My father remembered the day he took his first steps, he and Uncle Edmond was playing in the living room and dad wanted a ball and got up and walked to get it he said Uncle Edmond ran to the kitchen hollering Freddy took his first steps
@scrimdaddyКүн бұрын
Amazing story . Watching from Australia
@theappalachiachannel6 сағат бұрын
Thank you!!
@myerstalesofappalachia2 күн бұрын
I sure loved this
@Sara-hp2qp3 күн бұрын
Were these ladies identical triplets? One of them seems taller than the other 2.
@rubypayton45394 күн бұрын
What a beautiful story.
@cherylbrooks70055 күн бұрын
❤😊❤
@agneslong23235 күн бұрын
My dad came up with a garden plan one year that involved each one of us planting seeds when we got home from work or school. We laid the rows out at one time and he laid the seeds out. We could choose whatever we wanted to mess with. It didn't matter what because the plan was that there was a brick to mark your stopping point and the next person started from there. He kept saying, "Make sure you move that brick." As time passed and things were coming up, neighbors would stop to check on the garden as neighbors do and everything looked good until you got to a place near the center. There was about half a row where plants were all jumbled up. People would ask each of us what we planted and we would show them and tell them about the garden plan. Then they would ask who planted that mess in the center and we would tell them---daddy and that is soup. He hadn't moved the brick.
@Rodmic-hd9pn5 күн бұрын
There must have been racism.
@MarkHenderson-yv4ye6 күн бұрын
Good stuff!
@janetconnors31136 күн бұрын
Beautifully told love story. Thank you
@theappalachiachannel6 сағат бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@user-fo3jd6lb4n6 күн бұрын
You did Great TY
@soniaclayton35636 күн бұрын
What a lovely story really enjoyed it thank you
@randlerichardson58266 күн бұрын
Great story a lot of stories ended this way
@theappalachiachannel6 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@likhound6 күн бұрын
Beautiful story.
@judyingram-kh1vm6 күн бұрын
Great story, thank you for sharing this with us ❤
@theappalachiachannel6 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@judyingram-kh1vm6 күн бұрын
Great story, thank you for sharing this with us ❤
@rubycollins34927 күн бұрын
Wonderful story Thanks for sharing
@laura67967 күн бұрын
What a beautiful love story ❤️ Very well told!
@johnpeddicord49327 күн бұрын
Enjoyed again, SARAH, JD
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@metal29517 күн бұрын
👍
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
👍🏼
@jm007277 күн бұрын
Sniffle, sniffle...beautiful story. Loved it. 🥰 My G-G grandfather did the same as Andrew-fought for the Union though was from TN. I gotta find out more.
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
❤️
@Teresia127 күн бұрын
Another wonderful story that made me cry.
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
❤️
@garrymcgaw47457 күн бұрын
What a touching story. Thank you for keeping me grounded 🙏.
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
❤️
@marykaystreasures7 күн бұрын
Beautiful story Thanks for sharing your awesome video ♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️🗝️🇺🇸
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
Thank you ❤️
@djspatriqt22907 күн бұрын
Greetings and Blessings Kin Folks, from the Foothills of the Ozarks of Arkansas.
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
❤️
@Jerry-fd7yd7 күн бұрын
Great Content 💯 Awesome Narration! 👏
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
Thank you 😊
@Jerry-fd7yd7 күн бұрын
@@theappalachiachannel You're Welcome, I really enjoyed the story!🤗
@marionbowler54407 күн бұрын
Omg 😔🍁 so sweet
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
❤️
@user-ry8lw8je8l7 күн бұрын
I thought it was just a story I didn't think it was true about the civil war it shouldn't have been💯
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
It’s a true story
@arvettadelashmit93377 күн бұрын
Wonderful story. Thank you.
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
Thank you 😊
@noopy247 күн бұрын
😊
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
❤️
@ceceliaclarke7 күн бұрын
Thank you for this mini biography, of a little girl. Rural people of 19th century and early 20th deserve major credit, for all that they knew and for working so hard to survive. Must say however, that some of the established child care practices were horrendously cruel. I am including America and rural IrelandThe sadistic treatment of the horse matches what was done by most owners. And the locking of a child in a closet...very common practice. Thank you for this very honest description .
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
❤️
@cherriehearn69507 күн бұрын
❤❤❤much love to y'all! Thank you for the history ❤❤❤
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
Our pleasure!
@cgarrand787 күн бұрын
You do justice to every story you narrate Mrs Sarah,excellent job!
