories, make them smile, all that. It’s a tragedy that we never learn about her. This strong, incredible woman who knew where to draw the line and where to run right through it. She treated anyone and everyone, she ran multiple businesses, she stayed focused and determined through dark days, and she still remained kind. She is a hero and darn it I wish there was a movie about her.

  • @rddlegacy4114
    @rddlegacy4114 Pƙed 8 lety +634

    god damn this girl needs a monument. preferably one of her kneeling down holding the hand of a dying solider on his back with a face that looks like she's giving him sass for going and getting himself shot.

    • @Lectar117
      @Lectar117 Pƙed 8 lety +83

      She has a statue in London you know

    • @jimmyyang5193
      @jimmyyang5193 Pƙed 8 lety +54

      +Lectar117 Central London too, so tourists can learn her name too.

    • @nakenmil
      @nakenmil Pƙed 8 lety +22

      +Jimmy Yang Has it actually been put up? All I could find googling was proposals.

    • @elephant3109
      @elephant3109 Pƙed 5 lety +4

      order of merit too. that was something you wont give to someone else

    • @29gopikrishnap2
      @29gopikrishnap2 Pƙed 5 lety +4

      dude she was like 76 ......call her mother

  • @IWearTimepants
    @IWearTimepants Pƙed 8 lety +856

    Anyone else find it darkly humorous that Cholera has actually become a recurring character on the show? Like, you can visually recognize the Cholera character and you just want to shake your fist at it.
    Damn you, Cholera! You'll get yours! Oh yes. One day, when you least expect it, the people you tormented will get around to building a vast network of pipes and drains to dispose of waste water and stop disposing of excrement in the street. On that day, you'll get yours!!

    • @atomicjacob6413
      @atomicjacob6413 Pƙed 8 lety +88

      i just hope future generations will look at cancer, the way we look at cholera now, an old adverts that has been conquered

    • @SomeFreakingCactus
      @SomeFreakingCactus Pƙed 8 lety +17

      They showed caricatures of other diseases, like typhoid. I believe we'll be seeing them soon.

    • @HollowGolem
      @HollowGolem Pƙed 6 lety +14

      Dysentery is the big one. Surprised cholera is a bigger player so far since, historically, dysentery was a bigger threat for a longer period.

    • @DrGandW
      @DrGandW Pƙed 6 lety +11

      IWearTimepants It’s like seeing a flashback with a villain you already know gets killed
      Just you wait, John Snow will figure you out!

    • @BothHands1
      @BothHands1 Pƙed 5 lety +2

      😂 10/10

  • @ChristianNeihart
    @ChristianNeihart Pƙed 8 lety +813

    Mary Seacole will ride eternal, shiny and chrome.

    • @Silverhand264
      @Silverhand264 Pƙed 8 lety +37

      You better believe shes right there in Valhalla taking care of her sons just as she did those years ago.

    • @Armendicus
      @Armendicus Pƙed 8 lety +11

      +Christian Neihart and every day shall be a lovely day!!!

    • @yungsloth8336
      @yungsloth8336 Pƙed 8 lety +9

      Mary is awaited in Valhalla!!!

    • @robertwalpole360
      @robertwalpole360 Pƙed 8 lety +6

      +Christian Newhart *gives everybody silver food mist cans*

    • @Armendicus
      @Armendicus Pƙed 8 lety +13

      Robert Walpole * Speeds down road,Sprays mouth*
      "WITNESSS!!!"
      *gets pulled over* " Shit!!"
      Cop: " The hell kinda party you speeding to?!"
      "Valhalla Mutherfucker!"
      Cop: "Well tell Odin to pay this ticket."

  • @shadowtoast6294
    @shadowtoast6294 Pƙed 8 lety +982

    Damn. I woudn't have known about her if you guys wouldn't have told. History reminds us of bloody wars and makes us remember the names of the crazed leaders that sparked them, rather than people who give a glimmer of hope to us in the darkest of our times.

    • @vizthex
      @vizthex Pƙed 7 lety +3

      Same

    • @snowmanleblanc6053
      @snowmanleblanc6053 Pƙed 5 lety +2

      I prefer both actually

    • @garlicgirl3149
      @garlicgirl3149 Pƙed 4 lety

      Well said.

