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Fort William Henry Massacre - True Story Behind Last of the Mohicans 

Erik K Swanson
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During the French and Indian War, Fort William Henry was under siege. After 6 long days the British troops surrendered, and were attacked by the French allied Indians. This historic battle inspired "The Last of the Mohicans"
Check out these great books to learn more about the siege.
(Amazon affiliate links may earn me a small commission)
Fort William Henry 1755-57: amzn.to/48nVphm
Betrayals: Fort William Henry & the Massacre: amzn.to/3URlMcb
The Legacy of Fort William Henry: amzn.to/48xJ0r4
Visit my website to purchase the full length documentary that this clip is from
eks.tv/shop/
#history #americanhistory #documentary #historical
This video recounts the events at Fort William Henry, through historic journals and letters written by the men who were there.
During the siege of Fort William Henry, the French army bombarded the fort with their artillery, while their Indian allies attacked the British soldiers in the adjacent encampment. On August 9, 1757 the men in Fort William Henry raised the white flag, and asked to capitulate.
The French negotiated the terms of surrender, without consulting their Indian allies. As part of the agreement, the British would be allowed to keep their belongings, and march south to nearby Fort Edward.
The Indians were angered by this agreement. They had been promised the spoils of war if they fought on the side of the French. As soon as the surrender was signed, the Indians entered the fort and began taking what they were promised. Eventually the French were able to restrain their allies.
The following day, August 10, 1757 was the day the British began their march to Fort Edward. As they began to leave fort William Henry, on Lake George, the Native Americans resumed taking their belongings. Panic struck the British, and fueled the confusion.
British soldiers, and provincials ran in all directions as the Indians pursued them. Some sought refuge with the French, while others fled into the woods.
It is this scene of chaos that inspired James Fenimore Cooper to write, "The Last of the Mohicans." Initial reports of the massacre gave casualty numbers as high as 1,000 people killed. More modern estimates, are much lower.
Visit my website for more videos, and other content.
eks.tv/

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9 авг 2022

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Комментарии : 481   
@chestersleezer8821
@chestersleezer8821 10 месяцев назад
My very, very great grandmother was once a captive of the Indians during this war. The Indians had raided her family's farm killing nearly everyone except her, her sister and brother who were all taken captive. The Indians did kill her brother later and her sister told my great grandmother that they would kill as well if she did not stop being so stubborn, she was 9 years old at the time and her sister was 13. She got the point but stubbornness still runs in the family. She later married my great grandfather who did take part in the Battle of Trenton though he was on the Hessian side since he was a young Hessian soldier. He later decided that going back home would not be a good thing since they would just keep in the Hessian army, so he stayed here in the States and started farming in the Saratoga Springs area of New York.
@basilmcdonnell9807
@basilmcdonnell9807 9 месяцев назад
Wow, what a family history. Thanks for sharing.
@ryanmiller6254
@ryanmiller6254 9 месяцев назад
Very cool family history
@CYCLONE4499
@CYCLONE4499 Год назад
This battle is what instilled a childhood fascination in me when I once visited Lake George when I was young. It was at the time they were filming Last of the Mohicans. The rebuilt fort was turned into a museum and right next door that summer they were doing a archeological dig and I actually witnessed skeletal remains in situ as they were digging. Its a memory ill never forget and it lead me on a road to become a history graduate and later teaching
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
It’s amazing that they still find archaeological evidence all these years later - especially with all the town development over the years
@BLOXKAFELLARECORDS
@BLOXKAFELLARECORDS Год назад
Interesting bro.
@yeti4269
@yeti4269 Год назад
That must have been one of the few scenes they didn’t film in NC
@coyotedust
@coyotedust Год назад
I'm a History grad also for similar and different reasons I love the past.
@bettycrocker6692
@bettycrocker6692 10 месяцев назад
The past tensem of the infintive 'to lead' is spelled LED.
@jackjones3657
@jackjones3657 10 месяцев назад
They were called savages for a reason. Many fact-based historical accounts describe the term as being accurate to certain tribes.
@jimilove7773
@jimilove7773 19 дней назад
And then these losing savage tribes were pushed to Canada! Trudeau land! LOL! Are they commies now?
@Epoholic
@Epoholic Год назад
just as good as anything on the history channel! I wish you nothing but success! Great Work!
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Much appreciated! I have more stuff in the works
@B14k3
@B14k3 Год назад
I’d say it’s even better! Keep it up Erik
@jakethreesixty
@jakethreesixty Год назад
I live in the area, it's pretty cool to live in a historical area. Nearby there is Bloody Pond which has the most metal reasoning for it's naming: they built a bridge across it with the dead bodies of the French & Natives they ambushed there. One thing they don't tell you about FWH is that it was by far the worst smelling fort in British history, it was said the stench was awful even 3 miles out, they dumped their sewage in a swamp next to it that no longer exists today, and it was a terrible idea.
