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  • 01:00 New What Was Surgery Like In The 1800s?

    What Was Surgery Like In The 1800s?

    17 views / 0 likes - added

    Before the mid-1800s, surgery was unsafe and unsanitary. Thankfully times have changed, and we now have the modern anesthesia that keeps us under during surgery because of...parties!? Fascinating Fails host Maren Hunsberger unravels this unique origin sto

  • 01:36 Berlin 1800s Colorized Film | 1896 Frederick Street Germany [4k Colorized]

    Berlin 1800s Colorized Film | 1896 Frederick Street Germany [4k Colorized]

    191 views / 0 likes - added

    Berlin 1800s Color Film | 1896 Frederick Street Germany [4k Colorized] #berlin #germany #color #colorized #restored Upscaling to 4k with Ai technology is the core of colorization, and restoration of old videos into the modern age. Upscaled Studio is dedic

  • 11:01 Slavery And Missouri Compromise In Early 1800s

    Slavery And Missouri Compromise In Early 1800s

    618 views / 1 likes - added

    Kim Kutz explains how slavery was an issue at the birth of the United States and how the issue became more and more central as the country expanded.

  • 11:47 Increasing Political Battles Over Slavery In Mid 1800s

    Increasing Political Battles Over Slavery In Mid 1800s

    551 views / 0 likes - added

    Kim and Sal talk about increased tensions between slave and free states as new territory is added after Mexican-American War and from Compromise of 1850 (especially Fugitive Slave Act).

  • 04:31 Man Born in 1866 Talks About the Late 1800s

    Man Born in 1866 Talks About the Late 1800s

    88 views / 0 likes - added

    0:00 Introduction1:38 Main VideoThis is Eugene D. Nims, born in 1866. When the United States Government opened Oklahoma for settlement in 1893, he was there and made the run on horseback into the Cherokee strip. Here he got into the lumber business. All t

  • 04:29 Kids Try British Recipes From the 1800s | HiHo Kids

    Kids Try British Recipes From the 1800s | HiHo Kids

    410 views / 1 likes - added

    Sponsor this series: http://bit.ly/2zNbqjwCome play with us!Sign up at http://bitly.com/hihofans to get updates on HiHo, special offers, and exclusive behind-the-scenes content with your favorite kids.SUBSCRIBE to HiHo Kids: http://bit.ly/HiHoYouTubeDon't

  • 03:13 Popular EXCLUSIVE: Fur Seals Are Back From The Brink On California Islands

    EXCLUSIVE: Fur Seals Are Back From The Brink On California Islands

    794 views / 3 likes - added

    A group of researchers is tracking the gradual return of northern fur seals to the Bay Area of California. The seals were once prized for their thick, warm fur, and they were hunted nearly to extinction in the 1800s. Over a century later, they're slowly r

  • 10:49 Popular Maxwell's Equations: Crash Course Physics #37

    Maxwell's Equations: Crash Course Physics #37

    1,013 views / 0 likes - added

    Want more Crash Course in person? We'll be at NerdCon: Nerdfighteria in Boston on February 25th and 26th! For more information, go to http://www.nerdconnerdfighteria.com/ In the early 1800s, Michael Faraday showed us how a changing magnetic field induces

  • 27:38 Making Silver From Ore I Found In An Abandoned Mine

    Making Silver From Ore I Found In An Abandoned Mine

    188 views / 0 likes - added

    I've wanted to make pure silver as long as I've owned an abandoned silver mine. This past week, I found a book published in 1886 that walked through all the different steps. It was raining, so what better thing to do than read up and try to make the first

  • 04:06 Women Going to Work in 1904: 19th Century Women's Clothing and Hairstyles: Colorized and Restored

    Women Going to Work in 1904: 19th Century Women's Clothing and Hairstyles: Colorized and Restored

    171 views / 0 likes - added

    This video was filmed on April 26, 1904 at the Westinghouse Electric Corporation in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. This is an excellent display of what women wore in the late 1800s. It is a part of a film series called "Westinghouse Works," which was taken bet

  • Yellowstone Bison Are Built for Winter Survival  Epic Yellowstone | Smithsonian Channel

    Yellowstone Bison Are Built for Winter Survival Epic Yellowstone | Smithsonian Channel

    246 views / 0 likes - added

    With a dense coat, a powerful mass of muscle and a large head ideally suited for clearing away snow and locating buried grass, bison are built for frigid conditions in Yellowstone. If it wasnt for a hidden herd in the deepest reaches of this National Park

