Ancient Tunnels Or The Wild West? - Buried Cities at Kansas

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  • čas přidán 25. 01. 2024
  • There are many cities and towns across the nation and world that recognize what they call "underground cities" and actually give tours of them. One of these is Ellinwood Kansas, and in this video this underground is explored and examined as to the true origins of the tunnels, walls and sidewalks that exist. Were these structures built with basements that were dug out and then constructed with lower walkways?....-Or is this actually evidence of a hidden cataclysm that is commonly termed "the mudflood", in which these lower levels were originally the main levels at ground level? See first hand on this tour of the Ellinwood Underground.

Komentáře • 161

  • @shawnybee
    @shawnybee Před 4 měsíci +52

    They definitely have the INDOCTRINATION story down to a tee

    • @qua7771
      @qua7771 Před 4 měsíci +3

      That was my thought as well. Unlikely design features explained away. Lifting wooden sidewalks to bring coal in? Underground doors, and windows to nowhere for ventilation? That makes since.

    • @jeffburton2625
      @jeffburton2625 Před 27 dny

      Talk about indoctrination.. indoctrination to false beliefs. Interesting behavior.

    • @SMMBHQ-cg2zy
      @SMMBHQ-cg2zy Před 14 dny

      yes they do , especially the drinking and bars and walking home at night parts,

  • @VenturaIT
    @VenturaIT Před 4 měsíci +23

    best video of this kind i've seen
    lol, 20:15 omg, that's the front of the store from before the mudflood... looks like the same exact boardwalk too... it flooded they dug out and put in those foundations to build up and over... this is wild. Bavarians always build finished fronts of building in the basements, lol. This is amazing... you can clearly see that's the original store-front of the "hotel"... the big blocks seem to be the new foundation they built to raise the city up over the flooded areas...
    In the little town I grew up in in the midwest it has a town center like this, but most of the red brick buildings are gone now. There are photos of the road and sidewalks being at varying heights and the high school is characteristic of the mud flood type red brick building. There is an article from a newspaper about how the town was once a German speaking village, and this must be true since you can check the geneology online and some of the first generations were from German barons even, but there are no historical objects or documents in German, nothing, not a sign, not a book, not a school... nothing and there is even a whole book on the history of the county from 1880 and no mention of the people who lived in our old house that were the german baron's family, he was the town mayor and the hosue was the biggest and nicest in town, but nothing about it... the wood in that house was amazing, like the finest royal palace in the world... they owned the local saw mill too... but no photos of them, no one knows who built the house, which was burned down for insurance money in the 1990s and the last part was bulldozed just this year... nobody knows who built and who the architect was, but there are tons of photos of other less grand house and tons of photos of other families in that town... it's weird and that house had a two level basement, one level was a red brick floor and walls with partitions where the oil tanks were kept and a door that opens into the side yard just into a dirt room that we could never figure out... then a lower part of the basement not a full level down, like a step down with a concrete floor... the house would be close to 200 years old but I can't find any info on it. I'm the only one who really remembers it. The people who lived there before us after the family sold it didn't pay attention and my family members were either too old to explore it and didn't care or too young... and the house is gone... it had a big water tank under the back porch that we were told was the septic, but why would they put that under the back porch right next to the kitchen, I now know septic are out further, but have to study about that more... and why have a big basement and also a big root cellar too? I now think the root cellars held a big acid battery and the big cement tank was part of the battery, just a theory for now. I was going to try to buy it back but the town isn't as desirable as it once was. But it was a german town but no german relics whatsoever. Theyve torn down most if not all of the grand old houses and buildings and the town and region is struggling in a big way. And for sure the local masons are still covering up and making up stories about the my town's history to this day in the facebook group.

