Last Witness to Abraham Lincoln's Assassination
Mr. Samuel J. Seymour, the last living eyewitness to the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln at Ford's Theater in Washington, D.C. was the mystery guest on the February 8, 1956 episode of the I've Got a Secret game show. Mr. Seymour (March 28, 1860 - April 12, 1956) was actually 95 years of age at the time of this appearance instead of 96.
Our new music channel - Life in the Music
2-hour videos of music from the 1600s-1900s
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Host: Garry Moore
Panelists from left to right: Bill Cullen, Jayne Meadows, Henry Morgan, Lucile Ball
Пікірлер: 1 100
This man went from witness Lincoln death to end of the old west through Histories 2 World Wars. From horses to automobiles and TV. That's living a full life
@rayjr62
Жыл бұрын
And don't forget the Blacksmith, the Cooper, the building of the Transcontinental Railroad, The discovery of Gold in California and the Great Cabbage Fart Panic of 1881. Imagine that.
@GilliganMGCrebs
Жыл бұрын
And he lived through a real pandemic of the spanish flu that actually killed healthy young people for a total world wide death toll 3 times as much than our "pandemic" which largely was only fatal to the elderly and unhealthy people at a time when the population of the world was 1/6 of the population now, he lived through the economic depression of 1920 and the great depression of 1929.
@SteveinSanFrancisco
Жыл бұрын
@Gilligan M.G. Crebs lol... ok Karen
@samstrain
Жыл бұрын
We are slightly more medically advanced but okay
@stevensteven3417
Жыл бұрын
I witnessed the rise of the Internet and smartphones, soon the rise of AI and will go out with a Bang in the upcoming WWIII.
History is closer to us than we thought. This man made it from horse and buggy days to modern television times.
@notmefrfr
2 жыл бұрын
His voice and image have made it over 150 years to the modern internet times
@Ericsaidful
Жыл бұрын
History is closer than we thought? 150 years is nothing, even in a human time scale. Humanoids are 2.5 million years old. We all like to pretend, because we are taught to do so, that change is fast. Well, in the grand scheme of things it isn't.
@thenickli
Жыл бұрын
The Amish are in both
@calken546
Жыл бұрын
A great time to be alive he saw the Car, the Airplane and Television.
@Wavezone304
Жыл бұрын
Hard to believe we have people cutting off their private parts these days
96yo man fell down the stairs, got up and walked to a tv show the next day, respect.
@chelyalynniyah1997
Жыл бұрын
People, from those days, were made from a different cloth. If we did the same exact thing today, we would have not survived.
@MrJx4000
Жыл бұрын
And was as sharp as tack.
@MrImadummy
Жыл бұрын
@@chelyalynniyah1997 speak for yourself
@someguy892
Жыл бұрын
Natural selection really. The guy grew up in a world without antibiotics, modern medicine or worker safety laws. If the man wasn't harder than concrete he would died decades ago.
@Nonduality
Жыл бұрын
I witnessed his falling down the stairs.
Im glad he didnt miss the show, he made history
@AR-Exp
Жыл бұрын
These days folks don't leave the house if they spot a zit on their forehead
@thebigpicture2032
Жыл бұрын
Sadly he never fully recovered from the fall and died a few weeks later.
@TooCool4You69
Жыл бұрын
He was closer to death from fell down stair but got crit injury and died later on.. if he cancel the show because of fell down he wouldn’t make it to tell the tale..
@jessicahannah2522
Жыл бұрын
How did he make history by being on the show?
@Budbrothers420
Жыл бұрын
@@jessicahannah2522 because the life he had what he went through and saw if you can’t understand the beauty of that can’t really explain it better
This made me cry in so many ways. First being five years old witnessed a horrible historical incident, second he fell down the stairs at 96 and still came to the show with his story and third that they gave him the money anyway because he came to tell his story. I applaud all thee above
@rambles2727
Жыл бұрын
They were just built different back then i guess
@adamandrews4107
Жыл бұрын
He got a can of Prince Albert tobacco to boot!
@namedfcsssdff
Жыл бұрын
Three years
@beegee7573
Жыл бұрын
Stfu. sensitive
@sinbadsailor1963
Жыл бұрын
Don't be so gullible.
I love how gentle and kind they were to this sweet old man.
@thedawg2023
Жыл бұрын
Me too. Back then they really knew how to respect their elders!!
@darklex5150
Жыл бұрын
@@thedawg2023bruh we Still do.
