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The Early History of Appalachia

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  • čas přidán 13. 01. 2013
  • Settled for centuries by Native American tribes before the arrival of the Europeans, the Cherokee were the dominant people of Appalachia when the colonial settlers began to enter their Appalachian homelands. It would be the subsequent rush of Scots-Irish, English, and German immigrants that would ultimately settle into this region as colonists within the North American British empire.

Komentáře • 1,7K

  • @Witchofthewoods.
    @Witchofthewoods. Před rokem +36

    I'm an Appalachian resident my entire life and it's all I know. I love the feeling of Autumn approaching and being able to walk down the Appalachian trail during my day. We get all 4 seasons, lush mountain views, and the best outdoorsy stuff to do. It's beautiful for sure and I wouldn't feel at home anywhere else. I don't like others coming here and exploiting the land's resources, but it's been happening for years.

    • @RoxyNothing
      @RoxyNothing Před rokem +3

      To bad !NOT your land. Land back

    • @beautifuldreamer3991
      @beautifuldreamer3991 Před rokem

      I don't blame you dear...I hate it too and its totally terrible what they have done to California and now it's a haven for nutcase liberals....

    • @wegfarir1963
      @wegfarir1963 Před rokem +2

      @@RoxyNothing Not your land missy

    • @feedyourmind6713
      @feedyourmind6713 Před rokem +1

      While appreciative of your sentiments, a nation needs resources to be a nation.ine doesn't become a world power by being meek (excuse the borrowing of a line from the Cherokee leader at the beginning of the vid).

    • @rahsunallah2825
      @rahsunallah2825 Před rokem +2

      Exploiting the land resources 😂😂

  • @samueladams1775
    @samueladams1775 Před 4 lety +509

    Scotch is an alcohol. We are Scots. Not Scotch.

    • @kenkelble358
      @kenkelble358 Před 4 lety +14

      All respect to you, !!

    • @kenkelble358
      @kenkelble358 Před 4 lety +2

      @gavinator I'm glade they are here..100% give me a black and tan..

    • @robcochran6213
      @robcochran6213 Před 4 lety +39

      @gavinator Wrong. The term is first known to have been used to refer to a people living in northeastern Ireland. In a letter of April 14, 1573, in reference to descendants of "gallowglass" mercenaries from Scotland who had settled in Ireland, Elizabeth I of England wrote: We are given to understand that a nobleman named 'Sorley Boy' [MacDonnel] and others, who be of the Scotch-Irish race .
      Scots who were sent to Northern Ireland and then moved to America.

    • @michaelleeannspringer3247
      @michaelleeannspringer3247 Před 4 lety +53

      Scotch is a tape too, ha. A sticky word.

    • @samueladams1775
      @samueladams1775 Před 4 lety +9

      @@robcochran6213 but it wasn't the Scots that called themselves Scotch. It was a twit queen of Anglund, or England. Just because she in error used the term, that doesn't make it correct. Go to Scotland and start calling everyone Scotch. LMAO. Good luck.

  • @tashw2691
    @tashw2691 Před 3 lety +55

    Very proud of my Native family! They lived off the land, which is the righteous way of walking with God the holy way! They loved their brother and sister's of all colors! ❤❤❤

    • @commoveo1
      @commoveo1 Před 3 lety +4

      That’s it❤️! Always knew in my heart ❤️!

    • @Crystal-bp6gv
      @Crystal-bp6gv Před 2 lety +4

      The Cherokee were also slave owners. They even took Africans slaves on the trail of tears with them. This video seemed to skip that.

    • @user-nh6vu3qr7b
      @user-nh6vu3qr7b Před 2 lety +2

      @@Crystal-bp6gv freed black who bought their freedom also bought slaves so i guess its just a choice to learn and get rich just like everyone else.

    • @kiasax2
      @kiasax2 Před dnem

      ​@Crystal-bp6gv Very true, which I'll readily admit, even being a Cherokee American.

    • @kiasax2
      @kiasax2 Před dnem

      Not entirely true.
      We Cherokees had wars with neighboring Tribes over the right to hunt on certain lands.
      I get upset by those who paint us as some "touchy-feely" group of people who were perfect in some bizarre fashion. Hardly so.
      We fought and we killed. That's where the terminology of warriors came to be.
      We sided with the British during the American Revolution, in case anyone cares about true history. The reason was that the British were trying to prevent the colonists from spreading west past the Appalachian Mountains, which we liked. We only did what made the most sense for our Tribe, as any people would.
      Fantasies are for fiction, not for real history.
      Please folks, stay with actual facts, not some fantasy world nonsense.

  • @troyp5208
    @troyp5208 Před 3 lety +41

    They went to war to gather land also. Your documentary contradicts itself. "My people didn't gain the land of 7 states by being weak".
    That lady said, "it wasn't war for land".
    Contradicts.

    • @markinternets2009
      @markinternets2009 Před 2 lety +19

      Yeah that lady was really leaning hard into the noble savage mythos

    • @savingmayberry387
      @savingmayberry387 Před 2 lety

      yea it's just about "fug whitey"

    • @23strawbale
      @23strawbale Před 2 lety

      its all conolete, woke rubbish. trying to paint them somehow better than Europeans.

    • @scottinnh88
      @scottinnh88 Před 2 lety +4

      The truth is the Natives didn’t have the tech to fight back. The Natives were very good warriors amongst themselves. They would raid steal kill enslave other tribes woman’s people try to act like Native Americans were hippys or some shit not true at all.

    • @alexanderespada8871
      @alexanderespada8871 Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah. I thought she was kind of naive when l heard her say that.

  • @humbertoruiz3335
    @humbertoruiz3335 Před 4 lety +67

    I'm very proud native American I was born raised in el Salvador my families were pushed out of the land that is now America my families lost our land and we were sent in 1840 to mexico and then to el Salvador my families are comanches ute Aztecan and Mescalero Apaches

    • @russellbeverly94
      @russellbeverly94 Před 3 lety +6

      Amazing 👏 Thank you for sharing

    • @nicksaban88
      @nicksaban88 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm sorry this happened to you n your family peace love n joy please return to your natives land

    • @jeweloftheisle498
      @jeweloftheisle498 Před 2 lety +3

      I feel for what you ancestors must of went through. Your story makes me sad but I like the way you tell it with pride.

    • @bigfish8280
      @bigfish8280 Před 2 lety +6

      Ok.... Whats your point? I'm Cherokee, my ancestors were from Appalachia thousands of years ago. You going to cry about it and look for attention or be happy & live your life the best way you can...

    • @wyndella7212
      @wyndella7212 Před 2 lety +1

      Mighty warriors....

  • @imgary3
    @imgary3 Před 5 lety +117

    You will find both positive and negative traits among all people. A common denominator among all humans.

  • @nickphillips2125
    @nickphillips2125 Před 5 lety +123

    I've always been proud, and somewhat humbled to trace my family's bloodline back to Scot-Irish who settled in southern Appalachia near the Smokey Mountains. Thank you for the presentation

    • @iainmacmillan9575
      @iainmacmillan9575 Před 5 lety +5

      Scot with one T. If it has two Ts it's a surname, not a nationality.

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety +3

      My father's side of the family comed out of the Smoky and Blue Ridge Mountains which covers a lot of territory in all directions. I've seen pictures of it but would like to visit it some day.

    • @nickphillips2125
      @nickphillips2125 Před 3 lety +2

      @adam west By your comment, it is obvious who needs to "get a life"

    • @conorkelly947
      @conorkelly947 Před 2 lety +6

      Taking lands of native Irish and then Americans... what a proud heritage indeed

    • @nickphillips2125
      @nickphillips2125 Před 2 lety +15

      @@conorkelly947 Name one ethnic group whose ancestry is squeaky clean

  • @maryannhopkins7102
    @maryannhopkins7102 Před 10 lety +35

    You know in your heart the kinship to the rolling green hills and mountain passes.You feel at home in both places.

  • @B.D.B.Outdoors304
    @B.D.B.Outdoors304 Před 4 lety +37

    I'm proud to be from Appalachia, lifelong. My ancestor settled here, both European and native. Love this land.

  • @sunlightpictures8367
    @sunlightpictures8367 Před 2 lety +29

    I need to visit Appalachia, such great history and beauty.