    • @hetrodoxlysonov-wh9oo
      @hetrodoxlysonov-wh9oo Pƙed 3 lety +3

      It's complete and utter nonsense, Mary Seacole was a restaurateur she was never a nurse, she came to London to register a claim her and her brother had on a goldmine, her mother owned a restaurant in Jamaica and knew the trade, she ran out of money in London and saw an opportunity to open a restaurant in Crimea, in those days people would go out to view battles from the hillside, this is the closest she ever got while serving food and drinks to people watching, she was never a nurse.

  • @cherrybutterflyproductions6795
    @cherrybutterflyproductions6795 Pƙed 8 lety +270

    Weirdest thing about this to me? I played through three whole campaigns of a tabletop RPG as Mary Seacole in everything but name. Black, wartime nurse, built, owned and ran care centers in three different cities at one time or another, never gave up her cheerfully maternal disposition, etc. Really wish I'd known who she was before I made the character.

    • @jonahfalcon1970
      @jonahfalcon1970 Pƙed 6 lety +11

      What RPG would that be?

    • @aliaphoenix7194
      @aliaphoenix7194 Pƙed 5 lety +5

      I’m guessing dnd/pathfinder. Those two being the most common Table top RPGs (in the states at least)

    • @trinityspark7160
      @trinityspark7160 Pƙed 4 lety +5

      I actually was thinking of building a character for The Shackles Module in Pathfinder based of her. Where she would have her hotel on one of the islands and any pirate that enters captain or crew are called sons and daughters.

  • @vavakxnonexus
    @vavakxnonexus Pƙed 8 lety +1782

    5:50 Please start actually bandaging my arm and not the air, Mother.

  • @dicerson9976
    @dicerson9976 Pƙed 8 lety +42

    I wish we could go back to her in her dying moments, and tell her,
    "You are remembered". To console her and care for her just as she did so many others. Its what she deserves.

  • @extrahistory
    @extrahistory  Pƙed 8 lety +1243

    Mary Seacole sent herself to the Crimean War, believing that if she could be of any help, it would be worth any risk.

    • @Jebbtube
      @Jebbtube Pƙed 8 lety +13

      +Extra Credits How many others are there whose stories have been lost to time, ignorance, or neglect?
      Too many, I'd say.

    • @FiauraTheTankGirlGamer
      @FiauraTheTankGirlGamer Pƙed 8 lety +5

      +Extra Credits This was awesome! Can we get another one?

    • @mrtalos
      @mrtalos Pƙed 8 lety +2

      +MagnuMagnus that's very true. it's not the acts of kindness, more the promotion after. For example, Florence Nightingale was apparently not very good at what she did, but her name is extremely well known.

    • @thrandompug2254
      @thrandompug2254 Pƙed 8 lety +1

      +MagnuMagnus you sound very smart

    • @GallowglassAxe
      @GallowglassAxe Pƙed 8 lety +6

      +Extra Credits This was yet another incredible video. I love hearing the unsung heroes of history. I'm looking forward to seeing you at Magfest next month!

  • @JetKusanagi
    @JetKusanagi Pƙed 8 lety +21

    It helps to realize that Mary was no a young woman during the Crimean War. She was at least in her 50s by that time or close to them. Yet she spent so much time and energy running back and forth in the war zone treating soldiers and running her business. A true paragon of this and her age. She and Yolande of Aragon are my two favorite historical figures.
    PS Yolande of Aragon is another person deserving of an Extra History lesson ;)

  • @shadowsfromolliesgraveyard6577
    @shadowsfromolliesgraveyard6577 Pƙed 8 lety +628

    Well, I cried.

    • @sabata2
      @sabata2 Pƙed 8 lety +29

      +Kieron George I did my best to hold it in.

    • @popcornfilms1
      @popcornfilms1 Pƙed 8 lety +2

      :,)

    • @glorioustigereye
      @glorioustigereye Pƙed 8 lety +6

      Me too

    • @Potato-ey5hj
      @Potato-ey5hj Pƙed 7 lety +8

      My neighbors are cutting giant onions again, damn onions :(

    • @camellias.7106
      @camellias.7106 Pƙed 6 lety +6

      Can you imagine if they actually make a good Hollywood movie about her!