    • @miggyfixx6418
      @miggyfixx6418 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Now that is very interesting my friend, thank you for sharing. Over the last few weeks, I've been digging into Germanic history. What I've found which your story collaborates is that the erasure of their history is a recurring theme. Somebody has worked very hard, for a very long time, to make sure their accomplishments were forgotten. It would also appear that Germans have been several steps ahead of the rest of the world for a very long time, despite these efforts against them. I would like to know more about your small town and the home where you lived, and I'd be happy to share what I've learned about the old world in four years of obsessive research. I can see a row of these old red brick buildings where I now sit, and I've managed to get an endoscope under the vaulted sidewalk. Guess what I found? I live in a tiny town just north of Toronto, Canada, this phenomenon is widespread indeed. The mudflood community mostly attribute this buried world to so-called Tartarian peoples. I've long suspected a Moorish origin. Now I'm starting to lean towards yet another Germanic deletion. If you go to my channel and click About, you will find my email address. Shoot me a msg if you would like to discuss further...

  • @shawnybee
    @shawnybee Před 4 měsíci +18

    Great video my friend.... Excellent evidence of mudflood!!

  • @petemoro4938
    @petemoro4938 Před 4 měsíci +17

    Thanks for your dedication and critical thinking. It would be nice to discover an exposed lower level cornerstone with an actual, original date !

  • @Tommy369-le6tg
    @Tommy369-le6tg Před 4 měsíci +13

    Thank you for your videos showing us viewers the old world buildings. Keep it going my friend. Bless you 🙏

  • @faster6329
    @faster6329 Před 4 měsíci +9

    Great video. There are ancient cities in the Middle East that has been built upon at least 7 times. When archeologists dig down, they find layer after layer where people had build new homes on top of old ones.
    All around the world, they find that people have used ancient foundations to build new buildings upon. In some parts of Italy, these homes and tunnels go down over 40 or 50 feet and these are ancient but archeologists say they are from middle ages. The sewage system in cities like Rome are amazing structures that could have been used for a totally different purpose in the far ancient times.

  • @brentrenouf7127
    @brentrenouf7127 Před 4 měsíci +19

    Amazing find, best history channel 👍

  • @ischmel3884
    @ischmel3884 Před 17 dny +4

    Ellinwood KS was an important stop along the Santa Fe trail and the A,T & SF railway. A very busy place.. Hardware, banking, clothing, cafes, lodging, a drugstore, barber, an opera house and drinking establishments lined Main St. Those "tunnels" were mostly basements, but there were independent businesses located in some. The basement of the Wolf Hotel was at one time the Jail and the Public Library...as part of the Hotels lobby was also the Police Station. The "jeweled" man hole covers were at one time located every 20 ft. or so, along the length of the sidewalks, as there were also patches of colored glass bricks for natural lighting. In the alley side of the buildings, each structure had basement stairwells and grated window wells. All of the buildings along Main St. had basements for storage and additional enterprise and they were interconnected by common walkways.

  • @gkiferonhs
    @gkiferonhs Před 17 dny +5

    The basement stone looks like the buck-sawed sandstone used in almost all the first buildings in Kansas due to the lack of wood. My grandma lived her first eight years in a soddy; were the first buildings in the town originally part dug-outs to get out of the damned wind?

  • @pinkiesue849
    @pinkiesue849 Před 4 měsíci +10

    Amazing finds. Wonder how old the lower levels are. If water is just yen feet below the floor, why is the prairie so dry

  • @holykissme
    @holykissme Před 4 měsíci +4

    I'm going to take the other side on this one. Those walls are very typical of the mid to late 19th century (1850-1880). They're known as stone masonry. The wall thickness, the concrete and applied sealants, even the bricks are typical of that era. I've got an 1873 farmhouse basement that looks identical. The presence of a coal furnace in the basement suggest they knew hot air rises. The pantry shelving, it's very time appropriate. Telltale mud flood with below grade doors and windows. This area was inundated, which may explain why the newer ground level construction. Yes, it happened and whoever was left or came to the area responded. You are correct. The floor joists and subfloor are replacements. The electric wires are also telltale.

  • @JamesHawkeYouTube
    @JamesHawkeYouTube Před 4 měsíci +3

    I am in Australia, and I remember in the 1970's asking my dad why all the buildings in town had glass bricks in the pavement out front. I think he just said it was because of cellars below. These days they have covered all those glass bricks with new concrete, and nobody would know what is down there. Great channel and video, brother. Glad I found you.

