Westminster Quarters and the chimes of The Elizabeth Tower

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  • čas přidán 9. 05. 2019
  • One of the world's best known melodies, the chimes of The Elizabeth Tower or the clock tower of Westminster Palace, crosses cultural boundaries. This is the forgotten history of that song also called the "Westminster Quarters."
    This is original content based on research by The History Guy. Images in the Public Domain are carefully selected and provide illustration. As images of actual events are sometimes not available, images of similar objects and events are used for illustration.
    All events are portrayed in historical context and for educational purposes. No images or content are primarily intended to shock and disgust. Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Non censuram.
    Find The History Guy at:
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    The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered is the place to find short snippets of forgotten history from five to fifteen minutes long. If you like history too, this is the channel for you.
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    Script by JCG
    #history #thehistoryguy #england

Komentáře • 471

  • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
    @TheHistoryGuyChannel  Před 5 lety +111

    There is a lot of discussion over the name of Elizabeth Tower. This is my understanding from the official page of Parliament: The tower was never named St Stephen's Tower. That misconception apparently came because newspapers used to refer to actions of parliament as "coming from St Stephens." That was not a reference to the Clock Tower, but to the fact that MPs originally sat in St Stephen's Hall. Prior to being officially named "The Elizabeth Tower" in 2012 the tower was only ever officially referred to as the "Clock Tower." The actual tower named St Stephen's Tower is positioned in the middle of the west front of the Palace, between Westminster Hall and Old Palace Yard, and houses the public entrance to the Houses of Parliament, known as St Stephen's Entrance. Victoria Tower, at the south-west end, is the tallest of towers of the Palace of Westminster.
    The large bell is commonly called by the nickname Big Ben, but is actually officially named "the Great Bell."
    As to using the nickname Big Ben, the official page of Parliament acknowledges that "The name Big Ben is often used to describe the tower, the clock and the bell but the name was first given to the Great Bell."

    • @marymoriarity2555
      @marymoriarity2555 Před 5 lety +7

      I was astounded to hear you say about Trinity Episcopal Church in Eillusmdpiry Pennsylvania using The Westminster chime in their click tower starting in 1875. Thank you for an interesting episode.

    • @GLK-London
      @GLK-London Před 5 lety +5

      Very appropriate bow tie Sir! I approve :)

    • @preshisify
      @preshisify Před 5 lety +2

      thank you ☕

    • @WaltzingAustralia
      @WaltzingAustralia Před 5 lety +6

      Thanks for that additional explanation. When I was living in England back in 1972, I first encountered the use of St. Stephen's to refer to the tower (and as the name of a restaurant across the street). Always wondered why I couldn't find any reference that actually identified the tower as anything but the Clock Tower. I appreciate your clearing that confusion up.

    • @WaltzingAustralia
      @WaltzingAustralia Před 5 lety +5

      And I love that you keep coming up with these wonderfully unusual topics that connect so many things together. Thanks.

  • @markdonnelly1913
    @markdonnelly1913 Před 5 lety +141

    I love that you find such varied things to investigate and present to us

  • @WintrBorn
    @WintrBorn Před 5 lety +36

    I swear, after the open, I expected to hear "this is the BBC". And I'm American -.-
    Fantastic small bits of history add so much flavor to life.

    • @elcastorgrande
      @elcastorgrande Před 5 lety +3

      BBC World Service...the news, read by

    • @leemaxwell1912
      @leemaxwell1912 Před 5 lety

      A history of the BBC, as told by a Yank (even if he's an Anglophile), would be fascinating, but probably wouldn't fit into the "short snippets" format.

  • @mrjamesbonney
    @mrjamesbonney Před 5 lety +23

    Please do not stop. My kids have learned more thru you than years of public schooling . THANK YOU!

  • @causwayspeedway
    @causwayspeedway Před 5 lety +6

    Never had I imagined something recorded in 1870 can sound so cool... another Home Run History Guy!!!

  • @mudduck754
    @mudduck754 Před 5 lety +4

    That was my grandmothers front door bell chime. I think us grandkids rang that enough to where she got to dislike it or us. Thanks for the memory.

  • @RobKleifgen
    @RobKleifgen Před 5 lety +45

    Just wow. Sound is an incredible window into the past!