  • @arthurhill8185
    @arthurhill8185 Pƙed 8 lety +73

    This episode actually managed to make me cry a little. Wow.
    I think this episode shows how Extra Credits' people-focused approach to history really works.

    • @BrennanMorris
      @BrennanMorris Pƙed rokem +2

      7 years later, I'm crying while watching this. It's so sad that history forgot her. I'm glad Extra Credits covered her.

    • @stinkytoy
      @stinkytoy Pƙed rokem +1

      Yeeah here i am, years later crying all over again haha

  • @FiauraTheTankGirlGamer
    @FiauraTheTankGirlGamer Pƙed 8 lety +552

    This made my heart skip a few beats and feel, alive today. Maybe I can make it, if Mary could :)

    • @siadurans
      @siadurans Pƙed 4 lety

      If Mother could, you can, don't give up!

  • @shanweeboy
    @shanweeboy Pƙed 8 lety +2578

    At least she wasn't being constantly being thrown under the bus like a certain korean admiral...

  • @TheRWS96
    @TheRWS96 Pƙed 8 lety +400

    -Over the ages there have been many hero’s
    -But few are remembered
    -Because, for all their work and all that they have achieved
    -In time even the greatest legacy’s will be wiped away
    -But even if the hero’s themselves are forgotten and the paths they tread disappeared
    -Their influence will live on in the people they helped and those helped by them
    -Because you have to believe that kindness will grow
    --------------------------
    I do not know if this is any good but after watching this video i thought this up
    Anyway i more or less wanted to say, Thank you Mother Seacole

    • @Chowder_T
      @Chowder_T Pƙed 8 lety +2

      +TheRWS96 Couldn't put it any better.

    • @slimthegamer1245
      @slimthegamer1245 Pƙed 8 lety

      +TheRWS96 What is the point of separating your point into lines? I agree, but why make it a poem (if you can call it that)?

    • @TheRWS96
      @TheRWS96 Pƙed 8 lety +1

      i thought it sounded nice and if you do not separate the lines it will be read differently.
      i could also have used a dot but it looks better like this

    • @Tsuyara
      @Tsuyara Pƙed 8 lety

      +TheRWS96 While i agree, i think thanking Seacole goes kind of against that. There are so many heroes who are simply forgotten, even more so than Seacole (who is actually semi-famous nowadays).

    • @TheRWS96
      @TheRWS96 Pƙed 8 lety +2

      true, makes me think.
      still i am happy that there are (have been) so manny hero's that we can not remember all of them, even if it's sad that we don't

  • @lizzsmith128
    @lizzsmith128 Pƙed 5 lety +227

    This is amazingly uplifting and especially empowering for a young woman coming into her own. Thank you for bringing this amazing role model into the light. I’m going to share this with a ton of people I know who could use the inspiration and motivation this stirred in me! ^-^

  • @Sonics1DiscordKitten
    @Sonics1DiscordKitten Pƙed 8 lety +1060

    RIP in peace mother.

  • @abloogywoogywoo
    @abloogywoogywoo Pƙed 8 lety +23

    I was not prepared for the emotional ending...
    Such a strange bittersweetness of mixed profound sadness and joy...

  • @CypherRCX
    @CypherRCX Pƙed 8 lety +122

    5:20 I loved that
    "Trespassers will be shot, survivors will be shot again!... Unless you are Mary Seacole, you can come in"

    • @marxel4444
      @marxel4444 Pƙed 5 lety +5

      we need to shoot her too!
      are you stupid? thats our mother bringing us pies you moron!

    • @aero-cc6mt
      @aero-cc6mt Pƙed 4 lety +2

      @@marxel4444 the soldier:" wait what she brings us pie!?

    • @random_commenter6904
      @random_commenter6904 Pƙed 4 lety +2

      Soldier: OF COURSE SHE DID! NOW HOLD

    • @aero-cc6mt
      @aero-cc6mt Pƙed 4 lety +3

      @@random_commenter6904 soldier:" YES SIR!"

  • @ashleyhyatt6319
    @ashleyhyatt6319 Pƙed 8 lety +401

    Now THAT'S a woman! Bold, intelligent, gentle, and strong. I would have tripped over myself to get with her - colour barriers be damned!

  • @TurlasThe6
    @TurlasThe6 Pƙed 8 lety +79

    Thank you, Mary Seacole, for being the quiet, yet often very loud, hero that you were. We will remember you!