  • @luxuriousfir
    @luxuriousfir Před 4 měsíci +9

    I absolutely love your work. Thank you. Godspeed

  • @israeladams6439
    @israeladams6439 Před 4 měsíci +7

    those same type of stones are all over fort hays, and the base at junction city/manhattan..

  • @SaprinaAl-Mosrati
    @SaprinaAl-Mosrati Před 4 měsíci +8

    Love this!!! Nothing makes sense in everything we have been taught!

  • @austinmorris981
    @austinmorris981 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Downtown Knoxville, Tennessee, has a similar below-surface level, which is normally off-limits to public access.

  • @rollingvee
    @rollingvee Před 2 měsíci +2

    First thing that comes to mind looking at this...underground cold storage. Very important for the olden days pre-refridgeration.

  • @ericharrison3511
    @ericharrison3511 Před 17 dny +2

    My house, 1908 model, has the same construction. As a stonemason I don’t understand your statement about the age of the stone being much older than the brickwork. It certainly looks like work has been done since the original construction, but only repair or remodeling.

  • @binaryflat
    @binaryflat Před 4 měsíci +2

    These buildings, and many others like them, have always struck me as odd, even as a child. A bank in the little town I grew up in, had a tiny space under it, and was used as as barber shop. It felt like a hole in the ground, or a cave, with an awkward winding entrance. And there was a Ben Franklin Five and Dime across the street, that had a big basement floor that was used as part of the store. Even though the whole downtown area is like this, there are very few buildings that had them open to the public. Maybe some did not get dug out. I cannot begin to imagine the immensity of the event that caused all of this!

  • @richardmeiners6535
    @richardmeiners6535 Před měsícem +2

    We had tunnels like this in my hometown of Hiawatha, they used to use them as shops, restaurants, barber shops etc.. It was just more shop space to maximize the use of the buildings. Most of them are closed off or gone now, but as a kid I remember the stairs going down and the glass blocks in the walkway.

    • @cougarhunter33
      @cougarhunter33 Před 23 dny +1

      They apparently have them in Leavenworth too. Never personally seen them when I lived there, but read the article.

  • @deniseseaba8032
    @deniseseaba8032 Před 4 měsíci +3

    My neighbor is from Germany. He is 90 and lives to tell stories from his time in Germany. He said he got a job building a hotel. He described the beautiful workmanship that went into it. After they built the first floor, they were told to bury it and they built over it to made a first floor. So the Germans did built this way.

    • @deniseseaba8032
      @deniseseaba8032 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I believe our buildings are very old, older than they tell us.

  • @intelligentvoid
    @intelligentvoid Před 4 měsíci +9

    I'd love to invite you down to Oklahoma and show you what I've found. I'm a Geologist, whatever that means now, and this sh*t ain't right. It is not right at all. I'm finding melted quartz, burnt rocks, buried structures and a pyramid. I'm going to use my drone to get some footage. Please contact me if you are interested.

    • @kennethreffitt2051
      @kennethreffitt2051 Před měsícem

      I moved to Oklahoma last year and I'm interested in seeing some of the old world buildings

    • @DJ_Narcan
      @DJ_Narcan Před 16 dny

      It's the Phoenix phenomenon. Plasma cataclysm cycle. You can find those same things all over

  • @SMMBHQ-cg2zy
    @SMMBHQ-cg2zy Před 14 dny +2

    the reason every single town is the same is because they have a narrative they must adhere to. which puts the rest of us about 50 years behind the curve , and now a hundred years later we the people are 500 years behind the times of the haves . hence tecnology and the military are hundreds of years ahead of us today.

  • @jessecurlgoddess7320
    @jessecurlgoddess7320 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I remember when I was a kid I had a friend that lived in a small apartment building. Their unit had those windows that were partially buried underground. I remember always being fascinated by that. The building had stood abandoned for a number of years and eventually demolished. But even as an adult every time I would pass that building I wouldn’t always think about those windows. Funny how things come full circle

  • @oldworldmichigan705
    @oldworldmichigan705 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Tunnels, tunnels everywhere. Who do you think made them??

  • @williamjones7604
    @williamjones7604 Před 4 měsíci +4

    I totally agree with your analysis. Great work.

