Stephen La Cour
Stephen La Cour
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Bearded Soul At Barrel House 5/9/12 Part 1
Another Wednesday Night at the Barrel House, just chillin and living the dream!
Sorry couldn't record more guys, was called somwherez else.
I need to make like a music account on UA-cam or somtin!
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Відео

Bearded Soul Jam Session at Barrel House 4/25/12 Part 2
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The second part of Bearded Soul's Jam Session at the Barrel House on 4/25/12
Bearded Soul Jam Session at Barrel House 4/25/12 Part 1
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Another Wednesday night jam session at the Barrel House with the band "Bearded Soul" Good one brothers, good tunes, drink, and friends. Good Times.
Bearded Soul Part Live at Barrel House Part 3
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The last, longest, and best part of Bearded Soul's jam session at the Barrel House.
Bearded Soul Live at the Barrel House Part 2
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Part 2 of Bearded Soul's jam session at the Barrel House on the 18 April 2012.
Bearded Soul Live at the Barrel House Part 1
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Bearded Soul performing live at the Barrel House on 18 April 2012. Recorded by Evan La Cour, and edited by Steve La Cour Jr.
Downtown Lawrece after Ohio State Game (Music Video)
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My little video I make of going downtown after the Ohio State Game!! Homemade by me and my Bro who was the Camera Man.
Haskell 2012 Powwow Student Grab
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The Haskell Welcome Powwow Student Grab. enough said.
Haskell 2012 Powwow Jingle
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Haskell's 2012 Welcome Back Powwow: Jingle Dress The quality I know could have been better but I just didn't want to render the video again.
Haskell 2012 Powow Grass
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Men's Grass as Haskell's 2012 Welcome back Powwow. I'm so mad at the quality of these videos, I got a different version of Sony Vegas Pro, so like the newb I am I just didn't want to fool with the options. In my old version the default options were good enough.........whatever,
Haskell 2012 Powwow Fancy Shawl
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Another Park the Haskell's 2012 Welcome Back Powwow Fancy Shawl, I know I messed up on the title.
Haskell 2012 Powwow Men's Mixed.
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This was Haskell's first Powwow of 2012. I reformatted my computer and installed a different version of Sony Vegas Pro, so the rendering options are different. I know the quality could have been better.
Haskell Powwow Men's Straight
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another part of the powwow, At this point i was cold and hungry. I got cold and windy and i was wearing shorts, but i toughed it out to get these recording i even had to borrow and dolor to get it, i though i have the required 5 bucks to get in but i only had four!!!
Haskell Powow Men's Northern Traditional
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Here's yet another part of the Haskell End year Pow-wow i recorded. The rest of the powwow is on my channel.
Haskell Powwow Grass Dance
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i will add somting later to this its like 3:00 am
Haskell Powwow Men's Fancy Dance
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Haskell Powwow Men's Fancy Dance
Haskell Powwow Women's Fancy Shawl
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Haskell Powwow Women's Fancy Shawl
Haskell End Year Pow-wow Jingle Dress
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Haskell End Year Pow-wow Jingle Dress
Corrie Sanders VS Klitschko Brothers Ultimate Highlight
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Corrie Sanders VS Klitschko Brothers Ultimate Highlight
Haskell Powwow Men's Mixed
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Haskell Powwow Men's Mixed
Haskell Pow Wow Grand Entrance Feb. 2011
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Haskell Pow Wow Grand Entrance Feb. 2011
Haskell Powwow Quick Hightlight Feb. 2011
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Haskell Powwow Quick Hightlight Feb. 2011
Furio Tribute: The Sopranos
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Furio Tribute: The Sopranos
Ashley National Forest Hazard Trees Part 6 of 6 (Music Video)
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Ashley National Forest Hazard Trees Part 6 of 6 (Music Video)
Ashley National Forest Hazard Trees Part 5 of 6 (Poll Creek)
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Ashley National Forest Hazard Trees Part 5 of 6 (Poll Creek)
Ashley National Forest Hazard Trees Part 1 of 6 (Music Video)
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Ashley National Forest Hazard Trees Part 1 of 6 (Music Video)
Vampire: The Masquerade -- Scary theme! (Music Video)
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Vampire: The Masquerade Scary theme! (Music Video)
A Simpler Life (Music Video)
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A Simpler Life (Music Video)
Hazard Trees on the Ashley National Forest Part 4/4
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Hazard Trees on the Ashley National Forest Part 4/4
Hazard Trees on the Ashley National Forest Part 3/4
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Hazard Trees on the Ashley National Forest Part 3/4

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @NobenStudio
    @NobenStudio 3 дні тому

    The fights are epic, but that music makes it unspeakably awesome.

