The Jamestown Massacre 1622 | English - Powhatan Wars

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2022
  • The video covers events since the founding of Jamestown in 1607 in the English Colony of Virginia and Powhatan Confederacy territory until the Jamestown massacre of 1622.
    It shows the ralationship between the Native Americans of the Powhatan Confederacy and the English colonists. Many conflicts took place between the Powhatans and the English during this time resulting in the First Anglo Powhatan war, the second Anglo Powhatan war and the third Anglo Powhatan war.
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    Voiceover: Dean T. Moody
    www.deantmoodyvoice.com
    Sources:
    www.worldhistory.org/Powhatan...
    • Brown, J. E. Teaching Spirits: Understanding Native American Religious Traditions. Oxford University Press, 2010.
    • Dunbar-Ortiz, R. An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States . Beacon Press, 2015.
    • Mann, C. C. 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created. Vintage Books, 2012.
    • Page, J. In the Hands of the Great Spirit: The 20,000 Year History of the American Indians. Free Press, 2004.
    • Price, D. A. Love and Hate in Jamestown: John Smith, Pocahontas, and the Start of a New Nation. Vintage Books, 2005.
    • Sapp, R. Native Americans State by State. Chartwell Books, 2018.
    • Silverman, D. J. This Land Is Their Land. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2020.
    • Taylor, A. American Colonies: The Settling of North America. Penguin Books, 2002.
    • Bradford, W. & Paget, H. Of Plymouth Plantation. Dover Publications, 2006.
    • Drake, J. D. King Philip's War: Civil War in New England 1675-1676. University of Massachusetts Press, 2000.
    • Mann, C. C. 1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created. Vintage Books, 2012.
    • Musselwhite, P., Mancall, P. C. , Horn, J. Virginia 1619: Slavery and Freedom in the Making of America. University of North Carolina Press, 2019.
    • Neill, E. D. History of the Virginia Company of London. Alpha Editions, 2018.
    • Page, J. In the Hands of the Great Spirit: The 20,000 Year History of the American Indians. Free Press, 2004.
    • Price, D. A. Love and Hate in Jamestown: John Smith, Pocahontas, and the Start of a New Nation. Vintage Books, 2005.
    • Taylor, A. American Colonies: The Settling of North America. Penguin Books, 2002.
    • The Records of the Virginia Company, 1606-26, Volume III: Indian Massacre 1622
    • Virtual Jamestown: Indian Massacre of 1622
    www.signalsaz.com/articles/th...
    www.encyclopedia.com/defense/...

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @NativeAmericanHistory
    @NativeAmericanHistory  Před rokem +223

    Should we cover the 3rd English - Powhatan war in the next video?

    • @paintthesky3770
      @paintthesky3770 Před rokem +8

      Just got subscribed to your channel, thanks for the well needed info that isn't being taught thoroughly in schools. Do you have anything about Indian mascots, and the history of that? And how the Natives oppose of it.

    • @cjclark2002
      @cjclark2002 Před rokem +10

      Yes, love the videos.

    • @bobbymoore7874
      @bobbymoore7874 Před rokem +7

      Yes

    • @childoftheeternalsky2382
      @childoftheeternalsky2382 Před rokem +3

      Yes please

    • @carlos_cub
      @carlos_cub Před rokem +3

      yes please give us more.

  • @rdf4315
    @rdf4315 Před rokem +343

    I haven't heard anything about the Jamestown massacre in almost 20 years I forgot all about Pocahontas, it's so good to listen to real American history for change and not revisionist woke history.

    • @kennethpaquin8574
      @kennethpaquin8574 Před rokem

      This is not American history. This is English and Indian history. America did not exist for more than a century and a half after these events.
      Also, what fake American history have you been listening to?

    • @georgeortiz3608
      @georgeortiz3608 Před rokem +5

      It's history know about it at least

    • @forgottenfilmchannel1194
      @forgottenfilmchannel1194 Před rokem +9

      I'm in Petersburg Va. We have a rock called the Pocahontas Basin that has a few stories leading back to her. None of the make much sense but still interesting fokelore.

    • @ericmartinez1665
      @ericmartinez1665 Před rokem +2

      @@georgeortiz3608 No

    • @safeysmith6720
      @safeysmith6720 Před rokem +14

      Well people aren’t exactly going to talk about it everyday are they?
      You could have gone to re-read on the subject your damn self, by doing a little of your own research, instead of waiting for someone else to bring it up.
      The tone in your comment is that everyone else is being ignorant for not brining it to your attention sooner.
      Go f@cking read something. It’s nobody’s fault but your own, that you don’t know more on things like this. You have to search out knowledge, not wait for ppl to bring it to you.

  • @geebrewer8186
    @geebrewer8186 Před 8 měsíci +81

    I had ancestors who survived the 1622 war. They had a farm up river, near Henrico, neighbors to John Rolfe. One ancestor family owned the farm and employed another ancestor as their indentured servant. They appeared as survivors in the 1623 census taken. I had never heard of this war either until I started researching my ancestry.

    • @teomanvural897
      @teomanvural897 Před 8 měsíci

      Pislik herif o tarih başka senin şu anki zamanın başka gerizekalı soytarı nerden buliyorsun yasadinmi o tarihte?

    • @tah2606
      @tah2606 Před 5 měsíci +4

      So awesome I had ancestor who came over as indentured servant in 1630 to Massachusetts

    • @TEAMWHAT99
      @TEAMWHAT99 Před 4 měsíci

      I am a direct descendant of Pocahontas' son ,Thomas Rolfe,( said to be the biological son of Sir Thomas Dale,Whom,as many know,DID repeatedly raped Her before they had her killed ....Yes she wa

    • @kipincharge2833
      @kipincharge2833 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Humphrey Basse 8 yrs old🕊️

    • @lynx8664
      @lynx8664 Před 2 měsíci +3

      My ancestor’s plantation was raided, many killed. Basse’s Choice. Nathaniel Basse and wife, Mary Jordan were in England. One son survived by hiding in the woods. Powhatan is my 12th great grandfather through this child who hid in the woods.