@nanashi7779
Жыл бұрын
@@darklex5150 If we still do, it's becoming decreasingly clear that its so
@darklex5150
Жыл бұрын
@@nanashi7779 we respect our elders as much as any generation, there are 8 billion humans in the world, some treat their elders with respect and care, others don't. It's not a "nowadays" thing.
@nanashi7779
Жыл бұрын
@@darklex5150 You're right, saying "nowadays" is a massive overgeneralisation and inaccurate. It depends with society, I apologise for being unclear in my last comment
My husband’s grandfather was born in 1896. He was a blacksmith and lived well over 100 years. He was the most interesting person to listen to. In his lifetime he saw technology grow by leaps and bounds. He made all the old wrought iron fixtures in Seattle. In fact they are still there in pioneer square. From electricity, phones, vehicles and space technology, he saw it all. He would slowly shake his head and say “I don’t understand what the world is coming too.” Young boys being disrespectful to their parents really bothered him.
@bobsaget9717
Жыл бұрын
Old folks new all about respect
@homebodyheaven6114
Жыл бұрын
Interesting that these men lived so long before everyone started getting va xinated all the time.
@ryanm2148
Жыл бұрын
Someone said loosely one time we will never be as good as our fathers they were never as good as there fathers and they would never be as good as there fathers before them it’s just the way life works
@breathedeepnow1
Жыл бұрын
They do not make things like they used to. I live out here near historical Annapolis Maryland and there’s a lot of wrought iron work and I just love it. Nowadays, when they build homes, they just light weaker aluminum product or hard Vynal railing 😫
@AnalogX64
Жыл бұрын
I was born in the 70s. Internet, Sell Phones were not a common thing. So similar I've seen technology grow by leaps and bounds.
1860-1950’s is such an insane time frame, so much experience so much advancement as a human race in that time.
@patrickstockton2091
Жыл бұрын
Prolly doing a sequel to ALL THE PRETTY HORSES...
The old man died two months after this was filmed. Amazing.
@shindama
Жыл бұрын
Probably died of a subdural
@stevedavidson5038
Жыл бұрын
I hope he spent that $80 well.
@phantomlord5707
Жыл бұрын
why amazing??
@theoneandonly1158
Жыл бұрын
Due to the fall maybe. Hard to recover.
@Aventagatti123
Жыл бұрын
@@phantomlord5707 I'm late, but it isn't amazing that he passed obviously. Its amazing that we have the voice and film of a person who witnessed such a significant moment in history. If he were to have died a few days sooner, we wouldn't have this incredible story on film.
The closest thing to a time machine is video recordings of life way back when. We are very fortunate to live in today’s time with all of the modern technologies and access to everything you could imagine at your finger tips. This gentleman could not imagine that his video recording would be accessible to the whole world and we get to learn from it his experience. Thanks for sharing.
@thewewguy8t88
Жыл бұрын
hey here is an interesting thought but is anyone who was on this episode who is still alive.(maybe if anyone was in their 30s or 20s but they look a bit older then that its hard to tell)
@Skorpio420
4 ай бұрын
What's sad is how many of these recordings have been lost to time due to degradation, taped over, or just flat out lost.
I’m so glad this game show contacted this gentleman to tell his story. How neat. I’ve always been a huge Lincoln fan. Since I was a little girl growing up in Springfield, IL.
@mazmonte77
2 жыл бұрын
Have you check ' The Portable Lincoln?' It's an amazing portable compendium of his speeches and correspondences. I am a big fan and admirer, born in Havana , though.
@behindthen0thing525
2 жыл бұрын
Oh ok
@fetusgrinderofficial5923
Жыл бұрын
mindblowing
@terrybrown3224
Жыл бұрын
After digging deep into lincoln I suggest people read up on the Douglass Lincoln debates. You will see 2 men one pro slavery one not depending on the audience. Research don't regurgitate. Great program this was.
@marcietorrence5361
Жыл бұрын
Lincoln was a murderer, openly hated by his wife. The slaves could have been sent back or made into share croppers, but Lincoln was a blood-rhirsty criminal who wanted the spoils of War. We still hate Abe in the South. It wasn't that long ago.. I wanted to inherit an antu-bellum house, but Abe burned it down!!!!!!