  • @TS-yf2zf
    @TS-yf2zf Před 4 měsíci +4

    As someone with a background in foundations this makes very little to no sense.
    They rolled up & dug out beforehand 😂 yeah, ok.
    Anyone buying this story has obviously never tried digging or building anything without power tools 😂
    The man & woman giving the tour's don't seem to realise what they are saying sounds like they are completely indoctrinated & unable to see what's right infront of them, if I was there I'd be asking the tough questions 😂

  • @JackFrost-xvxv
    @JackFrost-xvxv Před 4 měsíci +4

    The titanic was sunk on purpose and guess what, all the very weathly & powerful people of that time who were completely against the federal reserve coming into power was on that ship 🚢
    And i heard j p Morgan had a direct hand in the that tragic incident. Along with the tesla stuff. Who knows.
    Great video.

    • @ryandoyle4344
      @ryandoyle4344 Před 4 měsíci

      Crazy rumor that the Olympic was in a Titanic-suit for an insurance scam. Definitely implausible

  • @johnjeffries6207
    @johnjeffries6207 Před 3 dny

    I lived there, as a teenager. Never knew they where there. Back then the basements where dark and dirty. There was a 18 bar, called the 1883.

  • @RavenSnore
    @RavenSnore Před 4 měsíci +2

    21:01 - what is staring us in the face is actually quite simple: they look much older, because they were buried in the mud. it didnt take these people "2 years to build" any of this stuff, what took "2 years" was the forced labor of digging it all out. they probably used slaves, or prisoners, or anyone really. it took a massive effort for us little humans to simply dig it all out. after sitting buried in the mud for who knows how long, then being "excavated" it will most likely explain the "older appearance". there was obviously LOTS of towns to dig out and get ready for the upcoming taxpaying society. Cheers Warrior!! :D :D

  • @johnalexander4356
    @johnalexander4356 Před měsícem +1

    I don't know for sure about today, but downtown Topeka had tunnels under the sidewalks and they stretched for miles. Back in the 1960 1970s we could still access some of them. When I was little there was a central steam plant downtown that sold steam to all the buildings with steam for heating. After that steam plant closed the tunnels started to be locked off or filled in. But I was personally inside the old tunnel system here.

  • @zen_harvest72
    @zen_harvest72 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Your channel is badass and done very well. Thanks for showing, be safe on your travels.

  • @keding9159
    @keding9159 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Cool glass in the manhole covers to let light down below.

    • @ryandoyle4344
      @ryandoyle4344 Před 4 měsíci

      Glass sidewalk was found a city under the concrete

  • @Aboard_and_Abroad
    @Aboard_and_Abroad Před 4 měsíci +3

    wow amazing. i see the same high pour concrete in my small town.. masons of course on the same block too. great work man

  • @jasonbecker4049
    @jasonbecker4049 Před 8 dny

    Downtown Farmington Illinois is like this too. Towns went back before the Blackhawk Indian wars. Pretty cool history out there right under our noses.

  • @sarahnoah3693
    @sarahnoah3693 Před 4 měsíci

    I’m always happy to see another video from you. Thank you.

  • @mond000
    @mond000 Před 4 měsíci

    Great tour! Thanks for posting this.

  • @corysufak9561
    @corysufak9561 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Your videos are phenomenal brother...

  • @JoshStoneTruth
    @JoshStoneTruth Před 4 měsíci +4

    Love your work brother

  • @kurtremislettmyr7108
    @kurtremislettmyr7108 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I wonder if the event that buried everything was dry or wet. Maybe dust floating in the air from many big explosions. To me that seems more likely than it being brought by water like in the deluge. I'm thinking water would be allot more destructive.

  • @activecontrain
    @activecontrain Před 4 měsíci +1

    Salisbury, NC is very similar. Always rumors of tunnels under the streets, as well

  • @timawells
    @timawells Před 4 měsíci

    I am in Sheffield England. All around our town centre we have old industrial buildings with these lower basements, we are told they were for lower level workshops and to let the light in. I will document as much of this as I can before it gets wiped out.

  • @faster6329
    @faster6329 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Why would you build a basement with doors and windows that you need to cover 100%? If the idea is to get some fresh air into the basement, why not build small windows as we do now? Why have full size windows with glass and door that are fully covered or almost fully covered? Does NOT make any sense.