  • @ericcriteser4001
    @ericcriteser4001 Před 5 lety +15

    My father was a Horologist and taught me with absolute precision how this chime came to be. Thank you!
    The rythym of the 'Regulators' is still the rytrhym of my life, with or without chimes.
    Tick-tock.
    Tick-tock.

  • @ConradSpoke
    @ConradSpoke Před rokem +2

    That's the best 19th century recording I've ever heard. Just amazing.

  • @sarjim4381
    @sarjim4381 Před 5 lety +3

    My dad gave me my first shortwave radio for Christmas when I was ten years old. Once I put up a crude antenna, the first station I heard was BBC with an identifier using the Westminster chimes. It took me about 40 years but I was finally able to see and hear the chimes in person.

  • @matthewrobinson4323
    @matthewrobinson4323 Před 5 lety +6

    I'm really glad you made this video. It's about time!

  • @michaelwalton4017
    @michaelwalton4017 Před 5 lety +15

    Nice touch at the end!
    Listening to a 129 year old recording!😁🕚

  • @patmancrowley8509
    @patmancrowley8509 Před 5 lety +7

    There was a radio station in St. Louis, in the 1960's, that used the Westminster chime sequence for their station identifier. KXOK, in St. Louis, Missouri. Every time I hear that chime I still hear the KXOK identifier in my head. VERY effective advertising I would say though at the time I had no idea that it was the Westminster chime sequence.

  • @therenumerator9198
    @therenumerator9198 Před 5 lety +5

    Lived in England from 1961 to 1964 and on trips to London with the family heard the bells often.
    No recording can do them justice. The sound makes everyone stop and listen.
    You will actually turn and face the tower while it is ringing, it is said that is how to tell tourists from natives...well that and tourists always used to carry cameras as well.
    Nice spot to visit, try the Fish and Chips with malt vinegar, it will make you happy all day.

  • @hyfy-tr2jy
    @hyfy-tr2jy Před 5 lety +16

    The History Guy should have a small parting segment on Sunday Morning on CBS...his style tone and delivery would make for a perfect end to each week's episode

    • @feellucky271
      @feellucky271 Před 4 lety

      The MSM would cheapen the HG with their duplicity and lies.
      He has too much integrity to be fouled by their scheming and lying.

  • @thomasdarby6084
    @thomasdarby6084 Před 5 lety +2

    As a child growing up in Oakland California during the 50's and 60's, I'd ride my bike through the pretty campus of Mills College, and would hear those famous chimes-- but it was years before I'd know that they were modeled on Big Ben, and only today did I learn the origin. Thanks!

  • @copferthat
    @copferthat Před 5 lety +2

    My daughter served in the British army's Adjutant General's Corps and I'm absolutely convinced that hat with the red band, second from the top, is her regimental hat. It has the same pattern and colours and also appears to have the regimental badge. C'mon history guy, who's is it? Here's a story about the chimes that I found very moving during a programme on the history of the tower on the TV. The keeper of the tower told a story of an old man from Holland who visited it and he was stood next to him when the clock chimed and he burst into tears. The keeper asked him why he was moved so much and the man told him that during the war he and his family would secretly listen to the BBC news, begun by Big Ben. He told him that as long as that clock kept chiming, they was hope.

  • @an-tm3250
    @an-tm3250 Před 5 lety +5

    Enjoy ALL of your history shorts. Thank you.

  • @edglunz9917
    @edglunz9917 Před 5 lety +2

    I am sure I'm not the first to mention the Historic Fact that The History Guy just had to Chime in with this episode! So must History does he share so many of us will know and remember important events. Thank you.

  • @padraicfarrell188
    @padraicfarrell188 Před 5 lety +6

    I used to attend a class that met at Trinity Episcopal Church, Williamsport PA. So fun that it ended up in a History Guy segment!
    Thanks again for all the interesting essays each day. Whether I am familiar with the subject or not, watching for the first time or reviewing an old segment, I am always interested. Very well researched and presented! Thanks!

    • @photolew
      @photolew Před 5 lety

      Padraic Farrell I’ve photographed numerous weddings there myself. Nice to see Lycoming County gets a shout out by THG

  • @Lord.Kiltridge
    @Lord.Kiltridge Před 5 lety +2

    One would think chimes every 15 minutes day and night would be distracting, but I have found them fantastically comforting. They seem to anchor one's self to home and hearth. Especially poignant through difficult times, I imagine the clocktower would have done so for all Londoners as it continued with steadfast gravitas throughout the blitz.

