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Unknown Soldiers 

The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered
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From The History Guy Vault
Following the Armistice on November 11, 1918, the world changed the way we honor our fallen. The History Guy remembers the creation of tombs to the Unknown Soldier from countries around the world and the United States.
This is original content based on research by The History Guy. Images in the Public Domain are carefully selected and provide illustration. As very few images of the actual event are available in the Public Domain, images of similar objects and events are used for illustration.
You can purchase the bow tie worn in this episode at The Tie Bar:
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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.
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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 THG
#history #thehistoryguy #unknownsoldier

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28 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 629   
@Anthony-xe2pz
@Anthony-xe2pz 3 года назад
I remember years ago reading how a mother who lost her boy during The Great War found comfort in the thought that the grave might be her son. If it only achieved that then in my humble opinion it's worthwhile.
@davidamoritz
@davidamoritz 3 года назад
Beautifully said
@ilanamillion8942
@ilanamillion8942 3 года назад
Anthony: what a lovely sentiment!
@meowmix3129
@meowmix3129 3 года назад
To the men and women, past and present, who put themselves in harms way for our continued freedom thank you.
@tinkmarshino
@tinkmarshino 3 года назад
This episode made me (for the second time since I left vietnam in 1972) cry.. I have always been able to hold my emotions in check. But by 4 minutes in I was over whelmed by my emotions and a flood of tears came forth that I could not stop.. For 3 minutes I struggled with it.. remember friends I had lost, remember stories my grandfather and my father told me of the first and second war.. I never realized until this moment the pain that I have carried all of these years never allowing it to have a voice in my mind.. I guess I am getting to old to shout it down and push it away any more. My doctor years ago said that it would all come back to me in a flood.. I guess he was right even though I laughed at him at the time.. We became friends for these last what 50 years? I guess I shall give him a call.. this is supposed to be good for me so I say thank you although I do not know how it could be.. I feel so empty.. Carry on my brother..
@monkeygraborange
@monkeygraborange 3 года назад
❤️
@michaelconran5252
@michaelconran5252 3 года назад
Only second time? Me I cry Everytime I hear the National Anthem or see a video like this. Thank you for your service and Semper Fi brother
@blackhawkinternationalsecu6962
@blackhawkinternationalsecu6962 3 года назад
I was rejected by the military for a heart condition that I never had. Played foot ball and ran track in high school. That was the only Doc that found that heart problem. I feel I have missed out serving my Country. I've missed the experiences, foreign countries, training, and the brotherhood. I did work as a Patrol Deputy for a number of years. Had to leave for better pay. So I did serve my community and I have some stories even though I was home every night. But its not like what you experienced. For that sir, I am envious. Thank you for your service.
@robertpyrosthenes1092
@robertpyrosthenes1092 3 года назад
Me too, Brother. I brought my squad home intact, but I lost friends. Too many friends. I gotta go plug these leaking eyes
@kirkmorrison6131
@kirkmorrison6131 3 года назад
Thank, you, Sir for your sacrifice
@PB-tr5ze
@PB-tr5ze 3 года назад
The Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington has a special place in my family. My dad had the privilege of being selected to serve in the US Army Honor Guard at Arlington, during the early years of the Vietnam war. He was selected to serve as a Tomb Guard, but never completed the training and was transferred to the Firing Party. He later became a medi-vac pilot and served until he was injured after his chopper was shot down. He never earned to sentinel badge, and it was one of his biggest regrets. What makes his story remarkable is that he was not a US citizen at the time, he was a street kid from Bogota Colombia and had only been in the US about five years before joining the Army. His time at the Tomb and in the Honor Guard, were some of his proudest moments. If you got him talking about his time in honor guard, he would demonstrate how to perform the 21 steps at the tomb. He would raise himself up to full height and move with this slow time precision that was even more impressive when was in his 70's. His service meant so much to him that at his memorial we had his pictures from his time in the Guard and we had the "Old Guard" emblem inscribed on his vessel. Here is my dad at Arlington during the Funeral for Astronaut Gus Grissom, the last funeral my father was assigned before being transferred to flight school (2:16 man at the front left of the formation). ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-6kP9jbFs9vQ.html
@TedBronson1918
@TedBronson1918 3 года назад
Great story about your dad ! Sorry to hear he passed. I enjoyed the film. I served in The Old Guard in the early 80's.
@laserbeam002
@laserbeam002 3 года назад
So many immigrants have came to this country and served in our military with great valor and honor. It's sad we have politicians who denigrate and demonize them simply because of their culture, skin color, accent...etc. I respect your father for her service.
@northdakotaham1752
@northdakotaham1752 3 года назад
@@laserbeam002 equally miserable are those politicians who use newcomers to our country as political pawns.
@PB-tr5ze
@PB-tr5ze 3 года назад
@@TedBronson1918 that's awesome. My dad took us to Arlington in the mid 80s. We got to take a tour of the Guard Barracks and I was even allowed to hold one of the rifles carried by the Tomb Guards. I remember thinking it was really heavy, granted I was around 10 at the time.