  • @tulsacableguy7277
    @tulsacableguy7277 Před rokem +127

    Powhatan village location was found recently on a farming field right off water! Woodentent posts were found in the ground as described by John Smith

  • @jackhughesbooks
    @jackhughesbooks Před 8 měsíci +34

    This was brilliant. I'm from Britain and we only know fragments of American history especially early history. I learned so much. I also like that it is bite-sized. Around 10 minutes is easy to listen to and absorb. Now subscribed and looking forward to hearing about the 2nd & 3rd Powhatan Wars. Thanks for your work

  • @davidmizak4642
    @davidmizak4642 Před rokem +41

    You deliver excellent content to your audience. It's very interesting material. All of your effort put into creating this video is much appreciated. I'm truly grateful for your help!

    • @xyzoub
      @xyzoub Před 5 měsíci

      You're listening to an AI voice, it's synthetic.

  • @andreweden9405
    @andreweden9405 Před rokem +48

    It's actually from the Powhatan dialect that we get the word "tomahawk", which is still used today. Ironically, the iron/steel-bladed tomahawks that are so iconically associated with American Indians, were actually introduced by the Europeans. People often think of them as only being a Native American weapon, but they were used by the Whites every bit as much, if not more so. The word means something to the effect of "it cuts by striking".

    • @inquisitive-
      @inquisitive- Před rokem +2

      Tom means twin. Hawk/eagle was and is the animal used to imply leadership. So tomahawk is a dual headed weapon or multi function tool

    • @pinchevulpes
      @pinchevulpes Před rokem +5

      Not to be confused with war club/axe combos which were in use by the people of the longhouse tribes prior to European arrival

    • @inquisitive-
      @inquisitive- Před rokem

      @@pinchevulpes you sure? It's funny to me how many regions said to be home to those people have insane asylum and oddfellows property on them

    • @pinchevulpes
      @pinchevulpes Před rokem +1

      @@inquisitive- excuse me?

    • @inquisitive-
      @inquisitive- Před rokem +1

      @@pinchevulpes locations that were said to have long house tribes also happen to have some of the most glorious architecture that were used as insane asylums, orphanages, state hospitals and so on.

  • @harrybenson9983
    @harrybenson9983 Před rokem +126

    One of my mother's family ancestors, a Christopher Reynolds, arrived in Jamestown in 1622. It was never clear if he arrived before the massacre or after. Either way, he survived and his bloodline survives to this day four hundred years later. He was a servant on a farm across the James River from Jamestown.

    • @Peter-tg9zv
      @Peter-tg9zv Před rokem +5

      My ancestor Thomas arrived in Jamestown in 1614. Wonder how he survived.

    • @Ethan-xf4or
      @Ethan-xf4or Před rokem +12

      Nobody cares.

    • @Brandonhayhew
      @Brandonhayhew Před rokem

      What if someday, people will discover a new evidence of the Jamestown massacre. This evidence might show us shines in massacre

    • @stefanozama2976
      @stefanozama2976 Před rokem +19

      @@Ethan-xf4or you're wierd

    • @japandave3871
      @japandave3871 Před rokem

      @@Ethan-xf4or poor alcoholic I mean Native American. Go smoke some copium in your peace pipe.

  • @bryany6565
    @bryany6565 Před rokem +43

    I was born and raised around the chesapeake, my 2nd time metal detecting beginners luck I hit a 1750s colonial coin! Blew my mind how much history has probaly long been forgotten where seemingly there is nothing anymore. My best guess of the coi. Being a hundred yards from the water maybe trading with a tribe? I have a shoebox full of native artifacts my grandfather found over the years plowing feilds.

    • @dannyhernandez265
      @dannyhernandez265 Před rokem +3

      Nice find! I always go metal detecting and never found anything good yet unfortunately. : (

    • @blakespower
      @blakespower Před rokem +2

      I found a old smoking pipe stem made of clay hard to date it since clay pipes were still being used as late as the early 1900's but it looks primitive so it could be from the 1600's

    • @DreaminNirvana
      @DreaminNirvana Před rokem +1

      Give the artifacts back to the tribes. These do not belong to you.

    • @HESSIAN578
      @HESSIAN578 Před rokem +9

      @@DreaminNirvana yeah? Then give all horses back to Spain since they aren't native to America. Then demand they all be sent back to Asia since that's where they originated from. Then tell Mexico to speak the language of the Incas. You know, since Spanish didn't originate there. And what actual tribe would you give those artifacts to? The 1 that currently lives near where it was found? What if that place had been conquered from them. Or are you implying that all native American tribes are the same? How unpolitically correct of you. We can keep on talking about who owns what or who owes who all day. These artifacts found were most likely thrown away or sold/traded or just plain lost. Not everything that someone finds has deep, religious or even valuable meaning to them.

    • @wor53lg50
      @wor53lg50 Před rokem +3

      @@HESSIAN578 hehe, that made it melt mighty quick...i found a skull once still in its head dress, i took it home and used it as a dream catcher..

  • @NicoleWilliams-pk9jr
    @NicoleWilliams-pk9jr Před 7 měsíci +9

    I am a descendant of Richard Pace of Jamestown who, the story goes, was informed by a young native boy of what was to happen and crossed the James River for his and his wife's safety, and alerted the town as to the attack. My other ancestors Rev Samuel Maycock, and his wife died in the massacre.

    • @TEAMWHAT99
      @TEAMWHAT99 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Powhatan was my 13th GreatGrandmother ,and her older sister is related to my late husband. I found out anout my familys connection in 2002. But just researched & found out my late husbands Mother was Powhatan as well. We wee distant cousin's, srveral times over,because our families married into each others family,many times throughoutvTennesse,Kentucky.I sorta of misspoke here I meant We are of Powhatan descent, my late husband's Mother's side can be traced to one of" Pocahontas" older sisters and my Father's Mother's side back to Pocahontas. But I would be PROUD to be ANY Native tribe. I wish we still lived as they did.

