World's Fair Construction Photos (1904 St. Louis)

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  • čas přidán 24. 10. 2022
  • Looking at some construction photos of one of the World's Fairs presents some alternative clues to the mystery of these buildings. There are many alt history channels about mud flood, tartaria, old world buildings in America, and most of these creators bring up legitimate suspicions about the mainstream narrative.
    I have watched content creators such as Jon Levi, Martin, Conspiracy-R-Us, and others who address the World's Fairs. Are they showing all the evidence fairly?

Komentáře • 219

  • @segomatu7063
    @segomatu7063 Před rokem +28

    Yep, salut de la France !
    I have spent all my professional life in the Construction field, first buildings then earthworks and roads. I've been in charge of many projects, including financial study, negotiation and ordering of supplies, realization of work schedules, and of course the conduct of work on the ground.
    So, here is my view and analysis about all these famous worldfairs all around the world.
    Even if these buildings were cheap made like "light empty shells", built with a wooden structure, then enveloped by plaster elements (or rather staff plaster), it still seems an absolutely insurmountable task considering the immensity of all these Grandiose projects (hundreds of buildings on thousands of square meters !) and also the very short period of time in which they are supposed to have been realized !
    With all the modern means of construction which we have today and which they did not have at the time (!), it would still be today an ENORMOUS challenge to carry out the same works in the same period of time !
    I don't know what's behind the curtain ? But something doesn't match here, clearly !
    A Kelt from Gaul,
    Rock the Universe !!

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for the comment! Appreciate you looking into it.

    • @sirenfromthenorth3727
      @sirenfromthenorth3727 Před rokem

      Agreed

    • @Dad-Gad
      @Dad-Gad Před rokem +3

      That's the same opinion I have , it would be physically impossible to build all this during World War 1 and 2 going on as well !

    • @pussariabitchen9223
      @pussariabitchen9223 Před rokem +2

      Where's the hundreds of workers?

  • @Script3dR3ality
    @Script3dR3ality Před rokem +41

    I find it odd how relatively few workers there seem to be for the sheer scale of these structures, and that's even if we assume that they're all authentic and not edited into the photos in any way..which of course would be a foolish assumption these days. Nonetheless, very interesting footage indeed. Thanks for sharing

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +5

      I agree, it's a strange thing.

    • @jeremymarczak4357
      @jeremymarczak4357 Před rokem +7

      Hello I agree as a stone mason it would require a much bigger crew, the derricks look old re used !

    • @drewh9166
      @drewh9166 Před rokem +4

      You ever walk by a construction site on the weekend?

    • @Kaspar0v1
      @Kaspar0v1 Před rokem +3

      @@drewh9166 i guess EVERY photo is a weekend photo...does this make sense to you?

    • @davepowell7168
      @davepowell7168 Před rokem

      No mystery, the transient and non Union workforce were not wearing suits or running

  • @-e-1536
    @-e-1536 Před rokem +14

    Regardless of the materials used, a 1200 acre construction site with 1500 buildings and 75 miles of internal roadways for a throw-away/disposable project makes absolutely zero sense. If Jesus or "The Founding Fathers" were to somehow confirm their return to earth in 1904 in St. Louis, I could see going to such insane extremes, but to just celebrate "The Louisiana Purchase"?...no way! I however appreciate this video and the effort that went into it, you seem very humble and honest in your approach.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +4

      I agree, it is such a big investment for a short term event. Very intriguing.

    • @supplement420
      @supplement420 Před rokem

      Tell that to Chinas new and old Ghost Cities which they have build in rapid time. All just facades for show and shine only.

    • @tomwryan777
      @tomwryan777 Před 11 měsíci

      Yes, it was a big investment, but back then that is how a country holding a World's Fair or Exposition as they were also called was to showcase their products for the world to see to stimulate commercial trade. Countries and companies would showcase the new developments in commerce. Remember, this was a time of major commercial development of the world with new inventions that not only did people want to see but companies and countries wanted to sell. This is how they got the word around in a world devoid of modern communication capabilities. Even through the 1960's World's Fair's were seen as a place to showcase new products. The Ford Motor Company introduced the Ford Mustang at the 1964 World's Fair in New York!!! And, now you can Google that event to see it. The St. Louis Worlds Fair, as we call it today, was not really the official name. It was the "Louisiana Purchase Exposition" commemorating the 100th anniversary of Thomas Jefferson's Louisiana Purchase that dramatically increased the size of the United States. The US government provided $15 million to finance the event, which is equal to $488 million in today's dollars. It featured exhibits from 60 countries and 43 of the then 45 states and was attended by 19.7 million people. Also, just to comment on some of the videos which are out there which claim, without facts, that many of the building were already there, it's easy to discover the truth that the fair was a massive construction project which was not intended to be permanent, except for the building which became the St. Louis Art Museum. The buildings were constructed of wood and the beautiful facades were created with cheap and easily applied plaster on the fronts. The Fair was also a year late. It was supposed to be finished in 1903 which was the 100th anniversary of the Louisiana Purchase, but due to delays in construction it did not open until 1904.