  • @gst32
    @gst32 26 днів тому

    Like many war movies, the actor that played Hood is much too old. Hood was 32 years old when he fought at Gettysburg. The actor here is in his late 50's.

  • @jamesbutler8821
    @jamesbutler8821 26 днів тому

    I really wish they would produce a non sanitized version of this movie. This hospital scene in reality would have been more gruesome than audiences can handle. Gore,and screaming all over. Would do a lot to dispel romantic notions of war and the Civil War.

  • @michaelmazowiecki9195
    @michaelmazowiecki9195 Місяць тому

    Lee repeated the mistakes made by the Union side at Fredericksburg. He acted like Napoleon against Wellington at Waterloo, using direct assaults uphill against heavily defended Union positions instead of outflanking manoeuvres.

  • @nicholaslamarca8341
    @nicholaslamarca8341 Місяць тому

    Berenger and Daniels should have both be nominated for oscars for this...

  • @travisbayles870
    @travisbayles870 Місяць тому

    Two of my Confederate ancestors who were in the 20th Georgia lnfantry Bennings brigade fought at the Devils Den July 2 1863 near Gettysburg A sad and a terrible day for both sides 😢

  • @johnbertrand7185
    @johnbertrand7185 Місяць тому

    The actor playing General Hood is Patrick Gorman, was 58 at the time this scene was filmed. John Bell Hood had just turned 32 at this point in the war (June 29, 1831).

  • @Sipherofstone
    @Sipherofstone Місяць тому

    "General, I do this under protest". The 1st and only time he does so

  • @burrellbikes4969
    @burrellbikes4969 Місяць тому

    I really think that Sickles moving forward - while seemingly a blunder, ended up working as a defense in depth, forcing the Confederate First Corps to wear itself out before it reached the key positions of the Round Tops and Cemetery Ridge. Had Sickles remained where he was, Hood and McClaws could have snuck up through the forests until they would have attacked right at the front line of the Fed’s. Then who knows…

  • @easyandsimplevid
    @easyandsimplevid Місяць тому

    The only two generals who knew that fighting in Gettysburg was a mistake.

  • @Sipherofstone
    @Sipherofstone Місяць тому

    One of the best divisions that fought at Gettysburg

  • @bmcg5296
    @bmcg5296 2 місяці тому

    Why did some Southern Military Units wear blue instead of grey especially officers in Cavalry? Was this due to a lack of uniforms made before the start of war, or due to the prestige of the unit they came from before war, or still identified as American's no matter the view? Hope someone who studied this as their history university qualification could answer this.

  • @josephliegl3975
    @josephliegl3975 2 місяці тому

    “Never fight up hill me boys. Never fight up hill.”

    • @jamesbutler8821
      @jamesbutler8821 26 днів тому

      Ugh. I groaned when I heard that. It is hard to believe our educational system allowed such an idiot to emerge unscathed by learning.

  • @Tadicuslegion78
    @Tadicuslegion78 2 місяці тому

    Remarkable how, at least in the film, Hood makes sound calls about the risks of smashing headlong into Devil's Den/Little Round Top and yet he would a year later lead two of the biggest disasters in the battles of Franklin and Nashville and destroy his army.

  • @tripsaplenty1227
    @tripsaplenty1227 2 місяці тому

    "Never fight uphill me boys"

  • @Kitchdmn3
    @Kitchdmn3 3 місяці тому

    Imagine being one of the troops within earshot of this conversation and trying to stay motivated.

    • @jamesbutler8821
      @jamesbutler8821 26 днів тому

      Speaking as a former grunt from the 82nd, the rank and file rarely know what is going on and ALWAYS think their officers are trying to get them killed. So the reaction by most would be, 'yep, knew it'

  • @MIchael-li7mq
    @MIchael-li7mq 4 місяці тому

    Seeing the number of amputated limbs was terrifying at realizing how violent that fighting was in trying to take that hill but also the number of wounded men who appeared disoriented and deeply traumatized those men are the bravest of the brave who were in this battle you have my utmost respect to everyone who served in the civil war

  • @Rockhound6165
    @Rockhound6165 4 місяці тому

    So we're just going to ignore the horse cart full of amputated limbs?