  • @cobrakillingfrog646
    @cobrakillingfrog646 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you Sir for the privilege of being able to hear that recording. I was absolutely speechless..

  • @yvansirois1496
    @yvansirois1496 Před 5 lety +1

    In 2007 i was in London with my brother, one night we were across the river next to Parliament bridge at 10pm.
    I must say in it was a magical moment i will treasure for the rest of my life. We could feel the vibrations in our guts.

  • @MrPants-zu6dm
    @MrPants-zu6dm Před 5 lety +2

    my great grandmother's grandfather clock would chime the Westminster quarters. Good memories for me.

  • @renardgrise
    @renardgrise Před 5 lety +35

    I'm glad we've surpassed the Wax Cylinder format for audio recordings... Awesome recordings never the less!

    • @Pluggit1953
      @Pluggit1953 Před 5 lety +3

      Nevertheless is a compound word - just a little correction 😏.

    • @mikeyoung9810
      @mikeyoung9810 Před 5 lety +3

      @@Pluggit1953 Correcting people is rude. Just a little correction.

    • @renardgrise
      @renardgrise Před 5 lety +3

      @@Pluggit1953 I've also seen never-the-less... I was just lazy and did it my way :-P.

    • @Jin-Ro
      @Jin-Ro Před 5 lety +1

      @@Pluggit1953 Take a day off being Mr Internet eh

    • @Pluggit1953
      @Pluggit1953 Před 5 lety

      Mike Young it’s correcting bad English. twat.

  • @danielsedgwick5476
    @danielsedgwick5476 Před 5 lety +2

    Loved that old recording at the end, to think over 100 years old.

  • @dsnodgrass4843
    @dsnodgrass4843 Před 5 lety +3

    An opinion: the secret behind the Westminster Chimes' "stickiness" as a musical passage is its sequence. Four tones only (1,2,3,and 5, major key), arranged to ask a "question"; and give an "answer". If the keynote is 1; the sequence is: 3-1-2-5 ...5-2-3-1/ 3-2-1-5...5-2-3-1. The 3-1 is a universally satisfying musical resolution to the "question" posed by the 2-5, or the 1-5 in the second phrase. It's almost the fewest notes you can use, to get that "call and response" with such comforting completion. Effects like that matter to people, whether they can describe why or not.

  • @doonsbury9656
    @doonsbury9656 Před 5 lety +9

    When I first started watching this I thought "It's finally happened! The History guy is off his dial"! But as it went on, I realized that the segment was providing entertainment and enlightenment with you usual...er....clock like precision! Cheers Mate!

  • @chaddog313
    @chaddog313 Před 5 lety +2

    I loved the old recording of the chimes at the end

  • @mikejvasquez76
    @mikejvasquez76 Před 5 lety +1

    Just love those really old recordings from the 1800's. It's the dawn of technology that has yet to come for them back then. Plus, they just sound so cool.

  • @chrisosh9574
    @chrisosh9574 Před 5 lety +2

    I'm a Londoner and I learned something new tome about London. Thanks. Love the Union Jack Dickie Bow by the way!

  • @gregorywest6563
    @gregorywest6563 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you for keeping History alive when today its not being taught in schools anymore

  • @chiefpontiac1800
    @chiefpontiac1800 Před 5 lety +6

    H.G., your Union Jack bowtie rocks. Another fine story about a tune that you never would think about where it origins came from.

  • @_Opal_Miner_
    @_Opal_Miner_ Před 5 lety +54

    Just noticed the Union Jack bow-tie
    You have to do an episode on bow-ties

    • @Gribbo9999
      @Gribbo9999 Před 5 lety +7

      The history of the neck tie would be interesting

    • @oldesertguy9616
      @oldesertguy9616 Před 5 lety +11

      @@Gribbo9999 I would be happy with either an episode on neckties or bow ties. Of course, the History Guy could do one on the history of dirt and it would be interesting.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před 5 lety +7

      @@oldesertguy9616
      We would learn more about dirt then we thought possible.