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@bettyfeliciano73227 күн бұрын
Oh Sarah! You do an excellent job on the storytelling of these awesome Appalachian stories! Thank you for sharing all of these wonderful stories. Please give your father, JD, my regards. Blessings always! ❤️🙏😊
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
thank you ma'am
@bettyfeliciano73227 күн бұрын
@@theappalachiachannel You are most welcome! ❤️🙏😊
@elizabethbuttke22247 күн бұрын
Sweet story ❤
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
Thank you! 🙂
@carolseeley7 күн бұрын
Beautiful story! Well done, young lady!
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
Thank you ma'am
@TheAppalachianStoryteller7 күн бұрын
Great job with this story Sarah!
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@theappalachiachannel7 күн бұрын
Please support the perseverance of Appalachian History and Storytelling by LIKING, COMMENTING and SUBSCRIBING. Thank you!
@LadyBug-wr1gu8 күн бұрын
I see she didn't stop with the triplets. 😮
@vikkibyington30669 күн бұрын
❤❤❤
@ronniewatkins11 күн бұрын
Great story, young lady! I live in Cartersville, Ga, not far from Ranger, the town that H F Hamrick's Rolling Store ran out of.
@bettyfeliciano732213 күн бұрын
I absolutely adore these stories! I could sit & listen forever! Thank you for sharing! Blessings always my friends! 🙏❤️😊 5:27 5:27 5:27 5:27 5:27 5:27 5:27 5:27
@theappalachiachannel9 күн бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@bayoumanbryan14 күн бұрын
im 60 and i remember them well. at my Grandma's house at Glade La. they still ran there when i was a kid.
@williamswindle544514 күн бұрын
In the 1960s we had a Watkins man that came through our area in Alabama a couple of times a month. He drove the biggest longest station wagon i ever saw! And he had a scale hanging just inside the back window.
@user-cy1ef2fr7i14 күн бұрын
I just love these precious stories! From New Brunswick, Canada
@chaddnewman269914 күн бұрын
My great grandfather was a peddler in Monroe County, Tennessee, all through the 20s and 30s. His brother owned a store in Madisonville and Papaw would drive back up through the mountains selling and trading. Problem was, he was really kind-hearted and would sell a lot of stuff on credit. Although, I’m sure the poor families he helped appreciated it.
@vivianjones913014 күн бұрын
I remember the rolling store coming by our house in the 60s when I was a kid. The man would give us a stick of hard candy. Those were the good ole days. We raised and grew everything we ate. Mama only had to buy sugar, flour, coffee and tea. Thank you for the story and bringing back good memories.❤❤
@arvettadelashmit933714 күн бұрын
I remember the big farm truck that came around every summer, when I was a child. It was loaded with some hay bails and big, beautiful, rattle snake watermelons. There were also some big boys riding on the back of that truck who helped unload the watermelons and sold them. This was the only way you could get watermelons (if you couldn't grow your own). They were better than candy (we didn't care that they had seeds). Daddy would always buy at least three watermelons. One for us to eat that day, and two to cool on the basement floor (which was bedrock) to be shared during the week. Home made wooden chairs and swings were also sold from a truck like that one. That's where our porch furniture came from; but, was later stolen while my family was living out west. We had the Company Store not far from our house. Plus, we could walk to town. So, we didn't see many Stores on Wheels.
@atexinc.547214 күн бұрын
I’m 52. I have a friend that still to this day can’t chew gum without swallowing it. He loves it so much he just has to swallow it. 😂😂😂
@billywalker922315 күн бұрын
I have a story about a peddlar in a wagon who brought the influenza to a mountain community. The residents died in the winter, and had to be stacked in a shed until the ground was loose enough to bury them.
Пікірлер
My father remembered the day he took his first steps, he and Uncle Edmond was playing in the living room and dad wanted a ball and got up and walked to get it he said Uncle Edmond ran to the kitchen hollering Freddy took his first steps
Amazing story . Watching from Australia
Thank you!!
I sure loved this
Were these ladies identical triplets? One of them seems taller than the other 2.
What a beautiful story.
❤😊❤
My dad came up with a garden plan one year that involved each one of us planting seeds when we got home from work or school. We laid the rows out at one time and he laid the seeds out. We could choose whatever we wanted to mess with. It didn't matter what because the plan was that there was a brick to mark your stopping point and the next person started from there. He kept saying, "Make sure you move that brick." As time passed and things were coming up, neighbors would stop to check on the garden as neighbors do and everything looked good until you got to a place near the center. There was about half a row where plants were all jumbled up. People would ask each of us what we planted and we would show them and tell them about the garden plan. Then they would ask who planted that mess in the center and we would tell them---daddy and that is soup. He hadn't moved the brick.
There must have been racism.
Good stuff!