@IncogNito-gg6uh
@IncogNito-gg6uh 10 месяцев назад
The novel "The Last of the Mohicans" is the second and best of James Fenimore Cooper's "Leatherstocking" tales. Cooper's native Americans have fully rounded characterizations, although a degree of the white man's condescension toward them begins to emerge in his later novels. Being written in 1826 the reader has to get into the rhythm of the speech patterns of that time, kind of like reading Shakespeare, but it is well worth it!
@charlieross-BRM
@charlieross-BRM 9 месяцев назад
I comprehend your meaning. That's why about every ten years I pull out my book of short stories by Edgar Allen Poe. He is acknowledged as the first author of the modern detective story form. The man wasn't a ghoul. The language is eloquent and phrased so differently from this era so it takes all of my attention to read it properly and that's the benefit. It takes my mind off anything but being immersed in the writing.
@RyanCoomer
@RyanCoomer Год назад
This channel is professional and amazing, deserves waaaaay more subs!!!!! love the narration and editing!!! THIS IS THE GOOD STUFF!!!!!
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thank you, I'm glad you are enjoying my videos
@ChrisBruhn
@ChrisBruhn 11 месяцев назад
I remember learning about this massacre in Jr High school, I guess they don't teach THAT kind of history anymore. Sadly, my children weren't taught a lot about what I thought was common knowledge American history... at all.
@huyenng3482
@huyenng3482 10 месяцев назад
right sir, nowadays they teach kid about gender more than history, what a shame
@davidhoward4715
@davidhoward4715 10 месяцев назад
@@huyenng3482 You are a liar. I teach history. Show your evidence or admit you are a liar.
@davidhoward4715
@davidhoward4715 10 месяцев назад
ChrisBrun, they do teach this sort of history these days. Stop listening to fascist propaganda and start thinking for yourself.
@wyominghome4857
@wyominghome4857 10 месяцев назад
It doesn't fit the narrative.
@jorgemt62
@jorgemt62 14 дней назад
It's the same here, in South America. Not the narrative wished to be told.
@coyotedust
@coyotedust Год назад
My 6x great Grandfather Zackquill Morgan's father moved from Wales to W. Virginia . His son Zack was the the first family to move into W. Virginia Colony- a territory of forts. They built Morgan Fort, founded Morgan Town fought in the French Indian War, Zack was a Captain in the Revolutionary war. He lost half his 600 men at Saratoga. He knew George Washington who helped him survey Morgan Town. There's a stature of Zack in the middle of the town square of Morgan Town today.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Wow, very interesting. Thanks for sharing
@user-ff2rt8ip9i
@user-ff2rt8ip9i 11 месяцев назад
Good chance my Comeaux ancestors fired at him
@RhysapGrug
@RhysapGrug 10 месяцев назад
Do you know what part of Wales your relatives were from??
@howiegee1
@howiegee1 10 месяцев назад
@@RhysapGrug Josey.
@davidpeters4129
@davidpeters4129 10 месяцев назад
I know of the Morgan brothers Zackquill, David, Evan "Chunk" and the Rev. Morgan Morgan a Revolutionary War Chaplain, fought also in Dunmore's under Gen. Lewis, sons of Morgan ap Morgan associated with the Shepard, Swearegen, Zane, Springer , Wetzel families
@danglol1953
@danglol1953 Год назад
How do you only have 3k subs, you genuinely deserve at least a million. Such Amazing work man
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thank you! hopefully more folks will come across my videos. It's hard to cut through the noise
@fatfurie
@fatfurie Год назад
looks like hes doubled in 2 days ..well deserved.
@danglol1953
@danglol1953 Год назад
@@fatfurie Well deserved indeed
@qubikaqubika689
@qubikaqubika689 Год назад
greeting from south of spain my man ! love your videos and good job on the animations they r very good !
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
@@qubikaqubika689 thank you!
@samueladams3746
@samueladams3746 10 месяцев назад
Well done. My direct paternal 5x grandfather was stuck in Ft. Edward with his company because the coward Genl Webb would not let them advance in relief of the William Henry. He was from Stillwater and likely knew many of the militia in the fort. Ironically, the person Fenimore Cooper based the character of “Cora” on (Jane McCrea) was the sister of his militia regiments colonel during the Saratoga campaign-where he fought again at age 57 along with one of his sons. I recommend the book “Relief is Greatly Wanted” as a good account of the siege and the afterward.
@v1ncent111
@v1ncent111 Год назад
Very well made, thank you!
@B14k3
@B14k3 Год назад
Between this and your NYC mile people docs, this channel is a hidden Gem! Subbed. Please keep up the great work.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thank you, I appreciate it
@sycadelic666
@sycadelic666 Год назад
Yaooo, how cool! Just watched a couple of your mini docs only to stumble upon this one - A mini doc on my new hometown built by the man who established my original hometown.
@danharris8805
@danharris8805 Год назад
This was an unexpected but excellent find! Also really enjoyed your video about Carlos who lived in the tunnel! Great stuff. Take care!