The older folks aboard Titanic (1912) witnessed the Civil War and Lincoln's assassination. Harriet Tubman was still alive. Many younger adults on the ship lived to see the Boeing 707 replace the steamship age of world travel. The youngest survivors of the shipwreck witnessed the first iPhone before they passed away. That's "Elapsed time from Marconi Wireless Telegraph to Wireless smartphone: 1 human lifetime." Aboard the ship it was possible for someone who remembered Lincoln to shake hands with someone who would see the first iPhone. When the ship sailed in 1912, there were still a few people who were born before the U.S. Founding Fathers were completely gone. They had witnessed the creation of mass transit (steam trains), the first mass-produced airplane (Wright Aircraft, Model B Flyer), and saw the first telecommunications (electric telegraph) become mass telecommunications (radio telegraph). At the time, engineers were looking for ways to make the airwaves carry sounds and pictures, not just beeps ("Tele-Vision" was in development, only needed another 10 years, but the average person's ability to get one was delayed by the Great Depression and WW2). The last surviving Founding Father of the USA could have met a baby who would live to see the invention of technology that would change the way voters would interact with the new government and its elections. Just one human lifetime.
@jdw12jdw12
Жыл бұрын
Which founding father of the USA wasstill alive in 1912?
@dylanstott8787
Жыл бұрын
@@jdw12jdw12 A kid who met a founding father around 1800ish could be an old person on the titanic. But maybe you’re trolling idk
@r2hammer
Жыл бұрын
James Madison died in 1836.... Last Major Founding Father. It is possible a kid who met him would have still lived in 1912 and been in their 80's or 90's. It is possible :-)
@j10001
11 ай бұрын
Thomas Jefferson and John Adams both died in 1825. Someone near 90 years old in 1912 might have met one of them as a toddler.
@beastabuelos6421
10 ай бұрын
The iphone wasn't the first smart phone and those that think it is know nothing of the history of the smart phone
His age gave it away. Fun to see someone who was alive to see Abraham Lincoln. My great grandma was about 102 when I was 9 or 10, which means she was born around 1863. When you look at it that way, doesn't seem so long ago.
@youknow227
10 ай бұрын
Not even a quarter of a millennium
Talk to old people. Befriend them. My grand uncle was 97 when he passed. He was 45 with a M*A*S*H unit on the heels of the Normandy invasion. Heard stories you'd never hear in history books. He was chock full of wisdom too. They say when an old person dies, it's as if a library burned down. I miss him a lot.
I share Lincoln’s hometown in Kentucky. He’s also my favorite president. I’ve seen this clip numerous times and it never fails to move me. What a strong man to be that age, fall and get hurt, and STILL go on the show. I would’ve enjoyed being in the audience that night. You can tell that the panelists were showing respect for him, and I love it that my favorite actress, Lucille Ball, was a guest panelist that evening. So much to love about this clip! Thank you for sharing it!
@ricoz2016
2 жыл бұрын
I know right? Today what passes for men would have been looking to sue lol
@g.davidlawrence8471
2 жыл бұрын
Hodgenville. His grandfather was my 6x great-grandfather's brother. Love the history...
@thecrazycrossstitchlady
2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate that you know that. Too many people would have said Springfield.
@jamesc8259
2 жыл бұрын
@@thecrazycrossstitchlady I like Lincoln too. I read that Lincoln was an amazing wrestler. I got to visit the David Wills House in Gettysburg.
@thecrazycrossstitchlady
2 жыл бұрын
@@jamesc8259 Yes, he was. Gettysburg is a wonderful town. Glad you got to visit! Lincoln was also fascinated with gadgets and technology. I think computers, and now the widespread use of video conferencing tools to chat live with people around the world, would have been right down his alley. 😊
He's on Wikipedia. Five years old and in a balcony across the theater from Lincoln's box. Saw Lincoln enter the box. Later heard a shot and saw Lincoln slump. Saw Booth jump and injure himself on the stage. Did not understand what was occurring but was concerned for the man who hurt himself landing on the stage.
@RickSimmons-ej1pv
Жыл бұрын
His parents had to attend a function that night, and his governess offered to take him with her to see a comedy at Ford's. Said that there was chaos in the theater, and he was not sure what had fully happened when Booth fell.
Scarred at the age of 5 & carried this trauma for 91 years. Thank you Mr. Seymour and Rest in Paradise.