  • 17:48 13 Antique Magic Tricks Revealed

    13 Antique Magic Tricks Revealed

    579 views / 2 likes - added

    Explore the secrets of old antique magic tricks! Learn the OLDEST trick in the book! Discover the secrets of ancient magic tricks from thousands of years ago and perform them yourself to impress your friends and family! Illusions performed by magicians in

  • 01:37 Science Of Why Golf Balls Have Dimples

    Science Of Why Golf Balls Have Dimples

    581 views / 0 likes - added

    Prior to the mid-1800s, golf balls were smooth and didn't travel very far in the air. The current design of a dimple-shaped ball reduces the air flow around the ball. Typically, golf balls have between 300 to 500 dimples. This helps them to fly twice as f

  • 03:53 3D Zoetrope  Real Time Stop Motion Machine

    3D Zoetrope Real Time Stop Motion Machine

    562 views / 0 likes - added

    This amazing animated optical illusion, is called a Zoetrope, which were the first kind of animated entertainment before movies.The Zoetrope machine can play 3D-printed animations by spinning them on a disc in front of an array of LED strobe lights. The m

  • 06:44 Manufacturing plywood boards: then and now

    Manufacturing plywood boards: then and now

    460 views / 0 likes - added

    Plywood is a simple material made by glueing together thin sheets of wood, known as veneers or plies. These basic elements have remained broadly the same throughout its history. The most significant breakthrough in its production came in the early 1800s w

  • 13:46 Popular Imperialism: Crash Course World History #35

    Imperialism: Crash Course World History #35

    2,293 views / 0 likes - added

    In which John Green teaches you about European Imperialism in the 19th century. European powers started to create colonial empires way back in the 16th century, but businesses really took off in the 19th century, especially in Asia and Africa. During the

  • 13:43 Popular Latin American Revolutions: Crash Course World History #31

    Latin American Revolutions: Crash Course World History #31

    1,170 views / 0 likes - added

    In which John Green talks about the many revolutions of Latin America in the 19th century. At the beginning of the 1800s, Latin America was firmly under the control of Spain and Portugal. The revolutionary zeal that had recently created the United States

  • 02:13 The 100% Real, Absolutely Honest and True Story Behind Snake Oil

    The 100% Real, Absolutely Honest and True Story Behind Snake Oil

    688 views / 0 likes - added

    Ah, the snake oil salesman. We've all heard, used, or maybe even been called this most nefarious nomenclature for no-good swindlers and charlatans before. But what the hell is snake oil anyway that its peddlers are such quacks? Well back in the 1800s, Sta

  • 02:48 Popular In Japan, Shaved Ice Goes Gourmet

    In Japan, Shaved Ice Goes Gourmet

    859 views / 0 likes - added

    Kakigori is a traditional Japanese shaved ice dessert dating back to the late 1800s. Originally meant for Japan’s elite, today it’s become a summer staple for everyone. Some, like chef Aya Eguchi, still abide by ancient methods of preparation, using ice f

  • 06:49 How Books Are Handmade At The Last Printing Press Of Its Kind In The US | Still Standing

    How Books Are Handmade At The Last Printing Press Of Its Kind In The US | Still Standing

    244 views / 0 likes - added

    Arion Press is the last printing press in the US where books are handmade from start to finish. Using machines and techniques that date back to the 1800s, these books can take years to make and cost up to $10,000 to buy. Set against the tech hub backdrop

  • 06:09 Why the Ouija board became so famous

    Why the Ouija board became so famous

    443 views / 0 likes - added

    This is where Ouija boards came from. And it might surprise you. Subscribe to our channel! http://goo.gl/0bsAjO In this episode of Overrated, Vox’s Phil Edwards explores what Ouija means, from a historical and cultural perspective. The Ouija game an

  • 00:58 The First Man To Record Sound  #sound #shorts

    The First Man To Record Sound #sound #shorts

    97 views / 0 likes - added

    Do you know who recorded the first-ever sound?If you answered, 'Thomas Edison', you are mistaken! It was actually a bookseller in Paris, in the mid-1800s. douard-Lon Scott de Martinville invented a device called the Phonautograph, which recorded audio. He

  • 04:53 Have you met Britain's Unknown Royal Family?

    Have you met Britain's Unknown Royal Family?

