Documenting American History, specifically the American Indian Wars and the westward expansion of the United States in the novel art form of "Videomapping"
This is proportionally minuscule to nearly every other culture/race on the entire planet
@alphaomega9382 күн бұрын
According to the 1860 census only 1.6% of Americans even owned slaves why does the white race brow beat itself over something it has the most hand in ending and the smallest contribution
@alphaomega9382 күн бұрын
Now do Barbary and Muslim slave trades
@EcclesiastesLiker-py5ts2 күн бұрын
Informative
@heremapping44842 күн бұрын
Great work
@TheGilliams4 күн бұрын
Nice
@j.r.36644 күн бұрын
Looking at this map, it seems that slavery abolishion took a huge boost during 1861-65. I am glad that a peaceful, lasting solution was found for this issue.
@zfloyd16273 күн бұрын
You are being sarcastic, right?
@micahistory5 күн бұрын
1st like, good job
@dodolulupepe5 күн бұрын
amazing
@kevinschilt13310 күн бұрын
There was slavery in Southern Illinois in Gallatin County in what was known as The Crenshaw House or also the Old Slave House. Used to get salt from the salt wells near the Saline River.
@Highasamf10 күн бұрын
Can people in the comments stop accusing each side of being supportive of slavery? Both Republicans and Democrats changed their party values and are completely alien from what they were 150 years ago. Determine them by their policies of today rather than events that happened before anyone here was alive.
@ThunderTheBlackShadowKitty10 күн бұрын
Illinois has such horrible gerrymandering. Why are the districts in Chicago shaped so weird? Makes no sense. Seems like Republicans attempt to sway the state in their favor.
@Bailey4President11 күн бұрын
As an independent republic, slavery was abolished in Vermont's constitution in 1777. I can see not including that in the map, since Vermont didn't join the United States until 1791, but it's worth noting.
@Ant_148812 күн бұрын
Oh the old gold times
@SamuelJones-tv8qv13 күн бұрын
wish we could turn back time to the good old daaaaayzzz
@florinivan690718 күн бұрын
A North-South divide on slavery only became a reality in the 1820s. With states like NY or Pennsylvania only having adopted a gradual abolition approach it wasn't yet an issue that could unify a clear bloc around it at the national level. Once NY abolished it entirely then you had a clear North-South divide forming. Its also not an accident that it still took more than 20 years until this divide started to paralyze the country. A divide on paper still needs some time to filter through in society.
@PappyP17 күн бұрын
Not to mention extreme tension events like the missuri compromise, compromise of 1850, bleeding kansas, uncle toms cabin, and the outcome of the dredd scot case. All of those really helped solidify the division between the north and the south and drive hatred against one another.
@insouciantFox19 күн бұрын
What about the Kingdom of Cole County? It seceded from the union but did not join the confederacy. Very strange.
@olhickory981519 күн бұрын
Ah, t'would have been a true triumph if only the American Colonization Society had completely repatriated the africans back to Africa.
@plpong8932 күн бұрын
How would that be a good ending?
@maureencora121 күн бұрын
2024 Happy Junteenth, Liberation Day From Slavery 246 yrs. 1619 -1865. Now & Forever Free 159 yrs. . Give or Take 100 yrs. Jim Crow (smile) Civil War Sore Losers.
@mapsandcountryballs604323 күн бұрын
Oh yes, The Missourian Civil war
@micahistoryАй бұрын
very cool video, as a Canadian I appreciate it
@Daking69_420Ай бұрын
I feel like I’m witnessing the creation of a future famous videomapper here.
@justsomerandomanimator9706Ай бұрын
AMAZING
@RenaissanceProductionsАй бұрын
my country ❤
@pepitamappingАй бұрын
awesom
@BulgarrrАй бұрын
Canada... 🍁
@HXSKlmfaoАй бұрын
which one of you mfs gonna say “wish we could turn back time”
@dodolulupepeАй бұрын
great video one thing, in the december 18th 1897 event, you should've written "eastward", not "westward"
@leighdee2084Ай бұрын
Tremendous amount of work and beautifully presented. But what's with the music?