@TedBronson1918
@TedBronson1918 3 года назад
@@PB-tr5ze At that time they were carrying Springfield rifles. Don't quote me on the weight, but I think 12 pounds. I never cared. I carried an M-14 (14 lbs), as did most of the Old Guard except for A. Co and some specialty units like the Tomb or Continental Color Guard. Of course, I'm speaking only of ceremonial duties here.
@michaelconran5252
@michaelconran5252 3 года назад
As a retired Marine and combat veteran, I appreciated this video. I spent years not being able to go to cemeteries to visit some of my fallen Marines. After Fallujah in 2004, I basically spent Memorial Day alone, away from everyone. In 2007 I had an opportunity to go to Arlington, I have over a dozen Marines there that I served with throughout my 20 years. I mentally could not do it. I now am ready and hopefully I can make it back to visit my Marine Brothers.
@craigspakowski7398
@craigspakowski7398 3 года назад
They will be glad to see that you are healing.
@donovanchilton5817
@donovanchilton5817 3 года назад
You'll be happy you did and they'll be happy to finally see an old friend. Go.
@RetiredSailor60
@RetiredSailor60 3 года назад
Ooh rah Devil Dog. Semper Fi...Thanks for your service from a retired Navy Sailor
@demo-qe1ps
@demo-qe1ps 3 года назад
Semper Fi brother
@michaelkaylor6770
@michaelkaylor6770 3 года назад
Semper Fi
@blackstone777
@blackstone777 3 года назад
As a veteran, I think I can say this: the memorial neither glorifies nor prevents war. It's there to remember those who have made the ultimate sacrifice, and that is enough in my humble opinion.
@wretchedexcess1654
@wretchedexcess1654 3 года назад
Well said, Brother. The cost is what it's all about. We are a race of beings destine to fight as we do, even as just a mere sperm on the way to the egg. It is in our nature to do so. Knowing what is worth fighting a war over and what is not, is left up to those we have as leaders. Don't lay the blame for conflict at the feet of the soldier, they're there to end it, with everything they can give.
@geoffers99villa
@geoffers99villa 3 года назад
Here here. We'll always remember our fallen brethren. #longmayitcontinue #untilvalhalla
@georgemaragos2378
@georgemaragos2378 3 года назад
As a normal citizen ( no military history ) i have the tomb of the unknown soldier as a tribute to those who never came back, cannot be identified or more importantly a tribute to the family who still do not know what happened, sort of a combination of MIA and known deceased but not given a formal burial I do not see it as glorifying war, rather almost the opposite Regards George
@moonasha
@moonasha 3 года назад
cannot agree more. It's simply what it is. A memorial to those who have died in war, which seems to be an unavoidable aspect of our existence as a species.
@robinwells8879
@robinwells8879 3 года назад
I think for me it reminds me of the high cost of peace and the responsibility those of us who enjoy that peace have, not to squander their their precious legacy to us. I am deeply conscious this year that they may not appreciate our current shallow society and its present trajectory.
@JayKayKay7
@JayKayKay7 3 года назад
" Where uncommon valor was a common virtue."
@robertwright6311
@robertwright6311 3 года назад
They shall not grow old, As we that are left grow old, Age shall not weary them, Nor shall the years condemn. At the going down of the sun, and in the morning, We will remember them.
@yt.personal.identification
@yt.personal.identification 3 года назад
Lest we forget
@guns2112
@guns2112 3 года назад
So say we all!
@bforman1300
@bforman1300 3 года назад
The tomb of the unknown from the Vietnam war remains empty, thus still represents the unknowns and the missing from that war. Even if all remains for future wars are identified, there will still be missing persons, so empty tombs symbolizing the lost of future wars will remain relevant.
@bruno640
@bruno640 3 года назад
B Forman: Thank You, for saying with the eloquence that I could only fathom to draw. Indeed, there will be some who will never be found /recovered, simply because of the most horrific of reasons, out of respect for their-sacrifice, that possibly allowed for many of us to return home, alive. But it is not for us to ever-know, in this-life, but only when we meet our God... Cpl. R. Sauer, USMC '69 May/'71 April.
@la_old_salt2241
@la_old_salt2241 3 года назад
Well said. God bless. Rob Sehon, USNR, 1987-1995
@BlueSaphire70
@BlueSaphire70 3 года назад
How true. There are those who are still out on patrol and who need to be remembered.
@51WCDodge
@51WCDodge 3 года назад
The Term Cenotaph, drived from the Greek Kenotaphion , means Empty Tomb.
@bforman1300
@bforman1300 3 года назад
@@51WCDodge thank you!
@evillyn7895
@evillyn7895 3 года назад
"We don't know them all, but we *do* owe them all."