    77 views / 0 likes - added

    As the United Kingdom prepares to crown King Charles III, another royal family will be watching with eager eyes. Meet the Pearly Kings and Queens of London.Like the British monarch, Diane Gould comes from a long line of kings and queens. She can trace her

  • 10:04 Recording on 100-Year-Old Equipment

    Recording on 100-Year-Old Equipment

    363 views / 0 likes - added

    Recording music on 100-year-old wax cylinder recording equipment. Here's recording metal with it: https://youtu.be/fR4BuM6dP44 Here are the full takes of Short Song: https://youtu.be/_sn7KyLHfr0 My Uncle the Philanthropist: https://youtu.be/TBpQR2z2eko Se

  • 44:53 I tried 500 years of Haircuts

    I tried 500 years of Haircuts

    131 views / 0 likes - added

    Signup for your FREE trial to Wondrium here: http://ow.ly/2ylu30rSeJU I've wanted try a bunch of these styles for so long, but always had the 'wrong' hair length! So I fixed that, one style at a time. Time Stamps: 00:00 Intro 00:25 1500s 04:43 1600s 10:38

  • 02:58 The First Man To Record Sound

    The First Man To Record Sound

    93 views / 0 likes - added

    Do you know who recorded the first-ever sound?If you answered, 'Thomas Edison', you are mistaken! It was actually a bookseller in Paris, in the mid-1800s. douard-Lon Scott de Martinville invented a device called the Phonautograph, which recorded audio. He

  • 01:36 Popular Michael Faraday's Electric Frogs

    Michael Faraday's Electric Frogs

    1,618 views / 2 likes - added

    Why did the Royal Institution used to have a froggery? Before more sophisticated methods for detecting electricity emerged, Michael Faraday and his colleagues used a rather brutal method… No frogs were harmed in the making of this video. Well, not since t

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  • 03:59 The Industrial Revolution (18-19th Century)

    The Industrial Revolution (18-19th Century)

    567 views / 1 likes - added

    Introduction to some of the elements of the Industrial Revolution, more on this subject to come! The economic developments of the 1800s saw the development of agrarian and handicraft economies in Europe and America transform into industrial urbanised ones

  • 25:30 Making Eggs Benedict With Master Chef Billy Oliva | Dial A Chef

    Making Eggs Benedict With Master Chef Billy Oliva | Dial A Chef

    295 views / 0 likes - added

    Delmonicos Head Chef Billy Oliva coaches Insiders Medha Imam on how to make Eggs Benedict, from how to poach an egg to creating homemade hollandaise sauce. Eggs Benedict is widely considered to have been created at Delmonico's in the late 1800s. Medha's a

  • 14:22 Italian and German Unification: Crash Course European History #27

    Italian and German Unification: Crash Course European History #27

    570 views / 0 likes - added

    So, we haven't talked much about Italy and Germany so far in Crash Course Euro, and that's because prior to the mid-19th century, those two nation-states weren't really a thing. Today we'll look at how Italy and Germany pulled it together in the second ha

  • 10:16 Why South Africa is still so segregated

    Why South Africa is still so segregated

    252 views / 1 likes - added

    How centuries of division built one of the most unequal countries on earth.Subscribe to our channel! http://goo.gl/0bsAjOFor decades, South Africa was under apartheid: a series of laws that divided people by race. Then, in the 1990s, those laws were disma

  • 13:14 Expansion and Resistance: Crash Course European History #28

    Expansion and Resistance: Crash Course European History #28

    518 views / 0 likes - added

    In 19th century Europe, with nation building well under way, thoughts turned outward, toward empire. This week, we're looking at how Europeans expanded into Africa, Asia, and Oceania during the 1800s. You'll learn about China and the Opium War, British In

  • 05:23 Why did the US try to kill all the bison? - Andrew C. Isenberg

    Why did the US try to kill all the bison? - Andrew C. Isenberg

    44 views / 0 likes - added

    Explore how the US government hunted bison to near-extinction in the 1800s to force Native Americans onto reservations.--By the mid-1700s, many Plains nations survived on North Americas largest land mammals: bison. They ate its meat, made the hides into w

  • 05:29 The secret society of the Great Dismal Swamp - Dan Sayers

    The secret society of the Great Dismal Swamp - Dan Sayers

    235 views / 0 likes - added

    Uncover the history of the hidden communities that inhabited the Great Dismal Swamp in North America. --Straddling Virginia and North Carolina is an area that was once described as the most repulsive of American possessions. By 1728, it was known as the G

  • 06:04 The dark history of the suburbs - Kevin Ehrman-Solberg and Kirsten Delegard