@DutchesthecatАй бұрын
green based
@AshfaqurBFАй бұрын
And still, there are a group of people who denies the history of slavery in USA. They say these are BLM propaganda
@elionlima9055Ай бұрын
It's really impressive to see how slavery was not only a losing issue, but also a very polarizing hot issue in America between the late-1840s and early-1860s, and yet, the abolitionists get a way of abolish this cruel institution by the middle-1860s after America surviving a Civil War and thanks to the efforts of abolitionist figures like Thaddeus Stevens, Frederick Douglass, Horace Greeley and Samuel Chase to convince President Lincoln of the necessity of immediate abolition of slavery.
@PappyP17 күн бұрын
Yeah its crazy but once you really dive into the history it starts to really make you think how it took so LONG for war to break out with extreme tension events like the missuri compromise, compromise of 1850, bleeding kansas, spreading of the uncle toms cabin book, and the outcome of the dredd scot case. In pretty much every single one of these events we were on the brink of civil war, and some were decades before it actually happened.
@samwatttАй бұрын
The music goes hard asf
@user-yf5su6ei4iАй бұрын
Блять да они просто сладко дунули
@CartonsHistoricalMapping2 ай бұрын
Thanks for your video. I love the Oklahoma state.
@user-rs6ox4xx5z2 ай бұрын
Can't believe, Ohio, of all the states, is the first one to arise with slavery already abolished
@danielebrparish4271Ай бұрын
Abolition is complicated because the U.S. government was formed by the Articles of Confederation in 1777 then created a new gov't in 1789. Generaly states that came into the union under the U.S. Constitution (1789) came in as free states. The 3/5 compromise acknowledged slavery as a legal institution. 5th amendment (1791) reguired compensation to owners when their property was taken. So some states passed laws that children born after 1789 would be free but the children before that date were not and neither were the parents. Slaves could not be bought or sold in Ohio but slaves brought into the state were not freed until a law was enacted in 1841.
@italia6892 ай бұрын
Missouri abolished slavery in 1864, not 1865.
@elionlima9055Ай бұрын
Also Missouri was one of the very first states to ratify the 13th Amendment already in January, 1865, and the Amendment would be completely ratified and passed only by December, 1865. The Great State of Missouri is a really great example of a former slave state that got rid of this inhumane institution alongside with Maryland, Delaware and Kentucky.
@italia689Ай бұрын
@@elionlima9055 Do not forget West Virginia, which abolished slavery in 1864 as well, a year after it became a state.
@elionlima9055Ай бұрын
@@italia689 Indeed.
@Pablo445287 күн бұрын
🤓🤓🤓🤓
@Adonnus1002 ай бұрын
Uh oh here come the pro slavery trolls here to call you a fanatic just for opposing it
Пікірлер
I had no idea the Mormons practiced slavery
make the texts larger
Theres a few inaccurate details but love the map
Nice land grab
This is proportionally minuscule to nearly every other culture/race on the entire planet
According to the 1860 census only 1.6% of Americans even owned slaves why does the white race brow beat itself over something it has the most hand in ending and the smallest contribution
Now do Barbary and Muslim slave trades
Informative
Great work
Nice
Looking at this map, it seems that slavery abolishion took a huge boost during 1861-65. I am glad that a peaceful, lasting solution was found for this issue.
You are being sarcastic, right?
1st like, good job
amazing
There was slavery in Southern Illinois in Gallatin County in what was known as The Crenshaw House or also the Old Slave House. Used to get salt from the salt wells near the Saline River.
Can people in the comments stop accusing each side of being supportive of slavery? Both Republicans and Democrats changed their party values and are completely alien from what they were 150 years ago. Determine them by their policies of today rather than events that happened before anyone here was alive.