    • @jordantylerquinnfarkas
      @jordantylerquinnfarkas Před rokem +2

      It's one of the most pleasant piece of nature in the world. I read somewhere there is more biodiversity in the Appalachian mountains than in the Amazon jungle! Haivng spent months in those mountains (off-grid), I would believe it.

    • @HorizontalFallDamage
      @HorizontalFallDamage Před rokem +1

      You most definitely should. A lovely place to enjoy summer and spring, lots of beautiful valleys and waterfalls too.

    • @yaddahaysmarmalite4059
      @yaddahaysmarmalite4059 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Go see the Smoky Mountain National Park and drive the Blue Ridge Parkway. Of course, also visit Qualla, the reservation of the Eastern Band of Cherokee (don't go to the casino, do go to the museum)

    • @sunlightpictures8367
      @sunlightpictures8367 Před 4 měsíci

      @@yaddahaysmarmalite4059 Great, thanks for the advice. I've driven through the Smoky Mountains and saw Lookout Mountain. TN is gorgeous.

  • @JmesFloyd76
    @JmesFloyd76 Před 2 lety +40

    That last commentary generated a chuckle: When the English settled, they built a church. When the Germans settled, they built a barn. But when the Scots-Irish settled, they built a whiskey still.

    • @johnnelson7050
      @johnnelson7050 Před 2 lety +1

      We do like us some whisky.......

    • @user-ey4rc5tu4t
      @user-ey4rc5tu4t Před 2 lety

      The Scotts were here as indentured servants to England. They were here to rebel rouse, and they are still great at it today.

    • @alexanderespada8871
      @alexanderespada8871 Před 2 lety

      Just the necessities.

    • @georgehutcheson9679
      @georgehutcheson9679 Před 2 lety +2

      They were intelligent because they knew how much pain was coming with building a homestead, so they needed something to kill the pain😆👍

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Před 2 lety +1

      @@johnnelson7050 thanks for spelling whisky correctly.
      For if it's nay Scot
      It's crap.

  • @Julsran
    @Julsran Před 2 lety +20

    Present day Cherokee," My people were warriors also, you don't control 7 states and be passive." Historian," There were wars but not for land or power but for revenge of killed kinsmen."

    • @marileedent8499
      @marileedent8499 Před 2 lety

      History. All Americans now

    • @hurdygurdyman1905
      @hurdygurdyman1905 Před 2 lety +3

      Agree. That lady sounds like she's not telling the truth.

    • @samuelculper5138
      @samuelculper5138 Před 2 lety +4

      @@hurdygurdyman1905 Yea, and they talk about escaped slaves becoming tribesman but leave out the fact that the tribe had a shit ton of slaves.

    • @Nasty-Nate-gh4it
      @Nasty-Nate-gh4it Před 2 lety

      The noble Indian myth. But these tards don’t even realize they are contradicting themselves a minute later. Typical

  • @bensk8in467
    @bensk8in467 Před 2 lety +39

    I am strangely drawn to this region and wish to move there badly. It’s most important to me at this time of my life and something I am working towards. Vacationed there as a child and have passed through it many times and always want to to stop and stay. It’s beautiful there.

    • @homesteadontheridge
      @homesteadontheridge Před 2 lety +5

      I completely agree with you. Having lived all over this great nation, Tennessee is the best. I've been in East Tennessee since 2007 and doubt I will ever leave.

    • @TEM14411
      @TEM14411 Před 2 lety +2

      😘😘😘 speaks to my soul. I love living here.

    • @The_Bass_Stunters
      @The_Bass_Stunters Před 2 lety +6

      Appalachia has a very strong magnetic energy to her. Very blessed to call her home from ancestral scots and Irish/welsh.

    • @molliemaemedlock
      @molliemaemedlock Před 2 lety +2

      I live in north GA my mother lived on the reserve. It’s beautiful here just respect the land ❤️

    • @jamesfstump
      @jamesfstump Před 2 lety +1

      Hopefully you can I have been here all my life my grandmother was Cherokee

  • @ladonnacross9548
    @ladonnacross9548 Před 2 lety +34

    While I love Native American history and have a Cherokee bloodline, the Cherokees actually said that they weren't the first people in Appalachia and described a people they called "The Moon Eyed people" as being here when they got here. They were apparently albino, white skinned, blue eyed people who stayed in caves and we're responsible for many of the ancient rock forts through Appalachia.
    There were also giants who were discovered in certain mounds in WV. So there were many races and groups here before the Cherokee.

    • @driverjeff1498
      @driverjeff1498 Před 2 lety +3

      That is confirmed.
      Rock Eagle GA.
      The stone hinge replica on top of lads mountain in Cartersville.
      When the first settlers asked the Cherokee why the built it the answer was they didn't.
      they said it was a people with hair like snow and eyes like the moon.

    • @michaelbee2165
      @michaelbee2165 Před 2 lety +6

      The Cherokee were not albino.

    • @michaelbee2165
      @michaelbee2165 Před 2 lety +1

      @@driverjeff1498 The Cherokee wee a brave and noble people. We owe them an acknodgement of there homeland and their bravery.

    • @bendover9813
      @bendover9813 Před 2 lety +5

      Giants, bro? Really? I’d ask you to show me

    • @CSAcrazy
      @CSAcrazy Před 2 lety +16

      @@michaelbee2165 he didn’t say the Cherokee were albino but the tribe in Appalachia before the Cherokee were and the Cherokee referred to them as moon people. Read.

  • @stephenjones101
    @stephenjones101 Před 2 lety +39

    I love the fact that this is focused on pre-European contact, yet all of the artwork shows Cherokee with rifles, and some riding horses. Neither was available to Native Americans prior to contact with Europeans.

    • @conorkelly947
      @conorkelly947 Před 2 lety +8

      Did you only watch half the video?

    • @vicaras1
      @vicaras1 Před 2 lety +3

      I know ! The cultural appropriation is sickening

    • @jonathanturek5846
      @jonathanturek5846 Před 2 lety +4

      Oil and acrylic paint on canvas was not available prior to the rifle horse and european in America.

    • @americanbronze2780
      @americanbronze2780 Před 2 lety

      Yea these are the Ppl who helped the Europeans attack the Original Black Indians before the More Mongolian type came later
      This documentary spinning the Narritive that’s why most the pics are paintings 🖼/made up as well

    • @awsheit
      @awsheit Před 2 lety +3

      Who do you think painted the fucking pictures

  • @edwardpate6128
    @edwardpate6128 Před 3 lety +100

    To me there has always been a great irony to the clan culture of the Cherokee and that of the Celtic peoples who emigrated to the region. Very similar cultures in many respects.

    • @tracicomstock6525
      @tracicomstock6525 Před 2 lety +17

      I agree. My mother's ppl are Cherokee and my father's ppl are Scottish.

    • @jacobstapleton7322
      @jacobstapleton7322 Před 2 lety

      So you said white celtics live like black originals!?

    • @shannonmccall907
      @shannonmccall907 Před 2 lety

      czcams.com/video/YUiKAv17rdY/video.html

    • @bendover9813
      @bendover9813 Před 2 lety +12

      @@jacobstapleton7322 the Native Americans in Appalachia weren’t black, they’re red indians.

    • @lodown3511
      @lodown3511 Před 2 lety

      @@bendover9813 no we were black originals

  • @TnMtnRdr
    @TnMtnRdr Před 4 lety +56

    So I have Scot-Irish, German, and English in my ancestry. As well as French and Dutch and who knows what else. probably a little native American as well. I live in the ole Tennessee hills and make a liven off the land. Upgraded a little in equipment but pretty much the same as how we used to be. I see in myself a little of everything I came from way back. And having grown up in a cabin in the hills without much modern convenience and very little money to go around, my experience harks back to the times of old. But it was good training.

    • @ridgerunner5772
      @ridgerunner5772 Před 2 lety

      The Californicators are coming like flies to honey, Sugar.... The mountains of Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina and Virginia are awhirl with change.... Soon you kids will be saying, "like" with every 4th word, "reeeally", "actuualay" and "Owe Ma Gawd"..... With land prices going out the roof, property taxes in the same fashion and the change in culture, the Over The Mountain People are doomed..., to be displaced.... Four of my six neighbors are from California and do not Poison Ivy from Turnip Greens....., chiggers from coyotes, "lions, tigers & bears" and all snakes are bad... Often, I have to translate what is being said from the natives to the "newby-Callitors."

