1776 The Vote 1972

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 229

  • @gittes98
    @gittes98 Před 2 lety +90

    Adam's comment "It's done...it's done" is incredibly moving. No cheers That's all that needs to be said at such a moment. no cheers just satisfaction

    • @jenniferann7212
      @jenniferann7212 Před rokem +9

      He also knew the real work was about to begin.

    • @vccstudents
      @vccstudents Před 3 měsíci +1

      It's one of my favorite movie lines of all the movies I've seen. Every time I have set a long-term, meaningful goal and accomplished it, I find myself referring to this line.

    • @beakedmonk3981
      @beakedmonk3981 Před měsícem

      No cheers indeed. At the same time, they all just signed their death warrant. It's a feeling captured fantastically in this classic movie

  • @bubbastill2040
    @bubbastill2040 Před 2 měsíci +24

    William Daniels and Howard Da Silva should have received Oscars for their superb performances in this!

    • @barbarapeterson4000
      @barbarapeterson4000 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Daniels was nominated for an Oscar - but as Best Supporting Actor. He felt he was the lead and so declined the nomination.

    • @barbarapeterson4000
      @barbarapeterson4000 Před měsícem +1

      @baronvonnembles whoops! Thanks for the correction!

    • @user-sx7wo1yl7y
      @user-sx7wo1yl7y Před měsícem +1

      Absolutely agree. One of the finest historical films ever made- it seems secondary that it's a musical- although a wonderful open at that. All American conservatives should be forced to watch this, until they finally realize that conservativism was and always has been supremely un-American. We are a nation forged by radical, erudite, well-spoken, and highly educated LIBTARDS. Those were the days...

    • @davidahlstrom7533
      @davidahlstrom7533 Před měsícem

      Nonsense. These were not 'libtards' like today. These were classical Liberals in the European sense. Freedom, liberty, and dignity for the entrepreneur, small farmer and average man (however imperfectly implemented for years) was what they believed. Today's "libtards" as you call Leftists believe in none of those things and only their ridiculous bigger and bigger governments.

    • @jeffs7915
      @jeffs7915 Před měsícem +2

      Da Silva what an actor

  • @jamezguard
    @jamezguard Před 3 lety +55

    I watch this every 4th of july. Love this movie. Also very funny.

  • @robertd.carver6240
    @robertd.carver6240 Před 3 lety +121

    Peter Stone's script is superb. One walked into the theater knowing how the show would end, but five minutes into the film--and play--one began to wonder how--and if--Independence would be achieved. Brilliant!

  • @Gablesman888
    @Gablesman888 Před 2 lety +63

    The New Hampshire delegate, who voted first for independence, was Dr. Josiah Bartlett, an ancestor of mine. He was also the second signer of the Declaration of Independence (after John Hancock).

    • @kidkique
      @kidkique Před rokem +6

      Ben Franklin is an ancestor of mine! 6th great grandfather

    • @EMomp
      @EMomp Před rokem +3

      Awesome

    • @DeeWeber
      @DeeWeber Před rokem +2

      That's so cool!

    • @pocarea512010
      @pocarea512010 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I Say, Ye! Dr. Josiah Bartlett !

    • @peterbyrne7348
      @peterbyrne7348 Před 20 dny

      @@Gablesman888 Who played you on The West Wing?

  • @TheFacefinder
    @TheFacefinder Před 8 lety +136

    Their wealth, their lives and their sacred honor. "If we don't stick together surely we will be hanged separately." Ben Franklin

    • @septegram
      @septegram Před 2 lety +9

      Franklin was actually being witty; he says "If we do not hang together, we shall most assuredly all hang separately."

    • @toddposton869
      @toddposton869 Před 21 dnem +1

      You somehow managed to misquote both.
      "We must all hang together, or else we shall all hang separately."
      -Benjamin Franklin
      "(And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence), we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor."
      -Rev. John Dickenson (last sentence of the Declaration of Independence)

  • @thomasgalyen6757
    @thomasgalyen6757 Před 3 lety +62

    “Every mapmaker in the world is waiting on your decision.”

  • @masterskrain2630
    @masterskrain2630 Před 2 lety +103

    Always liked Adams' final gesture of respect for Dickinson.

    • @kate2create738
      @kate2create738 Před 2 lety +9

      Every man had their flaws, but they all had qualities to be admired too. John was believing in the values that would keep a society happy and healthy, he valued respect.