  • @emmawalter5433
    @emmawalter5433 Pƙed 8 měsĂ­ci +2

    Queen! Heroine! Mother! May she never again be forgotten!

  • @manuelacosta9033
    @manuelacosta9033 Pƙed 8 lety +39

    well no shame in admiting it... I cried a lot, great video, INCREDIBLE WOMAN... thank you kindly for this great story. Let us never again forget such important people like this!!!

  • @AxelLeJeff
    @AxelLeJeff Pƙed 8 lety +58

    Absolutely wonderful. Although it was much shorter than usual, I'm still glad this was done. Thankyou.

    • @saltyk9869
      @saltyk9869 Pƙed 8 lety +4

      +Jeffman12 I'm just as happy with these short ones as the much larger five or six part ones. It helps to shine a light on a small part of history.

  • @hannabelphaege3774
    @hannabelphaege3774 Pƙed 8 lety +59

    I hope you realize this series is the only thing that brings me to tears.

  • @hadesfist1017
    @hadesfist1017 Pƙed 4 lety +5

    3:36 made me a happy a little just the fact that he said those words and still helped her was just great thing during that era

  • @grfrjiglstan
    @grfrjiglstan Pƙed 8 lety +59

    Wow, yet another amazing story, once lost, but now rescued from the depths of history.
    Excellent work as always, guys. I love this series.

  • @VenseyNess
    @VenseyNess Pƙed 8 lety +21

    Though I find it much more thrilling when you take a look at a bigger topic, these small ones really get to me, especially when you make them feel like how big they should be.
    This one... it was good, man. Thank you guys for taking stories people should know, and bringing them to the light.

  • @extrahistory
    @extrahistory  Pƙed 8 lety +207

    Extra History returns next week with the conclusion of the Justinian and Theodora series! If you want a say in future topics, go check out our Patreon. Donors vote for new topics at the end of every series, and the current vote is going on right now!
    Visit Patreon: patreon.com/extracredits

    • @declankearns1916
      @declankearns1916 Pƙed 8 lety +2

      wow wow wow wut

    • @TheSierraMadre_
      @TheSierraMadre_ Pƙed 8 lety +2

      Been waiting for this for 4 months.
      Woot.

    • @tenkenroo
      @tenkenroo Pƙed 8 lety +4

      +Extra Credits Can you guys tell the tale of the badass jack churhill?

    • @Duke_of_Lorraine
      @Duke_of_Lorraine Pƙed 8 lety +4

      +The Wolf the one who used a sword, a longbow and bagpipes in WW2 ?

    • @hwa90
      @hwa90 Pƙed 8 lety +14

      +Extra Credits Thank you, a friend of my who study on nursery had frustrated over the event that took place around the world,she suffer from a minor depressives but she able hold herself very well.your history review John Snow and Mary Seacole had spark a new light for her to continue her study.i from Malaysian,currently 4.3+am. she make me to inform her as soon that a new episode on late Mary how ever late it is.and i can see the spark on her eye lit after the video. hope you able continue your history review more on this unsung hero.

  • @garlicgirl3149
    @garlicgirl3149 Pƙed 4 lety +4

    I am proud, filled with pride, in awe, saddened and grateful all at once. Thanks for educating me and others about this tenacious woman.

  • @Fabby_naa
    @Fabby_naa Pƙed 2 lety +6

    i really hope more people will get to know her. Her story is just heart moving and wonderful!!

  • @tigerman9285
    @tigerman9285 Pƙed 8 lety +43

    This was a short series but I really liked it.

  • @AhrimanVII
    @AhrimanVII Pƙed 8 lety +23

    I can believe someone that GOOD actually could have existed.

    • @MouldMadeMind
      @MouldMadeMind Pƙed 4 lety +1

      Good and Evil are just questions of view and only exist in the human mind.

  • @catfood1788
    @catfood1788 Pƙed 3 lety +5

    This legitimately made me cry it’s such a beautiful story

  • @amymeadows9834
    @amymeadows9834 Pƙed 4 lety +5

    Mary Seacole. Woman of medicine, wanderlust, and bravery. If only there were more like her perhaps we as people would be thriving much more than now... May she know that her death however was not in vain after all she helped during the war like an actual field medic. May she rest in peace. And be remembered

  • @ammo1317
    @ammo1317 Pƙed 8 lety +17

    You manage to make me sad about nameless soldiers that died long ago, good job and keep on making amazing content

  • @Nogu3
    @Nogu3 Pƙed 5 lety +43

    "She took care of her sons in the face of adversity, and in the twilight of her life, her sons would take care of her."