    • @Vulpes10
      @Vulpes10 Před 4 měsíci

      @@TEAMWHAT99 " I wish we still lived as they did." You mean attacking other tribes and killing their leaders to take control of their lands? It doesn´t sound that much different than what we humans achieve today.

  • @anthonynicholson5523
    @anthonynicholson5523 Před rokem +58

    I'm very interested in the native American history and ancient history in western Nebraska. I live in a town called Sidney Nebraska. There was a very old native burial here accidentally unearthed during a road build in the 1990s. Anything you can uncover as far back would be great

    • @onlythewise1
      @onlythewise1 Před rokem

      they killed a bunch of Irish not born in America after they worked the roads they didn't pay them and just killed them buried them along the roads

    • @thinkofitthisway7804
      @thinkofitthisway7804 Před rokem +12

      Off topic, but I learned a few years ago that the Choctaw Indians, who were displaced from Florida and Mississippi to Oklahoma (Trail Of Tears) were on their lands in OK in 1848 when they encountered the arriving Irish, who themselves had fled Ireland after the Great Famine. The Choctaw were amazed at how emaciated the Irish were. They took pity on them and actually collected charitable donations from their tribe ($750) which they sent to Ireland. The Irish recognized the charity of the Choctaw people and in 2009 erected a statue (9 glass feathers) to them in County Cork. Choctaws, in return, made then Irish president, Mary Robinson, an honorary tribal leader.

  • @Jarod-vg9wq
    @Jarod-vg9wq Před rokem +7

    The complexities of Native American culture, politics, relationships is fascinating.

  • @stevenmccaughan2752
    @stevenmccaughan2752 Před 9 měsíci +6

    I lived in Richmond Virginia and I owned a piece of bloody run which was one of the battlefields of the war and across from Bloody Run was Chimborazo Hospital of the Civil War and to just to add that last bit of history seen from my backyard was The C&O railroad tunnel collapse

  • @sdsurfgirl60
    @sdsurfgirl60 Před rokem +29

    Thank you for this video. As a product of the California school system, this is much different and more informative than what we were taught.

  • @anarcho.femboyism
    @anarcho.femboyism Před rokem +69

    Other Native American confederations founding stories: “we are brothers so we must not do war with eachother, this friendship will make us very powerful and rich, may the confederacy bring prosperity to us all.”
    Powhatan confederation formation story: so do you wanna keep your independence or do you wanna keep your kneecaps?

    • @thestonecanoe3159
      @thestonecanoe3159 Před rokem +3

      Very similar to what our tribes went through during the Mohawk wars, we were on the losing end of the war

    • @rhondaclark716
      @rhondaclark716 Před rokem

      @@thestonecanoe3159 they are the NEPHLIUM giants offspring. USING DNA.

    • @francisebbecke2727
      @francisebbecke2727 Před rokem +9

      Sounds like an offer you can't refuse.

    • @CarlosBenito28
      @CarlosBenito28 Před rokem +8

      But the English people were intolerant because they would not accept the Indians as equals because they were not Christians. Being polytheist, or "pagan", was equal as being sub-human in those days. I had the same experience a long time ago when was living in the States as my American neighbors regarded me as pagan because I was Catholic with an independent mind. Many American people don't like you when you speak your mind

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Před rokem +3

      You picked up that Powatan was organizing his empire as Al Capone did in the 1920s...or as Borgia did in medieval Italy....or as many other medieval princes...such as Henry replacing objecting nobles with loyal toadies .
      It doesn't help to cover up and whitewash such obviously objective views on one side because you find one side or the other more personally romantic or at the end in a weakened state.
      This was the elaborate and violent gang life the 17th cen Virginia Colony settlers stumbled into as a tiny minority on the Continent. They had their flaws too from our "enlightened POV" but so did Powatan and his rivals.

  • @PsychedelicRodeo
    @PsychedelicRodeo Před rokem +12

    A native named Chanco warned the settlers at the Jamestown settlement of the approching attack allowing them time to flee.

    • @JDoe-gf5oz
      @JDoe-gf5oz Před 10 měsíci +2

      Chanco liked those white girls.

    • @markferguson5652
      @markferguson5652 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @Jdoe-gf5oz. Nah. He wanted the fire water.

    • @christinamedeiros9449
      @christinamedeiros9449 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Yup - Chanco lived with a settler named Richard Pace and he was told the plan and to kill Pace but he warned him instead- giving the Jamestown settlers a chance but not enough time to warn the surrounding settlements and they were devastated by the attack- Jamestown made it out better, but 1/3 of the English settlers were killed that day.

  • @RT-gv6us
    @RT-gv6us Před rokem +7

    Eagerly awaiting for a follow up video on the Jamestown Massacre. Very well done.

  • @andresyance8154
    @andresyance8154 Před rokem +25

    Please do a video on the Unconquered Seminole who against all odds managed to remain in Florida ! It would be an interesting video.

    • @kenneth9874
      @kenneth9874 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Only because the swamps there were considered worthless

    • @andresyance8154
      @andresyance8154 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@kenneth9874regardless the Seminole never gave in & resisted & managed to remain on the land & preserve their way of life well into the 20th century.

    • @elimartinez7704
      @elimartinez7704 Před 5 měsíci

      @@kenneth9874they made multiple unsuccessful attempts to drive them from there nonetheless. The site of Jamestown itself was considered worthless by the Powhatans. That’s how the English were able to build their town there.

  • @DisNerdsGreece
    @DisNerdsGreece Před rokem +32

    Thank you for sharing this video with us! Stories like this MUST be taught at European and US schools!
    Please do a video about the third English-Powhatan war and one about the residential schools!

    • @STho205
      @STho205 Před rokem +5

      Several of these maps and illustrations were in my 5th grade US History book, and again in 11th. This narrative is nearly identical to a chapter on Jamestown 1st generation before moving on to Massachusetts 1620s.
      This was in the 60s and 70s in a school on the Gulf Coast.