    The dark history of the suburbs - Kevin Ehrman-Solberg and Kirsten Delegard

    157 views / 0 likes - added

    Discover the dark history of the American suburbs, and how practices like racial covenants restricted access to home ownership for people of color.--Beginning in the 1800s, people began writing clauses into property deeds that were meant to prevent all fu

  • 06:00 The rebel radio that brought down a war criminal - Diana Sierra Becerra

    The rebel radio that brought down a war criminal - Diana Sierra Becerra

    130 views / 0 likes - added

    Get to know the story of Radio Venceremos, an underground radio collective that fought US-backed fascism during the Salvadoran Civil War.--Since the 1800s, a handful of oligarchs had controlled nearly all of El Salvadors land, forcing laborers to work for

  • 05:12 One of history's most dangerous myths - Anneliese Mehnert

    One of history's most dangerous myths - Anneliese Mehnert

    108 views / 0 likes - added

    Examine the empty land theory, which was created by European colonizers in South Africa to support their claims to the region.--From the 1650s through the late 1800s, European colonists descended on South Africa. They sought to claim the region, becoming

  • 06:11 The physics of entropy and the origin of life | Sean Carroll

    The physics of entropy and the origin of life | Sean Carroll

    124 views / 0 likes - added

    How did complex systems emerge from chaos? Physicist Sean Carroll explains.Subscribe to Big Think on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvQECJukTDE2i6aCoMnS-Vg?sub_confirmation=1Up next, The Universe in 90 minutes: Time, free will, God, & more https

  • 02:49 Popular How Do Erasers Erase?

    How Do Erasers Erase?

    915 views / 0 likes - added

    Erasers lift our mistakes right off the page, but it's not magic - it's the microscopic physics of stickiness. Learn more at HowStuffWorks.com: http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/everyday-tech/erasers-erase.htm Share on Facebook: Share on Twitter: Subsc

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  • 03:13 How Do Pneumatic Tubes Work?

    How Do Pneumatic Tubes Work?

    645 views / 0 likes - added

    The Internet has been called a series of tubes. But long before email, people sent messages across cities through networks of pneumatic tubes. Learn how they work! Learn more at HowStuffWorks.com: http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/everyday-tech/pneumat

  • 04:18 Decoded: How much do you really know about viruses?

    Decoded: How much do you really know about viruses?

    629 views / 0 likes - added

    These sometimes deadly packets of genetic information are more numerous in number than the stars in the cosmos. Viruses are tiny infectious agents that dominate much of the microscopic world.Theyre incredibly abundant. There are more viruses in a single d

  • 09:51 This Superheavy Atom Factory Is Pushing the Limits of the Periodic Table

    This Superheavy Atom Factory Is Pushing the Limits of the Periodic Table

    338 views / 0 likes - added

    As we push the Periodic Table of the Elements further and further into the unknown, its familiar columns and rows are threatening to crumble. Whats next for this science icon?Videos of the Flerov Lab courtesy of the JINR video portal - https://www.youtube

  • 10:12 The hidden history of Hand Talk

    The hidden history of Hand Talk

    169 views / 0 likes - added

    The hidden history of an ancient language.Subscribe and turn on notifications so you don't miss any videos: http://goo.gl/0bsAjO Centuries before we had American Sign Language, Native sign languages, broadly known as Hand Talk, were thriving across North

  • 12:29 The (mostly) true story of ghost photography"

    The (mostly) true story of ghost photography"

    207 views / 1 likes - added

    William Mumler claimed he could photograph ghosts ... and no one could prove he couldnt.Subscribe and turn on notifications so you don't miss any videos: http://goo.gl/0bsAjO In the mid-1800s, the development of exciting new forms of communication, like p

  • 06:41 Untangling the Devil's Corkscrew

    Untangling the Devil's Corkscrew

    625 views / 0 likes - added

    In the late 1800s, paleontologists in Nebraska found huge coils of hardened sand stuck deep in the earth. Local ranchers called them Devil's Corkscrews and scientists called them Daemonelix. It was clear these corkscrews were created by some form of life,

  • 08:34 The Mystery of the Eocene’s Lethal Lake

    The Mystery of the Eocene’s Lethal Lake

    550 views / 0 likes - added

    Check out America from Scratch: https://www.youtube.com/americafromscratch In 1800s, miners began working in exposed deposits of mud near the town of Messel, Germany. They were extracting oil from the rock and along with the oil, they found beautifully pr


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