  • @sneal8526
    @sneal8526 Pƙed 7 lety +21

    i almost cried
    how dare you, dan.
    you almost made me cry.

  • @kaitlynboss3497
    @kaitlynboss3497 Pƙed 3 lety +6

    Wow, what an amazing and wholesome story. I'm so glad she could be rescued from the sands of time. She has really inspired me, if only for the night.

  • @Tidus902
    @Tidus902 Pƙed 5 lety +2

    As someone who went through nursing school, it breaks my heart to have never heard of this woman. She may not have had the formal education of a nurse, but she had the attitude that nurses should aspire to have.

  • @satansgrandma6728
    @satansgrandma6728 Pƙed 8 lety +13

    omg I freakin love Mary Seacole! She's just an awesome woman who should really be mentioned more in history books.

  • @SandlyCut
    @SandlyCut Pƙed 3 lety +3

    a couple of drops came from my eyes.
    Love from Finland/Estonia.

  • @Duke_of_Lorraine
    @Duke_of_Lorraine Pƙed 8 lety +50

    John Snow, Mary Seacole... spoiler alert : Justinian would have needed people like that.

  • @willsighner1886
    @willsighner1886 Pƙed 8 lety +6

    6:02 I teared up. I was very surprised at how much that scene affected me. Thanks for bringing history so close to home!

  • @skippy9214
    @skippy9214 Pƙed 4 lety +3

    That bit at the end with the person jumping out of the burning building with a book actually happened at the British Museum of natural history.

  • @azhrayharris8
    @azhrayharris8 Pƙed 5 lety +1

    When I was little I had a picture book about Mary Seacole. I spent countless afternoons acting out her life using my Barbies. She has inspired me and helped make me the strong woman I am. Thank you for telling her story. She was an incredible woman who is too often forgotten.

  • @BerttheHuman4TheHydrant
    @BerttheHuman4TheHydrant Pƙed 8 lety +211

    The life of a Mercy main

  • @mcming3338
    @mcming3338 Pƙed 8 lety +4

    I'm literally crying right now. The end is just beautiful.

  • @DrakeVagabond
    @DrakeVagabond Pƙed 8 lety +411

    you ain't gonna see Mary in an Assassin's Creed game.

    • @ReyndommVideos
      @ReyndommVideos Pƙed 8 lety +172

      Screed? Shit, she deserves her own game. I'd play the hell out of a resource management/shopkeeping simulator called "Mary Seacole's Crimean Hotel".

    • @jeremysaklad6703
      @jeremysaklad6703 Pƙed 8 lety +66

      +Centimeterworm You could even combine that with a first-person simulation of her time as a medic. Or an RPG part about finding supplies along the way or tracking down people she needs to talk to in London. Lots of potential here.

    • @KaptenN
      @KaptenN Pƙed 8 lety +63

      +DrakeVagabond I'm not so sure. If they make an Assassin's Creed game that takes place in the Crimean war she might very well be one of the more important supporting characters, maybe even with ties to the assassins as an informant.

    • @firenter
      @firenter Pƙed 8 lety +17

      +Centimeterworm Ok, I'm noting that one down in my 'Game inspiration file' because that sounds incredible!

    • @ReyndommVideos
      @ReyndommVideos Pƙed 8 lety +6

      Firenter
      Please do! Let me know when you get published!

