1995 Oklahoma City Bombing - Visiting the Oklahoma City National Memorial

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Today we're in Oklahoma City, OK to pay our respects to the victims of the 1995 Oklahoma City Bombing. In this video we'll see the beautiful Oklahoma City Memorial that is there today, as well as the original location of the Alfred P. Murrah building where it used to be. Join us as we tell the story and go back in time to that tragic morning in April 1995.
The Oklahoma City bombing was a domestic terrorist truck bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States, on April 19, 1995, the second anniversary of the end to the Waco siege. The bombing was the deadliest act of terrorism in U.S. history until the September 11 attacks in 2001, and remains the deadliest act of domestic terrorism in U.S. history.

#history #darkhistory #oklahomacitymemorial
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As you can tell I didn’t do much editing in this video. Due to the topic, I wanted to do it a little differently. I wanted you to feel like you’re there with me as we walk around and explore this memorial together. Some may think this video is boring since I don’t cut from clip to clip and that’s okay. This video is for those who want to feel like you’re there with me. Thanks for your support and RIP to the fallen here in OKC ❤

TravelswithNick
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I can remember seeing this on television. I was pregnant at the time with my second child. My first was a little over a year old. All I could do was cry. So devastating and heart breaking. What those families must of went through, I couldn’t even imagine. God bless. Very respectful video Nick

Banditthecat
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Amazing job. Well said. Well done. Very respectful sir

Texasman
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I remember this sad story. Ugh makes me sad still. Beautifully done Nick well made video ❤

DreamWeaverzzz
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You did such a great job on this vlog. Very respectful and thorough. May all those souls rest in peace.🕊️ Safe travels. ~Love&Light♥️C.

dazzlingchick
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Of all the domestic' attack, horrors in the last number of decades, this is about the only one that I have *never known anyone who visited, as infamous, and devastating as it remains. Thank you for bringing us there. I am old enough to remember where I was when I heard about it. My own child was only six, so like your Mom, the terror became even more real. Who would guess the number of similar tragedies that would follow, involving innocent people?😪 Thank you, Nick for your coverage. It was top-notch, and obviously, deeply felt. It does seem very quiet there, but that sort of atmosphere rather goes with the mood one must feel... Thanks, so much, Nick... a very hearfelt, deserving tribute. 🇺🇸 🙏🏻😔

rhondaz
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Thank you for taking us along with you Nick

nem
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Baylee Almon turned a year old the day before the bombing. I have been to the memorial during the day and at night. It is a surreal place to visit. I also went on the tour of the museum. The ones on the west end are the people who died outside of the Murrah Building.

KristiBranstetter
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I watch a lot of these travel with me pages and yours is the best. you’re not pretentious or a know it all. you have a calm aura and inform us in a way that isn’t boring but effective. definitely have a new subscriber and hope for more videos!

ChasingKia
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The World Trade Center bombing two years before the OKC bombing in 1995 was classified as the largest terror attack up until the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. And, as we all know, six years later in 2001 was 9/11 and that officially became the biggest/largest attack.

The picture at 4:17 is the rear of the building where it met the plaza, which is still there, but a lot of people have never seen the front of it. It was all glass.

juslewissr
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Despite being in the middle of a city with several hundred thousand people in it, this memorial is the most peaceful place I've ever personally experienced, especially after dark. Regardless, it's a lot to process the first time you visit -- and can be everytime you're there regardless of having been there before or not. I've gone quite a few times and anyone that's never visited should go see it if ever given the chance. There really are know words to accurately describe the experience.

juslewissr
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What a terrible episode, in history. God bless all 🙏🙏🙏🇺🇸💐

javierdealba
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Nick. I think you captured a ghostly spirit on camera when you were up at the survivors tree.

Devin-Capper
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I was born a week before the Oklahoma City bombing, when the incident happened I was a week old, Didn’t learn about this until I was like maybe 14 or 15 years old. Pretty much fully learned about it until 2022 when I was 27. Tells us how extremely evil and vile people can be really be. What is more heartbreaking is that 19 children were among the people that was unalived on that day. Some didn’t even make it to their 1st birthday, Baylee Almon turned 1 a day before the incident and the photo of her with that fireman completely broke me😞😢 She would have been 30 years old today.

oreajessica
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I remember that day very well as well as the total disbelief that such a thing could happen here in the USA. When it was revealed that Americans were responsible(all because of some imbecilic cult leader’s warped rationalization) the anger was tremendous. To all the innocent victims, their families and friends of a couple of misguided madmen, again my deepest sympathies and prayers.

nanabutner
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My cousin Pamela was killed that morning while entering the doors to obtain a marriage license.

kgurlzmom
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OK that area that was behind the chairs yes that was a part of the Murrah building it was the plaza and also underneath it is the four-story parking garage

TylerMcLaughlin-ybhj
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Baylee almon had just turned one year old the day before 😢

elizabethmarielunacordoba
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That big wall it belongs to the murrah federal building.

elizabethmarielunacordoba