    • @mikefranklin1253
      @mikefranklin1253 Před rokem +5

      Except "this" history is very biased toward the English settlers.

    • @dariusgreysun
      @dariusgreysun Před rokem +10

      @@mikefranklin1253 It wasnt

    • @nunceccemortiferiscultu7826
      @nunceccemortiferiscultu7826 Před rokem +4

      @Mike Franklin no it isn't.

    • @swamp1634
      @swamp1634 Před 4 měsíci

      @@mikefranklin1253how so?

  • @BobSmith-in2gn
    @BobSmith-in2gn Před rokem +16

    Very good non judgemental coverage of history. Thank you for the professionalism. Something not seen today very much.

    • @thersten
      @thersten Před rokem +4

      Yes very very VERY non judgemental. Imagine someone taking your young daughter, making her change her name, change her religion, marry some stranger and then pretend it wasn't rape.

    • @oldschool1993
      @oldschool1993 Před rokem +1

      @@thersten Are you talking about Pocahontas or Sacagawea?

    • @JdmgjnFjahgks
      @JdmgjnFjahgks Před měsícem

      ​@@therstenlmao natives constantly rape and ate people

  • @morestupidforms
    @morestupidforms Před rokem +7

    The house I am sitting in and live in, as I post this, is 100 years older than this event. To me, mind blowing.

  • @effeojnedib7208
    @effeojnedib7208 Před rokem +8

    I live on property that was once a part of Martins Hundred, only a few miles downstream from Jamestown. Most history books say the massacre covered land from Richmond, down to modern Newport News, on the James river. The smoke could be seen from miles away. Martins Hundred lost the most lives of any plantation. (according to wiki and other local sources).

    • @lynx8664
      @lynx8664 Před 2 měsíci

      It amazes me how there are subdivisions built on land that had so much history. I helped with an archaeological dig just outside of Jamestown proper. We visited some of these sites, as well. My ancestors plantation, across the James, was also raided and burned and many killed. One child survived from that attack and I am descended from that child. He married the granddaughter of Powhatan. He is my 12th great grandfather.

  • @brianjett5718
    @brianjett5718 Před rokem +5

    I am an actual Powhatan Indian, and I had forgotten at least 1/2 of that.

  • @gregorybumgardner2741
    @gregorybumgardner2741 Před 9 měsíci +7

    At 9:08. Powhatan or other native tribes did not use flaming arrows. That's a Hollywood invention.

  • @Montblanc1986
    @Montblanc1986 Před rokem +8

    Keep up the great work!

  • @dixierayhaggard7035
    @dixierayhaggard7035 Před 9 měsíci +5

    I was not a confederacy. It was a chiefdom. The Starving Time was caused by English inability to feed themselves and a drought. The Natives had less food to share as a result of the drought. The causes for conflict were complex to say the least.

  • @richardglady3009
    @richardglady3009 Před rokem +15

    Thank you. Like most people. I was totally unaware of this story. Excellent quality video.

    • @jamespittman9256
      @jamespittman9256 Před rokem

      Bush GARDEN WILLIBURG

    • @DreaminNirvana
      @DreaminNirvana Před rokem

      It's false history that promotes white supremacy. Seek the people who were ethnically cleansed so you can live here.

    • @AngryAndNegativeHistoryProject
      @AngryAndNegativeHistoryProject Před rokem

      There's so many stories on all the plantations of that day. I covered a few on my page. But there's so much history. You can't learn everything. It's impossible

  • @beansmalone1305
    @beansmalone1305 Před rokem +4

    Videos like this make me glad we eraticated so many of the tribes when we did.

  • @thomastammaro693
    @thomastammaro693 Před rokem +8

    There is so much murkiness in the true history of this region, and era, that I can't get enough information on this subject. Thank you.

  • @williammkydde
    @williammkydde Před rokem +5

    This story makes it clearer to me why the English/British allied primarily with the Iroquois, while up north, the Algonquians allied with the French. Iroquois and Algonquians were at war, probably for centuries, and the arrival of the Europeans just amplified that old conflict - before bringing it to an end around the late 18th - early 19th century.

    • @user-bu9ju5ic9h
      @user-bu9ju5ic9h Před 8 měsíci +2

      And when the American Revolutionary War ended, the Americans who remained loyal to the Crown left. Many came to Canada and are remembered as United Empire Loyalists. What gets overlooked is the other losing participants also came to Canada, namely the Iroquois. They filled the land that the Huron lived on before they got wiped out early by other native people. By modern terms, that makes the Iroquois and Loyalist “refugees”.

  • @alicerivierre
    @alicerivierre Před rokem +6

    Thanks for the video! Keep up the great work!

  • @user-eb8xv9nd2h
    @user-eb8xv9nd2h Před 8 měsíci +5

    Great content! I myself am a descendant of John Rolfe/Pocahontas (11th great-grandmother).

  • @kevinbrasington1571
    @kevinbrasington1571 Před rokem +13

    My ancestor was Thomas Brasington , he was also killed in 1622 in this uprising

  • @dlmullins9054
    @dlmullins9054 Před rokem +10

    John Rolfe and Pocahontas are my 10'th great grandparents, so this was interesting to me. I live in Powhatan, Va .

    • @cathytilford388
      @cathytilford388 Před rokem +1

      Iam related to John Rolfe, established by a family tree . I would have to look up the connection.

    • @chrisculpen9205
      @chrisculpen9205 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Then we are cousins. Im from the Rives/Bolling/Eldridge families. My middle name is Rives.

    • @chrisfoster9942
      @chrisfoster9942 Před 8 měsíci

      Awesome to see history living on through you two. I'm part Blackfoot myself.

  • @AJ-et3vf
    @AJ-et3vf Před rokem +1

    Great video! Thank you!

  • @charlesfarmer9474
    @charlesfarmer9474 Před 8 měsíci +5

    My immigrant ancestor was an indentured servant when he arrived at Jamestown in 1616. It was this massacre where my ancestor fought, won his release from his indentured servitude and received 50 acres - he later served in the house of Burgess.