Beautifully told love story. Thank you
Glad you enjoyed it
You did Great TY
What a lovely story really enjoyed it thank you
Great story a lot of stories ended this way
Glad you enjoyed it
Beautiful story.
Great story, thank you for sharing this with us ❤
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great story, thank you for sharing this with us ❤
Wonderful story Thanks for sharing
What a beautiful love story ❤️ Very well told!
Enjoyed again, SARAH, JD
Thank you!
👍
👍🏼
Sniffle, sniffle...beautiful story. Loved it. 🥰 My G-G grandfather did the same as Andrew-fought for the Union though was from TN. I gotta find out more.
❤️
Another wonderful story that made me cry.
❤️
What a touching story. Thank you for keeping me grounded 🙏.
❤️
Beautiful story Thanks for sharing your awesome video ♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️🗝️🇺🇸
Thank you ❤️
Greetings and Blessings Kin Folks, from the Foothills of the Ozarks of Arkansas.
❤️
Great Content 💯 Awesome Narration! 👏
Thank you 😊
@@theappalachiachannel You're Welcome, I really enjoyed the story!🤗
Omg 😔🍁 so sweet
❤️
I thought it was just a story I didn't think it was true about the civil war it shouldn't have been💯
It’s a true story
Wonderful story. Thank you.
Thank you 😊
😊
❤️
Thank you for this mini biography, of a little girl. Rural people of 19th century and early 20th deserve major credit, for all that they knew and for working so hard to survive. Must say however, that some of the established child care practices were horrendously cruel. I am including America and rural IrelandThe sadistic treatment of the horse matches what was done by most owners. And the locking of a child in a closet...very common practice. Thank you for this very honest description .
❤️
❤❤❤much love to y'all! Thank you for the history ❤❤❤
Our pleasure!
You do justice to every story you narrate Mrs Sarah,excellent job!
Thank you!
Oh Sarah! You do an excellent job on the storytelling of these awesome Appalachian stories! Thank you for sharing all of these wonderful stories. Please give your father, JD, my regards. Blessings always! ❤️🙏😊
thank you ma'am
@@theappalachiachannel You are most welcome! ❤️🙏😊
Sweet story ❤
Thank you! 🙂
Beautiful story! Well done, young lady!
Thank you ma'am
Great job with this story Sarah!
Thank you!
Please support the perseverance of Appalachian History and Storytelling by LIKING, COMMENTING and SUBSCRIBING. Thank you!
I see she didn't stop with the triplets. 😮
❤❤❤
Great story, young lady! I live in Cartersville, Ga, not far from Ranger, the town that H F Hamrick's Rolling Store ran out of.
I absolutely adore these stories! I could sit & listen forever! Thank you for sharing! Blessings always my friends! 🙏❤️😊 5:27 5:27 5:27 5:27 5:27 5:27 5:27 5:27
Glad you enjoyed it
im 60 and i remember them well. at my Grandma's house at Glade La. they still ran there when i was a kid.
In the 1960s we had a Watkins man that came through our area in Alabama a couple of times a month. He drove the biggest longest station wagon i ever saw! And he had a scale hanging just inside the back window.
I just love these precious stories! From New Brunswick, Canada
My great grandfather was a peddler in Monroe County, Tennessee, all through the 20s and 30s. His brother owned a store in Madisonville and Papaw would drive back up through the mountains selling and trading. Problem was, he was really kind-hearted and would sell a lot of stuff on credit. Although, I’m sure the poor families he helped appreciated it.
I remember the rolling store coming by our house in the 60s when I was a kid. The man would give us a stick of hard candy. Those were the good ole days. We raised and grew everything we ate. Mama only had to buy sugar, flour, coffee and tea. Thank you for the story and bringing back good memories.❤❤
I remember the big farm truck that came around every summer, when I was a child. It was loaded with some hay bails and big, beautiful, rattle snake watermelons. There were also some big boys riding on the back of that truck who helped unload the watermelons and sold them. This was the only way you could get watermelons (if you couldn't grow your own). They were better than candy (we didn't care that they had seeds). Daddy would always buy at least three watermelons. One for us to eat that day, and two to cool on the basement floor (which was bedrock) to be shared during the week. Home made wooden chairs and swings were also sold from a truck like that one. That's where our porch furniture came from; but, was later stolen while my family was living out west. We had the Company Store not far from our house. Plus, we could walk to town. So, we didn't see many Stores on Wheels.
I’m 52. I have a friend that still to this day can’t chew gum without swallowing it. He loves it so much he just has to swallow it. 😂😂😂
I have a story about a peddlar in a wagon who brought the influenza to a mountain community. The residents died in the winter, and had to be stacked in a shed until the ground was loose enough to bury them.
dang it man!