@thesaintjimmy88
@thesaintjimmy88 3 года назад
This was an enthralling subject to learn about. My heart goes out to those who have died in the service of their nation and will never be recognized.
@DemocratsareagentsofSATAN
@DemocratsareagentsofSATAN 3 года назад
*"All war is a symptom of man's failure as a thinking animal..."* Semper Fi
@Doobie3010
@Doobie3010 3 года назад
The fact that the modern human beings are the only variety of our species left,is probably a hint of our aggressive,violent nature’s,even back in our prehistoric past.
@ChipmunkRapidsMadMan1869
@ChipmunkRapidsMadMan1869 3 года назад
War is the historical norm. Peace is the anomaly. The fact that peace has proliferated on so much of our planet is the result of one nation doing the extraordinary thing of security of the seas.
@RCAvhstape
@RCAvhstape 3 года назад
You see how aggressive adult chimpanzees are? We humans are talking chimps, with nuclear weapons.
@neilmccann5826
@neilmccann5826 3 года назад
“We sleep safely in our beds because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence on those who would do us harm.” - George Orwell
@jacquelinechristensen9231
@jacquelinechristensen9231 3 года назад
The Air Force Strategic Command had the motto “You can sleep safely tonight Because We Will Be Awake”.
@terryboyer1342
@terryboyer1342 3 года назад
@@jacquelinechristensen9231 Actually it was "Peace is Our Profession." Strategic Air Command was both a United States Department of Defense Specified Command and a United States Air Force Major Command, responsible for Cold War command and control of two of the three ... Wikipedia Founder: Curtis LeMay Founded: March 21, 1946 Motto: "Peace is Our Profession" Headquarters location: Offutt Air Force Base, NE Branch: United States Air Force Notable commanders: Gen Curtis LeMay
@Dirtzoo
@Dirtzoo 3 года назад
Amen
@jacquelinechristensen9231
@jacquelinechristensen9231 3 года назад
@@terryboyer1342 Terry, my father was career 33 year Air Force pilot. We were at Omaha and yes, you are correct. The slogan was Peace is our profession, but at the gate side post, what I noted was written on the wall. We are both correct.😀
@terryboyer1342
@terryboyer1342 3 года назад
@@jacquelinechristensen9231 No insult intended to you! 😄 To be totally accurate I just found this. Strategic Air Command - Conservapediaconservapedia.com › Strategic_Air_Command During General LeMay's tenure, the motto of SAC had been, "War is our profession; peace is our product." In 1958, after LeMay left SAC, the motto was changed to just "Peace is Our Profession" to sound less menacing.
@seandobson499
@seandobson499 3 года назад
I remember my dead and injured comrades every day of the year and usually attend the Royal British Legion Armistice Day service in Alicante but this year, because of Covid-19,there are no flights to mainland Spain, and we were all asked to pay our respects from our own doorsteps and it just felt so bleak and sad. I salute all those men and women from all nations who did their bit.
@RetiredSailor60
@RetiredSailor60 3 года назад
I visited Alicante in 1995 while deployed on USS Whidbey Island LSD 41.
@ghostrideri6289
@ghostrideri6289 3 года назад
I spent 12 years in SAC (Strategic Air Command) the mottoes we had during my tours were "Piece through Strength" then changed to "Piece is our Profession". Behind both we trained for something we all hoped would never happen, and thank God it never did. I ended my tour in 1992 as an 80% Disabled Veteran and yes I was in the "sandbox" for Desert Shield/Storm 1708th PBW(H) {Providential Bombardment Wing (Heavy)}, and as a veteran I understand the "check' we ,the veterans, signed to our nation. The question was ask about how the Tomb of the Unknown should be regarded, the answer is personal to EVERY person. For me it is a reminder of the cost of war, not in money but in blood and sacrifice, and as a veteran I was and still am willing to honor that 'check' if needed. My oath to defend my country does not have an expiration date. Please forgive my dissertation and, Thank you for helping us all remember.
@robinwells8879
@robinwells8879 3 года назад
Every year across the length and breadth of the UK, with the sad exception of this year, the names of the dead of the parish from two world wars are read out in church at the remembrance service. I am moved to tears most every year by the list from just our two small villages especially when it comes to the few families that seemed to pay particularly dearly. When we stop remembering, we risk being reminded. Thank you for the insights and your sensitive and thoughtfully crafted words as ever.
@657449
@657449 3 года назад
I watched a video yesterday. They Shall Not Grow Old. Great War movies colorized by computer. When I first saw the trailer last year, I wondered where they found so many actors with bad teeth and so many operating tanks. Then it dawned on me that it was colorized. Color movie film was available then but was expensive and very difficult to shoot and develop. Watching the war in color instead of black and white really shows the horror of warfare. Also with color you notice the red poppies all over the battlefield. Watch that movie and you will realize why honoring an unknown soldier was so important. There were so many of them.