    • @josephkarl2061
      @josephkarl2061 Před 5 lety +1

      Bow ties are cool 😁

  • @servico100
    @servico100 Před 5 lety +2

    The evolution of time it's marking and passing has occupied us since we first needed to know when to awaken. Westminister sounding it's passage throughout the world. Tolling, welcomes or warnings, joy or sorrow., from carillon and handbell choirs to inspiring Victor Hugo's Notre-Dame de Paris, tintinnabulation, indeed binds humanity. Thank you, Sir.

  • @noahcount7132
    @noahcount7132 Před 5 lety +7

    Very interesting and informative presentation, fittingly topped off with an historical wax cylinder recording of the 4 quarter-hour chimes followed by an 11th hour strike! Well done, History Guy!

  • @patrickfreeman4843
    @patrickfreeman4843 Před 5 lety +2

    Just last week I was thinking about this tune and wishing I had the royalties on it. I couldn't agree more that this is one that deserves to be remembered. Nothing transcends all cultural barriers the way music does.

  • @adriennegormley9358
    @adriennegormley9358 Před 5 lety +1

    Oddly, when I was in choir in high school, we had Christmas lyrics for this melody. I remember them to this day because the tune is so familiar. "Big bells do chime, Christmas is here. And when it comes, it brings good cheer." And that was in 1963-64. Been a while :-)

  • @Pocketfarmer1
    @Pocketfarmer1 Před 5 lety +6

    One of the reasons for the Westminster chimes popularity was their use in radio broadcasts . I believe that the chimes introduced regular segments during ww2.

  • @davidharris6581
    @davidharris6581 Před 5 lety +5

    When I was in Grade School Our Principal played them on a xylophone for announcements and to call us to prayer. "Hark to the chimes, Come bow your head, We thank the Lord, For this our bread. Aaaaaaaammmmmeeen.

  • @DirksenMolloyProd
    @DirksenMolloyProd Před 5 lety +1

    Hi History Guy and Gal. I want to thank you both for all of your hard work and excellent presentations of History Deserves to Be Remembered. I look forward to your documentaries and really enjoy sharing your channel with friends. Your programs are very important heading into the 20'20's. History should never be forgotten, and sometimes never repeated. Your diligence in research, production and making history casual, fun, and in depth, is unique in today's media. I would like to express how much I personally respect and enjoy your work and hope you both continue and grow with HDTBR.

  • @andrerobertdrouin3642
    @andrerobertdrouin3642 Před 5 lety +10

    The bowtie was a good choice for this history bit , nice touch

  • @paulclarke1207
    @paulclarke1207 Před 5 lety +1

    A side-note which you may find interesting:
    The two soldiers pictured inside the Elizabeth Tower are officers of the Royal Corps of Signals. They go up into the tower each year on Remembrance Sunday, and set up comms with the Royal Horse Artillery battery which sets up at Green Park. From the tower, they tell the gunners exactly when to fire their salute. They need to do this precisely, because the first strike of the bell and the first boom of the guns must reach the Cenotaph on Whitehall at exactly the same time. However, Big Ben and the guns at Green Park are different distances from the Cenotaph, thus the sound takes longer to travel from the guns than from the bells.
    Incidentally, I love the bow-tie!

  • @catjudo1
    @catjudo1 Před 5 lety +1

    My grandfather made a cherry grandfather clock for my mother about twenty years ago. It stands in her living room and when it chimes, it chimes the Westminster Quarters. It has other chimes, but honestly that one is the most tasteful. She has to be careful that a cat doesn't hop in the bottom and get locked in when she winds it!

  • @johncresswell-plant2913
    @johncresswell-plant2913 Před 5 lety +3

    A very pleasant surprise at the end

  • @tomgreenough3235
    @tomgreenough3235 Před 4 lety

    For 50+ years I have thought, and been taught, that the chiming was coming from "big ben". And now I find it was the name of the largest bell in the tower. Love ya History Guy.

  • @Carstuff111
    @Carstuff111 Před 5 lety +1

    I remember staying the night with some friends when I was younger, and this tune would some how put me at ease, and I would sleep so heavily. This is awesome, as all of your videos are, and I thank you for posting this :)

  • @lancer525
    @lancer525 Před 5 lety +1

    I just have to say, that bow tie was perfect.

  • @carwashslayer4235
    @carwashslayer4235 Před 4 lety +1

    Gastown Steam Clock and Otaru also plays this tune. This has been going for years and I love these clocks and I always love hearing it every 15 minutes.

