TheDataMeister
TheDataMeister
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1822 Massacre: Where the Crows Were Killed
In 1822, a Lakota Sioux War Party decimated a Crow village north of the Black Hills. The details of this event are difficult to ascertain, but the 1874 Black Hills Expedition map lends credence to the story. The event at Crow Buttes should not be confused with the fighting at Crow Butte near Crawford, Nebraska.
Переглядів: 5 314

Відео

Flying in a B25 Mitchell Bomber. The Sound of Freedom!
Переглядів 3,3 тис.21 день тому
Flying on a B-25 Michell Bomber at the Cedar Rapids, Iowa airport.
Wounded Knee Preview
Переглядів 1,3 тис.Місяць тому
It seems very few people know what happened here and, most importantly, what happened in the weeks after this tragedy.
Battle of the Bulge, Episode 15, The Beech Tree
Переглядів 7 тис.Місяць тому
On 23 December, Combat Command B of the 4th Armored Division captured the town of Chaumont, Belgium. As it secured the objective, a German counterattack led by Tiger tanks put the Americans on the run. The defenders of Bastogne had to continue to hold on by a thread. ua-cam.com/video/m-JoyW3ln1w/v-deo.html
A Lesson from the Past: What We Can All Learn from LBJ’s and McNamara’s Vietnam Strategy
Переглядів 1,4 тис.2 місяці тому
In this video, I’ll give you a quick introduction to a Strategic Framework and show how LBJ, Secretary of Defense McNamara, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff (the JCS) botched the strategy in Vietnam. We will also examine real-world planning dysfunction using an example from Operation Rolling Thunder and the strategic framework of Ends-Ways-Means. Dr. Mark Clodfelter, Professor of Military Strategy...
Total Eclipse, Indiana
Переглядів 3462 місяці тому
Fired up the drone and planted it at 350 feet then moved it down to 150 because of traffic. Sorry about the copyright violation, but I love Soundgarden and this song in particular.
Battle of the Bulge, Episode 14, Movement-to-Contact
Переглядів 12 тис.3 місяці тому
Our last chapter closed with the Third Army's bold maneuver of deploying three divisions northward in an audacious bid to smash the German southern flank. This video focuses on the three Combat Commands of the 4th Armored Division, part of III Corps, in their effort to relieve Bastogne.
Battle of the Bulge, Episode 13, Meat Grinder
Переглядів 18 тис.4 місяці тому
Episode 13 of the series and Patton's Third Army is on the move. Operational Art and Design Video Link - ua-cam.com/video/uw73xDSWg0M/v-deo.html
My Story of Desert Storm in the Iron Brigade.
Переглядів 8 тис.4 місяці тому
This video chronicles my experience during Desert Shield/Storm. As a young Armor Lieutenant, I had graduated from Tank Platoon Leader to Supprt Platoon Leader in the 2nd Battalion, 70th Armor. Stationed in Germany at Ferris Barracks and the city of Erlangen, I deployed to Saudi Arabia on Christmas Eve, 1990. As the video discusses, I was able to be an integral part to the success of the unit's ...
Battle of the Bulge, Episode 12, St. Vith, Part 2
Переглядів 5 тис.5 місяців тому
The second video on the battle of St. Vith. This is from the National Archives and covers the desperate defense of the remnants of the 106th Infantry Division, the 7th Armored Division, Combat Command B of the 9th Armored Division, and the 112th Infantry Regiment of the 28th Division, the "Bloody Bucket."
Battle of the Bulge, Episode 11, St. Vith
Переглядів 3,8 тис.5 місяців тому
This is another video from the National Archives that I supplement with relevant comments and maps. This is the first video on the fighting around St. Vith, which, like Bastogne, was a critical road junction. It includes some fascinating commentary from both the Americans and Germans.
Waterloo Short Video
Переглядів 2645 місяців тому
Waterloo Short Video
Battle of the Bulge - The Tigers of Bastogne
Переглядів 16 тис.6 місяців тому
Battle of the Bulge - The Tigers of Bastogne
Battle of the Bulge, Episode 9, Gotterdammerung: The Twilight of Kampfgruppe Peiper
Переглядів 2,9 тис.6 місяців тому
Battle of the Bulge, Episode 9, Gotterdammerung: The Twilight of Kampfgruppe Peiper
Battle of the Bulge - Those Damned Engineers
Переглядів 17 тис.7 місяців тому
Battle of the Bulge - Those Damned Engineers
Excerpts from the Normandy Battlefield Tour
Переглядів 5 тис.8 місяців тому
Excerpts from the Normandy Battlefield Tour
Normandy Battlefields.
Переглядів 1,9 тис.8 місяців тому
Normandy Battlefields.
Normandy Battlefield Tour Kick-Off
Переглядів 3,4 тис.8 місяців тому
Normandy Battlefield Tour Kick-Off
Kampfgruppe Peiper, The Road to a Massacre
Переглядів 15 тис.10 місяців тому
Kampfgruppe Peiper, The Road to a Massacre
Tales from the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument
Переглядів 45 тис.11 місяців тому
Tales from the Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument
Book Giveaway Winner, "Gettysburg's Peach Orchard"
Переглядів 71211 місяців тому
Book Giveaway Winner, "Gettysburg's Peach Orchard"
The Little Bighorn Battlefield by Drone
Переглядів 33 тис.11 місяців тому
The Little Bighorn Battlefield by Drone
Crow Dog Counts Coup on the DataMeister
Переглядів 1,9 тис.Рік тому
Crow Dog Counts Coup on the DataMeister
Peiper, the Man and His Kampfgruppe
Переглядів 21 тис.Рік тому
Peiper, the Man and His Kampfgruppe
Gettysburg, Off the Beaten Path 2.0 + Book Giveaway
Переглядів 13 тис.Рік тому
Gettysburg, Off the Beaten Path 2.0 Book Giveaway
Battle of the Bulge Episode 5, The Platoon
Переглядів 32 тис.Рік тому
Battle of the Bulge Episode 5, The Platoon
Tracing America, Episode 1, The Lawrence Massacre
Переглядів 32 тис.Рік тому
Tracing America, Episode 1, The Lawrence Massacre
A Message From Antietam
Переглядів 1,9 тис.Рік тому
A Message From Antietam
Get Ready for the Epic Series Coming Your Way!
Переглядів 1,8 тис.Рік тому
Get Ready for the Epic Series Coming Your Way!
Battle of the Bulge Episode 4 - The 99th Division gives the 6th Panzer Army a bloody nose.
Переглядів 30 тис.Рік тому
Battle of the Bulge Episode 4 - The 99th Division gives the 6th Panzer Army a bloody nose.