    • @timothygrayson
      @timothygrayson Před 8 měsíci +1

      Where you well educated by historians from your tribes?

  • @lewisleonard7200
    @lewisleonard7200 Před rokem +17

    My wife’s relative, Samuel Stringer was killed and scalped 1622. He is named in the dead list sent to England.

  • @skpjoecoursegold366
    @skpjoecoursegold366 Před rokem +7

    thanks for the history.

  • @jeffeldredge1608
    @jeffeldredge1608 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Dean, tell the writers they did a great job. Very smooth delivery of subject matter, Dean. Thanks again.

  • @sharonwheat3659
    @sharonwheat3659 Před rokem +15

    This should be included in American history classes.

    • @joebeamish
      @joebeamish Před rokem +4

      Seems super not likely to happen these days.

    • @goldenshark3182
      @goldenshark3182 Před rokem +2

      American schools need to focus on teaching basic math, the kids today are too use to using debit cards and have no clue how to make change with real cash!

    • @matthewspringer1369
      @matthewspringer1369 Před rokem +1

      They wont because its against the narrative that they have of European Colonists being evil. I bring this up as well as many other atrocities committed by native Americans and they're arguments are literally just "cope"... You cant teach people like this who live in a different reality and close their eyes/ears to history, good or bad. :(

    • @thersten
      @thersten Před rokem

      @@joebeamish correct. Those trump supporters are taking over the school boards.

    • @jasonbrown372
      @jasonbrown372 Před rokem +2

      @@goldenshark3182 American schools need to focus on duck and cover, the kids today are too used to using automatic weapons!

  • @geraldmeehan8942
    @geraldmeehan8942 Před rokem +3

    Excellent video, keep up the good work!

  • @WyomingTraveler
    @WyomingTraveler Před rokem +27

    I enjoyed your video, I especially like the fact you have listed your sources. I think the massacre of 1622 was one of the most skillfully planned attempts by the Indians to wipe out the Europeans. I did a video on the same topic a while back. It’s nice to see that you have gotten such excellent reviews and views on your video.

    • @mrzabie0138
      @mrzabie0138 Před rokem

      Skillfully planned? Sounds like it was cowardly to enter people's homes invited, eat their food and then murder them.

    • @788lakers
      @788lakers Před rokem +10

      Not a massacre when someone is encroaching on your lands and regards you as barely human.

    • @WyomingTraveler
      @WyomingTraveler Před rokem +18

      @@788lakers A Massacre, is a Massacre, no matter who does it. Please remember that the English are not the first group that were massacred by the Powhatan

    • @788lakers
      @788lakers Před rokem +10

      @@WyomingTraveler I agree a massacre is a massacre but not in this instance. Hostilities were already running high. I would’ve viewed it as a massacre if they choose to eradicate the English which they could’ve have easily done but wanted to send a message. Native battle tactics differ from English ones. Far to many times stories are told by those who are victorious.

    • @dorablanchard9814
      @dorablanchard9814 Před rokem +13

      A massacre is a massacre. I encourage anyone who disagrees to look up the definition in a dictionary. It doesn’t matter the reason for which the massacre took place.

  • @sannemaras7801
    @sannemaras7801 Před rokem

    Great video! Thanks

  • @ianwhitehead3086
    @ianwhitehead3086 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I drove across the three bridges of the Mata, the Po ,& the ni rivers. Always loved crossing them.

  • @jerryjones188
    @jerryjones188 Před rokem +5

    Awesome and accurate video. Very nice historical work.

  • @stevebutler8387
    @stevebutler8387 Před rokem +9

    Great video just subscribed. Am doing work on ancestor Thomas Savage. Would love to see your take on him during the early years if get around to it. Look forward to more videos, thank you

  • @MrNaKillshots
    @MrNaKillshots Před 8 měsíci +1

    Excellent presentations.

  • @markwilliams7461
    @markwilliams7461 Před rokem +2

    That was well watching verry informative

  • @goransvraka3171
    @goransvraka3171 Před rokem +9

    Can you do a video on what did the Native brother or cousin of Pocahontas learn about the English when the went to England and returned?

  • @greywindLOSP
    @greywindLOSP Před rokem +7

    Thank you Sir for the video and the truth.....Aho

  • @TubeRadiosRule
    @TubeRadiosRule Před 5 měsíci

    I remember reading a couple of articles in National Geographic about the rediscovery of a lost Virginia plantation called Martin's Hundred, near Williamsburg, that was decimated in the Powhatan Uprising of 1622. They even found a grave where one of the massacre victims was buried.

  • @rickmorrow993
    @rickmorrow993 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Thank you. Opechancanough was one of my ancestors. as were Cockacoeske and her son Captain John West. My great grandmother's name was West and my grandmother told my mother about it when she was a young girl because my mother saw a picture of her grandmother dressed as a native American when she was a little girl. It's funnny in a way because we always thought my mother's family came to the states very late from Ireland and that my father's family, who came here in 1649 were original settlers.

  • @fireboltaz
    @fireboltaz Před rokem +11

    The best part of this story was how the English went America all over their asses.

    • @paulfri1569
      @paulfri1569 Před rokem +2

      Indeed. Ultimate karma 🙏

    • @heybabycometobutthead
      @heybabycometobutthead Před rokem +2

      We don't f*#k around 🇬🇧💪👊

    • @spiritualknight704
      @spiritualknight704 Před rokem

      Can’t wait for the English to all get their asses handed

    • @chrisculpen9205
      @chrisculpen9205 Před 9 měsíci

      Lairs , and backstabbers, not to be trusted. Like The Palace, The Vatican, DC. Look They are still doing the same thing 400+ years later. Now morphing into NWO. Wake up 🤡🌎

  • @rachdarastrix5251
    @rachdarastrix5251 Před rokem +5

    Real life, he was shamed into silence after visiting England.
    In a disney movie he was silenced before going to England.