    • @Username-cb4fg
      @Username-cb4fg Před 2 lety

      You are a illegal immigrant..
      Not Native American

    • @user-nh6vu3qr7b
      @user-nh6vu3qr7b Před 2 lety +1

      U like a hybrid a lil bit of everything haha

  • @manicmechanic448
    @manicmechanic448 Před 4 lety +23

    My people were from Cork County, and Loch Sween Scotland. Some as early as the 1700's. And yes Tennessee looks just like Scotland and Ireland.🍀

  • @slappy8941
    @slappy8941 Před 5 lety +5

    The Cherokee were an Iroquois people who came to southern Appalachia from the Great Lakes region around the 16th century, and pushed the native Yuchee and other tribes off the land, just like my ancestors did to them. I have Cherokee blood through three separate female lines of descent, and my father's mother looked more Cherokee than white, with tawny skin and straight, black hair, so I have a better understanding of the complexity of the situation than most Americans who are the descendants of recent immigrants.

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety +2

      The Iroquois Nation did not exist in the Appalachian regent of this country. Half of the Nation (close to it) belonged to them. We're talking about territory as far North as Canada and before being forced from their homes, parts of Pennsylvania. Moving into Canada came a bit later due to "Trail of Tears." Some headed North into upstate New York and Canada and others were forced to make the trek to Oklahoma.

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety

      Actually, the Iroquois nation comes out of Mongolia as do many nations and crossed the Bering Strait and moved or traveled in many directions (southerly). There is an island in or Near Alaska where there is a large settlement of the Cherokee Nation and they own it.

    • @rvingkeepitrolling8797
      @rvingkeepitrolling8797 Před 2 lety

      As well as Blackfoot I have that & Cherokee.

    • @marifromky
      @marifromky Před 2 lety

      i dare you to say that in front of any Cherokee. go on.

    • @marifromky
      @marifromky Před 2 lety

      @@phyllislittlejohn3248 that theory has been disproven

  • @chesterwilberforce9832
    @chesterwilberforce9832 Před 2 lety +50

    I've only recently discovered that my mother was adopted. This was a complete secret. I was raised in the north to believe I was about 75% German, and about a quarter English. I did the DNA thing and discovered I was nearly 80% Scot/Irish/Welsh, and only about 4% German. I have first and second cousins in Tennessee. My mother went from being a Schramm to being a Malone. It answers a lot of questions in my family.

    • @californiabreeze2182
      @californiabreeze2182 Před 2 lety +1

      NOT IN MINE!!!GOOD FOR YOU,WHILE YOU ARE BEING LIED TOO.MOHICAN.!!!!!!!!

    • @jg0943
      @jg0943 Před 2 lety

      Gray reporting in - welcome to the team!

  • @MrBlackbutang
    @MrBlackbutang Před 3 lety +5

    Absolutely. Thank you telling the history of the people was not taught this in school.

  • @MaureenMaynes
    @MaureenMaynes Před 10 lety +143

    I'm Northern Irish; isn't it sad that people never learn anything from history and that they just keep on repeating the same old mistakes?

  • @currywertz9613
    @currywertz9613 Před 4 lety +9

    I'm thankful for their pronunciation of appa - LATCH - chia, instead of appa - LAY - chia. Finally

    • @SC-oi9wp
      @SC-oi9wp Před 4 lety +2

      Once had a woman call me... You mountain people. Lol 😀

    • @gypsybill
      @gypsybill Před 11 měsíci

      I have family who were born and raised in East Kentucky who pronounce it appa-lay-shuh. Maybe there are differences even within Appalachia

  • @jenniferandangelinafan1320
    @jenniferandangelinafan1320 Před 6 lety +10

    My grandpa was 1/4th cherokee he was born in Tennessee, he married my Apache, Irish, French grandmother who was born in Kentucky and I love Indian history

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety +1

      If my father were alive today, he would be able trace back (re family here) to the year 110 before anyone had any idea that America existed. I also love Native/American history. The problem is that I wonder if we're being told the truth.

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety

      Why not.

    • @Kabeyavictoria
      @Kabeyavictoria Před 2 lety +3

      You white

    • @knownundesirable
      @knownundesirable Před 2 lety

      @jenniferandangelinafan Brad Pit is that you?

  • @beebop9808
    @beebop9808 Před 2 lety +31

    My mom's side of the family came down from the Irish and Dad's came along to settle in the Blue Ridge in the late 1800's from Holland.
    I had quite a few Cherokee friends growing up close to the reservation in NC. Many of them chose to live outside of the reservation back then to work and live and receive the federal incentive pay to live outside. Over the years they mingled and married non indian people and diminished the bloodlines. Causing the tribal counsel to increasingly lessen the percentage of the bloodline required to be on the tribal roles. It was a concern that the race was being slowly lost.
    I moved away to Ga 25 years ago and don't know how that's been evolving since then? Hopefully they have made headway into the problem. No idea how the counsels in NC and Oklahoma interact with each other?

    • @rickjag4928
      @rickjag4928 Před 2 lety +1

      That's also interesting. I'm from Texas. There are a lot of oral histories told about regional Native tribes mixing with "Anglo" and Spanish settlers. The " "s are because of the generality applied to peoples of Germanic, Irish, and other European descent.

    • @HI-bh9cn
      @HI-bh9cn Před 2 lety +1

      @@rickjag4928 it started in the 1400s, Spaniards from Europe came and started to colonize the native Indians…The Indians never took to the European nations

    • @boatsoar2557
      @boatsoar2557 Před 2 lety

      @@HI-bh9cn you're a list or uninformed. In the 4th of July massacres. As you trade is the business if people that grow companies. Countries. Murder doesn't work. Trade does. Guess who the natives side with when anarchy strikes up. It's not the anarchist because they're not in control also, when tested they can't prove much other then wanting to steal for easy life. They would test it for guarantee in case they make off better....that's if they're unloyal. The traders would make sure orrrr they would test the anarchist. So you think American cowboys versus indians is about whites fighting for Oklahoma. No. It went allll the way back to bad people Ruining a good life. Their life was going to improve. Now? They tried to fight. They fought for England. Google is you friend. Quadruple check. Make it wrong. Why would people with arrows fight peoley that stole canons? One reason. Loyalty, first to life. Then too they advancement in society. Mannnn.... seriously. Especially with the acquistion of Mexico, ...same..do you think people want to face these new government rougue killers with no allegiance. No allegiance, run wild. Hence bomb 1 thru 20 plus two nuclear bombs on Japan. What countries use Nuclear weapons. They have them. Who uses them? Beside the world police USA. Yep. I'm sure people don't know this story. Uhh. Sure. Yet this means orphan. They're not European. That's over with. They're set off. No? They went where? Another one bites the dust.

  • @robarmstrong322
    @robarmstrong322 Před 2 lety +4

    my family fled the borders of Scotland as we were reivers, went to Enniskillen county Fermanagh, from there they left to migrate to Australia , some went to the USA and Canada

    • @mercurysun8081
      @mercurysun8081 Před 2 lety

      The Acheson family were from there and went to Canada and Australia...and we still cele rate our Scots Irish history 6 generations later...

  • @GingerJesusSaves
    @GingerJesusSaves Před 2 lety +6

    I'm from that coast in Northern Ireland and still live here. Some of my family settled in the Appalachians though.

    • @lindasmith9834
      @lindasmith9834 Před 5 měsíci

      Very interesting. My DNA is 17% Irish and I have evidence my Paternal Grandmother's great grandfather and grandfather were full blood Cherokee. Grandmother said her father was freeman with land living in South Carolina and was sold into slavery and sent to Mississippi and Louisiana. He died in Louisiana.

    • @lindasmith9834
      @lindasmith9834 Před 5 měsíci

      12% Scotish, 7% Wales, 8% Swedish/Danish.

    • @lindasmith9834
      @lindasmith9834 Před 5 měsíci

      17% Irish

  • @gjproducer313
    @gjproducer313 Před 3 lety +4

    I found my ancestors on the Dawes Rolls. My great grandfather and his mother and grandmother.

  • @andgomorra
    @andgomorra Před 2 lety +4

    proud to be from southern Appalachia!

  • @jamesmcelwain342
    @jamesmcelwain342 Před 2 lety +19

    The Scottish highlands and the Appalachian mountains used to be part of the same ancient mountain range when the continents were connected

    • @user-nh6vu3qr7b
      @user-nh6vu3qr7b Před 2 lety +2

      U lying 🤥

    • @user-nh6vu3qr7b
      @user-nh6vu3qr7b Před 2 lety +3

      @Shinshocks so Mexicans and Native Americans can be called European since it was connected to north America. There was no borders before so im sure they got some of that blood.