@tidespath2240
Жыл бұрын
Just seeing something is not trauma, he was more concerned about somebody falling out of the balcony
@Nicoletheburrito
Жыл бұрын
Oh brother. 😂
Just amazing!!!! To be able to see on a screen, not just a picture, but a picture with audio and with motion of the last witness of such event shows us how close from us ( chronologically speaking) is the person of Lincoln.
@stevedavidson5038
Жыл бұрын
Not to mention there are still loads of people alive today who probably watched this video on TV when it aired. Meaning we're actually less than two full human lifespans away from Lincoln which is even more insane!
@Rms_Titanic-1912
Жыл бұрын
I looked up this person his name is Samuel j Seymour he was the old man in the video and he actually died 2 months after being interviewed on this broadcast
@trekkiejunk
Жыл бұрын
I feel the same way when i look at human history in general. Someone once likened the history of the Earth to the length of a human arm. It was something like...Shoulder to mid-forearm, there was no life. From there to the wrist was single-celled life. Down to the second knuckle is the age of the dinosaurs, That last little nub is the rise of mammals, and finally, all of human history is washed away with one stroke of a file on a fingernail.
@harrymandel1663
Жыл бұрын
It's like a time machine
@thewewguy8t88
Жыл бұрын
@@stevedavidson5038 yeah what interests me though is anyone who appeared on this episode who are still alive.
I’m 26, and my father was born in 1952. Blows my mind to think there were still witnesses of Abe Lincoln’s murder alive during my dads life time. Cute (and very resilient) old man.
@thegreatapple9616
11 ай бұрын
why would you call your dad cute?
@Soulbrothersunny
11 ай бұрын
@@thegreatapple9616 was calling the old man in the video cute.
Boy, that shiner was probably so very much more! I am glad that they were able to record this, and get his testimony to history.
My father served in WWII with a man whose grandfather was in the bedroom when Lincoln died. James Tanner had lost both legs in the Civil War, and was working for the Ordnance Dept. office in Washington. He and a lieutenant had gone to the theater across from Ford's Theater, when it was announced that Lincoln had been shot, and everyone was to leave that theater. The lieutenant remained in the street, while Tanner went to his room on the third floor of a rooming house. (Nice lodgings for a double amputee.) Down in the street, someone came out of the same rooming house and asked the lieutenant if he could take shorthand. "No," he replied, "but my friend Jim Tanner can." They went upstairs and got James Tanner and took him to the bedroom on the lower floor, where Abraham Lincoln lay mortally wounded. Everything we know about what happened in that room is because Tanner took it down and later transcribed it. The only thing that he couldn't record was after Lincoln died and a chaplain offered up a prayer. Tanner's pencil broke and he didn't have another!
Our history is so short we don't realize just how close it is. My mother-in-law was born in 1923 and she's still alive and doing well this 21st of May 2023. She was a bounding little girl of 6 years old when Wyatt Earp died in LA in 1929. I told her that once and she said "I know. Don't remind me!" LOL!!
What a trooper. Older than dirt, fresh off of a fall and head trauma, and STILL gets on the stage to allow people to witness the last witness of a historical tragedy.
It's like some people are saying in the comments, history is closer to us than we think. I had this reality check when I watched a brazilian TV show from the 80s. The interviewee was a 116 year old, I think. He was an old man who saw history, he saw slavery abolished, he saw the Brazilian Emperor deposed, two world wars, the end of the Soviet Union and the beginning of the internet. In fact, what impressed me the most was hearing him speak in 19th-century Portuguese. It was like listening to someone from the 19th century speak. I am 25 years old and my father is 77, and I feel this closeness to history, because my grandfather was born before the First World War. I'm using a mobile phone, watching the creation of AI's and the first attempts to colonize space, while my grandfather was a "caipira" (it's like a brazilian redneck) who rode horses and had never seen a television in his life. Do you have any idea what that means?
@michaelkingsbury4305
Жыл бұрын
I can remember my grandfather telling me about harvesting beans in the Oklahoma panhandle during World War I. All the young men had joined up for the war, so they had to get the old men out of the Confederate rest home to pick the beans to feed the troops. He also remembered his grandfather's Civil War stories very well, and the stories passed down from before about the Trail of Tears.
@sebu46
Жыл бұрын
Damn, your dad had you when he was 52? What was that like if you don't mind me asking.
@user-di4bt7qu2i
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for telling us your family's story. I don't know how people who live through so much significant change can keep their sanity. It' just wouldn't seem real.