    • @Pfisiar22
      @Pfisiar22 Před rokem +8

      Dickenson was an interesting man. He would joke later in life about not signing the declaration. He was also a key figure in creating the Constitution

    • @RHHoward-er8lc
      @RHHoward-er8lc Před rokem +2

      And Dickinson acknowledging in his own way how he cared for America and it's well being bas much as Adams. So a mutual respect at the very end. And Dickinson was right . England and America would be reconciled and be the most important of allies in the coming centuries especially with world war 1 and 2

    • @peterbyrne7348
      @peterbyrne7348 Před 2 měsíci

      Dickinson was also a key instigator of the rebellion, actually. Hos "Letters from a Farmer" made clear what the colonists' issues were. He's presented here as a sort of Tory, but actually everyone in Congress was in rebellion against the Crown.

    • @toddposton869
      @toddposton869 Před 21 dnem

      Same here.

  • @DuffyLew91
    @DuffyLew91 Před 8 lety +45

    Nothing held them together but their sacred honor. The miracle of July 2, 1776.

    • @hefestus2012
      @hefestus2012 Před 2 lety +2

      And the threat of execution for treason

    • @ktkat1949
      @ktkat1949 Před rokem +1

      Too bad present Congress has no sacred honour

    • @gruntforever7437
      @gruntforever7437 Před měsícem

      @@ktkat1949 no matter which way you spell it, present congress would be clue less

    • @toddposton869
      @toddposton869 Před 21 dnem +1

      Technically, the DOL wasn't signed until Aug. 2, 1776.

  • @ariochiv
    @ariochiv Před rokem +33

    I love the sort of stunned silence when the deed is finally done. It's more powerful, I think, than any sort of jubilant celebration would have been... especially given the 7 years of bitter conflict that would follow.

    • @stevevasta
      @stevevasta Před rokem +4

      I saw the show on Broadway, and, at that moment, you could have heard the proverbial pin drop.

    • @fearlessfosdick160
      @fearlessfosdick160 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Yes. It was as if the weight of what they had just done was settling upon them.

    • @beakedmonk3981
      @beakedmonk3981 Před měsícem

      It certainly wasn't a cheerful moment, considering there was a war ahead of them that appeared hopeless and that they also just signed their own death warrants.

  • @sicilia303
    @sicilia303 Před 8 lety +112

    Such brave men putting all they had on the line. I'm amazed at their tenacity and bravery to this day. It isn't the perfect system but it is the best we've got unfortunately.

    • @phillipchappell6013
      @phillipchappell6013 Před 2 lety +8

      I'm a handicapped person, a son of man fought in Vietnam as a Marine. Lead the way for the Tanks in Desert Storm as a US Army Combat Engineer. If i had to i die on the line to keep country free. We have issues now, But this country still has promise.

    • @platoon1026
      @platoon1026 Před rokem

      Compare these men to the Congress w have today. Liars, thieves and perverts all; with a supporting cast of unelected overseers.

  • @jwvvvv
    @jwvvvv Před rokem +12

    Great movie to watch every 4th of July.

  • @manramen
    @manramen Před 8 lety +75

    I always say this film should be watched by anyone complaining about today's congress. It shows how hard it was to get anything done with only THIS amount of men and just the congress (only one "house" if you will).

    • @abehambino
      @abehambino Před 16 dny

      Yeah, the slow wheels of congress, which is an intentional check on the federal government ranks very low on the complaints people have on our modern congress. Today we are worried about corruption, undue influence, constitutionality, and pure political interest. Not that there wasn’t some of this back in the day, but very little of it was the issue during THIS congress. The slow wheels here were for the most part a matter of life and death for their nations as well for them as individuals. Very different from our modern congress.

  • @STRZB001
    @STRZB001 Před 3 lety +45

    I used to watch this picture when I was in middle school around 2001-2003, when I was in band class when we would have a substitute. I had seen it probably fifteen times throughout those years. I watched it the first few times and after that I just screwed around.
    I’ve seen it a few times since I’ve been an adult and I’m so grateful that I was introduced to this movie. It’s such a fantastic piece of film, history and art. This movie makes me glad to be an American.

    • @annedonovan9005
      @annedonovan9005 Před 2 lety +2

      When I was in Middle School this movie had just about come out. Our teacher got us out of school for the morning to go to the local theater to watch it for class. It was an awesome experience (and not just because we got out of school for the morning).

    • @gnnascarfan2410
      @gnnascarfan2410 Před rokem +1

      My band teacher (was probably in his mid-70s) showed us this movie in my 8th grade year of middle school, 2014-2015. Sadly he retired at the end of that year but I had a tremendous amount of respect for him and he taught me and others a lot of valuable life lessons.

  • @kate2create738
    @kate2create738 Před 2 lety +22

    Another 4th to celebrate the birth of our country, these men put so much on the line for the chance that we experience freedom and liberty. It crushes me how too many have forgotten the risks they all took.

    • @brianjacobson297
      @brianjacobson297 Před měsícem +1

      And now, not only are we on the verge of throwing it all away, but we're also potentially embracing something even worse than what they declared independence from.