  • @johnphillips519
    @johnphillips519 Před 5 lety +16

    Wow how awesome to hear those early recordings, Thanks for sharing your great knowledge as always👍

  • @tarmacd1802
    @tarmacd1802 Před 5 lety +38

    His neck has been colonized by the UK...

  • @bwayne40004
    @bwayne40004 Před 5 lety +19

    Very interesting today and of course the best reason to wear the Union Jack bow tie.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před 5 lety +1

      Best display of the Union Jack on screen is at the beginning of The Spy Who Loved Me, when that chute opens up and the Bond music kicks in it was the perfect hook for a 12 year old kid in America.

  • @chrisnemec5644
    @chrisnemec5644 Před 5 lety +2

    Westiminster chimes are also used in some schools (mainly in Japan) to indicate that the school day is beginning.

  • @moonspots01
    @moonspots01 Před 5 lety +5

    You never disappoint. Very good episode! ☺

  • @jesusbeloved3953
    @jesusbeloved3953 Před 5 lety +4

    I really treasure these glimpses into a past almost forgotten. If you hadn’t told us I’d have never know there were words to this simple tune. Unfortunately, how far the world has drifted from their simple prayer of God’s protection. Thank you, Mr. History Guy!

  • @kenthawley5990
    @kenthawley5990 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks, Lance! Very interesting, and what I find most interesting is the fact that a Edison Brown Wax Cylinder from 1890 still works!

  • @NPminnetonka
    @NPminnetonka Před 5 lety +2

    West minister chime is also frequently used to test electronic tornado sirens across many towns in America.

  • @glennllewellyn7369
    @glennllewellyn7369 Před 5 lety +4

    The tie makes it work. Good man.

  • @dobypilgrim6160
    @dobypilgrim6160 Před 5 lety +2

    You can take the most boring topic and make is so interesting. Such a talent sir. Thank you.

  • @matthewjones12181
    @matthewjones12181 Před 5 lety +1

    Hearing this reminds me of A Christmas Carol. The chiming of the bells is a major point of Scrooge tracking time. Perhaps when Christmas comes closer there can be a History Guy episode about A Christmas Carol. Loving the channel.

  • @ChakatSandwalker
    @ChakatSandwalker Před 5 lety +1

    I've never noticed that, on the hour, the first measure and the third measure are actually different! The clock tower where I live does the Westminster chimes, but occasionally one of the bells is, for whatever reason, silent. The third and fourth notes in the first and third measures also sound very slightly faster than usual, but I put it down to being just a quirk of this particular clock.
    Thank you for the wonderful history of the chimes! And the bow-tie was very fitting.

  • @robertphillips6296
    @robertphillips6296 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank You for sharing this with us. It is amazing to hear something recorded 129 years ago. I also have to belatedly thank those who recorded it. For some reason I just can't get over hearing that?

  • @45obiwan
    @45obiwan Před 5 lety +1

    Hearing that just ripped me back to college, Montana State's clock tower played it.

  • @MCDamavandi
    @MCDamavandi Před 5 lety +37

    Love these nuggets of history. Thanks.

  • @shadowraith1
    @shadowraith1 Před 5 lety +6

    Been into antique clocks for decades .🕰⏲🕰. Have managed to acquire a few bells along the way.🔔🔔🔔. Your right about the Westminster chime. If a an old mechanical clock has a chime. You can be pretty sure it will be the Westminster. Was not aware that the tune had spread worldwide however. Thanks for the lesson. 👍

  • @Peasmouldia
    @Peasmouldia Před 5 lety +9

    I'm ashamed to say I briefly wondered if that could be a clip-on tie. Such dark thoughts are unbecoming of THG viewers! Thank you THG.

  • @jordanfalkowski6924
    @jordanfalkowski6924 Před 5 lety +2

    The clock can tel you more than just the time. It can even tell a story about trees!

  • @kevinbarry71
    @kevinbarry71 Před 5 lety +1

    Great video, I had those notes drummed into me over the four years as an undergraduate at the State University of new York at Albany.