@darylhoppough168
@darylhoppough168 3 года назад
This video was a great service to veterans. It brings knowledge and understanding to the generations who have not served. Thank you
@sneekmatrix
@sneekmatrix 3 года назад
War is a disease inflicted on the innocent
@yogi70-76
@yogi70-76 3 года назад
Thank you for recognizing and honoring all of my brother and sister veterans on Veterans Day. The respect you show to the history of the world makes this one of the best channels on RU-vid.
@jamesfrankel7827
@jamesfrankel7827 3 года назад
As a veteran, I agree with my fellow brother in arms. The tomb of the unknown solder neither glorifies nor may prevent a nation from going to war but the stark, visceral reminder of the cost of war should, I hope, remind everyone of the ultimate cost our service members have pledged in their service to serve, protect and defend this nation.
@blackhawkinternationalsecu6962
@blackhawkinternationalsecu6962 3 года назад
Tomb of the Unknown Solider leads me think of the sailors who've died and were burred at sea and have no tomb stone.
@steveg5933
@steveg5933 3 года назад
Im an old Corpsman US Navy Came across this a few weeks ago "In Waters Deep' In ocean wastes no poppies blow, No crosses stand in ordered row, There young hearts sleep...beneath the wave... The spirited, the good, the brave, But stars a constant vigil keep, For them who lie beneath the deep. 'Tis true you cannot kneel in prayer On certain spot and think, "He's there." But you can to the ocean go... See whitecaps marching row on row; Know one for him will always ride... In and out...with every tide. And when your span of life is passed, He'll meet you at the "Captain's Mast." And they who mourn on distant shore For sailors who'll come home no more, Can dry their tears and pray for these Who rest beneath the heaving seas... For stars that shine and winds that blow And white caps marching row on row. And they can never lonely be For when they lived...they chose the sea. The poem is called 'In Waters Deep' and was written by Eileen Mahoney
@blackhawkinternationalsecu6962
@blackhawkinternationalsecu6962 3 года назад
@@steveg5933 That is a beautiful and touching poem. Thanks for sharing.
@ajg617
@ajg617 3 года назад
@@blackhawkinternationalsecu6962 I couldn't agree more.
@williamtiebout4142
@williamtiebout4142 3 года назад
Well done, Sir! ❤
@la_old_salt2241
@la_old_salt2241 3 года назад
@@steveg5933 Thanks Doc.
@dannyjones3840
@dannyjones3840 3 года назад
Thank you Lance. It was an honor and a privilege to serve my country. GySgt USMC ret 1994-2014
@gus473
@gus473 3 года назад
Semper Fi! Semper Paratus!
@steverennie5787
@steverennie5787 3 года назад
Although you have many great episodes to enjoy, @The History Guy , this is by far the best one I've seen. This is a very fitting episode regarding our honoured dead. Thank you. "There's a very good reason why you've never received a bill for the freedom you enjoy... someone already paid for it."
@propanepusher101
@propanepusher101 3 года назад
I lost my #3 son in Iraq, on 6/4/09. I have closure because his body was sent home. If the Tomb Of The Unkown Soldier brings closure or a small degree of closure to a grieving parent, spouse, son, or daughter because they can believe their loved one is that Unkown Soldier then the Tomb is worthwhile and not a wasted monument. Of what the Tomb represents is not lost on some of us and seen as a Sacred Value of Remembrance and Honor. Thank you for this video.
@garretvaughn7936
@garretvaughn7936 3 года назад
I am honored to say that one of my former students served as a member of the elite US Army Honor Guard at Arlington. His stories of his service at the Tomb of The Unknown Soldiers are enthralling to hear. Thank you for your service, Todd Carlson. And thank you, History Guy, for reminding us of the sacrifice made by so many all over the world in the service of their countries. May they eternally Rest In Peace.
@TheMyeloman
@TheMyeloman 3 года назад
As a U.S. Air Force veteran, this thank you felt the most sincere I’ve ever heard… I took my family (wife is also a veteran) to Washington D.C. where we visited all the memorials, including Arlington and the Tomb of the Unknowns. I hope the lessons interred therein stay with my children.
@tomfurie2996
@tomfurie2996 3 года назад
Nations do no start wars. Self-serving leaders do. Solders serve nations, regardless of the leader. Hence, we honor the solder, not the leader.