  • @ktkat1949
    @ktkat1949 Před 2 lety +33

    There was never a moment,” wrote John Jay Chapman, “when the slavery issue was not a sleeping serpent. That issue lay coiled up under the table during the deliberations of the Constitutional Convention in 1787.”

    • @gruntforever7437
      @gruntforever7437 Před měsícem +1

      there were fine men working hard to eradicate it before our country was even a country. but always a few fought it; and thus in the end came the civil war

    • @abehambino
      @abehambino Před měsícem +1

      20 years after this event.

  • @jeanneamato8278
    @jeanneamato8278 Před rokem +10

    My husband and I have watched this every 4th of July since 1984. We pretty much know all the words and lyrics and say them. We also know that our Congress really hasn’t changed since 1776 except maybe more juvenile and mean.

  • @lovedemfeet
    @lovedemfeet Před 7 lety +46

    I love that line Ben Gates delivered in "National Treasure:"
    "Had we lost the war, they would have been hanged, beheaded, drawn and quartered, and-Oh! Oh, my personal favorite-and had their entrails cut out and burned!!"
    It had to be in the back of their mind as they signed...Franklin brought that up.

    • @BMe-ck6fd
      @BMe-ck6fd Před 2 lety

      How it would have worked is that they would have all been simply trundled onto a British military ship and shipped off to England never to be seen again

    • @2steelshells
      @2steelshells Před 2 lety

      We must all hang together...or we will all hang separately.,

  • @alekm.5377
    @alekm.5377 Před 2 lety +26

    Always remember James Wilson!

    • @talmadgewalker279
      @talmadgewalker279 Před 3 dny

      My biggest gripe with the film is that it downplays James Wilson so much. He was actually very important in the drafting of the Constitution.

  • @TTony-tu6dm
    @TTony-tu6dm Před 2 lety +111

    “If we give in on this issue, posterity will never forgive us”. Nor should it. You were correct Mr. Adams

    • @Madison-iw8ix
      @Madison-iw8ix Před 2 lety +26

      South Carolina has always been the problem child of America. It took ninety years, but we eventually solved the horror of slavery.

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 Před 2 lety +5

      @@Madison-iw8ix Not if you listen to some these days.

    • @kennethpurscell
      @kennethpurscell Před 2 lety +16

      Apparently Adam's said, "There will be trouble a hundred years hence. Posterity will never forgive us." The writers decided that no one would believe he really said this, so they shortened the line.

    • @bithead17able
      @bithead17able Před rokem +18

      And yet Franklin's comments were correct. We wouldn't have been a nation and at that point what would have been the difference?

    • @mnfrench7603
      @mnfrench7603 Před rokem +6

      What are we Demi-gods? No, but they sure get treated as such.

  • @davehue9517
    @davehue9517 Před 2 lety +9

    My 5th grade teachers, Mr. Hooker and Miss May, showed us this movie in class and copied the music for us to sing along....it made a lasting impact ..

  • @eileencoffey6657
    @eileencoffey6657 Před 2 lety +55

    Dickenson wasn't the DB as portrayed in the film. While not for Independence, he did do what he stated at the end and joined the fight. This confrontation never happened. During private deliberations, they came to an agreement that Dickenson would be absent that day. So while against Independence at that point and in good conscience could not vote for it, he would be conveniently absent and not stand in the way, so it was sort of a combination of what you see here, both Dickenson and Wilson, but only Dickenson actually doing it. It is a great scene. Saw the play years ago in revival with Brent Spiner as Adams, just wonderful.

    • @TTony-tu6dm
      @TTony-tu6dm Před 2 lety +4

      True. Also, the confrontation with Rutledge did not take place during the vote. Adams and Rutledge were close friends but at odds over slavery. It took political wrangling between Rutledge, Adams, Franklin and Jefferson to secure the vote, along the lines of, as Franklin says here, “first things first”. Unfortunately.

    • @jbreezy101
      @jbreezy101 Před 2 lety +2

      This was better depicted in John Adams, the miniseries

    • @CorsetLebelle
      @CorsetLebelle Před rokem +2

      Actually he was not there cause he had joined the pensalvina line and Washington

    • @whatareyoulookingat908
      @whatareyoulookingat908 Před rokem +1

      Brent Spiner? Yuck. He soured on me despite the role. But glad you gave more information.

    • @r.c.auclair2042
      @r.c.auclair2042 Před rokem

      @@whatareyoulookingat908, quite right. Wikipedia lists the historical inaccuracies in the movie & this was one of those.