  • @bullettube9863
    @bullettube9863 Před 5 lety +1

    When I was a pre-teen we had three Edison players that used the cylinders, and over 50 cylinders. My dad gave them away to a college teacher who took them to a museum in Buffalo NY, along with some Native American artifacts we had. My great grand father had been a dealer and sold them in the little store in the front of our house. He was also a blacksmith as was his father, and the store was a stage coach stop at one time. He also sold British made stationary steam engines and later American made engines and tractors.

  • @trumpetmom8924
    @trumpetmom8924 Před 3 lety +1

    I used to ring the Westminster/Cambridge Chimes tune from the Crouse College carrillon at Syracuse University. It was one of the neatest things you could do, and could be heard for a mile (or more on cold winter days). I was so terrified of making a mistake during my 15 minute program that I would go up 15-30 minutes before I was to ring, just so I could silently practice (I rang 5:45-6:00pm, tolling the 3/4 and full hour, with music in between). We Chimemasters always rang the SU Alma Mater right before tolling the hour with Westminster Chimes.

  • @Pandabonium
    @Pandabonium Před 5 lety +1

    Fun episode. Thanks HG. In many orchestras in which I have played, we used the Westminster Quarters to call the audience back into the hall after intermission. Often it was done by a conspiracy of trombonists, tiptoeing into the percussion section to strike the chimes. ;)

  • @JJ-of1ir
    @JJ-of1ir Před 11 měsíci +1

    This was a fascinating video for me - about a sound I have heard all my life and never really thought about it - 'til now. Thank you

  • @williambabbitt7602
    @williambabbitt7602 Před rokem +1

    As much as I enjoy the big Ben clock and the chimes., The fact that the Westminster tune has gone all over the world and transcends culture and regional differences, also tells me that he is the Mark of the empire of Great Britain that they were able to spread their culture so far and so wide that it is now influencing the cultures of the world. My home church in New York (Lutheran) used to ring the church bells to call people to service, and also to announce the passing of an important person or a church member by ringing the number of years he had live. I always thought of it as a celebration of that life, and it brought me great comfort. Pity they don’t do that anymore, because most church bells are now considered an annoyance.

  • @shawngilliland243
    @shawngilliland243 Před 5 lety +1

    @The History Guy - What an appropriate bow tie for this presentation! Beautiful and pleasingly complex chimes. Your account of their universality gives hope for a brotherhood of humanity. Your shows are like a movie where one watches to the very end so as not to miss anything "extra" in the credits! I enjoy listening to church bells on Sundays whenever I am able. I've yet to listen to those of the Elizabeth Tower "in person".

  • @rdfox76
    @rdfox76 Před 5 lety +1

    Couple of trivia notes involving use of the Westminster Chimes... one of my oldest childhood memories is the opening title sequence to PBS's old "Wall Street Week," which used a recording of the first permutation of the chime to start its theme song. One of the odder uses of it, though, has to be as an alternative tone used for testing all-electronic outdoor warning sirens; while the electromechanical siren can only be tested by firing it up in the alert tone, all-electronic ones are basically giant speaker sets on poles, and somewhere along the line, it was decided by the manufacturers that a (low-fidelity, often off-key) rendition of the Westminster Chimes might be seen as a less objectionable sound to have blasted at full volume for a test than a siren howl.

  • @t.carpenter2886
    @t.carpenter2886 Před 5 lety +2

    Masterful presentation today THG! Your final monologue made me tear up and laugh at the same time!
    Thank you.

  • @richardjweeks
    @richardjweeks Před 5 lety +2

    the sound of Victorian London, 129 years ago. its both haunting and exciting to listen to.

  • @vmbrister3278
    @vmbrister3278 Před 5 lety +1

    Love the recording at the end, almost 129 years ago...Wow!

  • @susanwahl6322
    @susanwahl6322 Před 5 lety +2

    I’m glad to finally have found someone else who loves history as much as I do.

  • @jeffreynunya4716
    @jeffreynunya4716 Před 5 lety +1

    I love this channel because I'm always learning something about a subject I never thought I wanted to know about. I had never even considered where the tune came from when a church clock struck the hour.

  • @peterallen4605
    @peterallen4605 Před 5 lety +1

    Big thumbs up for including a copy of the original recording!

  • @ErikHare
    @ErikHare Před 5 lety +3

    The simple beauty, longevity, and universality are fabulous. Thank you for this presentation, and especially for the recording.