  • @gschaub9
    @gschaub9 Před 4 měsíci +2

    The Bavarian mud flood architectural style, learned, of course, back in mud flooded Bavaria.

  • @ccscomments757
    @ccscomments757 Před 10 dny

    A cousin, many generations removed from my life, traveled with his extended family to Kansas (this was about 1866 or so) from eastern Iowa. His remark upon arrival was, "Its windy enough to blow the hay from a horses mouth!". He and his wife decided to return to Iowa, but he died in northern Missouri at the home of family living there.

  • @xsynidex
    @xsynidex Před 4 měsíci +1

    stem walls is a type of foundation that prolly comes from the finding of these walls sticking out of the ground you should look at fort union in New Mexico, the mud on the chimneys is falling off showing the brick construction, the stone walls go below ground, there is also a star fort right near by

    • @iliketurtles2322
      @iliketurtles2322 Před 4 měsíci

      Just checked it out on Google earth. Pretty weird place....

  • @patjcarey
    @patjcarey Před 4 měsíci +2

    Coal leaves its mark and would have been trampled into the floor and smeared into the walls. The manhole cover coal access is laughable. Great video once again.

  • @IZingari
    @IZingari Před 4 měsíci +1

    Fantastic work HTHT , I've found out recently there are tunnels in my town , and they are passed off as smugglers tunnels from an undetermined nebulous age . and its easy to be convinced by this narrative , i believed it most of my life until now you've exposed the lie., God bless you and may your great work continue

  • @woofmeow247
    @woofmeow247 Před 4 měsíci +1

    21:48 Flanked by windows, the doorway that opens into land-mass: Bit of a giveaway!

  • @janicemilbourn2005
    @janicemilbourn2005 Před měsícem

    I was born and raised in St Joseph Mo. My mom used to tell us how there are tunnels under the city in every direction. Some have been stumbled onto by friends and some were exposed when they've torn down buildings. The city does it's best to keep it under raps, but my mom is 95 and was a child when she was told of the tunnels. They're large enough to drive a car through.

  • @austinroberts4008
    @austinroberts4008 Před 19 dny

    Lawrence Kansas has the same tunnels under the sidewalks . A waterwheel drove driveshafts under the sidewalks , then they went into the shops . The drove lathes, clothing spinning machines , mills etc , in the basements of these buildings . The industry was in the basements of the buildings . Not in the retail part of the stores . Makes sense

  • @teresajgregory
    @teresajgregory Před 2 měsíci

    I worked in an old building like this in Kemmerer, Wyoming. We had to move in there temporarily while we tore down and built a new building that was next To the very first JCPenney store in the United States - across the triangle From the old gas building that we had to temporarily use. I was amazed at how old the buildings were… Tin tile roofs and all. The skinny way down into the basement was exactly the same as in your film. Oh, and there was a child ghost, who liked to do funny things! All those old buildings on the triangle are still standing, except for the one we replaced. They were formerly 13 bars. Same extra wide sidewalks out front. There was definitely evidence of mud flood. Yes, this type of building’s are all over the United States, even today.

  • @brookeheartsmakeup4040
    @brookeheartsmakeup4040 Před 4 měsíci

    Your work is fantastic. Thank you for your courageous dedication.

  • @tomthomas2646
    @tomthomas2646 Před 13 dny

    Great Clip. Im from the area. Never had a chance to do the tour. Love the insight....

  • @lauracsimon4125
    @lauracsimon4125 Před 8 dny

    The wind Does blow most all the time in the western Kansas plains, but not so much where I live.. in eastern Kansas, near Kansas City.

  • @oldworldmichigan705
    @oldworldmichigan705 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Thank you. This is awesome

  • @doctorofart
    @doctorofart Před 4 měsíci

    Impressive.
    Sacramento Ca. Almost exact Same deal, underground tour and all

  • @My_Alchemical_Romance
    @My_Alchemical_Romance Před 4 měsíci

    I live in Olathe Kansas and the old courthouse across from the country jail was just demolished a couple years ago, and built a new across the street; there are tunnels underground from the courthouse to the jail; both new and old courthouse building.
    Don’t ask me how I know!