    • @birthdaycow
      @birthdaycow Před rokem

      @@user-nh6vu3qr7bthe way you’re jumping to these wild conclusions is crazy

    • @user-nh6vu3qr7b
      @user-nh6vu3qr7b Před rokem

      @birthdaycow5712 if I'm jumping you guys are literally flying from one region to another that aren't connected in territory.

    • @rahsunallah2825
      @rahsunallah2825 Před rokem

      When the continents were connected, what was it then called as a whole?

  • @deewesthill1213
    @deewesthill1213 Před 2 lety +12

    Several of my maternal ancestors came from County Donegal, Ulster in the mid-18th century and settled in Pennsylvania. Ephraim Blaine, a son of such immigrants, became the commissary-general of the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War. His brother Alexander was apparently my family's direct ancestor. For some unknown reason, Ephraim Blaine seldom even gets mentioned in most books on the American Revolution that i've ever seen, as if he was insignificant. Yet a "letter book", copies of correspondence kept by him and his assistant, John Chaloner, shows that they worked for years under difficult, even life-risking conditions, and helped save the troops from near-starvation. Except for one book that gives samples of their letters including some to George Washington, it's hard to get much information about him... In the early 19th century, my branch of the Blaine family settled in southern Kentucky on poor subsistence farms. Instead of making whiskey, they were strict teetotalers because their religious sect, the Church of Christ, did not allow alcohol except for medicinal use. My grandparents supported Prohibition.

    • @rickjag4928
      @rickjag4928 Před 2 lety +2

      That's very interesting. Cool that you're knowledgable of that history.

    • @deewesthill1213
      @deewesthill1213 Před 2 lety +3

      @@rickjag4928 I wish i knew more details about my family, but such knowledge depends on either written records or stories passed down by relatives, and both of those are scarce! A direct descendant of Ephraim, James Gillespie Blaine, was much better known as a popular senator, Secretary of State, and Republican candidate for President in 1884.

    • @hounddog3476
      @hounddog3476 Před 2 lety +1

      Yep Washington and Jefferson wanted to erase their importance. They murdered Harmond Husband because he was the true father of the united states and freedom. Here in swpa some of us still despise the solitary british magistrate system ruling our districts with price tag justice, drug dealing lawmen with full control etc. A panel of magistrates is not conducive to the needs of men who go to temples and perform masonic rituals instead of the ones at Christian place of worship. Harmmond Husband and his "Regulators" do not get mentioned because they were all Christians and not lieing, murdering, and thieving aristocrats.

    • @TradBarbie
      @TradBarbie Před rokem

      There are all sorts of cover ups going on. For instance these "native Americans" were NOT here first. They came and killed all the red haired giants when they walked across the land bridge. The giants were absolutely here first and we have found many of their skeletons in mounds. The Indians themselves talk about the giants. There are published stories in old reputable news papers talking about finding the skeletons, but someone is trying to hide the truth and trying to keep the stories and remains under raps. My viking ancestors *were here FIRST.* _EYE_ am the native, *not* the free loaders who refuse to care for their babies.

  • @leighknight2476
    @leighknight2476 Před 7 lety +83

    I am of Muskogee-Cherokee ancestry. We are the People of the Gray-Eyes, the mixed bloods of the 5th geberation after the Great Sadness (removal), who were foretold in some of the prophecies of western tribes such as Hopi, Zuni, and others. In the Great Sacred Circle of life, the Natural Way will return after the Great Cleansing, and the People who have kept many of the Old Ways, will lead the Chosen Remnant into the Fifth World. ..."and the meek will inherit the earth." Much Love and Many Blessings.

    • @tulessaslone5592
      @tulessaslone5592 Před 7 lety +4

      Sgi sister.

    • @annasophiawyck3993
      @annasophiawyck3993 Před 7 lety +5

      Leigh Knight..... I am with you. And it is soon to come. May I meet you in the Appalachian some day. I walk the path of the Ancient One's as well.

    • @phizzelout
      @phizzelout Před 5 lety +1

      hawwachicka mongo

    • @smug8567
      @smug8567 Před 5 lety +2

      Let's bury the hatchet. We smoke em peace pipe!

    • @claudiocarrera9552
      @claudiocarrera9552 Před 5 lety +10

      @Andy Vanderpool don't know about all that, however, you are 100% troll and as usless as tits on a bull!

  • @ManScoutsofAmerica
    @ManScoutsofAmerica Před 5 lety +10

    I refuse to believe they didn’t go to war with other tribes over territory disputes.

    • @MrAmhara
      @MrAmhara Před 5 lety

      Believe. White man!

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety +2

      They all did and it was common.

    • @victorialopez807
      @victorialopez807 Před rokem

      I agree with you but you have to understand this is the perspective of a white man's history and it is very sad that they believed they had the right to steal this land but what is done is done.

    • @ManScoutsofAmerica
      @ManScoutsofAmerica Před rokem

      @@victorialopez807 all land is conquered land.

    • @rd8370
      @rd8370 Před rokem

      Not unless you understand the ancient kinship that they had.

  • @martyadams3915
    @martyadams3915 Před 2 lety +28

    We all fit in here in some way. My family came through the gap as Scott Irish and set up farms and later timber business. They intermarried with our local Cherokee clans who never went on the trail of tears. My great great grandfather married a Cherokee her given name was gunpowder. A special place for a different kind of people's.

    • @scottw.3258
      @scottw.3258 Před 2 lety +1

      So is 'Scott Irish' your ancestor then? Where did he live?

    • @somniumisdreaming
      @somniumisdreaming Před rokem

      Hahaha yes Scott is a proper noun , Scot is a person from Scotland.

  • @carolyngarman1422
    @carolyngarman1422 Před 2 lety +1

    Yep. I'm Irish-Cherokee from the Appalachians in VA.

  • @krono5el
    @krono5el Před 2 lety +2

    The Americas were a true paradise before the 1400s. We will all pay dearly for what we've done to them.

  • @nativemedicineacademy2173
    @nativemedicineacademy2173 Před 8 lety +35

    Appalachian. is the home of the Cherokees
    medicine turtle Cherokee

    • @blueridger28
      @blueridger28 Před 7 lety +12

      Native Medicine Academy hey I've lived in the blue ridge mountains of NC all my life like my grandfather's before me. one day I was fishing grassy Creek and found a small turtle figure carved from Stone in the creek.

    • @VersatilisPeritus
      @VersatilisPeritus Před 7 lety +6

      Blueridger that is awesome! I live close to grassy mountain, close to Elijay, I find arrowheads,game stones and tools all the time!

    • @theoldscout3478
      @theoldscout3478 Před 6 lety

      Hope it wasn't on federal land. You could get arrested for just picking it up, that stuff belongs to gov't archaeologists.

    • @muchi1465
      @muchi1465 Před 5 lety +6

      @@theoldscout3478 "federal land". LOL. YOU NAZI.

    • @brendastolecki4755
      @brendastolecki4755 Před 5 lety +5

      @@theoldscout3478 lol, for real? Im of Polish descent and I am on the side of the First Nations....whatever is from THEIR ANCESTORS belongs to THEM. You need to keep your mouth closed and stop sounding like a fool. This land was stolen and bullied from them just like the Nazis, Russia, and other foreign invaders have done in Europe for centuries...

  • @stonebay2111
    @stonebay2111 Před 5 lety +46

    No Elizabeth Warren?

    • @boweavil1063
      @boweavil1063 Před 4 lety +8

      Most people won't understand your reference, but that's pretty funny. And very convenient for her if it gets her more votes. She's like Hilary, willing to say whatever it takes to pan to a certain group of people if it benefits her.

    • @sumnerwaite6390
      @sumnerwaite6390 Před 4 lety +4

      Fauxahontus😉

    • @lbbradley55
      @lbbradley55 Před 4 lety +1

      HA.... HA.... WHAT A GREAT THOUGHT.... the World had to be a BETTER PLACE

    • @kenkelble358
      @kenkelble358 Před 4 lety

      @@boweavil1063 good catch i got it but barely..