    • @skyelyte1699
      @skyelyte1699 Před 8 měsíci

      It makes zero sense because it isn't true. The photos are faked and a fraud. The natural skies have been photoshopped out which is the case for almost all historical photos. You can't say, some of the scientific study was faked and a fraud but the rest is valid and the same is true for these photos. They are all faked, thus none of them can be even mildly considered to be legit construction photos. His approach isn't honest if he claims to analyze photos, claims to be in construction but totally ignores the fact (which is lying by omission) that there are too many details that prove the photos are propaganda to perpetuate a lie. Lying by omission most especially in the extreme and gross way that is done in this video can never be claimed to be an honest approach. It is impossible for these buildings to be made with the number of people they show in the images. We would have to have all our brain cells removed to believe the photos are valid and the youtube creator is honest.

  • @jerseygirlinflorida
    @jerseygirlinflorida Před rokem +24

    What it looks like to me: They were repairing and digging out these structures. Great video.

    • @ShoneDaddy
      @ShoneDaddy Před rokem

      You people are insufferable.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +4

      Let's go with that assumption that they were repairing them. How long were the buildings left without maintenance?

    • @ColdSteel-dz3pf
      @ColdSteel-dz3pf Před rokem

      Long enough

    • @ryangaskell7006
      @ryangaskell7006 Před rokem +2

      @@newroam 1000 years based off what i have studied, if you want me to email you some of maddest shit you have ever seen that pretty much non of the names mentioned in your description, please let me know. I just cba making a youtube channel and then i go missing a week later haha. Great video.

    • @papaoco9304
      @papaoco9304 Před rokem +3

      It clearly shows how it was built! You might rewatch the video because there’s no digging out any structures, stone masons carving the stones right on the construction site, the largest buildings are obviously built out of wood(see the columns laid out on the ground for example).

  • @Damidas
    @Damidas Před rokem +4

    They're carefully disassembling the buildings so they can reuse the building materials. Zero photos of any ground breaking in any world's fair. The very first photo shows vegetation in the canal because it used to be filled with water.. as well as the trees looking decades old. If the trees were replanted they would need to be supported

  • @elgoog7830
    @elgoog7830 Před rokem +4

    You're off your effing rocker, if you believe the official narrative.

  • @princedarius7224
    @princedarius7224 Před rokem +7

    Resolution of these photos is too high to be believed.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      They were probably never printed this large but you can take old film and digitize them in fairly high def.

  • @dougoverhoff7568
    @dougoverhoff7568 Před rokem +8

    I'm originally from St. Louis, and I remember being told by my elders how magnificent the structures at the fair were. However, they told me they were never intended to be permanent, and only the pavilion in Forest Park remains to this day as a remnant from the fair.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +4

      That makes sense! It's really cool that you got to hear some first hand stories.

    • @pussariabitchen9223
      @pussariabitchen9223 Před rokem +1

      Doesn't explain shit. There are ancient Roman Greco pillars in the south that " They" said were from plantations. I call Before Columbus arrived on scene.

    • @pussariabitchen9223
      @pussariabitchen9223 Před rokem +2

      And the horse and buggy people..

    • @pussariabitchen9223
      @pussariabitchen9223 Před rokem +2

      Give me a photo of them hanging a giant door in SC.