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thanks, I appreciate it.
@danharris8805
@danharris8805 Год назад
@@ErikKSwanson no worries. Take care mate! 🙂
@Cynthia713
@Cynthia713 Год назад
Me, too, Dan Harris!... Very well said!👍 I echo the same sentiment... in *that* exact order!🙂 💯 Also, my thanks to you, Erik, for ALL your time and *care* you put into all of your work. This is not just a "j-o-b" for you. It IS your down-to-earth, "happy-place" that you "tuned," yes "TUNED," into yourself/intuition, and found 'your profession!' -- Wait. Whoa! Too deep?... Well, I couldn't leave without sharing my positive experience of your channel!... With gratitude and a job very well done! Lastly, may I say a loud *shout out* to Carlos?! Thank you, Carlos, for sharing your life with us!
@natashabegley1346
@natashabegley1346 Год назад
Just discovered your channel after the mole people video was recommended to me these videos are superb keep up the good work! 👍
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thanks, I appreciate it!
@Bayan1905
@Bayan1905 11 месяцев назад
I am a direct descendant of a militiaman from the 2nd Connecticut Provincial Regiment that was raised and was at the siege and then marched back to Fort Edward. Luckily, he survived the massacre but the amount that were killed and captured, many of them who the British never got back was staggering.
@MrAtsyhere
@MrAtsyhere 11 месяцев назад
Likely our ancestors knew each other. Our cousins were ensign Benjamin Atwell of the 3rd Conn Reg. 2nd cousins to Ethan Allen and relatives of Benedict Arnolds In-laws. Hezekiah Atwell, Unkas and Comstock (All cousins) were with the NY Militia there but returned with the Conn men to fight at Crown Point. Now for the shocking truths we were 3rd generation Mohegans living in Mohican Country as did Samson Occom. I could tell you more.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 11 месяцев назад
Very cool. Thanks for sharing
@benjaminmiller275
@benjaminmiller275 10 месяцев назад
My great great grandfather was Ephraim webster,british but fought in the continental army at valley forge,and at lake Champlain
@benjaminmiller275
@benjaminmiller275 10 месяцев назад
Im from the Onondaga nation, Ephraim was the 1st white settler in Onondaga county and met who was to become my great great grandma,
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 10 месяцев назад
@@benjaminmiller275 very interesting, thanks for sharing that
@livinlovelee2683
@livinlovelee2683 Год назад
I've been here a million times. Lake George is absolutely beautiful ❤️
@user-ff2rt8ip9i
@user-ff2rt8ip9i 11 месяцев назад
Land of the rich ... like Georgetown in DC.
@IncogNito-gg6uh
@IncogNito-gg6uh 10 месяцев назад
@@user-ff2rt8ip9i Whose development is slowly spoiling the lake.
@wjm5972
@wjm5972 9 месяцев назад
yes been going on since the early eighties@@IncogNito-gg6uh
@fatfurie
@fatfurie Год назад
Love your page. great videos!
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thanks so much! I appreciate it!
@nickthekid2245
@nickthekid2245 Год назад
Just gotta say, you’ve got a voice for this! Just saw walters clip in the tunnels and you’ve made a new supporter : )
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thank you, I really appreciate it!
@null6075
@null6075 Год назад
Keep up this great work, you will definitely hit 100k subscribers before you know it!
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thank you, I appreciate the encouragement
@BLOXKAFELLARECORDS
@BLOXKAFELLARECORDS Год назад
Great channel.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thank you, I appreciate it
@finn3721
@finn3721 Год назад
Are you doing all the animations yourself? If yes, big respect, thats gotta be a lot of work
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Yes, I am. Thank you! It is a lot of work. I have some new ones in the works, hopefully they won't take me too much longer.
@Brabant076
@Brabant076 Год назад
@@ErikKSwanson Man that is some dedication! I love this and i wish i found your channel earlier.
@BLOXKAFELLARECORDS
@BLOXKAFELLARECORDS Год назад
@@ErikKSwanson amazing bro
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
@@BLOXKAFELLARECORDS thanks!
@user-iw8oe4pc9z
@user-iw8oe4pc9z 10 месяцев назад
Same thing happened at Oswego, NY in August 1756, also under Montcalm
@LYLEWOLD
@LYLEWOLD 10 месяцев назад
This is the sort of tale that would color the American's response with Indians from that point forward, regardless of tribal affiliation or attitude. Massacre me once, shame on you. Massacre me twice, shame on me.
@buchan448
@buchan448 10 месяцев назад
cool channel love learning about this time period have subbed and pressed the bell hello from Scotland
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 10 месяцев назад
Thank you. I appreciate it! I'll have more videos on history and other topics out soon
@buchan448
@buchan448 10 месяцев назад
@@ErikKSwanson glad ti hear it :) keep up the good work pal
@SqueakyPasta
@SqueakyPasta Год назад
Production of this video is superb!