@vitorferreirapecanha1767
Жыл бұрын
@@sebu46 I don't know what do you want to say, but, yeah. He was 52, and 57 when had my brother hahahaha
@vitorferreirapecanha1767
Жыл бұрын
@@michaelkingsbury4305 Wow, amazing history. It's really cool to have old stories like that in the family, don't you think? My family has stories like that. My grandfather fought in Egypt, before returning to Brazil and having my mother and my aunts. My grandmother (His wife) is granddaughter of a portuguese farmer from the countryside. History is really closer to us that we thought
I love this. What history. God bless Mr. Seymour.
Wow, that head injury is huge. He took a very hard fall. I see he died a few months later, I wonder if the head injury didn't help but he was 96 years old after all. He got to experience so much. My own Grandmother is 96 now...I should record her telling stories...because they are interesting. I hope to do that this summer when I go see her. Ask about all sorts of things like War's, Politics, Racial Issues, Detroit, MI etc etc. So much stuff that would be interesting not just for family but for everyone so we don't repeat history but learn from it.
@ricoz2016
2 жыл бұрын
I was thinking that myself about the fall.
@be6715
2 жыл бұрын
Meeker Extreme I hope you do/did so. My father past in 2020 at 98 - and I think alot about what I should have talked to him about and asked him about. My dad did extremely well until he had a major fall - lived alone and took care of himself. Don't waste any time in talking to your grandmother - especially if she is a Michigander. I'm one too! Covid didn't kill him, but it kept me from seeing him before his accident. Don't delay.
@TheAidanodian
Жыл бұрын
It was probably more age related. It would be more expected of a head injury to kill in a couple hours rather than months. It’s amazing the stuff that this man got to see in his lifetime
@SweetPappyJones
Жыл бұрын
The only thing we learn from history is that we never learn from history. We need to ask Jesus for a change of heart, and be reborn and baptized in his name.
@daylineli
Жыл бұрын
"War's, Politics, Racial Issues, D e t r o i t," idk why but this made me laugh
I remember watching the show that day. It made the event in history come to life at may age then.
Amazing that this man lived long enough to give actual testimony to a hugely important historical event on TV.
Imagine finding the only living witness to such a tragically historic event like this. Truly fascinating!!!
My grandmother was born before the Wright brothers first flew. She lived to watch the TV and see men walk on the moon. Amazing.
@gemoftheocean
Жыл бұрын
Same here. My grandmother was born in 1899 and lived to be 91
I know an elderly woman who has many fond memories of her great-uncle Charlie, Charles Windolph...who fought in Reno's hilltop defense while Custer's five companies were being massacred about four miles away.
It absoloutley blows me away to see this video does not have over 1 million views. this is actually crazy.
Absolutely Amazing!! I love chatting with the elderly, as they are living history books.
Tough man. Falls down the stairs at 95 and still goes on television. I am glad he did. I enjoyed the video.
@vashon100
Жыл бұрын
96
DAMN 80 DOLLARS?! I can’t even imagine how much that was back then
@AR-Exp
Жыл бұрын
Bro you don't even get a full tank of gas for $80 now
@FollowTheRabbitHole
Жыл бұрын
About 2000 dollars in buying power of today's dollars. Back then you could bring those bills into the bank and by law they had to redeem them in silver dollars. May be more, because silver dollars have a good return on premiums so maybe around 25$ per silver dollar maybe more, today.
@RickSimmons-ej1pv
Жыл бұрын
@@FollowTheRabbitHole Depending on grade, a Morgan silver dollar is going for $40-55 now.
@gemoftheocean
Жыл бұрын
@@FollowTheRabbitHole in the US we put the $ sign in FRONT of the amount. We're not Europeans.
We are 4 generations away from lincoln 1809 his birth 1860 seymores birth 1956 anyone who witnessed this broadcast 2023 anyone of us with a grand parent old enough to tell us of this broadcast We have so little time to impact the world it’s crazy what we achieve in 1 lifetime and videos like this reminds me there is reason to be alive and be a part of our current world
@stevedavidson5038
Жыл бұрын
Also, Lincoln was killed 158 years ago, divided by 2 is 78 years, which is the average life span in the US. So we're only 2 lifetimes away from Lincoln. Crazy!
@wildwoodandonyx
Жыл бұрын
It’s been more like 8 generations sir.
@divyanshkachchhava9872
Жыл бұрын
We are only 5 generations away from 1700s? If you think why I'm saying this? why not?