  • @Rockhound6165
    @Rockhound6165 4 місяці тому

    I often wonder how differently Gettysburg might have gone had Stonewall Jackson had been there.

  • @ChrisAldridge
    @ChrisAldridge 5 місяців тому

    Lee was a fool.

    • @rmurphy3435
      @rmurphy3435 2 місяці тому

      Foolish but not a fool. Overconfidence has undermined many a good soldier and imo this was Lee’s undoing at Gettysburg.

  • @jasonhickman590
    @jasonhickman590 6 місяців тому

    Amazingly nearly half Hoods initial wave still went up the big hill. And robbed combat power from smashing the main Union line at a moment when Little Round Top was still unoccupied. Word is they were chasing sharpshooters. And it was right after Hood was wounded. I have to wonder after watching this scene if he thought he could still get away with sending part of his Division over Big round top and used the sharpshooters as a way to do it without violating orders. Either way the attacking force that hit Sickles flank was only a fraction of the actual attack force available. And bought time.. about 30-45 min for troops from the Union to occupy Little Round Top

  • @totallynotalpharius2283
    @totallynotalpharius2283 7 місяців тому

    When hood went west with Longstreet , his men hadn’t seen him since his wounding At Gettysburg. Upon arriving at Ringgold station hood is informed his men our needed immediately. Hood goes to the train car with his horse , throw open its door and jumps down telling his men to follow him. They roared at seeing their commander and they loved that man no lie. Then he gets shot leading an assault on Snodgrass hill

  • @user-hq9hl7uj3f
    @user-hq9hl7uj3f 8 місяців тому

    Have no clue on anything not a expert but did lee go visit the hospital when his men were hurt and did other general s do the same????????

  • @shehriyarheshimov6949
    @shehriyarheshimov6949 8 місяців тому

    Dizi tarihinin en taşşakli karakteri

  • @leeshackelford7517
    @leeshackelford7517 8 місяців тому

    I've watched this movie more than a dozen times.... Great film

  • @eichelbergergary
    @eichelbergergary 10 місяців тому

    Regardless of Hood’s final status as a command officer, Patrick Gorman portrays the role amazingly!

  • @kenneththomas2416
    @kenneththomas2416 10 місяців тому

    I wonder why Lee was so stubborn and didn’t listen to others ( thank god.)

  • @illinoismotionpicturestudi5065
    @illinoismotionpicturestudi5065 11 місяців тому

    1:30 It probably wasn't intentional on Beregner's part, but I like to think Longstreet was having flashbacks to seeing his own children die of Scarlett Fever. The way he grasps onto Hood's hand trying to offer some comfort, while also not quite knowing what to do, no doubt would have reminded Longstreet of what happened to his family months before.

  • @Rufus6540
    @Rufus6540 11 місяців тому

    “It is well that war is so terrible,” Robert E. Lee said as he watched. “We should grow too fond of it.”

  • @Blacklabels686
    @Blacklabels686 11 місяців тому

    Hood was only 33ish during Gettysburg. Great movie but a lot of these actors were way older than the officers they portrayed

  • @Psiros
    @Psiros 11 місяців тому

    The stories behind the lack of medical knowledge of this era are heartbreaking. Medical procedures thought to help actually made things worse and the lack of proper sanitation, rather ignorance of it, led to even more unnecessary deaths.

  • @jaycross1672
    @jaycross1672 11 місяців тому

    Great scene show how human Longstreet is!!

  • @sandiz83
    @sandiz83 11 місяців тому

    The only thing that bothers me about this scene is when Longstreet cuts Hood off, it's a bit mechanical. you see and hear that the man who plays Hood stops talking and then Longstreet comes in with his dialogue. but the scene in general is good. really good.

  • @lordseelenfresserdemonking1168

    The civil war Also known as The war over who had the best facial hair

  • @marksellers4875
    @marksellers4875 Рік тому

    As so many were, Hood was promoted, later, past his abilities. Outstanding division commander, but as a brigade commander, he had no equal. Deo Vindice! E Co. 1st Texas Vol. Infy. Hood's Texas Brigade, Longstreet's 1st Corp Army of Northern Virginia. At Gettysburg, Hood's division, Robertson's Brigade. Peace to their bones, honor to their memory and service.