@SqueakyPasta
@SqueakyPasta Год назад
Would also love to see how this was created with the different clips and videos
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thank you, I appreciate that. I have a blog post on my website about how I made the doc
@SqueakyPasta
@SqueakyPasta Год назад
@@ErikKSwanson thank you!
@goransvraka3171
@goransvraka3171 Год назад
I have a feeling you have narrated for History Channel before? Your voice sounds familiar.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
I haven't, maybe they'll ask me!
@primateinterfacetechnologi6220
Wow man... This is the first time the algorithm offered me your channel, and you just earned my subscription for sure. peace and love from the burnt-out remains of Butte County, in Northern California.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thank you, I appreciate it. Glad you're enjoying my videos
@primateinterfacetechnologi6220
@@ErikKSwanson The pleasure is mine I assure you. Your pieces are all so... professional, to start. If you don't mind my asking... what is your technical background?
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
@@primateinterfacetechnologi6220 I started out years ago creating graphics for TV news - I've been trying to get away from that for years, expanding my skillset and working on my own projects/films
@primateinterfacetechnologi6220
@@ErikKSwanson Nice. I must applaud your choice of subject matter as well as your execution of the technicals... Seems you have a great thing going here. May the almighty algorithm favor you. I'll be watching your work.
@christopherlarose2770
@christopherlarose2770 Год назад
Unbelievable content here I'm honestly blown away! You need to get into Hollywood bud. You tube is just a step. Fantastic directing.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thank you, that is very kind of you to say. Hopefully you're right!
@robertking6510
@robertking6510 Год назад
Great video as always! Have you researched the massacre at Ft. Mims?
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thanks! I’ve only read about that very briefly. Fort mims is definitely something I want to learn more about
@JoeTHEBLOODknight
@JoeTHEBLOODknight Год назад
I only knew about this battle from the last of the mohicans love that movie but this channel is a damn good history channel
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thank you, I appreciate it. I have some more history videos in the works
@lomein7
@lomein7 Год назад
your voice is the perfect documentary voice
@harshwardhansaharan6698
@harshwardhansaharan6698 Год назад
Good work brother.Loved the homeless video.Keep going.
@MrAvidOutdoorsman
@MrAvidOutdoorsman Год назад
You mean,, "Assault Tomahawk" dang weapons of war! 🤷🏻‍♂️😂🤣🤣
@CSUnger
@CSUnger 11 месяцев назад
Not one word in the comments about the barbarity and cruelty visited on the disarmed and captive British by the “native Americans “ and for what? Their personal possessions? Nor about the duplicity of the French?
@ANDROLOMA
@ANDROLOMA 10 месяцев назад
Time passed.
@CSUnger
@CSUnger 10 месяцев назад
Consciousness passed, I think. We today think of the as the “noble savages” who were traduced and oppressed. They were largely barbaric and uncivilized.
@ANDROLOMA
@ANDROLOMA 10 месяцев назад
@@CSUnger I'll never know, since I wasn't around back then and therefore must rely on second-hand reports.
@CSUnger
@CSUnger 10 месяцев назад
@ ANDROLAMA. There are plenty of first hand accounts. Plenty.
@ANDROLOMA
@ANDROLOMA 10 месяцев назад
@@CSUnger It's not a first hand account unless you speak to the person directly. Understand?
@crush42mash6
@crush42mash6 11 месяцев назад
Excellent job would love to see more at the battle of Lundys lane things of that nature or of 1812
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 11 месяцев назад
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it! I’ll ha e to look into that battle I’m not familiar with it
@dash1141
@dash1141 Год назад
I enjoyed this to watch
@conservos2349
@conservos2349 10 месяцев назад
Of course Hollywood lies about it. The movies never get the Indian Wars right.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 10 месяцев назад
The various movies weren't even accurate to the book... which also wasn't accurate to history.
@1_fishin_magician153
@1_fishin_magician153 Месяц назад
I live in Lake George, NY area and drive by " Bloody Pond " almost daily.... it was where hundreds of dead bodies were thrown in a small pond along route 9. Thumbs up !!
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Месяц назад
It's great how much fascinating history is in that area
@1_fishin_magician153
@1_fishin_magician153 Месяц назад
@@ErikKSwanson ... indeed ! * have a great day Sir.....!
@sargonixofur1234
@sargonixofur1234 9 месяцев назад
The reconstructed fort is well worth a visit and Lake George is a lovely area.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 9 месяцев назад
They have some fun events at the fort,
@pauldjdundas
@pauldjdundas Год назад
So beautiful 💙
@MainelyBoxers
@MainelyBoxers Год назад
Your wife has to the luckiest woman alive.. I live in Maine and I just adore this channel . I could listen forever..
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thanks, I appreciate that... I'll be sure to let her know!
@chancealots5294
@chancealots5294 Год назад
I love the movie last of Mohicans! Another great video!