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @MarlinWilliams-ts5ul
    @MarlinWilliams-ts5ul День тому

    The Sioux came from the Great Lakes region, pushed out by French fur trappers.

  • @traditionalbowhunter473
    @traditionalbowhunter473 2 дні тому

    161st anniversary tomorrow Gettysburg Battle

  • @jesseacewest
    @jesseacewest 2 дні тому

    Torn rotary cuff is legit

  • @philipargo
    @philipargo 2 дні тому

    Decent video with two exceptions: decimation is not the same as annihilation...it's almost the reverse, and it looks pretty stupid from my perspective to be doing your lifting while recording. Who are you trying to impress?

    • @MilitaryHistory317
      @MilitaryHistory317 2 дні тому

      Our cat, "Boy," in classic redneck fashion we put on a leash outside. He enjoys the ruckus I guess. My employees live to tease me about the cat.

  • @sartainja
    @sartainja 3 дні тому

    This video needs to remind whites that native Americans were killing each other long before the Europeans arrived.

  • @tabletsam5624
    @tabletsam5624 3 дні тому

    Crazy horse was the greatest of the great. Murderded from men they never been able to defeat him on the battlefield.

  • @conradnelson5283
    @conradnelson5283 3 дні тому

    Nice story

  • @derekp2674
    @derekp2674 3 дні тому

    Thanks very much DM, that was really interesting.

  • @gator83261
    @gator83261 3 дні тому

    I live in Neenah, Wisconsin just north of Oshkosh. I’ll try to go to the show this year, if you have a meet & greet time(s) let us know.

    • @MilitaryHistory317
      @MilitaryHistory317 2 дні тому

      I will be in Oshkosh on the 21st, seeking to get some photos, and then on Monday, I will be at the South Pavilion for the full airshow. I believe I have a camping spot on site. In a previous lifetime, I lived in Madtown, so it is always great to get back to Wisconsin.

  • @walterbrown9651
    @walterbrown9651 4 дні тому

    Right on time! I was just in Crow Country! headed to Spearfish Canyon and Crazy Horse! I was at the 148th LBH Anniversary, was hoping to meet you Data Meister! HOKAHEY! Stay Strong!

  • @jimplummer4879
    @jimplummer4879 4 дні тому

    Exactly !!

  • @nmelkhunter1
    @nmelkhunter1 4 дні тому

    Always good to learn something new. Thank you for sharing.