@jdgower1
@jdgower1 3 года назад
Five years ago I posted the following on my FB page, and my intent with that post is pretty much what I see the intent of your comment as being - even though it's hella more wordy. "There is no doubt that the ultimate primary reason most veterans enlisted is because they wanted to serve their fellow man. Even the reluctant draftees who would not have signed up otherwise ended up fighting the same battles as the ones who were 100% gung ho. What each veteran sacrificed for, whether they saw battle or not, was the idea of the service they gave. In the military, you project the policies of the nation as they are. You don't get a choice of which policies you project or which front you fight on, but you fight, nonetheless. It's like writing a blank check in faith and hope that the check is used for good. And, much more often than not, it is. For this, we all owe an un-payable debt of gratitude. Veteran's Day is not a day for the policy makers, but the enforcers of the policies made. To offer up your life in faith and hope that your fellow citizen elected a leader for you that has the best interest of all in his heart, is an ever riskier gamble. But, good men and women keep making that sacrifice. Thank God for those who would bet their lives on the wisdom of their fellow man, and who will risk their lives in order to preserve the ability of their fellow man to enact that wisdom over himself and all else. And, as a people, I truly believe that if one is as appreciative of the sacrifices made by others on our behalf, we should endeavor to sacrifice thusly, at least in so much as choosing the people and philosophy that sends our most stalwart people off to defend that which makes us all who we are. Veterans can only protect us from outside enemies, it is up to the rest of us to protect us from those within who would subject us to what our enemies wish for."
@inawrocki207
@inawrocki207 3 года назад
It's impossibly sad that the price is paid by those who don't even know or dislike one another. I'm sure that these combined millions of Unknown Soldiers could have sat down together and been good friends across their lifetimes. It's a handful of leaders, their politics, and their greed that engender that kind of war, but their people who pay the price.
@durangojoe1123
@durangojoe1123 3 года назад
All gave some, some gave all. The unknown soldier gave everything, even his name.
@davidgun6826
@davidgun6826 3 года назад
Thank you for this video, we must never forget the sacrifice our service men and women have made for our freedom. my son is pictured in this video, he is a tomb sentinel.
@ihave1god
@ihave1god 3 года назад
I’m a veteran and I believe that remembering the lost does not glorify war but hits hard about how war destroys everything in its way. Thank you to all veterans and prayers to all gold star families. God bless America.
@tedwardfox
@tedwardfox 3 года назад
To the comment quoting George Orwell, I wish to add, that not just "rough men" but sincere, gentle and determined men and women make up the military of many nations. We do our duty when and if called upon and can range our actions from a gentle and reassuring touch of an old person's cheek to a pat on a young girl or boy's head all the way to acting with the worst of violence that only a few individuals every must take. And, since the early 1970s we do it voluntarily and mostly because we so strongly believe in this nation we gladly accept all the challenges involved. For anyone who has never thought of being part of the military, I must say that it becomes evident in the way some utterly fail to work together with those around them for any "good." There seems to be a level of selfishness in non-military younger adults that places their wishes above almost all other people's. That is sad. I volunteered in 1973 and even took part in the evacuation of Viet Nam with all the attendant horrors of that. I often still sleep with that at night; it is something I wish to never experience again, but cannot deny made me a stronger person and would not wish it to have never happened.
@connieembury1
@connieembury1 3 года назад
Thank you for remembering and reminding us of the great sacrifice that many have made to bring peace not war.
@honodle7219
@honodle7219 3 года назад
Thank you for your kind remarks about veterans. May the day come when no one need fall in battle ever again.
@sntstafford
@sntstafford 3 года назад
To all those who served..... Thank you for your service........... And welcome home.
@codybailey855
@codybailey855 3 года назад
Thank you sir. You’re gratitude is especially welcomed because of your sincerity. You have helped bring stories from throughout history that really do deserve to be remembered. At the end of the day, that’s all we really want for our service....is to be remembered. Thank you sir. From the bottom of my heart.
@chachadodds5860
@chachadodds5860 3 года назад
A dignified tribute to those fallen in defense of freedom.
@kantemirovskaya1lightninga30
@kantemirovskaya1lightninga30 3 года назад
History Guy, I thank you for helping us to all not forget the sacrifices made and the lessons forgotten (or never taught!). As a combat veteran (Heavy Anti Tank Infantry) I applaud you and your efforts in teaching us needed lessons. An appropriate and timely lesson this one is-thank you for the class.
@Nordern
@Nordern 3 года назад
i have been to Paris and the Arch as a kid I didn't know, or was told about the tomb, i truly wish i was when i was there
@brannancloward
@brannancloward 3 года назад
Same here! I had no idea... People should not let their kids around these places without telling them what they are! I'm going to yell at my parents when I get home.....
@uppastdawn7627
@uppastdawn7627 3 года назад
I arrived at the Arch when the daily ceremony was starting- It was blocked off and I was worried that I wouldn’t get to go up close. A local guy explained it to me. There was a ceremony and some children sang “La Marsailles.” It was moving, to say the least.
@Jim-ie6uf
@Jim-ie6uf 3 года назад
Same here, I was 19 at the time.
@kevinbourke1847
@kevinbourke1847 3 года назад
Me too
@stevecobb6001
@stevecobb6001 3 года назад
Thank you Sir. We MUST ALL REMEMBER. AND WHAT LIVES HAVE BEEN LOST! So that WE can do what we do today!
@RetiredSailor60
@RetiredSailor60 3 года назад
Have witnessed the Changing Of The Guard many times. Very solemn ceremony. OS1(SW/AW) USN Retired.