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
Thanks, I appreciate it. That violin piece in Last of the Mohicans is amazing
@ernestclements7398
@ernestclements7398 10 месяцев назад
This doesn't mention it but some of the victims in the hospital tents, were suffering from small pox, their blankets and clothing that were taken as trophies led to a break out among the tribes, decimating some of them to the point of near extinction.
@martinholmes1493
@martinholmes1493 10 месяцев назад
Or as we call it Karma.
@joebr249
@joebr249 10 месяцев назад
I thought this to be true. It was actually proven that blankets and clothing with small pox was false! I wish I had a source to cite here but look it up. That was untrue after all. I swear lol.
@cchavezjr7
@cchavezjr7 9 месяцев назад
@@joebr249 There's multiple different stories with smallpox in blankets and clothes. The one from Fort William Henry is probably one of the more real ones as they also dug up graves and more than likely, some of the bodies were infected with smallpox.
@doug2078
@doug2078 10 месяцев назад
I live about 50 miles from Fort William henry . Ive been to Lake George many many times .But have never gone in the fort. Definitely will have to go in next time Im there. Most much History right at my back door.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 10 месяцев назад
It’s a fun visit. There is also a new visitor center at battlefield park. I haven’t been yet myself, but heard good things about it
@doug2078
@doug2078 10 месяцев назад
@@ErikKSwanson Thanks !! I will definitely check it out.👍
@mauricemcdonald6192
@mauricemcdonald6192 Год назад
What’s the song that’s plays at 5:11 ?
@stevedecata462
@stevedecata462 11 месяцев назад
Have you thought about doing a video of the attack/ massacre of Schenectady ???
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 11 месяцев назад
I need to look into it more.
@ANDROLOMA
@ANDROLOMA 10 месяцев назад
Interesting, informational video.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 10 месяцев назад
Thanks. Glad you enjoyed it
@jimilove7773
@jimilove7773 11 месяцев назад
Thanks live nearby used to work there as a guide and actor.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 11 месяцев назад
Very cool. That must have been a fun job!
@jimilove7773
@jimilove7773 19 дней назад
@@ErikKSwanson It was a blast! Thanks for your great vid!
@brycecharles3856
@brycecharles3856 Год назад
Did you see what they did to the old beautiful fort William Henry hotel. It was stunning and they tore it down and put up another plastic, crappy, clarion type ehhh. It's tough to canoe from the end of lake George where the Minnie haha is docked to Ticonderoga. I grew up here and we had the history drilled into us. We even had a hike from lake George to Saratoga.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
It’s a shame that more isn’t done to preserve and teach the history in that area
@minisurfbanana
@minisurfbanana Год назад
I was just at Lake George and we walked by there!
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
You should go check it out! It's a fun place to visit
@richardcarpenter5049
@richardcarpenter5049 10 месяцев назад
I grew up in the area myself Glens Falls a brother and I would camp on French mountain looking down on fort William Henry yes, I’ve been to bloody Pond to we would find all kinds of arrowheads when we were kids and bullet fragments
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 10 месяцев назад
Nice! There’s a lot of great history in that area
@johncooner8957
@johncooner8957 10 месяцев назад
Must be some mistake I thought the noble red man was kind and were abused by the evil white man.
@hansgruber6455
@hansgruber6455 10 месяцев назад
Thats what todays liberal History professors want you to believe.
@anthonyeaton5153
@anthonyeaton5153 10 месяцев назад
If that massacre was infamous what is a famous massacre like.
@mitcha1065
@mitcha1065 10 месяцев назад
I visited the fort in 1966. I remember looking down the well at night. It was lighted with an erie glow. A woman guide th old us they had recently unearthed human bones at the bottom of the well.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 10 месяцев назад
That’s really strange about the light. Supposedly some old (original) parts of the fort are haunted
@CRAZYHORSE19682003
@CRAZYHORSE19682003 11 месяцев назад
Kind of debunks the modern narrative of the peaceful American Indian minding their own business in harmony with nature.
@conservos2349
@conservos2349 10 месяцев назад
Yes, the Indian Wars are terribly misunderstood.
@brandonterzic
@brandonterzic 10 месяцев назад
If you want to use generalizations based on particular instances to characterize an entire group of people, have at it. The Indians numbered in the millions, with thousands of different languages and tribes, some peaceful, some warlike, some diplomatic, some barbarous. The world is a much more interesting place when you look at it from multiple angles.
@baskoller5506
@baskoller5506 10 месяцев назад
@@brandonterzic Thank you giving that (crazyhorse) dude a reasonable yet stern reprimand.
@mattfox2716
@mattfox2716 10 месяцев назад
I mean, can’t have a massacre if there wasn’t a fort with soldiers….
@stewartmillen7708
@stewartmillen7708 10 месяцев назад
The Europeans were at least as bloody to each other and to the natives.