    • @elmobrother
      @elmobrother Před 4 lety

      Gfys

  • @djquinn11
    @djquinn11 Před 2 lety +2

    The Cherokee were peaceful, industrious and intelligent people.

  • @sirjuju4766
    @sirjuju4766 Před 2 lety +2

    Back in those times, women were in charge of building/putting up the tipi, cook, fetching water, clean and raising a family. Men however were the hunters and of course the protectors of the tribe.

  • @RivetGardener
    @RivetGardener Před 5 lety +4

    Wow. I would like to go back in time and watch all this going down.

  • @christolbert4628
    @christolbert4628 Před 2 lety +3

    It was during the mid 1700's my mother's ancestors who were named Shaw, landed at about Wilmington, NC. On the same ship were Clark's and McDuffie's, from Scotland.

    • @sandman9924
      @sandman9924 Před 2 lety +1

      Large stretches of the Cape Fear River Valley were heavily populated by Scottish (not Scots-Irish) immigrants. Well into the 1800s, travelers to the area wrote of predominately Gaelic speaking communities, where the men still wore the kilts and tartans of Scotland.

  • @Duolingobirdy
    @Duolingobirdy Před rokem +1

    My dad’s side has Native Americans, Irish ,English, and Scottish. As far as I know. My mom’s side is Native American, English, and Irish.

  • @breadtoasted2269
    @breadtoasted2269 Před 2 lety +1

    My Native American Mom always said travellers from all over the world visited America for thousands of years. Many governments came and gone. She says the US and Canada will be the same they will eventually fall again and our people will have to take care of the land again.

  • @bomjam2590
    @bomjam2590 Před 8 lety +38

    I wish there were documentaries on the ancient of Native American tribes of present-day USA. There are many documentaries of the Mayans and Aztecs of present-day Mexico. How about videos on the "ancient" history of the Cherokee, Sioux, Cheyenne, Seminole, Apache, etc.?

    • @susanmiller7258
      @susanmiller7258 Před 6 lety +2

      bomjam 2. Yell.

    • @eastsidemuu
      @eastsidemuu Před 6 lety +11

      there is one its called 500 nations. it's an exelent doc of most tribes! rise & the fall of them

    • @jasonnorthcutt4008
      @jasonnorthcutt4008 Před 5 lety +5

      The people before the Cherokee were the mound builders and the stone grave Indians. little is known when whites got here they had already been eradicated.

    • @brendastolecki4755
      @brendastolecki4755 Před 5 lety +2

      @@jasonnorthcutt4008 the Mound builders were not Native American. They were descendants of the Annunaki, giants descended from the fallen angels that mated with human women. (Red hair, dble row teeth, 6 fingers and toes, 7 feet and taller.) The mounds are all over the world as is pyramids. They are all from the same time period and people.

    • @jasonnorthcutt4008
      @jasonnorthcutt4008 Před 5 lety +10

      @@brendastolecki4755 well darling if you look in the graves in Tennessee what you'll find is Bones of regular people. lay off the Peyote it's not meant for recreational use.

  • @butchslowhand6015
    @butchslowhand6015 Před 4 lety +29

    It would have been more accurate to have titled this video, "The Early History of the Cherokee in Appalachia" instead of what they did. This is told from a Cherokee perspective. If you ask another tribe that lived in Appalachia, you'll get a different story.

    • @rickjag4928
      @rickjag4928 Před 2 lety

      @@jamesyoung2241 Is that so..? If you come across my reply, please respond with your source of this information. I'd like to know/learn more.

    • @KingofallHacks
      @KingofallHacks Před 2 lety

      @@rickjag4928 His source is he made it up he has no idea when the Cherokee were there because they didn’t write it down.

    • @jordantylerquinnfarkas
      @jordantylerquinnfarkas Před rokem

      Yes, exactly. The Cherokee simply cooperated with the Europeans more than other tribes (and so they are the ones History glorifies - a history written by their once allies). The entire region of APPALACHIA is named from a much older and more civilized nation of people called "Apalachee". These people lived in towns, with wooden houses and fences. Does history honor them? No. But then again, they didn't help run all the other natives off of their territorial/ancestral lands like the Cherokee did. Which is no surprise, that is what they always did. Cherokee moved from greater texas area, after a few hundred years, to the great lakes, where they tried to settle but were again pushed away (as they were obviously much weaker than other tribes), that is when they settled in the area now known as Appalachia. Why isn't it called Cherokian Mountains? Because they were squatters, not the first people or oldest people there.

  • @doberman1ism
    @doberman1ism Před 2 lety +2

    I am so very proud of my Scott-Irish, Cherokee Indian ancestry.

  • @thomassmestead2801
    @thomassmestead2801 Před 2 lety +2

    Scots-Irish on my paternal Grandmother's side. That branch of the family originally lived in Western Virginia, but moved first to Missouri, and after the Civil War, westwards to the Pacific Northwest, then, Oregon Territory.

  • @jameslanning8405
    @jameslanning8405 Před 2 lety +6

    I had ancestors that arrived in the NC area, before it was a state, but a territory.
    They were in and around the area that is today Hendersonville. There are Cherokee on the Dawes rolls, with my surname, but I don't know them.
    The name is Irish, also Cornish and Welsh... And the name also is spelled with one n as well as two.
    I don't know if there are any Lannings still there in NC.
    My grandfather was thought to be from Hendersonville, my grandmother was from Ashville.
    My father was born in Hendersonville.

  • @mrsmith8436
    @mrsmith8436 Před 2 lety +7

    3:02 she says Indians did not fight for land or to expand their kingdoms or ideology or to inflict their religion on others. They fought to avenge the death of kin. In one statement she subtly but cleverly denigrates Europeans fighting and justifies native Americans reasons for fighting as if revenge is a more Nobel and Just reason for fighting and killing others. This woman has to be a progressive liberal. She must have really been a fan of the Hatfields and McCoys. That was all about revenge.

  • @hoponpop3330
    @hoponpop3330 Před 2 lety +1

    I was a mill town street kid who had some success and visited are sister plant in England
    No knowing any better I referred to a Scot as Scotch .
    I was promptly lectured that Scotch was a whiskey ,people from Scotland were either Scot’s or Scottish .
    I never forget that lesson.

  • @Duolingobirdy
    @Duolingobirdy Před rokem +1

    My ancestors on my grandpa’s side were from Appalachia. I’m 1.5 percent Native American. I know its not a lot but I will not call my self a Native American person. I am barely Native American. But I live in Appalachia. And have my whole life

  • @tombristowe846
    @tombristowe846 Před 4 lety +14

    "We need to remember that the first Appalachians were in fact native americans...." really ! who would've thought? I had completely forgotten that.....not. Moronic, and I'm only 30 seconds in.

  • @megabushcraft
    @megabushcraft Před 5 lety +6

    I highly disagree! native American tribes and nations faught eachother just like anyother people around the world for resources.

    • @MrAmhara
      @MrAmhara Před 5 lety

      What resources? I think the Cherokee conquered using politics not force.

    • @megabushcraft
      @megabushcraft Před 5 lety +2

      @@MrAmhara well your mistaken. and I was referring to all native Amarican tribes not the Cherokee in particular. to be honest all human groups have fought and conquered.

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety

      This is a true statement.

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety

      If they didn't trade or others weren't willing to share, then you know what happened.

    • @MSanz-jc2bg
      @MSanz-jc2bg Před 2 lety

      We are still one people.

  • @bluegirl777
    @bluegirl777 Před 2 lety +2

    Does anyone know the name of the ballad sung in this video? It's beautiful!!

  • @lelandc9763
    @lelandc9763 Před 2 lety +1

    Sir, keep the videos coming! This is pbs worthy lol

  • @nathanhoskins7653
    @nathanhoskins7653 Před 2 lety +10

    I am a direct decendant of Cherokee Chief Red Bird whom once assimilated took the Christain name Arin Brock of Harlan County Kentucky.

    • @marifromky
      @marifromky Před 2 lety +1

      i know a handful of those Brocks.

    • @gypsybill
      @gypsybill Před 11 měsíci

      Then we're kin!

  • @TheOreo1210
    @TheOreo1210 Před 5 lety +7

    Didn’t the Cherokee guy just say they, owned 7 states at one time. Which they did by conquering. Lol

  • @jackallan8196
    @jackallan8196 Před 5 lety +1

    So the women were in change of Native American Tribes. And men were in charge of the European settlers. And who won again?