  • @rayjulien4739
    @rayjulien4739 Před 5 lety +1

    To Miss Ferguson and Graham Hope...Thank you. Suddenly I want to know more about you...I can see why the History Guy loves History!!

  • @JosephK42
    @JosephK42 Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks for playing the historical recording at the end. Really cool!

    • @joedellinger9437
      @joedellinger9437 Před 5 lety

      Ought to be possible to take the flutter out of that recording with a little careful digital signal processing!

  • @michaeldougfir9807
    @michaeldougfir9807 Před 5 lety +4

    Wonderful.
    Union Jack bow tie noted.
    Good touch.

  • @NorthernChev
    @NorthernChev Před 5 lety +5

    I have a Howard Miller Greene grandfather clock that chimes the Westminster. Absolutely beautiful intonation.

  • @herm43506
    @herm43506 Před 5 lety +1

    As always, wonderful episode. I love the tie, and the bowler on the skull on the desk. Great ending as well.

  • @donaldbuchan4387
    @donaldbuchan4387 Před 3 lety +1

    And no doubt we have big Ben to thank for one of the most iconic rock songs of the late twentieth century, hells bells by acdc, which would have been such a blight on music history had the song been written and not performed. Rock on history guy.

  • @daveyjoweaver5183
    @daveyjoweaver5183 Před 5 lety +11

    Good show History Guy! Now I shall Bong Bong Bong my way through Friday. Thank You Kindly! DaveyJO in Pa. And of course, my best to Mrs History Gal!

  • @rorycraft5453
    @rorycraft5453 Před 5 lety +2

    I first heard this melody emanating from Orton Hall at The Ohio State University as a freshman in September 1975. I later learned it originated with in Great Britain at Westminster Tower and not at OSU! The Ohio State marching band also plays a rendition of the Westminster Chimes before playing the Alma Mater, Carmen Ohio at football games. Now I know the history behind this melody.

  • @dr.skulhamr3220
    @dr.skulhamr3220 Před 5 lety +2

    What a gem! Thank you my friend!

  • @PelenTan
    @PelenTan Před 5 lety +7

    Wow. Well actually double-wow: That tie! Anyway... Another one I wish I could give more than one thumbs up. I was listening to it this morning, enjoying my coffee, and enjoying learning a bit of trivia that was somewhat interesting but not earth shaking like some of the others. And then you bring it home in the final few seconds. Wow that was deep. And very important I think. Yet another of your videos that I feel should be shown in schools.

  • @spookyshadowhawk6776
    @spookyshadowhawk6776 Před 5 lety +2

    Reminds me of when I watched the house of a antique clock collector, he had close to a hundred clocks from one hundred to four hundred years old. They all rang at about the same time, which made it hard to sleep until I got used to all the ticking and ringing. Good times! Thanks for the memories!

  • @WhiteStone21475
    @WhiteStone21475 Před 5 lety +4

    Every day I find some of your videos I have not yet viewed. It has become a morning ritual and I love spending time with them and you (by proxy). Wishing you a good day, today and hereafter.

  • @davidcoleman4800
    @davidcoleman4800 Před 5 lety +2

    Another excellent episode. You continue to be a great use of my time.

  • @johnkelley9877
    @johnkelley9877 Před 5 lety +1

    A great story about how the chimes came into use.

  • @untruelie2640
    @untruelie2640 Před 5 lety +1

    Nice episode! It is funny, I currently live in Halle (the hometown of G. F. Händel) and I hear the Westminster chime almost every day when I pass by the "Red Tower" at the market square.

  • @wrnchhead76
    @wrnchhead76 Před 5 lety +1

    Would have never thought about this if not for this video. Fascinating. Love the full play at the end. And of course the tie.

  • @davidlathrop9360
    @davidlathrop9360 Před 5 lety +1

    That recording... To realize you're listening to something Queen Victoria probably heard, from a time with no airplanes flying overhead, virtually no cars in the street. It's haunting.

  • @Chrisamic
    @Chrisamic Před 5 lety +3

    Well I've looked at and photographed Westminster Palace ("Big Ben") from the very high vantage point of the London Eye and this video was *at least* as emotional as that experience. Top work HG.
    Incidentally the London Eye was so high, they gave British Airways the job of running it, and a trip on the Eye is called a "flight". Perhaps that is also a worthy subject for the History Guy treatment?