@deadhorse1391
@deadhorse1391 10 месяцев назад
Don’t call them savages for nothing
@lyndoncmp5751
@lyndoncmp5751 10 месяцев назад
Massacring defenceless people in hospital is pretty savage isn't it?
@KG-th3cr
@KG-th3cr 10 месяцев назад
Where the hell were the 8000 soldiers from the French army? They negotiated a surrender but when it actually came to seeing that the terms where honored they were like: "Yeah, it'll be fine."
@patsaylor8973
@patsaylor8973 9 месяцев назад
That day was horrendous! I don't think words are capable of describing the atrocities committed. These were families not only of soldiers, but those who fled to the fort! What happened at Detroit wasn't much better. If I can remember all of the forts fell except two that lined the frontier!
@johnkeviljr9625
@johnkeviljr9625 10 месяцев назад
The noble Indian.
@vanbilly8387
@vanbilly8387 10 месяцев назад
David Hogg also survived this battle.
@padraig7744
@padraig7744 10 месяцев назад
Excellent piece of history. Could you please stop referring to the UK as 'England' as many Scots, Welsh & Irish paid the ultimate price in that war.
@MrKilroi
@MrKilroi 9 месяцев назад
They were the Northern tribes from what is now Northern Ontario. The Mistake they made was aligning with the French. The French lost a few years later at Quebec. The Iroquois sided with the English and were given lands in Southern Ontario and after the war of independence were given more lands in compensation for lands lost to the "Americans" It's a brief outline of events after the described events
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 9 месяцев назад
There were people from more than 30 tribes at the siege. Some were Algonquin from the Trois Rivières area, some were Miami from around Ohio and Michigan, and others, “are from a nation so far away that no Canadian interpreter speaks their language,” according to Louis Antoine de Bougainville. I have read several books which claim as far away as Lake Superior, and others which say past the Mississippi, but haven’t personally seen any historical documents which give exact locations.
@MrKilroi
@MrKilroi 9 месяцев назад
@ErikKSwanson the Northern tribes that I am aware of were Huron, Abernaki, Chippewa, and of course Algonquin long-time trading partners and allies of the French. It's interesting that so many others were involved as well. I had to study this war in Middle school as part of the boring Canadian History. L
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 9 месяцев назад
@@MrKilroi Ha! It would be great if history classes were more dynamic. I had a great teacher in highschool who made it fun to learn about the fascinating stories of the past. Bougainville gave a pretty detailed breakdown in his journal of the numbers and locations of the various tribes who showed up for the battle... I have to admit, I had never heard of many of them.
@MrKilroi
@MrKilroi 9 месяцев назад
@ErikKSwanson my middle school teacher tride his best but Canadian history is boring. Grade nine things got interesting when our teacher gave us an exercise on how the stage was set for the start of ww 1 . I actually had ancestors fight in the war of 1812.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 9 месяцев назад
@@MrKilroi wow, that’s interesting about the war of 1812. I always think it’s great when folks know that aspect of their lineage
@hbkslazyeye6916
@hbkslazyeye6916 Год назад
They were doing it to eachother before anybody cameover
@michelenutini8476
@michelenutini8476 10 месяцев назад
Yep
@DrWarman86
@DrWarman86 9 месяцев назад
This is another reason why you never give up your weapons.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 9 месяцев назад
They still had their weapons, but no powder for the muskets
@DrWarman86
@DrWarman86 9 месяцев назад
@@ErikKSwanson then they should have fixed bayonets and used swords.
@cheeks1182
@cheeks1182 10 месяцев назад
Indigenous peoples own historians acknowledge the great waring that took place. Thats why the Great Peace happened and thousands of tribes gathered together to establish treaties. They further entered into treaties with the British and the French. And those treaties remain unhonored in both the US and Canada. Expand your view just a little and maybe you can see a bit more truth than just Europeans being blamed
@limgreen9766
@limgreen9766 Год назад
this noble savages, right.
@phoenixdreams3494
@phoenixdreams3494 Год назад
Yes! just like any other part of the world at that time you keep your promises or feel the heel of the ones you liked too
@petersclafani4370
@petersclafani4370 10 месяцев назад
The Iroquois where the most savage of all
@ernestclements7398
@ernestclements7398 10 месяцев назад
Not for my money, I would submit that the Huron, we're the most feared of all the great lakes tribes, ( and were most likely to have been the ones responsible for the legends of the Windigo) due to their cannabalism.
@petersclafani4370
@petersclafani4370 10 месяцев назад
@@ernestclements7398 you never read about the Indian wars in New York state against the colonist. It was brutal until Washington death with them to end there allegiance with the British.
@user-qb5nk7lx5r
@user-qb5nk7lx5r 10 месяцев назад
So much for the noble savage.
@SuperGreen4219
@SuperGreen4219 9 месяцев назад
In those days if you had bare minimum clothes you were considered a savage
@ReapWhatYaSow
@ReapWhatYaSow Год назад
Lessons to be learned is don't be the one at the end of a gun barrel. If you fight like a man, you might not die like a dog. Reminds me of similarities to the Massacre of Elphinstone's army (1842).