  • @chuckreid5018
    @chuckreid5018 4 дні тому

    Who told him this...?.. Scottish way across the water know all of these story's ..SMH ..time traveler ...let me hear it from the crow people because its there land...because it was a couple of battles going on at the same time!..

  • @redswingline262
    @redswingline262 5 днів тому

    Fighting hunter gatherers who are expert at tracking, mobility, stealth, deception, ambush, coordinated attack, local terrain, strategy and horsemanship, it's a wonder the US Army enjoyed any success

  • @redswingline262
    @redswingline262 6 днів тому

    I'm learning quite a bit from your series

  • @redswingline262
    @redswingline262 6 днів тому

    "I don't know if you can hear it..." while background music plays "but there are prairie dogs..." background music continues. Awesome editing. Good job

  • @artembiyun423
    @artembiyun423 7 днів тому

    I don't think Custer deserves the warped negative reputation he's received, honestly much of it is from people too dumb to learn about him that just repeat whatever is socially cool to them at the time. Custer was a very bold commander not stupid or glory seeking, he made the right decisions based on the information that he had, unfortunately the risks taken and assumptions made were not in his favor by a mile. He did make big mistakes that day but they weren't the mistakes of a 'mad sociopath' trying to glory seek one last battle to become president like some people stupidly claim. The Indians had good medicine that day and good on them for defending themselves from the governments stupid imposed ultimatum.

  • @artembiyun423
    @artembiyun423 7 днів тому

    Thank you so much for this series! it's done incredibly well and is probably one of the best resources online I've seen so far. My lingering thought is that Custer probably expected Reno and Benteen charge in and help him to his last breath, I don't see much fault with Benteen since Reno was the commanding officer, Benteen actually did the right thing and rushed to assist as quickly as possible. Reno pretty much rattled the hornets nest and ran out of it only for it to turn to Custer. Pretty much the critical hour that would have most likely saved most of Custers men was when Benteen met Reno. The 40 minutes that it took for cpt Wier to move up to Wier point the situation already became critical for Custer's men and by the following hour that it took for Benteen and Reno to move up to wier point they were just in time to see the last of Custers men shot in the ravine. Saying that all the men would have died if they went immediately to assist Custer is a bit of a cope, Reno and Benteen had somewhere around 180 troopers combined, if they moved together they would have easily broken the indians starting to surround Calhoun hill and might have had a good chance to reunite with those men as well as give a chance for Custer to break through to them. I don't believe that the Indians would want to face 180 men head on, they could have moved to relieve custers men, succeeded without getting flanked and established defensive lines when company B reached them. I think Benteens three companies could have saved a lot of people had they received the order.

    • @BezmenovDisciple
      @BezmenovDisciple 5 днів тому

      There were even Indians themselves that said had Reno continued his initial charge into the village instead of pulling up into skirmish lines, he would have sent the Indians reeling in panic and probably would have won the battle. I liked your other comment about Custer doing the right thing with the information he had at the time. Up until that point in history, no Indian village had ever held their ground against a large scale cavalry charge. Ever.

    • @artembiyun423
      @artembiyun423 5 днів тому

      ​@@BezmenovDisciple thanks! I don't think I have enough information to adequately judge if calling off the charge was a good call or not, you have to consider that this is the largest planes Indian camp ever of all time and Reno's men got repelled and flanked in their skirmish lines pretty quickly - so charging in might have been an even deadlier mistake than not. On people's testimony, I wouldn't trust retrospective opinion's like that - there's conflicting claims on who or what killed custer, or who shot him when I'm pretty sure that the Indians only found out they defeated Custer way after the battle was over - the fame and significance of the battle meant that a lot of people had a lot to say about it afterwards but much of it might have been imagined or outright false. I think, from the information I have, Reno canceling the charge might not have been his worst decision, him panicking in the woods, fleeing or 'charging' out of the woods to a nearby river crossing and narrow hill face where the indians had a good shot at them, leaving many of his men to hide in the woods to either get killed or run back up to reno hill on their own, then just doing nothing on Reno hill, not making any attempts to contact Custer or help him when Benteen arrived and pretty much being drunk the whole time are just massively egregious failures of command. Reno was in a extremely tough situation and I don't think he was the guy for it, I think he left the battlefield in the worst way and had he stayed in the woods longer or if he had an organized retreat into another skirmishing line and kept fighting the Indians, the Indians wouldn't have swung around so quickly to overwhelm Custer and Custer and his men might have survived - in that scenario too Benteen would reinforce Reno's battle pretty much at the same time as Custer started his battle. So, Reno fleeing the battle and crossing the river near the Indians to climb up Reno hill where the Indians could shoot them easily caused the most deaths of his men, this disorderly retreat concluded as soon as Custers battle started allowing the Indians fighting Reno to swing back up north and envelop Custers men pretty much dooming them.