  • @messerschmitt7240
    @messerschmitt7240 Pƙed 3 lety +3

    *crying* oh my god what a great story of a Legend , God Bless you Mary Seacole . 😭😭😭😭

  • @Sidorio
    @Sidorio Pƙed 8 lety +14

    Fantastic couple of episodes! My favourite part of Extra History is highlighting stories from humankind's past that I'd likely never have known about otherwise. Keep up the fantastic work everyone :)

  • @otakudoctor8423
    @otakudoctor8423 Pƙed 8 lety +1

    Extra Credits did where none of my history teachers succeeded...
    Made me cry
    A really awesome episode and a tribute to an awesome person. Thanks for introducing me to Mary

  • @decommissionedunitnanotech2265

    Mary Seacole: So, have I fulfilled it? Am I a hero to people's eyes?
    The Soldiers: No
    Mary Seacole: Why?
    The Soldiers: You're a legend

  • @AceHawk37
    @AceHawk37 Pƙed 8 lety +302

    Fiction's got nothing on history

    • @mymylenrok7466
      @mymylenrok7466 Pƙed 7 lety +1

      what do you mean

    • @Potato-ey5hj
      @Potato-ey5hj Pƙed 7 lety +18

      He means that fiction is trying to get realistic heros, but history gets it by default. For instance in every war there was on this planet there are always gonna be good people helping people out, whether they was just fighting each other or they're allies, WW1 they had a football match.

    • @thonmoyrahman2270
      @thonmoyrahman2270 Pƙed 6 lety +6

      Zenith Wills fiction just attempts to get realistic heroes. History gets *even better ones that seem fictional* .

    • @snowmanleblanc6053
      @snowmanleblanc6053 Pƙed 5 lety +2

      Potato i think he meant that fiction is nothing compared to history. Since fiction is supposed to be a recreation for most people rather than education.

    • @hyperhare0624
      @hyperhare0624 Pƙed 4 lety +1

      Now make a movie of this story!

  • @filmting05
    @filmting05 Pƙed 8 lety +5

    Actions of the past untold, echoing across the world.
    Feats of strength incurred, in silence but still heard.
    So many heroes left behind in the cold, let their voices be heard, let their stories be told.
    Great episode as always, thanks for making this.

  • @TheZeyon
    @TheZeyon Pƙed 8 lety +18

    What a lovely lady. Too bad her name got forgotten for a while.

  • @Loiner_Leftie
    @Loiner_Leftie Pƙed 8 lety +5

    I never cry, but this has me on the edge. I have goosebumps all over.

  • @rodrigorebollos
    @rodrigorebollos Pƙed 6 lety +23

    "Who lives who dies who tells your Story?"
    Seriously...would love for that Hamilton guy to take a crack at a Seacole Musical

  • @Sylocat
    @Sylocat Pƙed 8 lety +8

    Dang. This was a short series, but it's one of my faves so far. Every chapter in this woman's life was fascinating and extraordinary.

  • @tsujimisaki3684
    @tsujimisaki3684 Pƙed 3 lety +11

    God bless Mary seacole, we should all remember her.

  • @fezdalek
    @fezdalek Pƙed 8 lety +82

    You know nothing people who forget her!

    • @jeremysaklad6703
      @jeremysaklad6703 Pƙed 8 lety +9

      +Fezdalek Abrasion Please, for the love of god, don’t make that a meme here.

    • @KaptenN
      @KaptenN Pƙed 8 lety +1

      +Jeremy Saklad I already is. Deal with it.

    • @nils191
      @nils191 Pƙed 8 lety +2

      YOU KNOW NOTHING FEZDALEK ABRAIAN.

    • @jeremysaklad6703
      @jeremysaklad6703 Pƙed 8 lety +1

      Zenith Wills Leave me out of this!

  • @user-cu6sj6he3k
    @user-cu6sj6he3k Pƙed 5 lety +2

    What a great woman. Those who’re not familiar with military life may not feel nearly as connected to her stories compared to those who are familiar with. Having someone to provide you with the caring and love just like moms on the harsh battle field really would feel like a life saver. Rest In Peace Mother Seafole.

  • @chaew0nieee
    @chaew0nieee Pƙed 4 lety +3

    She was in my year 8 history textbook!!

  • @Callistosdotcom
    @Callistosdotcom Pƙed 5 lety +2

    this story always makes me cry.. ):

  • @tomcat-ek3bh
    @tomcat-ek3bh Pƙed 8 lety +11

    Can't wait to see Justinian next week!
    Also I'd like to see some more of these small series's.
    They help shed light on people you may not have heard of.

  • @suysb
    @suysb Pƙed 5 lety +1

    These types of people are so easily forgotten but they did a lot
    Sometimes even the smallest of things can make a big change
    Smile and that smile may brighten someone’s day.
    Those small things will change the world

  • @papafrancesco2937
    @papafrancesco2937 Pƙed 8 lety +366

    extra history: Bismarck

    • @labrynianrebel
      @labrynianrebel Pƙed 8 lety +5

      +hermanPla Glorious Kleindeutschland! Leave the Austrians to their Balkan nonsense!