  • @Auss3Natasha
    @Auss3Natasha Рік тому

    Anyone notice that Longstreet never got an Army base named after him? Even though he was a much better general than Hood?

    • @Masada1911
      @Masada1911 Рік тому

      Southerners named those bases. They were never going to name a base after a man they saw as a turncoat.

    • @ndp7054
      @ndp7054 10 місяців тому

      Meh, just copied this from wiki. Explains pretty easily when you add up that a lot of these military bases weren't created and named until after the 1870s. "Longstreet was subject to vigorous attacks over his war record beginning in the 1870s and continuing until after his death. After Longstreet died, his widow Helen Dortch Longstreet published Lee and Longstreet at High Tide in his defense and stated that "the South was seditiously taught to believe that the Federal Victory was wholly the fortuitous outcome of the culpable disobedience of General Longstreet".[291] Despite the writings of both James and Helen Longstreet, his reputation was heavily blackened well into the 20th century.[292] In the first half of the 20th century, Freeman kept criticism of Longstreet foremost in Civil War scholarship in his biography of Lee. Speaking of Gettysburg on July 2, 1863, he writes: "The battle was being decided at that very hour in the mind of Longstreet, who at his camp, a few miles away, was eating his heart away in sullen resentment that Lee had rejected his long cherished plan of a strategic offensive and a tactical defensive."[293] He called Longstreet's performance on July 2 so sluggish that "it has often been asked why Lee did not arrest him for insubordination or order him before a court-martial".[293] Freeman moderated his views in his later three-volume set, Lee's Lieutenants: a Study in Command, where he states that Longstreet's "attitude was wrong but his instinct was correct. He should have obeyed orders, but the order should not have been given."[293] Clifford Dowdey, a Virginia newspaperman and novelist, was noted for his severe criticism of Longstreet in the 1950s and 1960s.[294] In 1974, Michael Shaara's novel The Killer Angels about the Battle of Gettysburg was published, and was based in part on Longstreet's memoirs. In 1993 the book was adapted into a film, Gettysburg, with Tom Berenger portraying Longstreet. Longstreet is depicted very favorably in both, significantly improving his standing in popular imagination.[295] God and General Longstreet (1982), also upgraded Longstreet "through an attack on Lee, the Lost Cause, and the Virginia revisionists".[296] In 1993, Wert published a new Longstreet biography, stating that his subject was "the finest corps commander in the Army of Northern Virginia; in fact, he was arguably the best corps commander in the conflict on either side."[297] Military historian Richard L. DiNardo wrote: "Even Longstreet's most virulent critics have conceded that he put together the best staff employed by any commander, and that his de facto chief of staff, Lieutenant Colonel G. Moxley Sorrel, was the best staff officer in the Confederacy."[298] Noting Longstreet's delegation of control of battlefield movements to his staff, DiNardo argues that this allowed him to communicate more effectively during battles than the staffs of other Confederate generals.[298] Praise for Longstreet's political conduct after the war in modern times is tempered by the fact that he urged white acceptance of Reconstruction at least in part so that whites, and not blacks, would have the preeminent role in rebuilding the South.[299] Nevertheless, he has been commended for his willingness to work with the North, support for black voting rights, and bravery in leading a partially black militia force to suppress a white supremacist insurrection." Longstreet served his country before the Civil War, then served the Confederacy because of where he was from (South Carolina and Georgia) and then once the war was over returned to serving his country however he could in several official government positions until his death. If Lincoln wasn't assassinated and reconstruction didn't become a fiasco, both the US and Longstreet would look very differently today - and probably so would the names of our military bases.