  • @redbluebae4397
    @redbluebae4397 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for this history lesson…with love muscogee creek nation here

  • @blessedamerican3541
    @blessedamerican3541 Před 2 lety +10

    You may be a Scot but the term Scotch has been used in Georgia U.S. ever since I can remember. It only recently has been called out.
    The Appalachian people can quote the King James Bible verbatim. They do it in a strange sweet sing songy way with a little smile on their face. It’s quite lovely as some of them cannot read or write.

    • @shredmetalshred7395
      @shredmetalshred7395 Před 2 lety +4

      "the appalachian people" - like they're all the same, they can all quote the bible lol identity politics is the woooorst

    • @Fall_Spectacular
      @Fall_Spectacular Před 2 lety +2

      😂😂😂 wtf

    • @bigdeal4real1
      @bigdeal4real1 Před 2 lety +2

      @@shredmetalshred7395 right. Appalachian here, and I can’t quote the Bible verbatim. lol
      Don’t know anyone that can, as far as I recollect, though I’m sure there’s some out there that can.

  • @TheArtemis07
    @TheArtemis07 Před 4 lety +20

    Scotch is whiskey. It’s “Scots-Irish,” not “Scotch-Irish.” These folks should know this.

    • @marifromky
      @marifromky Před 2 lety +1

      you'd think the majority would understand that they're Ulster-Scots, not Scots-Irish ...

    • @thomaswhite2802
      @thomaswhite2802 Před 2 lety +1

      As a Scott’s Irish I agree

    • @dogslobbergardens6606
      @dogslobbergardens6606 Před 2 lety

      If you're going to be pedantic, you could at least spell "whisky" correctly. ;)
      The "whiskey" spelling is widely used by Irish and American distillers, but traditionally Scotch doesn't use the "e."

    • @sandman9924
      @sandman9924 Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks for sharing, cultural imperialist. I think the Scotch-Irish know what name they choose to use in reference to themselves. And there is no such thing as "Scotch whiskey" in Scotland. To the Scots, it is just whisky. Scotch Whiskey is the name outsiders have mis-named it, to distinguish it from other types of whisky the Scots themselves would never think of drinking.

    • @sandman9924
      @sandman9924 Před 2 lety +2

      @@marifromky Thankfully, the Scots-Irish have you to tell them they are referring to themselves "wrong."

  • @autumndanyel21
    @autumndanyel21 Před 5 lety +2

    I am English, Irish/scottish and German. I love Appalachia.

    • @bldyvalentine5001
      @bldyvalentine5001 Před 5 lety +1

      Thx! I am from West Virginia (the middle of Appalachia)

  • @drock5404
    @drock5404 Před 2 lety +2

    Both my mother and father's families were from Appalachia and had Cherokee great-grandmothers. Don't see many Cherokee in Appalachia these days.

  • @sharjjahnaziz4122
    @sharjjahnaziz4122 Před 5 lety +5

    This story has a lot of " Grey Areas" which are missing. They need more research.

  • @leathers970
    @leathers970 Před 4 lety +4

    Cherokee had slaves read about the Cherokee slave revolt and held slaves after the civil war

    • @saphireblue3563
      @saphireblue3563 Před 2 lety

      Can you tell me where to find that?

    • @josephstorm6093
      @josephstorm6093 Před 2 lety

      Right, & out of the 5 Civilized Tribes the Cherokees were the biggest owner of black slaves.

  • @byronmilla9865
    @byronmilla9865 Před 2 lety +1

    History is so cool and funny !!! So much to learn about other cultures and their traditions !!! 👍👍👍

  • @anitatichacek1460
    @anitatichacek1460 Před 4 lety +1

    Don't let Lakota tribe bully you... Remember you were the top five that were civilized something to be proud..I love you my Cherokee brothers and sisters even though I'm only 1/16 and mainly Irish's Scot's

  • @RosinGoblin
    @RosinGoblin Před 5 lety +3

    They seem so underrated. I've been to the Rockies but these look more interesting and pretty for some reason. Maybe it's the trees? I'm gonna take a drive down from Indiana and go some exploring

  • @jasonpoe5360
    @jasonpoe5360 Před 5 lety +38

    2:55 proves this is nothing but politically correct revisionism.

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety +4

      This was happening long before the words "politically incorrect" existed.

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety +2

      Try politically incorrect because under something that is politically incorrect that which is wrong is right and that which is right is wrong.

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety +1

      There is nothing politically correct if it is wrong in the first place.

    • @chaishalom8701
      @chaishalom8701 Před 5 lety +4

      @@phyllislittlejohn3248 • I would like to know the truth. (I don't care about political correctness.)

    • @interstellarsurfer
      @interstellarsurfer Před 5 lety +5

      You're wrong mate, at least in the case of the Cherokee. War was a police action for them, more oft than not. Picture the sheriff in old western movies assembling a posse to get the bad guy hiding out in the wilderness. They also had a well developed system of justice, which you would do well to read about. 👌

  • @DREWBOR
    @DREWBOR Před 4 lety +1

    Just walked down a mountain and found a burial site untouched tones of artifacts

  • @aWienerandaBeaner
    @aWienerandaBeaner Před 2 lety +1

    9th Generation upper Greenville County SC.
    Originally from the Galbraith Clan near Edinburgh..
    My family was here on this land co-existing with natives since before the revolution.

  • @NepunWadchu
    @NepunWadchu Před 5 lety +3

    Thanks for sharing. Is there a place I can see a list of music credits? I recognize one of the songs and would love to know who sings it....

  • @johnshields6852
    @johnshields6852 Před 2 lety +8

    Born in Boston in 1960, I was always fascinated by the history of our nation, but it's always bothered me that they were here long before us, I feel guilty of something, even though society was already entrenched at my birth era, it's odd to feel that way but I can't help think our land really wasn't our land, idk. 🙏

    • @chesterjade7630
      @chesterjade7630 Před 2 lety

      The land belonged to the Native Americans and the Europeans came with guns and stole the land as with everything else. Sad.
      Now they still think their guns and assault weapons are the answer.
      They trying to take over America by force again. They feel the Black, Red and Yellow people don't belong or should prosper.

    • @arddermoutcramer5695
      @arddermoutcramer5695 Před 2 lety

      The point is that anywhere you live, doesn't matter what lineage you are from, you inherit the land that has been cultivated by the people who lived there before you. The European settlers didn't enter wild nature everywhere they went, humans before them had already altered the landscape which made it habitual for other humans to settle with ease. So when colonizers steal the land which has already been prepared by cultivation through millenia of hard labor they really do commit a crime of theft. People forget that the earth has been cultivated to serve our needs and that actual human beings are responsible for that. You live on the riches of generations of peoples that have been forgotten since they left no monuments behind for you to see. They didn't care about monumental works, they lacked the cultural ideas that come with having reproducable scripts and that's a shame because now you have no reference to acknowledge them for their great deeds; the cultivation of the land you are living on. Atleast the Aztecs had their temples that showed their lasting significance. Land and crops are taken for granted. I'm from Holland and the same applies to the land I'm living on. This land is reclaimed from the sea, a technique that was created through the centuries by necessity and approved upon by each generation. I feel proud of the people who did that because I can see the dykes every day that keep me dry and safe. It used be endless swamps and lakes here when the Romans arrived, they didn't even bother to conquer it because the labor it would take to cultivate it was too intensive for it to produce something worthy. it took a millenium

    • @SpicyTexan64
      @SpicyTexan64 Před 2 lety

      The entire world at some point belonged to someone else and was conquered by others but for some reason we are guilt tripped about it.

  • @renitaperry5808
    @renitaperry5808 Před rokem

    My great grandmother was half Cherokee Indian and white. She was so beautiful 😍

  • @klemenshartner3613
    @klemenshartner3613 Před 2 lety +1

    Amazing little documentary! I was wondering what song the guy is singing at 8:52, i've been trying to find it online for an hour now🥲 Can someone maybe give me a hand?😅

  • @MrMegamike2k
    @MrMegamike2k Před 2 lety +3

    My wife's family comes from the hills of western Virginia. Interestingly enough she is 1/4 Native American though we aren't sure exactly what clan her great grandparents were from though it is said they were Cherokee.

  • @bodyworkwithshalako7466
    @bodyworkwithshalako7466 Před 4 lety +4

    What of the people that were already in the area of Kentucky, when the Cherokee entered the area? It is said that they were great, fearsome warriors, and their spirits still roam the area.