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
I'm going to have top learn about that battle. Thanks for bringing it to my attention
@thearnorianruby4681
@thearnorianruby4681 10 месяцев назад
I enjoyed the accents.
@pitbullman77
@pitbullman77 10 месяцев назад
Never give up Your ARMs Never surrendering meas death
@katiejon17
@katiejon17 Год назад
The French and Iroquois (Hurons) certainly are stained for this massacre.
@roderickreilly9666
@roderickreilly9666 11 месяцев назад
????? The Iroquois and Huron, though both Algonquin, were separate tribal nations, and bitter enemies. The Iroquois drove the Huron out of Canada the previous century.
@katiejon17
@katiejon17 11 месяцев назад
@@roderickreilly9666 but when did they, begrudgingly, work together on the same “side”?
@roderickreilly9666
@roderickreilly9666 10 месяцев назад
@@katiejon17 : good question. In this war, it would seem.
@tankc6474
@tankc6474 10 месяцев назад
Great work respect from Ireland 🇮🇪 👏
@richvest7212
@richvest7212 10 месяцев назад
The Indians were savages Not noble red men
@TheWizardOfTheFens
@TheWizardOfTheFens 11 месяцев назад
The Abenaki aren’t doing so well today………
@ADobbin1
@ADobbin1 10 месяцев назад
Adds a new perspective to why the Americans never honored an agreement with the Indians.
@markbirchall8225
@markbirchall8225 Год назад
This scene was immortalised in Michael Mann's Last of the Mohican's, although prudence tells me the attack was much more one-sided with the native warriors, as they'd learnt to use violence guerrilla style ambushes against the British regulars. The rules of warfare go out the window when you're fighting savage opponents like this - the Brits were far to regimented and steeped in tradition and drilling to appreciate they needed to expect a dirty fight.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
The Indians were promised that they would be allowed to pillage and take rewards for fighting on the side of the French. The French broke that promise, so the Indians took what they were owed - nobody works for free
@markb5403
@markb5403 Год назад
@@ErikKSwanson Makes sense.
@davidk7859
@davidk7859 Год назад
Who were the "savage opponents?" .... The Indians or the invading British? Also, gotta remember that "history" is often told by the victors. In this case, that would be the White man.
@ravengomez9777
@ravengomez9777 Год назад
@@ErikKSwanson you are a special soul Erik. Thank you for offering and uncovering real history. The natives deserve so much more respect
@mizotter
@mizotter Год назад
@@ErikKSwanson I'm glad to see you say this, because the video reps the Colonizers POV and uses dehumanizing language for Indigenous people in their homeland. This is only the 2nd vid of yours I've watched; the 1st was about the illegal attacks on the folks living free in the bay. The difference is striking and shocking. It's like telling this story from the POV of the rich in SF. Where are the voices of the Indigenous people who were living free and faced genocide and were responding in kind to barbarous foreign invaders who came to make them homeless, kill them, enslave them, or colonize them? Why is their POV absent from this story? 1/3 of the story has been erased.
@carolecarr5210
@carolecarr5210 8 месяцев назад
The "Tourist Fort" in Lake George Village is not site of original fort.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 8 месяцев назад
It’s about 20 feet off… and the buildings are completely inaccurate
@geeeeeee3
@geeeeeee3 10 месяцев назад
Wow. Native Americans acting no better than Europeans
@1LSWilliam
@1LSWilliam 10 месяцев назад
More than 30 Native American Nations participated. I had no idea that the French had that kind of support although I did know it was considerable.
@aemtp
@aemtp 10 месяцев назад
The French recruited along their trade lines through the great lakes and river systems, I've read that there were natives present from as far away as Missouri.
@PAGANONYMOUS
@PAGANONYMOUS Год назад
Why weren't the British kept under guard within the fort instead of in tents outside the fort?
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson Год назад
The fort couldn’t hole everyone. The majority of the British were outside the fort during the entire siege
@NotYourAverageFishKeeper
@NotYourAverageFishKeeper Год назад
My great great grandmother was Mohican. She was adopted into the family and gave birth to my great grandmother. Pretty interesting learning our history.
@katiejon17
@katiejon17 Год назад
I didn’t think the Mohicans or the Delaware’s were involved in this massacre. I believe it was purely Iroquois/Huron. I don’t believe this was “your” history. And if my ancestor’s tribe was Iroquois, I would not be proud.
@thullraven1
@thullraven1 Год назад
@@katiejon17 I agree. Savage and brutal POS way to behave.
@unclescipio3136
@unclescipio3136 Год назад
@@katiejon17 why? It's not all the Iroquois ever did. And in their interaction with the European colonists, they were far more sinned against than sinners.
@katiejon17
@katiejon17 Год назад
​@@unclescipio3136 the Iroquois were a violent and savage tribe. Your claim that “they were far more sinned against than sinners” is simply modern day white apologetics. It’s a lie. Even other native tribes hated them. Stop being a simp.