    • @BezmenovDisciple
      @BezmenovDisciple 5 днів тому

      @@artembiyun423 Oh I agree with everything you said. 100%. I just thought I’d add that interesting anecdote that came from Indian sources. I think in hindsight, if Custer HAD to engage in battle, his most likely path to victory would have been to keep the command altogether and charged straight in (like Reno did but with the entire regiment), rather than try the pincer maneuver. Of course, the reason he didn’t makes perfect sense to me as well, them being most afraid of the Indians scattering to the wind.

    • @artembiyun423
      @artembiyun423 5 днів тому

      @@BezmenovDisciple yeah it's just bad circumstances, Custer went north expecting to get to the northern part of the settlement but ended up in the middle of it, he split his command to go north again but was met with native warriors again. The strategy was to capture Indians fleeing and end the battle by taking hostages, which was a sound strategy previously and still looked like a valid strategy with the information that Custer had at hand. If they didn't encounter those three groups of Indians previously, compelling Custer to rush to take the village by surprise I think they would have gotten better information and the battle would have gone completely differently. And honestly, yeah if Reno charged in it could have caused a big panic that could've made Custer's plan to capture hostages work. And yeah totally, hypothetically if their command was together they would have won, we have to remember too that the Indians didn't have centralized command structures or army drills or any of that, the US army would outmatch them pretty handily in most cases. But I think that's why this battle is so fascinating, it's like the Titanic or the Franklin expedition and just that mystery of all those souls lost and having to piece it all together but never quite being able to because everyone that was there died. It's just that their goal was to get the Indians to surrender and march back to their reservations, so that I think was one of the big reasons that compelled Custer to that fatal strategy

  • @darthmike4845
    @darthmike4845 7 днів тому

    That Voice sounds familiar anyone knows. Who narrator is his voice sounds very familiar.

  • @StewardSmith-sw5dl
    @StewardSmith-sw5dl 7 днів тому

    From movies to American history ive fine Indian history more accurate .most of history pretty much accurate both sides .again Indian history more facts.

  • @mikekelly6023
    @mikekelly6023 7 днів тому

    Thanks man your series has been awesome to watch just found your channel and binge watching all yur videos ! I’m a Canadian with family history attached to Sitting Bull , my great great grandfather was a butcher in southern Saskatchewan and apparently sold and gave meat to Sitting Bull and Sioux

  • @davidarmstrong7549
    @davidarmstrong7549 8 днів тому

    Great video! You tell the story so well.

  • @neilmclachlan3931
    @neilmclachlan3931 11 днів тому

    I heard that Custer didn't look after his men, they were badly fed and underweight, same with the horses, not up to weight and badly cared for.

  • @coolchange954
    @coolchange954 11 днів тому

    Curt moser

  • @lonnietoth5765
    @lonnietoth5765 11 днів тому

    Isaiah Dorman was known by Sitting Bull and was promised to be left alone to die by Sitting Bull . The women ignored that order , along with everyone ignoring , Sitting Bulls warning , " NOT TO MUTULATE OR STEAL FROM THE BODIES " ! This guy goes through the dance of hell , cutting his body and no sleep . and when he tells them what the price of victory is , they can't come through ?

  • @Horsecatcher
    @Horsecatcher 12 днів тому

    This reanimated pictures of our grandfather's remains and memories is not right. We respect our dead we do not bring back to life our memories of them. It is against our beliefs to molest our ancestors. Whoever did this either wasn't thinking or they weren't ndn.

  • @billflamank6882
    @billflamank6882 12 днів тому

    Donahue believes Custer rode over Weir Point along the bluffs down

  • @KenDignam
    @KenDignam 14 днів тому

    Youve nicked the music from zulu 👍🇬🇧

  • @CinRife
    @CinRife 14 днів тому

    It was actually the Cherokee that defeated crook and Custer! Sue and shianne? They never stood up to the government!

  • @TomBrennanHorse-Sense-Media
    @TomBrennanHorse-Sense-Media 16 днів тому

    Benteen fought the best action of the two days.He had the mule train and was limited in speed.