    • @josephcampese5347
      @josephcampese5347 Před 4 lety +5

      You're not allowed to talk about that. Universities have a propaganda machine that needs feeding. That story you speak of, doesn't fit the diet plan.

    • @TH-rn4rf
      @TH-rn4rf Před 2 lety

      @@josephcampese5347 relax buddy

  • @mrfreezo5024
    @mrfreezo5024 Před 7 měsíci

    notes for class. KCTCS Appalachian studies.
    Early 17th century, small number of Europeans settle.
    First people were ancestors of modern native americans. Shawnee, Choctaw, and Creek. dominate tribe Cherokee.
    Cherokee were mainly farmers.
    Woman had economic authority over crop, autonomy. Men lived in womens household, heirs were his niece and nephew, not own children.
    Older women were part of council.
    Natives went to war to avenge their kinsman.
    Their tradition allowed them to bring outsiders in to the tribe.
    Cherokee seen people as kinsman or enemies.
    Captives taken from battle were adopted in to klans, same with escaped slaves.
    It was possible to be adopted in to a klan.
    1730s, ancestors of appalachians went to the mountains, Germans, English and Wales. Most prominent were Irish.
    After a century in Ulster, Scotch irish migrated to America, Appalachia.
    Scotch Irish amongst first to make the Appalachia home.
    Germans known for rules, building staunch barns.
    Scotch irish were of fighting stock.

  • @virginianative847
    @virginianative847 Před 2 lety +2

    Hell yeah Appalachia! I live in Grundy, Va which is right in central Appalachia. Coal field s.

  • @griffin7700
    @griffin7700 Před 7 lety +4

    Adoption and vengeance are quite common across the continent

  • @CapAnson12345
    @CapAnson12345 Před 2 lety +12

    My family got caught up in the warfare going on in Scotland which was of course related to the English civil war in the mid 1600s. They were on the losing side, migrated to Belfast, then starting in the early 1700s travelled over to North Carolina bit by bit. So typical Scots- Irish. Though I never liked that name since there's not much Irish about them. But whatever. Family roots are important to Americans, particularly southerners. I'm almost pureblood Scottish, even after all these centuries. When I finally visited Scotland it was weird that although it was a different culture.. there was just something vaguely familiar about it all, even though I had never been there or ever met a Scottish person prior. Eerie feeling. It was kind of amusing when I ran across citizens in Scotland and chatting with them realized I actually had more Scottish ancestry than they did. Course I didn't say that. Americans have an obnoxious enough reputation.
    But growing up in the south you get to know people and understand them on a deeper level and that's why it's so frustrating to see the negative stereotypes and views people have about Southerners. Especially poor, rural folk. Because you know them, you live with them day by day. and you know things just aren't that way.
    As far as the Cherokee go, indian tribes in general... people have to remember things go both ways..Settlers in Appalachia faced almost daily, certainly weekly attacks all along the entire area from the Cherokee, and farther south the Creek. And the atrocities from the natives were... quite unpleasant. But you know.. you get by. And most southerners greatly respect the Cherokee today.

    • @thephuckmaster9376
      @thephuckmaster9376 Před 2 lety +1

      Try summarizing your story to a paragraph or shorter and maybe someone will read it 😅😂🤣🤣

    • @deeznuts6907
      @deeznuts6907 Před 2 lety +1

      The fact your family came in the 1700s and you still believe you’re pure Scottish is comical

    • @CapAnson12345
      @CapAnson12345 Před 2 lety +1

      @@deeznuts6907 If I couldn't trace my lineage back that far it would be. And I said almost.

    • @theseeker4642
      @theseeker4642 Před 2 lety +4

      My Scottish Lowland Clan was one of the Border Reiver Clans or Steel Bonnets, to reive means to theive. I still live in my clan's lands. The English had Reiver Families & we looted pillaged each other's stock with impunity. Beacons of fire were lit to warn the English when we were spotted on the move across the Borders. We feuded amongst each other, made convenient alliances, could hold grudges for hundreds of years, took bribes & trusted nobody. My clan fought with Robert the Bruce at Bannockburn as did other Lowland Clans. The Scottish/English Borders ran from the West to the East of Britain.
      As James VI of Scotland & Ist of England united the two kingdoms, he exiled us Reiver Clans to Ireland, mostly what is Ulster today, their accent still has undertones of Lowland Scottish in it.
      We were also sent to the New Lands. The Lowland Clearings were as devastating for us as the Highland Clearings. I don't know if some English Reiver Families were also exiled, would be interesting to find out, but wouldn’t be surprised, I've never asked any of my English Reiver Family friends.
      People who had been my mortal enemies across the Borders, are now my friends & we've married into each other's families since the Clearing. Many Scottish & English Reivers have stayed where their ancestor's have always lived, but with the movement of people more & more incomers, who have nothing in common with either of us Reivers are living in our communities.
      Here in the Western lowlands of Scotland we have what's known as the Marches, which define North, South, East & West borders areas of the Reiver Clans. These are the Reiver's lands. Just by surname we know from which Reiver Marche they originate. The Riding of the Marches still takes place every year. I don't know if they ride the Marches over the North East of Scottish/English, but can't see why not.
      There's many sites that can tell you where those of your original surname originated, if you're interested. It might be that you're not of any Lowland Clan, but these are the Clans who were exiled. Avoid any site of Ancestry or Border Reiver Clans put out by the Church of Latter Day Saints, just a load of misinformation a pal told me.

    • @scottw.3258
      @scottw.3258 Před 2 lety +3

      I have to pick you up on a couple of things.
      First off, there was no 'English Civil War'. It was 'The War of The Three Kingdoms'.
      Second. I can guarantee you are nowhere near 'pureblood Scots'. Scotland is, and always has been a melting pot of cultures, you've had Celts, Gaels, Norse, Norman, Angles, Brythonic, Jute, Dutch, Saxon. Since the 1700's when your ancestors headed to the New World, they'd have bred with other cultures, so you're far from 'purebred Scots', my friend. Sorry to break that to you, and you certainly won't have more Scots ancestry than Scots living here. Your Surname means very little. You may be of 'Scots' descent, but you are not Scots. Please get that straight in your head.

  • @HappyHermitt
    @HappyHermitt Před 2 lety

    My ancestors were French Acadian. They were exiled from Nova Scotia and scattered. Mine settled in the swamp regions of Louisiana.
    My grandparents were beaten in grade school for not speaking English.
    "Speak English" they said...

  • @mild_meme
    @mild_meme Před 2 lety +1

    My own lineage is of the Scots-Irish that migrated back to Scotland and stayed there instead of onto the new world. I reckon when we arrived at the Appalachian mountains, we saw something of the mountains of home in Scotland and Ireland.

  • @rrider3946
    @rrider3946 Před 5 lety +3

    This clip concentrates on the southern portion of the Appalachian Mountains region. The Appalachians also extend into PA., New York State even into Maine I hope that the northern regions are also discussed in other clips.

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety

      I agree.

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety

      Very true and I have had the priviledge of actually climbing on part of the Applachian Mountains in New York State. It's a beautiful site. Can you imagine many of the Native Americans (Cherokee) travelling on it to get into to Canada, etc.? We had it rough.

    • @rrider3946
      @rrider3946 Před 5 lety +1

      Thanks for the info I was unaware that the Cherokees roamed that far north. That is why we need one or two more clips that center on the northern Applachians, a very different history and culture such as the Borscht Belt comedy club circuit in New York state as an example.

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety

      I agree. They should focus on us more and I forgot to tell you, the Cherokee roamed as far North as Maine but when the "Trial of Tears" came about, we got scattered all over the place, including Canada. There are many Cherokee in Newfoundland, Canada and in Alaska, there is an island where the Cherokee live and own. After all, we did cross the Bering Strait as did so many other nations.

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety

      I've been and visited the part of the Appalachians which is in New York State in an area known as Peekskill, New York. I was climbing it in my sandals because it is a very scenic area.

  • @williamoverton7414
    @williamoverton7414 Před 8 lety +6

    the coolest thing about Appalachians is that they persist today and all the people there today have their founder markings.