@catherinelw9365
@catherinelw9365 10 месяцев назад
@@unclescipio3136 Really? Proof?
@Slcm02
@Slcm02 11 месяцев назад
Who is paying who today ? Read a book called Over The Ohio. Indians loved each other so much
@darbyohara
@darbyohara 10 месяцев назад
The British failed to destroy the forts liquor stores and the natives partook in consumption of those spirits which fueled there savage attacks. It’s unlikely the “massacre” would have taken place or been as bad were it not fueled by rum. The French could not control the size of the native force and in the aftermath paid thousands in bounties and gifts to get British prisoners back from natives.
@davidlloyd2225
@davidlloyd2225 9 месяцев назад
5:14 guess whos bak❤️🇬🇧💯 5:25
@fortcarillon615
@fortcarillon615 2 месяца назад
The French left the honours of war to the English, who left with their arms. The 100 Frenchmen could not contain the 500 Indians who were furious that they had not had their "scalp number." English propaganda unjustly accused the French. Some tried to oppose the fury of the Indians and allowed their attack to be stopped. This served England well as they deployed 3 armies to finaly defeat Montcalm's 5000-man army and all of its victories.
@darz3829
@darz3829 9 месяцев назад
According to Google there are still around 1,500 Mohicans, so the idea this is the last is a lie.
@JOSECANUCCJ
@JOSECANUCCJ 10 месяцев назад
“Lo, the poor Indian”
@petelosuaniu
@petelosuaniu 10 месяцев назад
I didn’t realise the Last of the Mohican’s movie battle was based on a true story. Brutal end for them but they were technically invading a foreign land which was already taken.
@dannyv2468va2
@dannyv2468va2 9 месяцев назад
Just wait woke boy until the 3rd world overwhelms this country. Cities will be almost uninhabitable soon!
@jcfra420
@jcfra420 9 месяцев назад
Give me a break, the Indians did the same thing. They literally massacred other tribes in conquest. They were not some fairy tale version living with nature. They were savage. They were conquerors and as such, eventually were conquered. Not to mention, the French were "invading" their land as well, if not more. The only difference is, that the French bought off the Iroquois with whisky, gold and weapons.
@alessiodecarolis
@alessiodecarolis 10 месяцев назад
I saw a documentary about this fact, hosted by John Rhys-Davies, at the end they said that the indians, in their frenzy for booty and scalps, had also digged out some bodies from the local cemetery, and VERY ironically, most of them had been killed by....smallpox! i imagine that the outcome wasn't very pretty for them !☹
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 10 месяцев назад
I e heard that before too, but also read that it is speculation with out any documentation to support it
@ImaSMACKHEAD982
@ImaSMACKHEAD982 10 месяцев назад
Whats this got to do with LotM?
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 10 месяцев назад
The siege of Fort William Henry is the backdrop to the story, and the inspiration for James Fenimore Cooper to write the novel
@Darklighter75
@Darklighter75 10 месяцев назад
They weren't referred to as "savages" for no reason... Hard to play the victim card when you commonly murdered children, women, and the wounded... then took their scalps as trophies.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 10 месяцев назад
Many tribes didn’t engage in indiscriminate killing. Often prisoners would be taken and assimilated into the tribe as a replacement of fallen warriors, and as a way to grow the tribe. There are at least a few accounts of white prisoners being discovered years later who didn’t want to be “rescued” from the community they were now part of. As for the scalping - both the French and British colonies offered bounties for the scalps of their enemies. The practice was taken up by both European colonials and native Americans.
@daffyd5867
@daffyd5867 10 месяцев назад
Still can't rely on the French...
@vaisseauspatialterre3768
@vaisseauspatialterre3768 9 месяцев назад
8,000 men including1,800 indians ? Not realistic. because it would mean that 6,200 french and canadiens would be in that detachment. There where not that many french militaries in Canada at that time.
@ErikKSwanson
@ErikKSwanson 9 месяцев назад
The numbers are taken from historical records and journals written by men at the siege. Louis Antoine de Bougainville, Aide de Camp to General Montcalm provided detailed breakdowns of the troops at the siege
@formacionG13
@formacionG13 10 месяцев назад
wheres magua at?
@williamswan9114
@williamswan9114 10 месяцев назад
Part of it also was most the people in the area the tux and surrounding villages and towns for Dutch German not British, that area was a Dutch colony, the French had the preset where would the mohawks another native tribes following an attack the surrounding villages and forcing them down the Hudson valley, Mohawk valley, once I got them out of their fortifications they got them on the trail and massacred men and women, what are the headings causes of this war was not only territory in the Americas but the old descendants of the battles in Europe against France and the church, and rapid bution by the French and the Catholic authorities in the world, my family was here they had death warrants on them from call Jim Holland ordered by the charts for them and any other descendants, pan the tribes were the paid mercenaries
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