    • @notbobby125
      @notbobby125 Pƙed 8 lety +6

      +Broodrooster24 Short version: Bismarck was a genius in time where everyone else with political power was a complete idiot.

    • @theguyeverybodylikes9667
      @theguyeverybodylikes9667 Pƙed 8 lety +3

      +goff0103 i think no one cares about that, because the french hate everything that is german

    • @theguyeverybodylikes9667
      @theguyeverybodylikes9667 Pƙed 8 lety

      +goff0103 i think no one cares about that, because the french hate everything that is german

    • @labrynianrebel
      @labrynianrebel Pƙed 8 lety +3

      the guy everybody likes
      Except the Saarland

  • @countjondi9672
    @countjondi9672 Pƙed 8 lety +1

    I was fully unaware of Mother Seacole until you put this forward. I found your telling of her story both fascinating and heartwarming. I absoloutely love this series, and i hope to see many more Installments

  • @VideoPaladin
    @VideoPaladin Pƙed 8 lety +3

    I had never heard of Mary Seacole before this and I really enjoyed watching both episodes. They were very informative.

  • @stanj85
    @stanj85 Pƙed 8 lety +2

    This is one of the most touching stories I've encountered in a while. Thanks so much Extra Credits for telling it.

  • @Ilichburger
    @Ilichburger Pƙed 8 lety +5

    God, watching the "Controversy" section of her Wikipedia article is so disheartening... Can't believe the world still refuses to give her credit

  • @Art1611
    @Art1611 Pƙed 8 lety

    I shed some tears around the end. What a truly courageous, exemplary life, full of compassion and grit.

  • @batozorange
    @batozorange Pƙed 5 lety +4

    You were a legend, Mother Secole.

  • @ares1zz921
    @ares1zz921 Pƙed 5 lety

    Wow... wish I had that Bravery and the willingness to help all like she did. I'm glad you brought her into the light. She shouldn't have been forgotten in the first place.

  • @theslappingbox6302
    @theslappingbox6302 Pƙed 8 lety +8

    I feel like you guys could do a wonderful job of dealing with the rise and fall of the Wiemar Republic. Even taking a fairly advanced European history at a great school here in the states, the best we got was "WWI, economic collapse, something something, BOOM, Nazi Germany". From doing a little digging I feel like it's a rich period of history that so few people really know a lot about.

  • @benneilson10
    @benneilson10 Pƙed 7 lety +2

    What a great story, it is nice to hear in history that such great people existed.

  • @vulpinecatastrophe9377
    @vulpinecatastrophe9377 Pƙed 3 lety +4

    We love and respect Mary Seacole in this house

  • @rafaelmoreno1985
    @rafaelmoreno1985 Pƙed 8 lety +2

    Thank you for bringing this amazing piece of history to our knowledge. The most beautiful and emotional video about history that I have seen in a long time. Congratulations.

  • @AhJong0
    @AhJong0 Pƙed 4 lety +7

    I had no knowledge of this woman - real sense of shame as a citizen of the UK. I will ensure the children of my class do not have the same shame.

  • @filip4900
    @filip4900 Pƙed 8 lety

    It's great that you make these videos of forgotten events and individuals. Mary didn't deserve to be erased from history.

  • @berneverything1932
    @berneverything1932 Pƙed 6 lety +36

    MARY WAS BADDASS AND YOU CANT TELL ME OTHER WISEE

  • @MythlyInari
    @MythlyInari Pƙed 8 lety +2

    This is absolutely amazing. Now I know what I'm going to bingewatch for a few hours. Extra History!

  • @adampigott9677
    @adampigott9677 Pƙed 6 lety +8

    She reminds me of my Nan(that's what Irish sometimes call grandmothers)

    • @ThePkmage
      @ThePkmage Pƙed 5 lety

      I think nan is fairly universal in the british isles

  • @KevinOMalleyisonlysmallreally

    This was amazing. We spend so much waste awe and wonder on villains who murdered their way across the world. Who wasted their small portion of life on the husbandry of wealth at the expense of countless lives and potential. But here we have a human in the truest sense of the word. A hero. Thanks for taking the time to introduce her to the many of us who may not have ever had the chance to reflect on her life, I know you have limited resources and an audience to entertain but this is a truly meaningful 20 minutes you've given me and I'm genuinely grateful.