  • @TWOCOWS1
    @TWOCOWS1 Před 3 lety +19

    "If we don't hang together now, we shall surely hang separately." Ben was hot with his English

  • @debradobson2236
    @debradobson2236 Před 3 lety +14

    1776 best movie to me, seen this movie every year, on 7/4/. Actors very good who they represent of history and facts. I'm a history nut about presidents. Very historic movie. I'm crazy about it. Mrs. Allen. 💕 It.

  • @valeriemangan2064
    @valeriemangan2064 Před měsícem +2

    This movie is an absolute masterpiece, as well as being an important piece of history.

  • @shanesmith6941
    @shanesmith6941 Před rokem +14

    In 1975/1976 during the Bicentennial, I was in the 5th grade in Weaver Alabama and our teachers arranged for us to go on a field trip (remember those) to see this movie at the theater. We were very excited and having a great time and then we noticed the teachers being shocked at some of the language used in the movie. All of us students thought it was funny. "Too late now" one teacher said, and we enjoyed the movie so much. If you were to show this movie today to students in school, I wonder what their reaction would be. Hard to believe we went from this great struggle for independence, to what is happening today. So sad. May the Lord Jesus save us soon!!

    • @DeeWeber
      @DeeWeber Před rokem +1

      My kids love it and I watched it in 6th grade in 84. I own it digitally, dvd, and vhs. My friend, it's not yr Jesus but our active participation that will keep the inheritance. Everyone forgets "Of the People". Disagree with something? Get involved. Not violently. Active civic participation. It's not what they can do for us as our government, it's what we are doing for this legacy and responsibility.

    • @shanesmith6941
      @shanesmith6941 Před rokem

      @@DeeWeber LOL You think it's going to get better ? Good luck with that.

  • @ForgottenHonor0
    @ForgottenHonor0 Před 2 lety +13

    "I say ye John Dickinson."

  • @goldgeologist5320
    @goldgeologist5320 Před rokem +11

    It is so sad how few Americans know the full history of how this once great nation was created!

  • @wgbc2393
    @wgbc2393 Před 2 lety +7

    '' WE ''...we watch this every 4th OF JULY !

  • @mikeking7470
    @mikeking7470 Před rokem +4

    I watch this every year on the Fourth!

  • @erik_griswold
    @erik_griswold Před 3 lety +26

    KITT as John Adams was a great choice

    • @kylahdorsey610
      @kylahdorsey610 Před 2 lety +3

      he played the teacher and later princple on boy meets world.

  • @KKPsi-TubaDawg
    @KKPsi-TubaDawg Před rokem +8

    I've never seen the stage play, but this film version is excellent.

    • @SarahB1863
      @SarahB1863 Před rokem

      The 1973 film starred just about the entire original Broadway cast (the only exception I think was the part of Martha Jefferson, playing onstage by Betty Buckley and on screen by Blythe Danner), so if you watch that it's pretty close to being a filmed version of the stage show. The stage version isn't produced often because the cast has about 26 male parts but only 2 female parts, so it's difficult for community theaters to put on.

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Před rokem

      @@SarahB1863 Two very important replacements are Donald Madden as Dickenson (instead of Broadway's Paul Hecht) and John Cullum as Rutledge (instead of Broadway's original Clifford David). Cullum, however, had been the third replacement Rutledge on Broadway and actually played it longer on Broadway in the original production than any other actor.
      I've always thought the problem of the show having an overwhelmingly male cast could be solved (or at least mitigated) by presenting "1776* in repertory with *Nine" (which is all women with only one male role). Gender blind casting offers another strategy, and as you may know there was a recent revival that featured an all-female cast.

  • @carrickrichards2457
    @carrickrichards2457 Před 6 dny

    James Wilson had greatness thrust upon him. How reluctant!

  • @allyoneverstone
    @allyoneverstone Před 7 lety +25

    It just makes me laugh with North and South Carolina, and the issue of slavery, like we would have the issues later if South Carolina's delegates kept their mouth shut. lol. I honest will always love this movie and musical was more then Hamilton

  • @ricashbringer9866
    @ricashbringer9866 Před 2 lety +6

    Rhode Island on its own had declared Independence on May 4, 1776.

  • @brianwinters5434
    @brianwinters5434 Před rokem +3

    Massachusetts mr Feeney living American history as well as making it.

  • @cheongyei
    @cheongyei Před 2 lety +5

    Fantastic!

  • @TheKamikazeCam
    @TheKamikazeCam Před 8 lety +6

    Question: did anyone else come here after watching last Sunday's Game of Thrones episode, after the meeting with Tyrion & the slavers? For some reason, his diplomatic approach with them reminded me of this scene where Adams, Jefferson & Franklin had to choose between having a nation that (for the time being) tolerated slavery, and not having a nation at all.