  • @classicgunstoday1972
    @classicgunstoday1972 Рік тому

    Is the surgeon with the bloody apron Sean Pratt as Dr. Hunter McGuire who was Stonewall Jackson’s doctor in Gods & Generals? Sure looks like him

  • @user-kk7zp2dm5e
    @user-kk7zp2dm5e Рік тому

    What I am about to say, I say as a Veteran of 10 years in the USMC. I have watched the entire movie of Gettysburg, over and over, and I know one thing. The mental part of General Robert E. Lee, the Southern General in Charge of the Army of Northen Virginia. Marching into Northen states, thinking they could just have their way and do whatever they wanted. The mind of Lee was under a false sense of security, it's not hard for me to see. Yeah it's just a movie, maybe, but what really happened at this battlefield, all the high number of dead and wounded on both sides. Lee had to be utterly insane, nobody with experience and common sense would have done what Lee did. And I do mean Nobody. Of course General Meade had greater number of men to put into the fight, that's a no brainer, but Lee's army marching around without shoes, barefoot, low food, and his entire situation coming into PA. There's no way they were going any more North and were met with a large Army in blue. The Federals came to fight, and that's what happened. And do not get me started about the charge on July 3rd of 1863. That was a waste of over 12,500 good men in open country side. The whole battle was a TOTAL WASTE OF YOUNG MEN IN MY EYES. I wish the Civil War had never happened, I took my wife in August 2019 to the battlefield, and it left a major impression on me. And it's still there, and never left. I can't get over how big and open the battlefield is. It's eye opening and then some. I hope everybody gets a chance to see Gettysburg, PA. You won't regret going there, I CAN TELL YOU THAT FROM THE HEART. Dan Phipps of Lafayette, Indiana.

    • @marknelson2846
      @marknelson2846 7 місяців тому

      So true. I think Lee was supremely confident, to the point of arrogance. He had defeated every Union general he'd faced, and his army had defeated the federal army time after time. He simply couldn't see any other outcome, even though he certainly knew the odds were against them. Longstreet understood the need for a defensive campaign, and had he been listened to, the outcome of the battle (and the war) may have been different.

    • @user-kk7zp2dm5e
      @user-kk7zp2dm5e 7 місяців тому

      The North had more men, more manufacture and more everything to work with. They wore the South down, this was the only way they could win. But the South did not think this could happen. But it did. @@marknelson2846

    • @Rebel-ny3lm
      @Rebel-ny3lm 7 місяців тому

      AMEN!!!

    • @alhemingway1265
      @alhemingway1265 3 місяці тому

      Semper Fi Marine ... I totally agree.

    • @user-de7mb9rn9w
      @user-de7mb9rn9w 2 місяці тому

      In his defense I think Lee probably had diarrhea

  • @j.m.youngquist419
    @j.m.youngquist419 Рік тому

    Lee should have been relieved of command after that debacle.

  • @j.m.youngquist419
    @j.m.youngquist419 Рік тому

    The soundtrack to this great movie was epic.

  • @j.m.youngquist419
    @j.m.youngquist419 Рік тому

    Once again, the arrogance of Lee cost the Confederacy.

  • @snowplow7883
    @snowplow7883 Рік тому

    Walking the actual battlefield brings this movie to life, having fired historically accurate replicas and seeing how the bullets destroy everything in its path… frightening

  • @janandersen8735
    @janandersen8735 Рік тому

    A battle and possible a war lost because of 2 words, "if practicable"

  • @buckrogers7498
    @buckrogers7498 Рік тому

    It's hard to feel pity towards men who were fighting a war so that other human beings could be held as slaves.

  • @susiepittman601
    @susiepittman601 Рік тому

    These beards all look so fake.

    • @rmurphy3435
      @rmurphy3435 2 місяці тому

      Maybe because they are fake, lol.

  • @JaketheJust
    @JaketheJust Рік тому

    Longstreet first saw the high casualties this battle will bring. He saw it all before Lee did. Lee as he did thought the Army of Northern Virginia was invincible

  • @Paleotech1
    @Paleotech1 Рік тому

    Quite possibly the worst movie ever produced relative to this conflict.

  • @user-vq3of7um7c
    @user-vq3of7um7c Рік тому

    I watched the movie years ago. Also several years back I had the opportunity to go to Brunswick, Maine. There I saw Joshua Chamberlain's grave. At the museum there, I bought the book Killer Angels. The museum had many artifacts from Chamberlain's life and time in the Civil War. Longstreet was my favorite character in Killer Angels. I really enjoyed the movie Gettysburg.

  • @Silverlarkspur87
    @Silverlarkspur87 Рік тому

    0:08-0:12 Is it just me or does the cart in the background look to be full of severed arms and legs?

  • @JG-tt4sz
    @JG-tt4sz Рік тому

    Lee was getting old and tired. Longstreet should have mutineered.