  • @iAbstractArt.
    @iAbstractArt. Před rokem

    Great video, keep it up

  • @tomdarco2223
    @tomdarco2223 Před rokem

    Right On great video

  • @kingcatx2
    @kingcatx2 Před rokem +5

    Remember Tupac Amaru 2 had one of the biggest natives rebellion against the Spanish in the Americas. Also the reason where tupac shakur's name came from.

    • @kenneth9874
      @kenneth9874 Před 4 měsíci

      They should have fought harder while in africa against the tribes that enslaved them...

    • @kingcatx2
      @kingcatx2 Před 4 měsíci

      @@kenneth9874 What are you talking about 😂. Since when the native Americans were in Africa? I’m talking rebellions in the American continent against the Europeans. Peru to be more specific. Also they couldn’t enslaved them. The Spanish tried everything. Fact the Incas had the biggest empire in the Americas. They are equivalent to the Roman Empire to this side of the world.

    • @kenneth9874
      @kenneth9874 Před 4 měsíci

      @@kingcatx2 not even close to the roman empire and you mentioned tupac s.

    • @kenneth9874
      @kenneth9874 Před 4 měsíci

      @@kingcatx2 and they did enslave them to work in the silver mines among other things.

  • @jasong705
    @jasong705 Před rokem +6

    God bless our brave native ancestors and people

  • @akdragosani
    @akdragosani Před 5 měsíci +1

    Very Good Documentation 👍🏻

  • @TheReckoningBeginsToday
    @TheReckoningBeginsToday Před rokem +18

    Great work. Nice to have access to accurate, fact based, uneditorialized, history. Thank you.

  • @dereknoll1499
    @dereknoll1499 Před rokem +3

    Would love an episode on the paxton boys massacre of native americans in Lancsaster, Pennsylvania 1763

  • @fixento
    @fixento Před 5 měsíci +1

    The Jamestown colonist fished for sturgeon that were large fish, the record in 1827, 34 ft, at 3463 lbs as a primary source of protein. In addition they planted corn and vegetables. A drought in the early 1600s changed the salinity of the bay's water and the sturgeon left the area. Several ships arrived with additional colonist during this period but they had little food left after the crossing. The colonist ask the Powhatan's for food, but they had none to spare. The colonist resorted to cannibalism, during the winter of 1609 -1610, and an indentured servant was butchered, assuming it was after she died, for food. Relief ships arrived in 1610 and the colony expanded. A must, visit Jamestown Fort site, its owned by a foundation, informative and educational. The Park Service has the area where the town stood and foundations of old house, a nice walk but.......... Note, Indentured servants were the first form of slavery by the colonist.

  • @LeoTheSSJ
    @LeoTheSSJ Před rokem +1

    Perfect timing for a youtube reccomadation studying for APUSH

  • @petervenema1443
    @petervenema1443 Před rokem +24

    Noble savages ?? No -- simple another example of human nature and greed -- a symptom of humanity throughout the world

    • @kevinjohnson3521
      @kevinjohnson3521 Před rokem +6

      Serial killers…

    • @greatplainsman3662
      @greatplainsman3662 Před rokem +5

      ...and been going on for millennium, and will continue.

    • @jasonbrown372
      @jasonbrown372 Před rokem +1

      Civilized settlers?? No - simply Christians showing their faith like Audrey Hale did at Covenant School yesterday.

  • @williewonka6694
    @williewonka6694 Před rokem +8

    Powhatan: nice village you have here, be a shame if something would happen to it.

  • @blakespower
    @blakespower Před rokem +8

    and people think that indians (native americans) were innocent

    • @thebeesknees745
      @thebeesknees745 Před rokem +1

      And thats the real problem. We were brutal mother f*ckers. Cut people up, raped women, killed children. We were not nice.

    • @jasonbrown372
      @jasonbrown372 Před rokem +1

      And people think puritans (european warmongers) were innocent until they show their true colors, like Audrey did yesterday at Covenant School.

    • @blakespower
      @blakespower Před rokem

      @@jasonbrown372 oh shut you dope

  • @sheldonwheaton881
    @sheldonwheaton881 Před rokem +12

    When I lived in this area, I kept bugging the Yorktown Park Rangers why there was no real mention of the Spanish mission west of the battlefield. Not even a marker on the Colonial Parkway. The Spanish Jesuits took Opecancanough to Spain where he developed his anti- European stance.

    • @hetrodoxly1203
      @hetrodoxly1203 Před rokem

      What made him hate the Spanish?

    • @chrisculpen9205
      @chrisculpen9205 Před 9 měsíci

      They thought they brainwashed him. When he got back to the Americas . He killed the Spanish that where with him. Then went back to being Chief again.

  • @chrismccartney8668
    @chrismccartney8668 Před rokem +5

    Excellent Video Poco hantas died not far from here at Gravesend on the Thames Estuary..
    You mentioned the native American thought after massacre we would leave whereas the British Policy would be to Rebuilt Reinforce Reqconquer and build a strong defence..to make it clear who is boss.
    This can seen by castles around Wales Dublin Castle and border fortified town Berwick upon Tweed.

    • @TheReidex22
      @TheReidex22 Před rokem

      Why would England build castles in England to defend against native Americans? 🤣🤣😅

  • @stevenwilgus5422
    @stevenwilgus5422 Před rokem +9

    William Hancock, of Jamestown is my direct ancestor. He was killed during the "Jamestown Massacre" on Good Friday by the Algonquin Indians (under Chief Powhatan) on Berkeley Hundred Plantation at Thorpe House, Virginia Colony -Outside Jamestown toward what is now Richmond 50 mi. from Charles City.

    • @kennethpaquin8574
      @kennethpaquin8574 Před rokem

      Interesting. Very few people can trace their ancestors that for back.

    • @banga8973
      @banga8973 Před rokem

      Well thats good he didn’t belong on there land anyway 😂hope he in hell were he belongs. 👏🏻😂

    • @DreaminNirvana
      @DreaminNirvana Před rokem

      Reparations to the Tribes for their effort. It was not enough.