@tygrkhat4087
@tygrkhat4087 3 года назад
When my sisters and I visited Washington, we had some slight disagreements on which sights to see. There was no disagreement on seeing the Changing of the Guard.
@RetiredSailor60
@RetiredSailor60 3 года назад
@@tygrkhat4087 Never a disappointment. Tugs at your heart knowing every person buried there are deserving of everyone's respect.
@JohnDoe-pv2iu
@JohnDoe-pv2iu 3 года назад
The honoring of the unknown soldier is the honorable remembrance all who gave all. It is very important to remember that all Servicemen who gave their life are as important as any named, remembered or otherwise seen as special people. No serviceman's life is more valuable than anothers because of name, wealth or social standing. God Bless all Veterans. Yall Take Care and be safe, John
@lloydkinder
@lloydkinder 3 года назад
I has been my honor to serve in the US Navy. Thank you.
@allanlank
@allanlank 3 года назад
Thank you for making my service worth while. "History Deserves To Be Remembered" Lest We Forget.
@kirkwilson10
@kirkwilson10 3 года назад
That padre reminded me of a real deal "chappie" whose MO is to go with the men on their missions. Too many dangerous places to list... His duty station now? Arlington. Well deserved post. Thanks HG and thank you to all the warriors who have our backs!
@camrenwick
@camrenwick 3 года назад
I served as a soldier 1974 - 1985. You will never see me in uniform (now). I'm just quiet and keep to myself. I don't care about what some people might think. I don't consider myself to be a hero or brave. I don't look for any gratitude or praise. I did my job to the best of my ability. Being part of something bigger than me, trying to keep peace as a warning to any threat. Training to defend against any aggression. Live in peace with each other and be humble.
@terrywashington8669
@terrywashington8669 3 года назад
Thank you for reminding us of the true cost of war and of those who pay the ultimate price in the service of their country.
@vf24renegade23
@vf24renegade23 3 года назад
I get thanked for my service often and i always appreciate it, but from you with your love and knowledge of history, it is very meaningful. Thank you.
@Music-lx1tf
@Music-lx1tf 3 года назад
I did 16+ months in Nam. You made me ball like a baby. Thank you.
@JennRighter
@JennRighter 3 года назад
Rest In Peace Andre Williams, I’m sorry you never knew your daughter and she never knew you, and that you never could marry your fiancé. We love you and think about you all the time. Your brother is still crazy, but he’s doing well. My brother misses you more than anything to this day. This is my favorite video you’ve ever made, and that says a lot because I love every video. Thank you.
@JennRighter
@JennRighter 3 года назад
And Dre, Aaliyah still shares the videos you made from Iraq and sent to her mom. I just miss you 😢.
@christophhintze7917
@christophhintze7917 3 года назад
Thank you kind sir for this fitting memorial to our fallen dead. Like many vets I was moved to tears by your presentation. I am a US Navy veteran of the Cold War, serving from 1975 to 1981.
@terrygrossmann2295
@terrygrossmann2295 3 года назад
I thank all who have and currently are serving for our country. I feel for those who have died while serving. I especially feel for the families who will never know what happened to their loved one.
@nando03012009
@nando03012009 3 года назад
Bravo! This truly is history that needs to be remembered. I love how you included not just the USA but also other respective countries. Thank you to all the services man and women on beautiful planet we call home.
@dennyhensley7762
@dennyhensley7762 3 года назад
Thank you. Prayers and blessings to all that have served.
@scottfabel7492
@scottfabel7492 3 года назад
This video caused me to weep deeply for our brothers and sisters who have given their lives for our freedom. Thank you Mr. HG.
@ChiefWarder
@ChiefWarder 3 года назад
I have been to both locations in Paris and Rome as well as the D-day cemetery. We in uniform thank you Sir for remembering us and our brothers/Sisters before us.
@Tydusis1
@Tydusis1 3 года назад
The sacrifice of the unknown soldier is that their war was so bloody, violent, and costly that they lost their own name, their identity. We know they gave their lives for their country, but we don't know what their hopes were, their dreams, if they had a family, a son who misses them, a mother whose heart is broken. Therefore, we must assume theirs was like any of ours, and we should be cautious, not eager, to go to war, for it could be our own hopes and dreams that are sacrificed by the cost of war. Their sacrifice must be venerated and remembered because if not for them, would it be us instead that are forgotten?
@4b131
@4b131 3 года назад
May all lost in war rest in piece and thank you for your service and ultimate sacrifice.
@MrScott1171
@MrScott1171 3 года назад
On November 11, 2020 here in Manchester, CT, we celebrated the 100th anniversary of the Manchester Memorial Hospital. It is a living Memorial to the 45 Manchester residents who fought and Died in WWI. That is a history the deserves to be remembered. I hope you could do a video on it.