  • @TheTexasCowboy56
    @TheTexasCowboy56 Před 3 lety +16

    I still say this flim should be played in schools now sure is probably everything in it legit probably not. But think it would show people just how hard it was, and why slaverly still happened after it. People seem to forget it wasn't like how it is now, where you don't need every vote. And something like this they needed every vote.

    • @UnderseaPumaKing
      @UnderseaPumaKing Před 2 lety +3

      You are correct in that, historically speaking, it has its share of flaws. However none of these inaccuracies change

    • @TheTexasCowboy56
      @TheTexasCowboy56 Před 2 lety +1

      @@UnderseaPumaKing Yup and event hey admitted not all of it is correct, most of it they went off of letters, and stuff like that the these people wrote. But also there a lot they don't know what happened between the start and the vote so they just added some fun stuff in.

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Před rokem +1

      It isn't historically accurate in every respect, but it dramatizes the issues in a compelling way, and can be used as a valuable teaching tool.

    • @b1uel1ght52
      @b1uel1ght52 Před rokem +1

      I worked in a school as an instructional aide for 3 years and taught this film each year

  • @SarahB1863
    @SarahB1863 Před rokem +3

    5:58 and here we see the tragedy that is "cropped TV." When I first saw this on TV in 1975 I wondered why the heck Wilson was so low in the frame. It was another couple of decades before I saw the movie in its original aspect ratio and discovered Adams is standing to his left!

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Před rokem +1

      Yes. Because most scenes take place in a Congressional chamber packed with delegates, the original theatrical widescreen version of this movie is stunningly different from the 4:3 "pan and scan" version shown on TV for decades.

  • @KINGofEPICNESS99
    @KINGofEPICNESS99 Před 8 lety +6

    I love mr Thomson!!! New Hamshire say yay!

  • @denisescutt1865
    @denisescutt1865 Před rokem +3

    They would be ashamed and appalled at American
    politics today.

  • @johnzeszut3170
    @johnzeszut3170 Před 2 měsíci

    During the last few minutes this is one very powerful film!

  • @TheFacefinder
    @TheFacefinder Před 8 lety +6

    This can no longer be affirmed. This rangtaggled, regardless of the King's, men who sought freedom from England. Sought to bring this country to bear. God bless them

  • @Stalicone
    @Stalicone Před 8 lety +11

    Historical error, both John Dickenson and James Wison were staunch supporters of independence. They both served on key committees regarding independence. Dickenson served on the second "committee of 5" charged with drafting proposed treaties to foreign powers after the declaration was made public. Wilson, who authored some of the first legal documents challenging the authority of Parliament (in the 1760s) over the colonies sans parliamentary representation was considered a legal scholar on a par with Adams and Jefferson. He was appointed to the Supreme Court by President Washington. Both of these men should be respected as leaders and founders of our nation, and certainly did not act as portrayed here.

    • @allenjpl
      @allenjpl  Před 8 lety +15

      Uh, no. Dickinson favored negotiations and reconciliation, not independence. Thus the reason why he didn't sign the Declaration.

    • @Stalicone
      @Stalicone Před 8 lety +2

      allenjpl
      True, but he wasn't the intransigent douche as portrayed in this movie - a virtual Tory. He contributed mightily to American independance.

    • @masterskyrunner
      @masterskyrunner Před 8 lety +13

      John Dickinson served his country, but he was not a staunch supporter of independence. The day before the vote was rendered, he discoursed on the dangers of independence and democracy, that those who support it "are the promoters of slavery," that "so necessary is monarchy to cement human society together" that all democracy is doomed to end in "a state of confusion and ruin," and lead to conditions which will "annihilate liberty forever."
      In his last paragraph, he actually predicted the French Revolution quite accurately, give him that.

    • @carlevans7416
      @carlevans7416 Před 7 lety +1

      Philio Phrog & Allenjpl are essentially correct, I don't want to pile on but let us recognize that this musical has it's own creative license. Ultimately what happens here as in any historical piece, is that the authors turn up the volume on characterizations. Hamilton being timely here is a perfect example. These depictions are less rock solid historic accuracy and more along accurate interpretation. And one thing you would have to recognize that at any volume, Dickenson was immediately after and over time viewed as being on the wrong side of the coin from the American perspective. And what you describe is more a counterpoint that this film tries to address with his whole bit about going into service. A good proof of Dickenson being willfully discarded from the national narrative is the fact that there is a perfectly legit case to be made that the congress doesn't even come together without Dickenson's advocacy.

  • @HUGGYBEAR-262
    @HUGGYBEAR-262 Před rokem +5

    I would love to go back in time to 1776 and love to hear their stories and map makers from 1776 to now. Plus, I wonder if any of them had any idea or predict how America was made and completed

  • @SIUSaluki04
    @SIUSaluki04 Před 2 lety +2

    I love this movie.