  • @Bluecho4
    @Bluecho4 Pƙed 8 lety +14

    That Mary Seacole was forgotten by history is a travesty. Let us all remember her struggle.
    And when you get the chance, everyone, give your mothers a hug.

  • @ghostiegeist
    @ghostiegeist Pƙed 8 lety +2

    Thank you, EC crew, for bringing a light to the story of Mary Seacole; a woman I could only dream of aspiring to be more like. The world would be a much better place if saints like her were more widely known. It just goes to show the true love and compassion a humanbeing is capable of - even in the darkest times, there are those whos light shines the brightest.

    • @Tsuyara
      @Tsuyara Pƙed 8 lety

      +thewallsown Why can't you be like her?

  • @raulendymion9917
    @raulendymion9917 Pƙed 8 lety +17

    I love this so much. I wonder sadly how many Mother Seacole's we don't hear about. She's a hero......
    Also colera I have learned to hate even more...

  • @GeminibBorn
    @GeminibBorn Pƙed 8 lety +2

    Im Glad someone remembers her and man I Love this show, guys keep it up ...I can get enough of this.

  • @Achillez098
    @Achillez098 Pƙed 8 lety +18

    Bless Mary Seacole, what a woman!

  • @nactros
    @nactros Pƙed 8 lety +2

    Thank you. To the whole team. These have become my favorite part of the show.

  • @parsahamidi
    @parsahamidi Pƙed 8 lety +32

    I always wonder, how come these people who help the sick (Jon snow) never get sick them self. I don't know about Mary though, cuz I haven't seen the whole vid, but I'm still wondering why.

    • @linkxsc
      @linkxsc Pƙed 8 lety +39

      +Parsa Hamidi in the case of cholera, you can be round people with it, just as long as you don't eat or drink anything tainted. And actually mary seacole did come down with a mild case of cholera during Crimea.

    • @TheKiroshi
      @TheKiroshi Pƙed 8 lety +25

      it's sometimes simple luxury. Jon Snow was not poor and had the ability to wash, eat clean food and had the expensive education to figure out and piece together things to understand sickness better.
      seacole most certainly got sick,without a doubt. but I she probably fought though it and tended to herself? if anything is to believed about her attitude. she was probably pretty conscience of her own health

    • @MrTrollaid
      @MrTrollaid Pƙed 8 lety +11

      +Parsa Hamidi Also, some people are simply naturally immune. Why did the Plague killed one third of Europe and not all of it? It's not because those two thirds didn't get it, they did. They just didn't feel it.

    • @NotaWalrus1
      @NotaWalrus1 Pƙed 8 lety +10

      +Parsa Hamidi In addition to what others have mentioned, most plagues either kill you outright, or leave you alive and immune to the disease for essentially the rest of your life. Some of these people contracted the disease and then survived it, gaining immunity.

    • @Mankorra_Gomorrah
      @Mankorra_Gomorrah Pƙed 8 lety +3

      I always assumed that most people who tried to cut diseases did end up dying of it, only the lucky few actually cured the disease and thus were remembered

  • @Darthbelal
    @Darthbelal Pƙed 4 lety

    Mary Seacole deserves to be remembered and I will do so. Thank you for highlighting Ms Seacole and her story...........

  • @enoughofyourkoicarp
    @enoughofyourkoicarp Pƙed 8 lety +9

    One fucking incredible woman!
    (I cried, I'm not ashamed to admit that.)

  • @coltonberry985
    @coltonberry985 Pƙed 8 lety

    My #1Source of extra history, just helping me spark interests, and confirming/re-evaluating my current knowledge. Thank you extra credits. Thank you.

  • @MoistyLimes
    @MoistyLimes Pƙed 8 lety +3

    "This video restores your faith in humanity! You are filled with DETERMINATION!"

  • @spongebobbies
    @spongebobbies Pƙed 4 lety +2

    It’s content like this that gives me hope for my children’s futures ! Thank you for add meaningful and educational information for the youth and for grown adults! Amazing channel!!!!