@johnhickerson3290
@johnhickerson3290 3 года назад
The tomb is a holy place for a soldier. Sad to say but war advances society if several ways. I myself have served and know sometimes great violence is all some world leaders will understand.
@briansmit2917
@briansmit2917 3 года назад
As a South African I agree the politician s are stirring pots,social networking covers everything. Media run by government SAbC turn everything into a racial issue in many instances it's not.But the problem with this is that most people don't even realize they been brainwashed. They fed hatred toward s each other and in the end you end up with a blood bath.
@wendychavez5348
@wendychavez5348 3 года назад
That is a wonderful tribute you gave, to all who have defended their homeland. Not all have done it willingly, though if they did it honorably they deserve our thanks--even if their homeland is not the one "I" hail from.
@jasonfullerton7763
@jasonfullerton7763 3 года назад
I have been to three Unknown Soldier national memorials: Arlington National Cemetery (USA), Victor Emmanuel II Monument (Italy), and National War Memorial (Canada). In Arlington, you know you are in a cemetery, surrounded by soldiers' graves.. In Rome, you know you are at a great monument to Italy. In Ottawa, you know you are in Ottawa. It is so low key that I didn't know what it was until I got up close. Each felt right for the nation it represented. Each got a moment of silent respect from me.
@RandalBauska
@RandalBauska 3 года назад
In behalf of my Grandfather R.T.Bauska, and his son R.T.Bauska, my dad, thank you who read this, thank you for remembering their sacrifice for our United States of America. Grateful, R.T.Bauska. My son is R.T.Bauska.
@vermasean
@vermasean 3 года назад
I’d recommend doing a video on the ‘Missing Man Table’. 🙏🇺🇸
@dougc190
@dougc190 3 года назад
I've seen two of those one was at a hotel in Gallup New Mexico, and the other one was at a eagles in Barstow California. I agree that would be a nice video to do
@JohnRodriguesPhotographer
@JohnRodriguesPhotographer 3 года назад
Agreed
@KJAkk
@KJAkk 3 года назад
Always set up at VFW events.
@mdwallace
@mdwallace 3 года назад
Any non deployed military dining facility will usually have a table
@burningchrome70
@burningchrome70 3 года назад
Very good.
@m1t2a1
@m1t2a1 3 года назад
The poem In Flanders Fields by John McCrae is stuck in my head.
@drewhartwell2559
@drewhartwell2559 3 года назад
Thank you for your commitment to history and passing on the lessons that it teaches. This is one of your finest videos yet.
@woody1320
@woody1320 3 года назад
Thank you so much for another very well done presentation. I too found myself with leaky eyes for all the sacrifices made by our veterans. Thank you on behalf of a grateful nation!!
@TXGoneRiding
@TXGoneRiding 3 года назад
Thank You. I served 21 years in the Marine Corps and this video moved me
@jimsn9624
@jimsn9624 3 года назад
I learned some today! I Never knew other countries had a Tomb of the unknown soldier. Great video! Thank thank you! 🇺🇸
@radarmike6713
@radarmike6713 3 года назад
Canada is also the ONLY nation to have had a honor guard killed at the tomb of their unknown soldier. It is so disheartening as a former Canadian Forces Airmen to know that we had someone murder fellow brotheran while honouring our much loved respected and honoured brother from WWI.
@Alexei2539
@Alexei2539 3 года назад
12:40 I think we honor the soldier because he was called, went to serve his country, and made the ultimate sacrifice in carrying out his duty. That deserves some measure of respect and reverence whether or not we agree with the war or the circumstances itself.
@skyden24195
@skyden24195 3 года назад
That bit about France, U.K., & U.S. awarding each other's unknown with each country's respective highest military award is awesome.
@David.Anderson
@David.Anderson 3 года назад
I want to thank you History guy for all the History you bring me.
@willyeverlearn7052
@willyeverlearn7052 3 года назад
With tears welling in my eyes, thank you.
@WiliiamNoTell
@WiliiamNoTell 3 года назад
A big salute to all our veterans!
@angeldelacruz2388
@angeldelacruz2388 3 года назад
As a veteran of the first Gulf War. I believe that honoring the unknowns, is a way to remember all have never left the war. We may leave the battle field but it is always with us. Some can not beat the demons that come with combat and we need to remember them as well.
@heavenst.murgatroyd3128
@heavenst.murgatroyd3128 3 года назад
I especially appreciated your sincerity in this episode, Sir. Those of us that served wholeheartedly need to hear appreciation from those who hold us dear.
@franknicholson6108
@franknicholson6108 3 года назад
My dad died in 1961. He served in WW1 But because I was only 9 at the time I never really asked him about it. I really wish I had. Excellent as usual. Thanks for such a heart string tugger.
@BaronSamedi1959
@BaronSamedi1959 3 года назад
The Belgian "Unknown Soldier" was chosen by a blind veteran of the Great War among twelve coffins of unknown soldiers. At least, that was the story my grandfather, himself a veteran of the Great War, always told me.