  • @pop5678eye
    @pop5678eye Před 2 lety +13

    While Dickinson has been assigned the role of villain in this musical in real history he was a hero. He was one of the architects of the Articles of Confederation that laid the foundation for our eventual Constitution. His objection to the Declaration of Independence was not so much because he harbored loyalty to the Crown but his fear that such a declaration was meaningless without a plan for follow up.
    Ultimately history proved him partially right as there was over a decade of uncertainty just to start off our government and as we know from history an incomplete and imperfect Constitution that came back to haunt us for the rest of American history.

  • @jeffs7915
    @jeffs7915 Před 2 měsíci +1

    The representative that did not wish to be remembered James Wilson,from Pennsylvania did some voice work in the Star Trek the original series, and Reverend Lymon Hall was in Amadeus.

    • @ThreePointOneFou
      @ThreePointOneFou Před měsícem +1

      Also of note: James Noble (Rev. John Witherspoon, the lead delegate from NJ) starred on _Benson,_ and John Cullum (Edward Rutledge, the SC delegate) was on _Northern Exposure._

    • @jeffs7915
      @jeffs7915 Před měsícem

      ​@@ThreePointOneFou Rutledge also started on Broadway in "Shenandoah" this Anderson Land

  • @codyshi4743
    @codyshi4743 Před 3 lety +11

    With that the United States of America was born, 4:11 but the fate of 618,222 future American lives is seal in the American Civil War.

    • @amitkenan3878
      @amitkenan3878 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Civil war was inevitable, but at that time they had to unite against the British threat

  • @TheFacefinder
    @TheFacefinder Před 8 lety +2

    Our of an honor. We true. men and all, pledge our sacred honor, to prefect and defend this oath of honor

  • @nativevirginian8344
    @nativevirginian8344 Před 2 lety +5

    The quiet when all was done. They all knew they could be hanged. Starting a new country. Man!

  • @hagamapama
    @hagamapama Před 11 měsíci +2

    John Dickinson didn't oppose Independence because he loved England. He opposed it because there was no actual government. Congress was just a committee, not a government and America suffered badly because all they had to lead them towards victory was a toothless committee.
    A unified central government over the 13 colonies could have shortened the war by 3 years, even with all the inherent mistakes of a young nation factored in.

  • @user-ne6gp4gn6x
    @user-ne6gp4gn6x Před 2 měsíci +1

    1776 did win a 1969 tony i loved this movie get history lesson

  • @joeyshort6028
    @joeyshort6028 Před 8 lety +6

    glory to America!!!!

  • @robinsonrex1280
    @robinsonrex1280 Před 11 měsíci

    "If I go with them, I'll just be just one among dozens, no one will remember the name of James Wilson". He had hoped to preserve his anonymity, however when I googled his name, he stands out as being "the only person who signed the Declaration of Independence"!

  • @brianwinters5434
    @brianwinters5434 Před rokem +2

    Sometimes unlikely people have to rise to the occasion. Read about Edmund G Ross the senator who voted not to impeach Andrew Johnon and was the reason the vote was 35 to impeach Johnson 19 not to. He was listed by John Kennedy in profiles in courage

  • @TheCdecisneros
    @TheCdecisneros Před 2 měsíci +1

    John Adams was one of the founding fathers that didn;t own slaves.

  • @seandineen999
    @seandineen999 Před 8 lety +7

    later on Dickenson became an anti slavery crusader

  • @michaelschaumburg589
    @michaelschaumburg589 Před rokem +1

    So that’s how they come up with the name, Little Caesar 😂

  • @ChristopherMarlowe
    @ChristopherMarlowe Před měsícem

    Donald Madden reminds me so much of Phil Hartman.

  • @JustMe-um8zp
    @JustMe-um8zp Před rokem +3

    "Every map maker in the world is waiting for your decision".
    Fantastic line.

  • @bluekitty3731
    @bluekitty3731 Před rokem +5

    Is it just me? But Would've love to have been there and say " Michigan says yea!" ( yes I know Michigan wasn't a colony!")

    • @BeefCake1012
      @BeefCake1012 Před 8 měsíci

      *the French Canadien settlers living under the yoke of British imperialism at Fort Detroit…
      “Michigan says YEAY!” 😂🤣

  • @Melissa0774
    @Melissa0774 Před rokem

    You'd think more movies would've been made about this.