  • @LawrenceAccountability
    @LawrenceAccountability Před měsícem

    There’s similar passages and rooms below Liberty Hall in Lawrence.

  • @historyisfake9153
    @historyisfake9153 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I think they used the smashed up demolished building to raise the side walk and crushing doent take much to make it as fine as they want. Where else did they put the building remains as they demolished so many buildings. Just a thought I had. xx

  • @Hankkan777
    @Hankkan777 Před 4 měsíci +3

    okay I almost hate to comment on these channels
    But I have to put this out there why don't you hear anything from native American people mentioning these buildings!!! ?????
    U can't find any information on the native people's saying anything like oh yeah these huge buildings were already here!!!????? If like a lot of people believe they were here and could have been remnants of so called tartaria ???
    why doesn't the creators of these videos look into what the original people think or have to say about them? there's definitely some questions about how they were built and I do believe our time line has been messed with aka changed but more information is needed to find out what the native people's have to say

  • @12TribesUnite
    @12TribesUnite Před 4 měsíci

    Looks like a fun travel hope you enjoy and take care!

  • @ashm3697
    @ashm3697 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Lower level melted out brick

  • @zen_harvest72
    @zen_harvest72 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I've a question, is the Lurs buildings in phoenix az old world? They are called art deco, or renaissance revival style buildings. Said to be built in like 1912. Again, the same story, built by two dudes. there are a couple of them but one was demolished. I live by flagstaff, az on the navajo rez.

  • @concretewhisperer9877
    @concretewhisperer9877 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I think they probably used the mud they had an abundance of and made them into bricks!

  • @gordonsmith33
    @gordonsmith33 Před 4 měsíci +3

    BOOTS UNDERGROUND!

  • @willemhaifetz-chen1588
    @willemhaifetz-chen1588 Před 2 měsíci

    Well done Sir, thank you !

  • @Shananana99
    @Shananana99 Před 4 měsíci

    This was great!

  • @DaveD-jx2sg
    @DaveD-jx2sg Před 4 měsíci

    Awesome video!

  • @kipbrown1549
    @kipbrown1549 Před 4 měsíci

    Very interesting video !!!

  • @user-lc3wv2yw3w
    @user-lc3wv2yw3w Před 15 dny

    Underground storefronts existed in other Kansas "cow towns" like Newton and Wichita, but were filled in years ago. If you spend ant time on the prairie in the heat of the summer, you would understand why. Not to mention the need to keep rowdy cowboys out of sight.

  • @johnsevo3674
    @johnsevo3674 Před měsícem +2

    Yeah, even when I was young I knew we were being lied to. I remember the b.s. narrative story when I was on a elementary school trip to downtown Wichita, ks. Ancient stone repurposed building called a jail, and the Ancient stone building/castle repurposed called Friends University, and the Ancient downtown Catholic church building, and the Ancient Roman style bridge by Century 2 concert building, and the Ancient Catholic Nunnery in Hilltop neighborhood.
    It's nice to see people are now realizing almost everything we've been "made" to believe in compulsory indoctrination centers called public schools is mostly lies

  • @shawnybee
    @shawnybee Před 4 měsíci +2

    So weird.. i was just watching some of your videos like 20 minutes ago...

  • @zippyjer
    @zippyjer Před 4 měsíci +1

    Great effort👍🏼

  • @sircampbell1249
    @sircampbell1249 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Lot old towns had steam tunnels in downtown areas

  • @karencontestabile6064
    @karencontestabile6064 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Thanks for your BOTG.❤❤❤

  • @jeanbaker2087
    @jeanbaker2087 Před měsícem

    San Angelo Texas also has underground tunnels downtown.

  • @marcusgomez3307
    @marcusgomez3307 Před 4 měsíci +7

    NO SILT ON THE WOOD FROM THE LANTERNS

  • @peanut422hb
    @peanut422hb Před 4 měsíci +1

    Underground cities all over the world😮

  • @bluewaterdiva1
    @bluewaterdiva1 Před 12 dny

    Finally! A view below.