@SR_superior_1000
Жыл бұрын
*8 Gens
@mrsillytacos
Жыл бұрын
Actually only 3 from 1790. John Tyler was born then and his Grandson is still alive today.
Still amazing to me that I was 2 years old when someone who saw Lincoln get shot was still alive.
@Daveskidder-cy3jp
Жыл бұрын
How old are you now
@mr.incredible9663
Жыл бұрын
@@Daveskidder-cy3jp he is 69 years old according to my calculations
@sqprxs
Жыл бұрын
@@Daveskidder-cy3jp can't be figured out, you have inquire directly
@rdelrosso2001
Жыл бұрын
I was ALMOST two years old ON Feb 8, 1956, when this aired on TV. I was born on June 8th, 1954 !
@scarbo2229
Жыл бұрын
Just goes to show how young our country really is.
The host is So Sweet! He blamed his (Edit: Mr Seymore) deafness on the desks being so far apart.
Thank you for making this available for everyone. Thank you 🙏
Very interesting, but I wish I could've heard Mr. Seymour's account of the experience.
@John-tp5gc
2 жыл бұрын
He can't remember.
@HowieHoward-ti3dx
Жыл бұрын
Molly, since you're black, you would call him racist.
@marquisejudge8871
Жыл бұрын
@@HowieHoward-ti3dxu sound dumb right now
@Glockky
Жыл бұрын
@@HowieHoward-ti3dx?
@kwimms
Жыл бұрын
@@HowieHoward-ti3dx You, Sir, are a racist racist. How dare you!
What a cool old man, excited as hell to be on the game show!
Gosh I haven’t thought about these panelists for years. In those early years of panel shows they were seen so much, their personalities and names were very common. Gary Moore, Henry Morgan, Peggy……., Bill Cullen. Kitty Carlyle,
@getlostyougoofball
2 жыл бұрын
Peggy Cass
@XxowendanxX
2 жыл бұрын
They made poor Nipsey Russell get them coffee
@richardbrowning8221
Жыл бұрын
Did you leave out Dorothy Kilgallon?
@d.g.n9392
Жыл бұрын
@@richardbrowning8221 what a coincidence, last evening my wife and I were talking again about the old shows and my wife mentioned Dorothy Kilgallen, because my wife was describing how the ladies dressed in evening gowns, long gloves and dangling jewelry. We watch lots of the old shows and read about the actors and actresses of the bygone days. 👍
@briane173
Жыл бұрын
@@d.g.n9392 Because back in the 50s and early 60s ladies had class and wouldn't dare show up at any event dressed in pajamas and a sports bra.
Just unbelievable and historic, thank you Mr Seymour!
I’ve seen this before and it’s nothing short of amazing.
This was amazing, first that there was someone old enough to be on a popular TV show and be the only person to have a memory of such a historic event. I don't have much memories from when I was 5, but I can see how he could remember this event. Interesting that it was mainly Booth falling on stage (so after the gunshot and before his statement). I would have thought as a child, he would notice the presidential box (being ornate with all sorts of flags). But then, it was off to the side, so maybe he didn't see it from his vantage point.
This channel just continues to astound me
picture in another 30-40 years someone the same age as this man, the last living person to witness the tragedy in dallas that november day appearing on a tv show.
In the book, "We Saw Lincoln Shot," Mr. Seymour was quoted in a 1950s interview. "When the intermission came Lincoln got up. Mrs. [George S.] Goldsborough [Mr.Seymour's godmother] told me, 'Look he is about to say something.' I think he was standing, not sitting, when he was shot." [Lincoln was actually sitting when Booth shot him.] "There was lots of excitement. People were hollering and screaming and crying. I began to cry and Mrs. Goldsborough took me out of the theater."
@HowieHoward-ti3dx
Жыл бұрын
Maybe she saw JWB and thought it was Lincoln and thought he was standing. Or maybe his memory was clouded or maybe the historians are wrong. History is also filled with lies.
Even way back in 1956, I would imagine that was ABSOLUTELY incredible. I hope he was never discredited, because that would be just about the most extraordinary event I could ever recall any living person recalling in my lifetime...and I'm 51.
@supremefandom6970
Жыл бұрын
He wasn't discredited because it is 100% fact.
Mind blowing that he was in the theater that night.
He's lived on, and will continue to on the internet for infinity
I love things like this. You have a great channel here.