@mookzmom
@mookzmom 3 года назад
Bless you for this. Counting myself blessed to have had my father, after he was badly wounded in the Korean War. I can't imagine the pain of the many who have ad losses- much less, a missing and lost.
@robbabcock_
@robbabcock_ 3 года назад
This is a really moving, beautiful tradition. Thanks for a very moving video.
@donschellenberg6625
@donschellenberg6625 3 года назад
Outstanding Episode...Least We Forget...Amen 🙏
@joeliebhauser816
@joeliebhauser816 3 года назад
Excellent segment. So wonderful, and unusual, to see history presented nowadays with little or no political or revisionist spin; just the history. Thank you.
@Chris_at_Home
@Chris_at_Home 3 года назад
Your are most welcome Sir. Thank you for keeping this history alive.
@johnadams5714
@johnadams5714 3 года назад
I watched this 15 hrs after posting. I was truly moved. God bless you History Guy. And keep up the excellent work.
@Your.Uncle.AngMoh
@Your.Uncle.AngMoh 3 года назад
Thank you for this. LEST WE FORGET.
@Dsandelin44
@Dsandelin44 3 года назад
You are very welcome sir. It was an honor to serve.
@garyodle5663
@garyodle5663 3 года назад
I served but was caught by surprise by your thanks. Yes, I cried.
@MightyTiki
@MightyTiki 3 года назад
Becoming an unknown in a time of war and conflict is the worst thing that can happen to a service member. Your family will never have a physical place to mourn you, they will never know what happened to their loved one. Their official status will remain as “missing-in-action”. I’ve often visited the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at the Garden. And thought about the loved ones of those individuals, they not only fell in defense of the United States of America but in turn lost their identity. Not far from the Amphitheater rests the Tomb of the Civil War Unknowns with 2,111 individuals in Section 26. Not as popular as the TUS, it’s still an impressive reminder of those who came generations earlier. It’s not a reminder that war is terrible, it’s about those individuals who tragically lost their identity to fight a cause in defense of this country and they should be honored by those who visit their final resting place.
@TheoneandonlyJobis
@TheoneandonlyJobis 3 года назад
In today's climate I often forget why I chose to serve. Your videos are the slap in the face I need to feel proud again. Thank you
@ChrisBeardsley
@ChrisBeardsley 3 года назад
Very interesting, and glad you brought the point up about forensics. To your last point... As with almost anything, we have at least 2 choices; to see it as a celebration of, or a reminder to appreciate and stay mindful of.
@Furniture121
@Furniture121 3 года назад
Thank you for a thoughtful, and respectful video. As a member of the RCAF I offer my thanks for the good work you do preserving history, and making sure it is remembered.
@lostsoldier212
@lostsoldier212 3 года назад
History Guy! Thank you for making video. It was great and I appreciate it as a Vet and as a friend of those who served and died
@Ashfielder
@Ashfielder 3 года назад
The British unknown warrior was buried with a Crusader’s sword, a fitting tribute for the representation of all British fighting men who have fallen.
@51WCDodge
@51WCDodge 3 года назад
The sword was from the Royal collection at Windsor. The placing of the tomb at the West Door of Westminster Abbey was decided so that it would be visible to all. There are a number of traditions that have built up. First it is the only tomb in the Abbey not walked over. Second Royal Brides at the Abbey , starting with HM QueenElizabeth , The Queen Mother, lay thier wedding boquets on the tomb. The first was to Honour the Queen Mother's brother Ferugus killed in 1915. No soldiers gaurd the tomb, for various reasons, including that it was felt it would segregate the Tomb from the people.
@revade6698
@revade6698 3 года назад
My great uncle Mickey was shot down over the English Channel during the Battle of Britain. His body was never found. R.I.P.
@Deludedcrackhead
@Deludedcrackhead 3 года назад
Thanks for uploading a better understanding of something so worthy of remembering. Yet another great video.
@phillipjones3342
@phillipjones3342 3 года назад
Thank you THG for the tribute to our service members and thanks to all who served
@SteveMcInerney
@SteveMcInerney 3 года назад
I was there at the entombment of the Unknown Soldier in Canberra, AU, in the early 90's. Part of the crowd on Anzac Parade. One of those events that is unforgettable. The lone bugle playing the last post. The silence, when even the background city traffic noises seemed to stop. Emotionally powerful. And dare I say, nary a dry eye in the entire crowd. My grandfather fought on the somme in the great war, but he, fortunately, came home.
@benjamintrejo9307
@benjamintrejo9307 3 года назад
Got all teary eyed multiple times, great video.😔🙏🏼
@guychatterton6643
@guychatterton6643 3 года назад
I have never been so emotionally affected by a utube video. Thank you!
@bryantsemenza9703
@bryantsemenza9703 3 года назад
I learned even more about the tomb of the unknown soldiers, how this was started and how many Countries honor them. Great job History Guy.
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