  • @utg369
    @utg369 Před 4 měsíci +1

    The tour guides could've added that frosted Lucky Charms are magically delicious, and it wouldn't have sounded any crazier than the "official" narrative they were spewing. 🙄

  • @dylanschulz2404
    @dylanschulz2404 Před 10 dny

    Interesting. Are you from Kansas? I am located in McPherson county. Thanks for the videos.

  • @edwardgarcia614
    @edwardgarcia614 Před 17 dny

    Cool find. Thanks for sharing. have you ever researched when the Earth turned to mud and structures literally sank into the mud?

  • @corysufak9561
    @corysufak9561 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I found an old church in downtown Gary indiana I'm going to check out

  • @richard1849
    @richard1849 Před 4 měsíci +1

    good one man, peace.

  • @danthoreson4062
    @danthoreson4062 Před 4 měsíci +1

    reminds me of Pipestone Minnesota

  • @DogRoar-dq4ri
    @DogRoar-dq4ri Před 2 měsíci

    Where are pictures, or descriptions, of the massive brick factories it had too take to make littteraly zillions of bricks and transport them to the various sites?

  • @janh5199
    @janh5199 Před 11 dny

    Originally from Ohio. The town I grew up in had similar underground structure built about the same time period. It was just the way it was done.

  • @cheechmcduck7013
    @cheechmcduck7013 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Yeah of course the underground windows were for ventilation 😂😂..

  • @Satori.108
    @Satori.108 Před 4 měsíci

    Interesting 👍

  • @stuffedbeagle
    @stuffedbeagle Před 4 měsíci

    11:00 The Camera's of the day could not capture the Pavement Lights at this angle, but it does seem to be a Vaulted Sidewalk with Pavement Lights. The Coal Hole Covers would have been Photo Manipulated out of the image for aesthetic reasons same as the Vanilla Skied Background...LUV BEAGS 🐶

  • @WatchMeTower
    @WatchMeTower Před 4 měsíci

    it was 110 that is clearly why they kept the potato's down there. duh.
    I would have guessed it would have been better in the winter but I never considered the sidewalks would be cleaned, making it like a freezer. Either lugging all that stone made them stupid back then or there is more to the story we have been told. and comparing the floor joists to the old windows was brilliant.

  • @greggcollins4215
    @greggcollins4215 Před měsícem

    Notice the "knob and tube" electric wires.

  • @pandypop1
    @pandypop1 Před 4 měsíci

    I wonder what's beneath our feet that we'll never get to see...

  • @trinity7776
    @trinity7776 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Excellent vid. We know that the railroad and trolley tracks were dug out of the ground and are ancient. So those builders had powerful locomotives and it stands to reason very powerful heavy machinery. I would take a 1960's or 70's bulldozer, steamshovel or crane over any of the ones produced today. I drive a 20 year old truck and wouldn't trade it for a new one. We are a primitive backward civilization who are good at killing innocent people and support those who do all across the earth.

  • @oldworldmichigan705
    @oldworldmichigan705 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Dude, I have so many questions

  • @oldworldmichigan705
    @oldworldmichigan705 Před 4 měsíci +1

    "it's almost like an oven" pay attention

  • @ianandjohnandmaniandreni9323

    I'm new to the mudflood theories and when it would have occurred. Has anyone plotted on a map all the areas that look like they have been mudflooded and all their elevations relative to sea level? I'm trying to see what could have been a natural cause for it, I can understand a local event to an area, state or even a country, but not a global event.

    • @wesporter2176
      @wesporter2176 Před 4 měsíci

      Some are saying it wasn't a flood really but a massive global earthquake that caused the top soil to liquify and everything solid actually sunk into it.

  • @jonnyjones4692
    @jonnyjones4692 Před 4 měsíci

    Any thoughts on standard lookimg brick farmhouses all over the midwest? I see them everywhere, some are set aside as historical houses, some add ons to peoples homes. Drive im the country they are everywhere.
    Why did they build all these in same style and where did all these poor farmers afford brick homes?

  • @zmaxhunter
    @zmaxhunter Před 28 dny

    Check out Minneapolis Ks
    Israel Markley
    Ottawa county, James R. Mead
    Pawnee Gap and Zebulon Pikes 1806 travels