  • @BIG-DIPPER-56
    @BIG-DIPPER-56 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Nice synopsis 😎👍

  • @bobbythompson3544
    @bobbythompson3544 Před rokem +1

    Very interesting, beautifully narrated!

  • @1gigi
    @1gigi Před rokem +8

    Imagine your chillin plowin ya field, and suddenly warriors just completely loot you

    • @daffyd5867
      @daffyd5867 Před rokem +15

      BLM??

    • @chico9805
      @chico9805 Před rokem +3

      Such was life for the average farmer, up until rougly 200 years ago.

    • @jasonbrown372
      @jasonbrown372 Před rokem

      @@daffyd5867 Covenant Lives Matter?

    • @kenneth9874
      @kenneth9874 Před 4 měsíci

      Maybe the field was looted from the warriors in the first place..

  • @Cross-Carrier
    @Cross-Carrier Před 7 měsíci +3

    Can i give a bit of advice on this video. Its so much nicer to hear someone's real voice in these types of videos. Even if you don't feel your voice is as polished as an AI , its just so much more engaging with a real voice. I've been nothing this recently with videos of this style format. Lots of them are heavy with AI generated images and an AI voice over which for me creeps into the
    " uncanny valley " territory where you become very aware you are listening to an artificial voice. Your image work is fantastic and i think the AI voice is a turn off.
    Think of it like this, if you were listening to an audiobook and you discovered that the voice wasn't actually the author it was effectively a robot its hard to unhear the robot. Im just trying to be helpful as i am subscribed amd find the topics you cover fascinating.

  • @leeluhrabbit
    @leeluhrabbit Před 2 měsíci

    I am from Virginia, and my ancestors were from the Nansemond Indian Nation which at one point was apart of the Powhatan Empire. We are still here!! Even if they have tried to erase us. I love my heritage.

  • @RedcoatsReturn
    @RedcoatsReturn Před 4 měsíci

    Excellent education for me….these native conflicts….in the early colonial history of America….are very illuminating 😊👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 These events….are very poorly covered in British schools….and this history of life and death…is gripping and astounding too 😊👍👍 Its amazing 😲 that the colonies survived and grew….with all the challenges…in those early days…when the first colonies started in the early 1600s…all….those centuries…ago 😔

  • @Nora-mg7cc
    @Nora-mg7cc Před rokem +4

    Yes please I would be really interested. 🙃

  • @collinwhites9833
    @collinwhites9833 Před rokem +15

    There were a number of times smaller native American tribes asked to go into the Spanish mission system so as not to be annihilated by the Comanche. Similarly, tribes that were victims of enslavement and human sacrifice by the Aztecs helped Cortez conquer Mexico.

    • @larshofler8298
      @larshofler8298 Před rokem +3

      And see how that played out for them. They made an alliance of interest, and after eliminating the Mexicans, the Spaniards were able to defeat the other tribes one after another. I just don't find these facts interesting.

    • @nunceccemortiferiscultu7826
      @nunceccemortiferiscultu7826 Před rokem +2

      @Hamood Grünstein of course you don't lol.

    • @thersten
      @thersten Před rokem

      Every nation has traitors. Unless the numbers were large the treason is insignificant.

    • @chrisculpen9205
      @chrisculpen9205 Před 9 měsíci

      Powhatan knew all three where coming. French, English and Spanish. He held them off as long as he could. Would have been better if Powhatan could trust them. Just like today. They (English Government/CABAL ) Crooked AF!!

  • @GeoCalifornian
    @GeoCalifornian Před rokem +2

    The Indian Confederacy of 30 tribals was a force to be reckoned!

  • @lilaj4621
    @lilaj4621 Před rokem +2

    Chief Powhatan was my 8th great grandfather!! Pocahontas was my 7th great Aunt.

    • @IAm9theintuneinstrument
      @IAm9theintuneinstrument Před 4 měsíci +1

      Hey cousin! 👋🏾

    • @GodHelpUsNow777
      @GodHelpUsNow777 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I'm white.. my 11th great grandma is Pocahontas and I am a decendent of her only child kaokee .. Pocahontas and kocoum had kaokee .. DNA is amazing.. on my fathers side im known as melungeon .. i have pictures of my dad's grandpa.. triracial.. black indian and white...I'm still white white greenish grey eyes brown 2b and 2c hair type .. God made a way for his people ❤

  • @binghamguevara6814
    @binghamguevara6814 Před rokem +3

    People today always mistake Jamestown with Jonestown, the 1978 mass suicide.

  • @onlythewise1
    @onlythewise1 Před rokem +3

    the first james town was in 1600, my family came 1640

  • @AQ-uc4bb
    @AQ-uc4bb Před rokem

    Thanks for the update

  • @kennyblack8558
    @kennyblack8558 Před rokem +1

    Excellent video and history lesson

  • @jcc2c22
    @jcc2c22 Před rokem +3

    My 1st ancestor in this country arrived in Maryland in 1621. He then relocated to Jamestown just in time for the 1622 massacre.

    • @jasonbrown372
      @jasonbrown372 Před rokem

      Were you in time for the massacre in Nashville yesterday?

    • @ladyalaina42
      @ladyalaina42 Před 8 měsíci

      He must have been on the ship Fortune with my Briggs ancestor who stayed in Plymouth.

  • @kevinrotten8259
    @kevinrotten8259 Před rokem +3

    Happy thanksgiving

  • @RetiredSailor60
    @RetiredSailor60 Před 8 měsíci

    My ancestors arrived in Jamestown Settlement in 1611. My 7 times great grandfather, William Stone, was the 3rd Colonial Governor of Maryland 1649-1655 and my 5 times great uncle, Thomas Stone, signed the Declaration Of Independence....

    • @ronaldsherbaum899
      @ronaldsherbaum899 Před 5 měsíci

      I was under the impression that only the white man killed and the native americans were nothing but peaceful.