Illinois has such horrible gerrymandering. Why are the districts in Chicago shaped so weird? Makes no sense. Seems like Republicans attempt to sway the state in their favor.
As an independent republic, slavery was abolished in Vermont's constitution in 1777. I can see not including that in the map, since Vermont didn't join the United States until 1791, but it's worth noting.
Oh the old gold times
wish we could turn back time to the good old daaaaayzzz
A North-South divide on slavery only became a reality in the 1820s. With states like NY or Pennsylvania only having adopted a gradual abolition approach it wasn't yet an issue that could unify a clear bloc around it at the national level. Once NY abolished it entirely then you had a clear North-South divide forming. Its also not an accident that it still took more than 20 years until this divide started to paralyze the country. A divide on paper still needs some time to filter through in society.
Not to mention extreme tension events like the missuri compromise, compromise of 1850, bleeding kansas, uncle toms cabin, and the outcome of the dredd scot case. All of those really helped solidify the division between the north and the south and drive hatred against one another.
What about the Kingdom of Cole County? It seceded from the union but did not join the confederacy. Very strange.
Ah, t'would have been a true triumph if only the American Colonization Society had completely repatriated the africans back to Africa.
How would that be a good ending?
2024 Happy Junteenth, Liberation Day From Slavery 246 yrs. 1619 -1865. Now & Forever Free 159 yrs. . Give or Take 100 yrs. Jim Crow (smile) Civil War Sore Losers.
Oh yes, The Missourian Civil war
very cool video, as a Canadian I appreciate it
I feel like I’m witnessing the creation of a future famous videomapper here.
AMAZING
my country ❤
awesom
Canada... 🍁
which one of you mfs gonna say “wish we could turn back time”
great video one thing, in the december 18th 1897 event, you should've written "eastward", not "westward"
Tremendous amount of work and beautifully presented. But what's with the music?
green based
And still, there are a group of people who denies the history of slavery in USA. They say these are BLM propaganda
It's really impressive to see how slavery was not only a losing issue, but also a very polarizing hot issue in America between the late-1840s and early-1860s, and yet, the abolitionists get a way of abolish this cruel institution by the middle-1860s after America surviving a Civil War and thanks to the efforts of abolitionist figures like Thaddeus Stevens, Frederick Douglass, Horace Greeley and Samuel Chase to convince President Lincoln of the necessity of immediate abolition of slavery.
Yeah its crazy but once you really dive into the history it starts to really make you think how it took so LONG for war to break out with extreme tension events like the missuri compromise, compromise of 1850, bleeding kansas, spreading of the uncle toms cabin book, and the outcome of the dredd scot case. In pretty much every single one of these events we were on the brink of civil war, and some were decades before it actually happened.
The music goes hard asf
Блять да они просто сладко дунули
Thanks for your video. I love the Oklahoma state.
Can't believe, Ohio, of all the states, is the first one to arise with slavery already abolished
Abolition is complicated because the U.S. government was formed by the Articles of Confederation in 1777 then created a new gov't in 1789. Generaly states that came into the union under the U.S. Constitution (1789) came in as free states. The 3/5 compromise acknowledged slavery as a legal institution. 5th amendment (1791) reguired compensation to owners when their property was taken. So some states passed laws that children born after 1789 would be free but the children before that date were not and neither were the parents. Slaves could not be bought or sold in Ohio but slaves brought into the state were not freed until a law was enacted in 1841.
Missouri abolished slavery in 1864, not 1865.
Also Missouri was one of the very first states to ratify the 13th Amendment already in January, 1865, and the Amendment would be completely ratified and passed only by December, 1865. The Great State of Missouri is a really great example of a former slave state that got rid of this inhumane institution alongside with Maryland, Delaware and Kentucky.
@@elionlima9055 Do not forget West Virginia, which abolished slavery in 1864 as well, a year after it became a state.
@@italia689 Indeed.
🤓🤓🤓🤓
Uh oh here come the pro slavery trolls here to call you a fanatic just for opposing it
One month later.... Nope