I’m surprised he’d remember since he was only 5 years old at the time
@randyrhoads6357
2 жыл бұрын
memory retention takes a huge leap forward at 5 yrs old
@Rms_Titanic-1912
Жыл бұрын
It is really amazing that he was only 5 when he saw John Wilkes Booth shoot Abraham Lincoln and still remembered it 91 years later
@briane173
Жыл бұрын
My earliest memories go back to around age 3, and some details are very sharp, so it's not beyond the realm of possibility he'd remember this. He might not have _known_ much of the details of the incident but he remembered Booth falling out of the balcony and breaking his leg. I have to imagine that he carried the trauma of that moment throughout his life.
@RickSimmons-ej1pv
Жыл бұрын
I very much remember my first day of school (5 years). Certain things can imprint on a young person's brain and be recalled.
im so glad this channel exists
Wow, amazing, props to Mr Seymour for appearing on the show. Amazing he remembers a memory from 90 years ago.
This is nothing short of amazing
I'm super impressed they were able to figure out what he saw so quickly.
@jcrc1
Жыл бұрын
It almost seemed like they already knew what the secret was beforehand
@Lord_Bibulous
Жыл бұрын
His age had to factor in their line of questioning.
@trekkiejunk
Жыл бұрын
Also, saying that he witnessed a huge historical event...with his age, an event so large to actually be noted that he was there makes extremely limited options. They probably figured Lincoln before anyone even asked a question.
@dougdownunder5622
Жыл бұрын
Back when schools taught logical thinking instead of indoctrination & reasons to hate.
@dylanjwebmusic
Жыл бұрын
I was gonna say, they started straight away by asking if it had historical and political significance, and then if it was a well known person, and if the person was president?? Either its a set up or thats insanely lucky
Thank you for sharing.
Awe, he's auch a sweetheart 😮 omg what a thing to witness! Absolutely an amazing historical story and witness to one of the worst political crimes ever committed. RIP Mr. Seymour
It said the tough generations are all gone or dying. My dad just passed away today Vietnam Vet. Mans man. The way a real man should be. They are all leaving this world. They don't make them like they used to. It's very sad.
@briane173
Жыл бұрын
I'm very sorry for your loss, and just as sorry for the current state of affairs you alluded to. A perversion has taken place over the course of just the last 20 or so years, until suddenly we're courting socialism, emasculating men and fathers, and attempting to defy the laws of nature. This, supposedly, is "woke," and if it is I'd just as soon go back to sleep -- and dream of days gone by.
@tomysoulsociety
Жыл бұрын
yeah too many men with podcasts nowadays😪 they should go back to witnessing assassinations and dying in wars 🙏🏼
Incredible moment really in the mid 1950's to still have a person of the Mid 1800's there to talk about the period before 1900 and specifically seeing the death of Abraham Lincoln. But you know, this is exactly what is happening today with the last of the World War 2 Soldiers. We are about to see the very last of WW2 survivors passing away. Much the way, in the 1950's were were seeing the last of the Civil War survivors.
@RickSimmons-ej1pv
Жыл бұрын
As a junior in high school (1968) I witnessed the Veteran's Day parade of some two dozen old WWI vets march down my town's main street. It was the 50th anniversary of the Armistice. They're all gone now.
This video genuinely fascinates me each time I watch it.
I’m gonna take a shot in the dark and guess this show was sponsored by Winston.
Goodness, that must have been a terrible fall. God bless him. :))
@bullus41
2 жыл бұрын
Right? According to the dates he passed away 2 months later, could have sped up the inevitable unfortunately.
That Was Great That Mr. Seymour Came To That Such A Neat Show. And A Witness Of What Happen To A Very Caring And Respectful President Of The United States Of America. God Bless Mr. Seymour And Lincoln Will Never Be Forgotten.
@HowieHoward-ti3dx
Жыл бұрын
He should have deported the blacks to Africa. America would be so much beter.
Its been soon 160 years since this man was a wittness to that event. How crazy it is to think about.
This host was tremendous.
1:47 it was very good of Matt Damon to go back to experience this historic moment in person.
@lestereliza9445
2 ай бұрын
😂
"I'm tired. Just give me the $80 so I can get out of here."
He made history all over again INTERESTING 👍🏻
The poor guy died less than 2 months after this Interview, it's amazing he was able to come on the show.
"He fell down the stairs and gave himself a shiner." Audience: "Lmao!"
@ricoz2016
2 жыл бұрын
You heard wrong.