    • @tlctammie1884
      @tlctammie1884 Před 7 lety +3

      cool thing about Appalachian to me was my great grandpa had 800 acres of land I grew up on 😁 I love the woods, I've never been in a city that had big buildings like 5 or more stories tall, I think it would freak me out, only 3 story building I've even seen in real life is a hospital about an hour & half away, I'm kinda afraid of them, I can't stand elevators but I had a booboo that put me in a motorized wheelchair, I try real hard not to have to go to no hospitals for nothing, stupid elevator's freak me out & break me out in a sweat & pound my heart 😨 I hate them....

    • @mickloving9737
      @mickloving9737 Před 3 lety

      @@tlctammie1884 have you ever been outside? Or had a job?

  • @VIRGONOMICS
    @VIRGONOMICS Před 2 lety +1

    Seems there are a few of us here ; who’s families have been in North America since late 1600’s .

  • @renataostertag6051
    @renataostertag6051 Před 5 lety +2

    Matriarchial line does NOT mean, women had anything to say in the Cherokee society. It just means one could say this child is from that woman because it popped out of her. The fathers - most of the time - were not known because "sleeping around" was more or less the norm. Before the discovery of DNA nobody knew for sure WHO sired a certain child. That is why societies who wanted to make sure that a man could pass on his property to a child that was sired by him and NOT by another man !

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety +1

      That statement can be said about any ethnic group. The fathers probably didn't know them upon the arrival of Europeans as well as the separation they caused.

    • @Tsalagi978
      @Tsalagi978 Před 2 lety

      In Cherokee society, it did actually. You inherited through your mother, the woman owned the home, and women had a say in government. Especially Beloved Women (war women). They decided the fate of all captives for instance.

    • @renataostertag6051
      @renataostertag6051 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Tsalagi978 Nothing to be proud of for being a "warrior woman".
      Women should get their worth from being gentle, loving, and caring in raising the young,
      not from trying to outdo the men.
      Often enough women (due to their extreme cruelty) were more feared than the men by the hapless
      prisoners. Nothing to be proud of.

  • @lhartatt
    @lhartatt Před 2 lety +4

    Darn shame this video failed to include contemporary accounts of lacrosse as played by the Native Americans by many tribes. Fighting would be suspended between them and the settlers and replaced by a lacrosse game. Very few rules, only the mountains unbounded as a playing field, a goal to place the ball and score, and many a broken leg, arm and skull. The settles never won but played nevertheless. The old accounts go on at some length and are fascinating. Maybe, we should brutal games rather than fight wars.

    • @kingfishone2345
      @kingfishone2345 Před 2 lety +1

      French saw the lacrosse stick which reminded them of 'the cross' carried by priest

    • @shredmetalshred7395
      @shredmetalshred7395 Před 2 lety

      lacross is not Appalachian it was played elsewhere

    • @kingfishone2345
      @kingfishone2345 Před 2 lety +2

      @@shredmetalshred7395 it is an eastern woodland game,I have several gamestones and a room full of artifacts.I am on the French Broad in eastern Tenn there was a village on an island across from our farm

    • @kingfishone2345
      @kingfishone2345 Před 2 lety

      Field may be 400 yards,last for 2 days!If you were wounded ...you came back in when you recovered

  • @catmandont100
    @catmandont100 Před 5 lety +18

    "The Original" people ? ? ?......I'm part Choctaw & Chickasaw. We have Stories that say Others were there before us....Some were giants....We killed them. Where THEY the "Original"....or did they kill the others ? ? ?

    • @catmandont100
      @catmandont100 Před 5 lety +1

      5 Peaceful tribes, my ass.

    • @renataostertag6051
      @renataostertag6051 Před 5 lety

      1 + !

    • @B.D.B.Outdoors304
      @B.D.B.Outdoors304 Před 4 lety +2

      Tens of thousands of years of unknown world history. Especially in America. Im sure the land changed hands tens of thousands of times

    • @rvingkeepitrolling8797
      @rvingkeepitrolling8797 Před 2 lety +2

      My mother's side of the family was viking mixed with English and Indian & that side of my family was Giants Mom was 6/2 grampa was 7 ft.

  • @eabaendallbeall7959
    @eabaendallbeall7959 Před 2 lety +1

    "You don't become part owner of 7 states by being meek." Also said "they didn't go to war for land or resources."?

  • @pranavsambamurti7746
    @pranavsambamurti7746 Před 2 lety +1

    There were many Irish that were slaves of the Cherokee. Many of them married Cherokee women, and became assimilated in there culture.....

  • @dennisgross5105
    @dennisgross5105 Před 8 lety +91

    Cherokees were in fact not black. they were the lightest skinned of all the tribes. some even sported beards. some people should get their facts straight.

    • @miskogwanredfeather5135
      @miskogwanredfeather5135 Před 6 lety +5

      Dennis Gross nonsense. That is a theory by jews. All wrong man

    • @jarrodwalker6807
      @jarrodwalker6807 Před 6 lety +2

      Dennis Gross ..beards....ok then dude

    • @matthewmann8969
      @matthewmann8969 Před 6 lety +9

      Well they where damn sure not White either

    • @marquitarobertson5467
      @marquitarobertson5467 Před 6 lety +1

      No one never said that they were

    • @marquitarobertson5467
      @marquitarobertson5467 Před 6 lety +5

      luigee78 I guess he was talking about when the white people lied to become $2 Indian so that they can reap the benefit of being a Indian black people never claimed to be Indian they was adopted by the Cherokee so that's what made them Cherokee and as far as the government they made Indians black if you check your history it was called the maroon and the freedmen collected on the United States census

  • @sandybeebe9149
    @sandybeebe9149 Před 5 lety +3

    if we had to visualize this wilderness environment I'm thinking trees would have been huge..

    • @phyllislittlejohn3248
      @phyllislittlejohn3248 Před 5 lety +1

      That is correct.

    • @johnwayne7476
      @johnwayne7476 Před 4 lety +3

      Sandy Beebe Yes. I have 1 tree over 6’ thick another over 5’ they grew from ancient stumps cut about 250-300 years ago.

    • @etheridescence
      @etheridescence Před 4 lety +1

      If I remember correctly some tribes did controlled burns in forests to control the undergrowth, making travel and hunting game easier.

    • @martinmaddox5315
      @martinmaddox5315 Před 2 lety +1

      My dad , friend and I went hunting at the high knob recreation area in Virginia. We found an old chestnut tree trunk. The diameter was probably 12 feet. It was about 10 feet tall and about 1/4 of it was gone from deteriorating. Dad shot a doe while the three of us hunted from inside the trunk. Dad said when he was young the large chestnut trees were common and all sorts of game, occasionally deer, squirrels ., and sometimes bears. He said the woods were beautiful and little else grew under the chestnut canary looking like a park. He said one tree would have multiple squirrels in it which they relied on as a supplement to their farm diet of chickens, hogs and every once in a while a young cow.

    • @sandybeebe9149
      @sandybeebe9149 Před 2 lety

      I tried to do a painting of such huge trees in the mist of a small area where Native Americans lived ..and even for my creative mind I could not be content with what was really there in the early 16-17 hundreds .This was like painting something I had never seen before so needless to say I was discontent with the out come .as u can imagine. These huge trees made the humans look like ants = so tiny ..Never cut red woods out in California are a good example of what I'm talking about . Photos with humans in them of these red woods did make the humans look tiny ..

  • @gracelove886
    @gracelove886 Před 5 lety +1

    Why has this clip received such a negative backlash.?

  • @jharbin4409
    @jharbin4409 Před 2 lety +1

    In the words of Roddy Piper "Scotch is what a Scotsman drinks"

  • @jennylee9278
    @jennylee9278 Před 7 lety +17

    Those are all my ancestors, my gr grandfather from Wales married a Cherokee lady. Another ancestor fled the potato famine in Ireland. Another was a German immigrant, and a whole mishmash of all sorts of mongrels:)

  • @ebogar42
    @ebogar42 Před 3 lety +4

    Where I'm from that "smoky look" is just called fog to us, and it sucks sometimes while driving in the mountains. It can get pretty thick. 😂

    • @ronniedickerson7899
      @ronniedickerson7899 Před 2 lety +1

      It may be some of popcorn Sutton moonshine still giving some of the fog! Just hate the way he took his life!

  • @yeroc5033
    @yeroc5033 Před 3 lety +2

    Got the Irish, scotch, and Indian in me and I'm proud of my grand daddy running shine.

  • @Blessedhope83
    @Blessedhope83 Před 2 lety

    These mountains will always be my home