  • @strangebrew1231
    @strangebrew1231 Před rokem +2

    Why did they look at Adams like it's his fault for insisting slavery not be part of it. South Carolina is out of line for real with that shit

    • @ThreePointOneFou
      @ThreePointOneFou Před měsícem

      Rutledge, in an earlier scene, was letting Jefferson have it for his oblique reference to slavery, both defending the practice as a "peculiar Southern tradition" and calling out both Jefferson and the Northerners as hypocrites (Jefferson as a slave owner, Adams' Massachusetts as a slave-trading hub). Adams tried to belittle Rutledge on the issue, prompting Rutledge to rub it in their faces (the "Molasses to Rum to Slaves" song) before leading the Carolinas and Georgia to walk out. Franklin subsequently reminded Adams that, for all their disagreements, the other delegates were still deserving of respect, and that Adams should start showing it to them.

  • @pocarea512010
    @pocarea512010 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Will July 4th, 2024 Be Our LAST Independence Day ?

  • @rc59191
    @rc59191 Před 2 lety +11

    To think the Civil War could of been prevented had South Carolina not been so goddamn stubborn about slavery. It should of ended right there that day.

    • @NOMADcourier85
      @NOMADcourier85 Před 2 lety +1

      From what I've read on it it probably wouldn't have ended till after the war and being part of the constitution.

    • @humansvd3269
      @humansvd3269 Před 2 lety +1

      That would have killed their economy.

    • @rc59191
      @rc59191 Před 2 lety

      @@humansvd3269 there's such thing as transitioning or hiring their slaves back as field hands and paying them a wage.

  • @BMe-ck6fd
    @BMe-ck6fd Před 2 lety +2

    The election of new representatives to the continental congress occurred soon after the vote on the declaration and the new additional representatives also signed realizing the significance

  • @windarchercookie8861
    @windarchercookie8861 Před 2 lety +5

    the founding fathers were hot af

    • @SarahB1863
      @SarahB1863 Před rokem +1

      I had SUCH a crush on Thomas Jefferson thanks to this movie!

    • @SexySkoChick
      @SexySkoChick Před 2 měsíci

      Thomas Jefferson was REALLY cute! 😳

    • @SexySkoChick
      @SexySkoChick Před 2 měsíci

      @@SarahB1863 he was a HOTTIE 😍

  • @original.intent.bitcoin
    @original.intent.bitcoin Před rokem +1

    NEW MEXICO
    SATOSHI NAKAMOTO, AKA SUSAN HERBERT, SAYS YEA !!

  • @dovbarleib3256
    @dovbarleib3256 Před 22 dny

    I think that while the dissenting issues in this vote were genuine, they were ironed out before July 2nd.

  • @jeranperry6954
    @jeranperry6954 Před 21 dnem

    Adams is Mr. Feeny.

  • @ericbarash8496
    @ericbarash8496 Před rokem +2

    Thank you Benjamin Franklin for the declaration of independence.

  • @brandonknebel3313
    @brandonknebel3313 Před 3 lety +4

    I didn't think Ben franklin Would have that voice. He sounds like Batman LOL

    • @holydiver73
      @holydiver73 Před rokem

      The actor was named Howard Da Silva. He was blacklisted from movies in the late 40’s for being a dirty red. Ben Franklin would have been appalled having such a despicable character playing him .

  • @JohnRoberts-wk6rf
    @JohnRoberts-wk6rf Před rokem +1

    After the vote was taken, I wonder if these men truly realized what they had done.

    • @whaaat3632
      @whaaat3632 Před rokem +1

      They LIVED it. I would say yes.

  • @mr.raslyon6626
    @mr.raslyon6626 Před rokem

    Wow, Mr. Feeny was there too? 🤣

  • @bnelso2833
    @bnelso2833 Před 2 lety +2

    Why does Franklin hardly seem like he is on the Pennsylvania delegation?

    • @thecousincrew9558
      @thecousincrew9558 Před rokem

      The first time I watched the movie, I thought he was in the Massachusetts delegation. I got so confused when he voted with Pennsylvania! 😂

  • @thedukeofswellington1827

    I guess a motion this important had to come from.Virginia. if Florida had sent delegates they wouldve probably sank the vote. Or probably just gone along with SC and NC and GA

    • @edwardpate6128
      @edwardpate6128 Před rokem +2

      Florida was not acquired by the United States from Spain until 1819, it was not an English colony.

  • @Narrowgaugefilms
    @Narrowgaugefilms Před rokem

    In all fairness, a clause accusing George III of carrying people off into slavery in another hemisphere should have been scratched out just for being untrue.
    Slavery as a system was in place before his grandfather was born and many men in Congress that day were a part of it a lot deeper than King George, especially including the man who wrote it

  • @alexandertriozzi5121
    @alexandertriozzi5121 Před 2 lety +1

    Quick thing I caught - Delaware was also a majority vote - they kick him out also 😉

    • @ThreePointOneFou
      @ThreePointOneFou Před měsícem

      Actually, there was a little dramatic license here. Caesar Rodney, the lead delegate from Delaware, would go on to die of cancer, but at the time of the Second Continental Congress he wa 37 and in good health.