  • @shyhand1
    @shyhand1 Před 8 měsíci +2

    My great uncle John Hooks, Bennett plantation, 18 years old Suffolk England, killed.. He was a servant working His way to the new world..

  • @nwofoe2866
    @nwofoe2866 Před rokem +8

    it's amazing the extent to which Natives' numbers, differences, and beliefs have been generally witheld from American education.

    • @u235u235u235
      @u235u235u235 Před rokem +2

      most Americans just don't care. we all die and life is short. live your life and enjoy what you have there's nothing you can do to resurrect past generations who lost wars and were overtaken. entire civilizations have risen and fallen, wiped out unjustly or justly. make your family wealthy and safe so you can enjoy life until you die and leave lots of wealth to your children. be happy and thankful what what you have and try to do no harm. peace.

  • @alexc8209
    @alexc8209 Před rokem +9

    This commentary is very amusing, it seems to try and paint the British in a negative light but at the same time it admits to the facts that dont support this negativity. For example, the British steal Pocahontas and dont return her but she chooses to stay, becomes Christian and the chief of the tribe approves of this... er. "The Indian experience of the Rowanoake settlers was far from pleasant because.... the Spanish.... er. LOL please, if you want to slag us off then do better than this or if you want to tell it like we know it then try to avoid the forced negativity.
    Anyway its 2022 so what should I expect.

    • @elimartinez7704
      @elimartinez7704 Před 5 měsíci

      Well I mean I’m sure the kidnapping itself wasn’t very pleasant.
      Also it literally talks about how the marriage between her and Rolfe was a political alliance to achieve peace. Nothing new here.
      Also Pocahontas was her own woman with a brain, even if getting kidnapped wasn’t fun there were worse fates for a woman in her time so it also isn’t that out of the ordinary that she would choose to stay. There are LOTS of examples of that in history. Doesn’t really give insight into whether or not the English should be viewed in a “negative light,” especially considering that this video actually omits most of the wrongs committed by the English against the Powhatan.

  • @zitiboylilo5789
    @zitiboylilo5789 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I’m a descendant twice through two different ancestors to Elizabeth Nansemond and John Basse.

  • @Black-Hebrew-Idiots
    @Black-Hebrew-Idiots Před 8 měsíci +2

    Let’s discuss the Chicago massacre…that happens every weekend!

  • @paulclifton5532
    @paulclifton5532 Před rokem +8

    My 11th Great Grandfather was Chief Powhatan's Half Brother.

  • @davidcunningham2074
    @davidcunningham2074 Před rokem

    fascinating

  • @TemperTemper...
    @TemperTemper... Před rokem +2

    I'm very knowledgeable about the plains Indians but know nothing about the Eastern tribes..This was very interesting and eye opening.

    • @haleyguthrie3113
      @haleyguthrie3113 Před rokem

      Same here when I left for college. PNW natives on up to Alaska are CRAZY different. I was like, "where are their totems?" Haha but I've been catching up too.

  • @hellskitchen10036
    @hellskitchen10036 Před rokem +3

    The first successful Plantation in Virginia was "Bennett's Keep" . Warrosquyoake Shire (later as Isle of Wight County). Edward Bennett was also killed in the Indian massacre of 1622

    • @theshamanarchist5441
      @theshamanarchist5441 Před rokem

      The Isle of Wight is in Hampshire, England.

    • @hellskitchen10036
      @hellskitchen10036 Před rokem +1

      @@theshamanarchist5441 Edward Bennett (1577 - bef. 1651), was an English merchant based in London, and a free member of the Virginia Company. A Puritan who had lived in Amsterdam for a period, he established the first large plantation in the colony of Virginia in North America, in what became known as Warrosquyoake Shire (later as Isle of Wight County)

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před rokem +1

      I used to live on the original Isle of Wight in England. Lovely place.
      Didn't know there was another one in America.

    • @DreaminNirvana
      @DreaminNirvana Před rokem +1

      Interesting since Berkeley Plantation is the first. Aka Berkeley Hundrend or Bearkly from documentation of covenants agreed with John Smythe who also died before they got here. Still right hand to a King who paid the Pope for Papal Bulls and still related to the Church of LDS 5th largest land hoarders of Native Land with a net worth of over 200 trillion dollars and who donate to politicians to keep the lies in place to validate squatting and selling life for paper in the name of a Male God who doesn't exist.

    • @AngryAndNegativeHistoryProject
      @AngryAndNegativeHistoryProject Před rokem

      Do you know if any memoirs or journals of the people of that plantation? I just did a video on the subject. I read my own sources, but I'm still interested in finding more. That's so much from that one day, it's hard to put it all into one concise video

  • @Pays2Win
    @Pays2Win Před rokem +18

    You won’t hear about this history in school anymore. Doesn’t fit the narrative. Awesome channel.

    • @thersten
      @thersten Před rokem

      Are you still in school?

    • @Pays2Win
      @Pays2Win Před rokem +1

      @@thersten college

    • @amatmc8319
      @amatmc8319 Před rokem

      What narrative?

    • @fp8901
      @fp8901 Před rokem

      The narrative where the natives killed all the whites and took the white man's land obviously. All English did was defend themselves, just like Germany defended itself against Europe in WWII.

    • @Chiscassippi
      @Chiscassippi Před rokem

      @@amatmc8319 The Rousseau "noble savage" narrative of first people's living in peace and harmony until europeans showed up.

  • @forgottenfilmchannel1194

    Yes please do the 3rd anglo-powhatan and how about doing one about the settlements located at Flowerdew Hundred in Prince George Va. I read about artifacts found years ago by UVA at that site which is now privately owned and closed to the public.

  • @lotty.
    @lotty. Před rokem +1

    Can you make a video on the Ambatukam tribe?

  • @mouser4290
    @mouser4290 Před rokem +5

    I'm a descendant of James Watkins an old Welsh solder who came over 1608. He help explore the Chesapeake and had lot's of adventures.

  • @fannieyang-rl1ho
    @fannieyang-rl1ho Před rokem +3

    Powhatan is a quite strong person.