  • @user-ch4ok3ei6w
    @user-ch4ok3ei6w 17 днів тому

    4:01

  • @g4joe
    @g4joe 17 днів тому

    Poor buggers, should have joined the Navy.🇬🇧

  • @thelemmykilmistermuseum4265
    @thelemmykilmistermuseum4265 20 днів тому

    Excellent Video 🇱🇷🇱🇷🇱🇷

  • @johnbutler4236
    @johnbutler4236 20 днів тому

    One thing I thought was a big mistake that Colonel Custar did. he refused 4 galing guns brigades. at the time when he was going to The Little Bighorn in Montana. that was a serious, ill faded mistake. by lieutenant colonel Custar. that got him and his whole regiment killed. if they had those 4 brigades of galing guns, it would have turned out a lot different..🤔

  • @IntheBlood67
    @IntheBlood67 20 днів тому

    Anyone know who the senior Sergeant was killed with the seventh?

    • @IntheBlood67
      @IntheBlood67 20 днів тому

      Found him.SGTMaj. Sharrow, William Hunter. Thanks for the info and precise analysis!

  • @tooter1able
    @tooter1able 20 днів тому

    Thanks for an interesting narration.

  • @tooter1able
    @tooter1able 21 день тому

    He talks TO DAMN FAST!! a speech problem to boot! Clarity is affected unfortunately/,

  • @MorningStarmama13
    @MorningStarmama13 22 дні тому

    I spent many summers in Pine Ridge, and our family would go to the monument every year to pray and leave tobacco. I found it so disrespectful when, while praying, tourist would come up and start taking pics or filming. My dad always asked them to be respectful and not do that while we prayed. Always good about it.

  • @jeffjenkins8303
    @jeffjenkins8303 22 дні тому

    You mentioned General MacArthur as one of the renowned US military commanders as aside in your video. I beg to differ. MacArthur was an arrogant, glory hunting Arsehole who cared little for the lives of the soldiers under his command. His ultimate aim was to become president of the U.S. and needlessly wasted human lives in this endeavour. Thank God he failed in his quest to achieve his aim in that. What a grub he was.

  • @srec539
    @srec539 23 дні тому

    Whoever clicks link of "air wars in vietnam", watch audio only, video is mostly shoving prof talking, and what he has to show was ofscreen, whoever handled video is amateur. Why do i write that here, well bcs someone can not take critics, so disabling things is the way to make it better, nice teachings in war college...

  • @aa64912
    @aa64912 23 дні тому

    Amazing aircraft

  • @RonalldAnderson
    @RonalldAnderson 23 дні тому

    Remember, the Victor's in any war write its history.

  • @markt.3685
    @markt.3685 24 дні тому

    Very glad you filmed this guy's story telling of what happened here, excellent, and thank you.😎👍

  • @markt.3685
    @markt.3685 24 дні тому

    Haven't walked much of this area during my over a dozen trips visiting the Gettysburg battlefield, and good to see this area accordingly. Also, the camera seems to move a bit too quickly in spots, and seems a few breaks in footage as well, causing a loss in bearings, yet enjoyed seeing this video and the perspectives it brings, thank you.😎👍

  • @getoffenit7827
    @getoffenit7827 24 дні тому

    Something i never thought about before. How did the warriors communicate between each other? And how did Leaders like Lame White Man or Crazy Horse direct warriors? The Army used Bugle Calls,Flags ,runners with notes between cavalry units Did individual groups of warriors formulate plans of attack independant of a 'central command'?

  • @markbutler5539
    @markbutler5539 25 днів тому

    Reno was following Custer's reckless attack plan.

  • @Eric-kn4yn
    @Eric-kn4yn 25 днів тому

    June assasination july 20 44 u buffoon.

  • @stevesambale3717
    @stevesambale3717 25 днів тому

    Im a German far far away and I know at first Rosebud wasnt a Battle ,was a Masacre from the US Militaria to the Native People .Thats the first and biggest fail what this documantation have.

  • @josephwurzer4366
    @josephwurzer4366 25 днів тому

    Lee had flanked the 🇺🇸 at all his big wins in 1862 accept if he was Unable to attack. Then 1863. - 7 days -Campaign flaking then Battle Flanking at Bull Run. -Chancellorsville -Then Here. 4 Times in 1 year if you add the Wilderness 5 times in a year.

  • @gregsmith9125
    @gregsmith9125 26 днів тому

    I was lucky enough to ride the battlefield. I was able to ride the Keogh sector, Deep Ravine from the head cut all the way to the river. The battle makes more sense when you can see it from the back of a horse. I was able to locate markers that had not been seen in years in a ravine that branches south of Deep Ravine. The final ride was a charge from Deep Ravine to Last Stand hill. You could hear a pin drop as we made that ride.