  • @ripple-effect-mlp
    @ripple-effect-mlp Před rokem

    "Mr. Secretary, is the Declaration ready to be signed?"
    "It is."
    "Even with the new revision imposed during the vote?"
    "... (Well, crap.)"

    • @georgepierson4920
      @georgepierson4920 Před 5 měsíci

      I was wondering about that.

    • @mikeb8674
      @mikeb8674 Před 2 měsíci

      It was the next day, Johnny tore the calendar page and everything.
      Not his name here but I will never not see him as Johnny the shoeshine guy from Police Squad. “Word on the street is that they’ll strike the slavery passage so the Carolinas will vote in favor.” :hands over $20:

  • @GeneralJamin2799
    @GeneralJamin2799 Před 8 lety +5

    Couldn't Pennsylvania had just abstained?

    • @Sueb18631
      @Sueb18631 Před 8 lety +5

      Good question but I don't think Franklin or Dickinson would have agreed to doing that. Franklin wanted it to pass and Dickinspon was just as determined to take it down. I also don't think they could if the resolution required a unanimous vote, i think that means every colony had to support it.

    • @InAHearbeat
      @InAHearbeat Před 8 lety +4

      No every colony didn't have to support it. New York (according to the movie) originally abstained. But I think abstaining has to be a consensus itself within the colony. Since there were 3 of them there would be a majority. It had to be Judge Wilson's decision, one way or the other.

    • @larrystuder8543
      @larrystuder8543 Před 2 lety +3

      @@InAHearbeat it's a running joke thru the play and the film: the delegate from New York could not get any instructions from the NY Legislature. So he abstained, courteously. At the time of the signing, he has a line: "To Hell with New York!" , and signs...

    • @loveGG3
      @loveGG3 Před 2 lety

      Yes, at the time of signing. Not at the time of voting. The point was it didn't have to have all yay votes. It only couldn't have any nays because originally NY abstained and it still passed.

  • @stopsign997
    @stopsign997 Před 10 měsíci

    Holy S! FEENY!!

  • @animationfanatic2133
    @animationfanatic2133 Před rokem +2

    3:00-3:10 sadly yes

  • @davidaltman3867
    @davidaltman3867 Před 2 lety +1

    dickinson sounds like the late great phil hartman

  • @smilessmiles7906
    @smilessmiles7906 Před 28 dny

    How brave 🏳️‍🌈✊🏿

  • @gordonsypolt9519
    @gordonsypolt9519 Před rokem

    This whole notion about James Wilson being the decider for Pennsylvania is BS. There were NINE Pennsylvanians who signed the Declaration.

  • @tronghai55
    @tronghai55 Před 2 lety +1

    Protect all costs the decent french or you will choose you own path of disaster till then .

  • @thedukeofswellington1827

    Dickenson was certainly not as much of a buffon/tory as this film wants us to believe

    • @oliverbrownlow5615
      @oliverbrownlow5615 Před rokem +1

      No, and nor did Salieri poison Mozart. But if Shakespeare taught us anything, it's not to let historical accuracy stand in the way of writing a good play.

    • @TTony-tu6dm
      @TTony-tu6dm Před 5 měsíci +1

      I don’t think the film presents him as that at all. While not exactly historically accurate, it presents him as a man of conviction who supports what he believes is best, and when he is overruled he lends himself to the fight. Pretty noble imho

  • @sleepdemonsmusic
    @sleepdemonsmusic Před 8 lety +1

    No wigs? Pfftt.

  • @deadlynytshayd2220
    @deadlynytshayd2220 Před 8 lety +3

    Why does Franklin sound like worf

    • @erik_griswold
      @erik_griswold Před 3 lety +6

      Howard Da Silva had a distinct voice.

    • @davidahlstrom7533
      @davidahlstrom7533 Před 2 lety +1

      You can also see a much younger Howard DaSilva in the great 1940 film Abe Lincoln in Illinois (he was Lincoln's early rival in Salem who wrestled with Lincoln). He was great in that supporting role also.

    • @sharonmahoney9333
      @sharonmahoney9333 Před 2 měsíci

      @@davidahlstrom7533 And he played Ben Marino, the political wheeler-dealer, in "Fiorello!" on Broadway. Here he is, re-creating one of the signature songs from that musical, in which with his fellow cardplayers he acts out the testimony in the Tammany Hall trials in NYC. czcams.com/video/XrJMnONes2w/video.htmlsi=RhwvK1w9qu1ncm8z

  • @gruntforever7437
    @gruntforever7437 Před měsícem

    Those woke jokes whining about this event are not worthy to empty their chamber pots

  • @bingingbinging8597
    @bingingbinging8597 Před 2 lety +1

    2 states actually voted AGAINST independence