@HowieHoward-ti3dx
Жыл бұрын
No, they did not laugh. People had respect in those days.
the value of that 100$ now is $1045.07. for a retiree no small change. i love this show would just give the money to people that had important stored to tell.
gramps was fighter 💪🏼 wouldn’t miss the interview for nothing
🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽 May all these people Rest In Peace 🕊️🕊️ 🕊️🙏🏽
@rotunda57
Жыл бұрын
Jane Meadows was the last to go in 2015, she made 95.
Whoever this host is did a fantastic job
@yvonneplant9434
Жыл бұрын
Garry Moore who was a well known game show in the 1950s.
@RickSimmons-ej1pv
Жыл бұрын
@@yvonneplant9434 A real professional---he knew his business.
They should have let him talk a little more, despite their time constraints, he was kinda cut off there in the intro, it was his story to tell, but still nice to see him. And just in time, he died just afterwards. Hopefully not because of anything to do with his fall.
@HowieHoward-ti3dx
Жыл бұрын
Well, time is money. They have to do it fast.
Amazing!!!
That’s fascinating! And what a fun interested show! Wish it was still on!
This is incredible
Mr. Seymour died two months after his appearance on _I've Got a Secret,_ two days shy of the 91st anniversary of LIncoln's assassination.
This video was amazing to watch.
The audience reaction when he whispered the he secret, they knew what a big deal it was for him.
A good episode of a game show of a guy who was there at the the theater when Lincoln was shot
Just amazing!😗
I’ve watched this video so many times and I just can’t get over the urge to cry. He was 5 YEARS OLD and witnessed something extremely horrific, then lived through 2 world wars and saw everything change. I feel like he deserved more than $80 dollars but it’s good that they respected him.❤❤❤❤❤😢😢
I love watching old footage like this
My uncles were in WW1, WW2, and I had a customer when I was a teenager who was in the Spanish American War - 16 yrs but was a very tall and strong Texas farmboy. He later went into the navy and was on the gunboats in the Boxer Rebellion. He always quizzed me on Geography. He was not disappointed. I also had a customer who flew a Me 262 and landed in Greece to surrender to the English. Remember what the older generation has to say. It is beneficial for all of us.
@jessicahannah2522
Жыл бұрын
My grandmother, born in 1901, witnessed Spanish Flu, WWI, Great Depression, Dustbowl Migration, polio epidemic, the attack on Peral Harbor, WWII (was a Rosie the Riveter!), and so much more before passing at 102 years old in 2003. I have stacks of letters from her that are an astonishing history lesson from an average American woman.
@TRHARTAmericanArtist
Жыл бұрын
@@jessicahannah2522 be sure to make a compilation of them.
Amazing. Guy took a fall got a severe black eye and still wouldn't miss the show. When men were men...
@patrickstockton2091
Жыл бұрын
I don't see any trans around there...
He lived thru the Civil War, Spanish American War, WW1, WW2, & Korean War …. Wow 😮 ! He witnessed and lived life when there was slavery, Reconstruction & Jim Crow.
@djumps2455
Жыл бұрын
As we are living life in history today with wars going on and anti-lgbt legislation in the u.s. .
This is SO crazy cool !!!!
That was pretty incredible that he lived long enough to pass this information on. The changes in society he has witnessed are incredible.
Living history... so to speak.
Amazing.
This is amazing
History in the books seemed so long ago until you meet someone who seen it. Abraham Lincoln All seriousness I was born 100 years after the civil war 20 years after WWII. Not that long in perspective
He is living history. I was 8 years old when John Kennedy was assassinated.
@sandybruce9092
11 ай бұрын
I was a Junior in high school when President Kennedy was murdered! It’s still as clear as yesterday. Same with 9-11! But then I have a hard time remembering what day of the week it is😮😮😮😊
Incredible!
It was special seeing this bit of history. My grandparents taught me so much about life growing up I the late 1800s. So much respect for those people. If only we had more of that in our shallow world today.
$80 would be about $820 nowadays, not bad.
@steveflinn6
2 жыл бұрын
A NYC union bus driver made 1.90 per hour when this show was filmed. So, $300 per month. So that $80 would be about a blue-collar guy's weekly take-home. Today the average is ~$22/hr or $3875/mo. That sure would have been a lot of money to an old-timer, because he wasn't likely getting much of anything. But still a game show today would probably net you a lot more today. Right? Wouldn't you expect to get $5k at the least?