    • @johnnada9058
      @johnnada9058 Před rokem +1

      Not true, the art museum on art Hill is still around

  • @mysteriesoftherealm
    @mysteriesoftherealm Před rokem +12

    Mostly deconstruction stuff and then falsely dated.
    some are obvious attempts to copy building techniques, but there is no comparison to the old world folks.
    The urn at 7:19 is garbage and at 8:19 those ones are not the same builders , pretty obvious that we didn't do that roof.
    I think the wiring was covered, they tore it up to get it to work and now it looks like we did it , because we did do it, we had to ruin it first.
    Also there are some photo tricks, a couple of people are definitely edited into the photos.
    Any photos with no sky, clouds, sun or horizon are not convincing.
    Photographers don't delete beautiful skies and landscapes.
    I've never met one that does, have you?
    Interesting video , thanks.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +2

      The first urn was the plaster mold before they put the final cement coating on it. The 2nd ones at 8:19 were after the cement coating.
      Plaster is not weather proof. You need to add a cement coating to withstand the rain and snow.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +2

      Those knob and tube wires were the standard electric wiring of the time.
      Are you saying the entire building was buried up to the 3rd or 4th story?
      If this was an ancient city with lost technology, I would think it would have more than knob and tube wiring with standard light bulbs.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +1

      Regarding old photography, I'd recommend reading this article:
      www.laphamsquarterly.org/roundtable/world-without-clouds
      It required a skilled photographer to capture clouds, because the camera overexposed them, turning them all white. You had to merge two photos or hold a flap over the sky to prevent this.
      Your smartphone camera does this automatically nowadays, adjusting exposure for the light & dark parts of the scene.

    • @mysteriesoftherealm
      @mysteriesoftherealm Před rokem

      @@newroam
      I'm saying they striped and white washed most of these buildings.
      con-struction, it's right in the word itself.
      It's destruction passed off as a con.
      Still need scaffolding to dismantle these buildings so you can learn from them.
      The cords and the fake wooden electric box is staged.
      The crappy urn and the rest of that junk around there may even be miniatures.

    • @mysteriesoftherealm
      @mysteriesoftherealm Před rokem +7

      @@newroam
      I worked in printing. I can spot a doctored, edited, razor scraped, dodge and burnt photo a mile away.
      Ever heard of a stripper?
      Or how about a plate maker?
      We used to do it with glass and vinyl back in the day and make "NEW" negatives.
      Photo shop with physical tools, basically.
      Same technique as "some" of these photos.
      Don't make assumptions that I lack skills. you know nothing about my many professions in this realm.
      My opinion of these old photos isn't based on YT channels, I've been into this stuff before there was an internet.
      I was born a long time ago.

  • @davidmilka3909
    @davidmilka3909 Před rokem +9

    The quality of these photos are to good . They are probably taken by the old world and up dated to 1900
    In the mid 1800s there was no tech
    like this. civil war ended there were shortages everywhere. We are blind leading the blind.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +1

      Interesting. Do you think someone found the photos?

  • @stuffedbeagle
    @stuffedbeagle Před rokem +13

    Thanx Bunches for posting these images....please keep in mind that the glass plate negatives are being uploaded daily, on different websites and more are always being found. Personally, I have done several videos on this particular World's Fair Construction photos...but I will say I have never seen the set you are showing here...I found the archive and will be adding them to my collection now. Please understand, we are doing the best we can, it's not as easy as it may appear...LUV BEAGS 🐶

  • @panamatimdawson
    @panamatimdawson Před rokem +16

    Your presentation is great. You are allowing us to look for ourselves. Most of the channels, even the ones with really good information, put a lot of pressure on the viewer to agree

  • @belowradar1113
    @belowradar1113 Před rokem +5

    After seeing how easily they can alter these images, they shouldn't be used to set the bar for human accomplishments. Old school photoshopping using negative plates, artist literally hand drawing additions onto the images to blend the scenery into a more believable look for the bovine scatt agenda. Question to be asked now is how many were staged for the agenda.. we no longer care about the dozen or so images of the controllers applying the practical application of the reverse engineering they learned, after years of working on the abandoned cities prior to moving the sheeple back in.👎👎👎👎

  • @AlphaFlight
    @AlphaFlight Před rokem +6

    St Louis feels strange to me. I recently visited and I believe the entire city was a hub, an important Tartarian city.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +7

      It was accessible by the Mississippi river, along with nearby Missouri river, Illinois river, and Ohio river. Nowadays we forget about rivers because we have cars and airplanes.

    • @lauragraves4342
      @lauragraves4342 Před rokem

      💯🧡👏👏👏

    • @lasvegasloner4621
      @lasvegasloner4621 Před rokem

      It does feel odd to me as well, and reading somebody else noticing it vindicates my thoughts somewhat. One day I'd like to look into a subject I sort of conjured on my own- how geography affects behavior, and though it's because many examples exist from everywhere, I noticed the people I've encountered from the St. Louis area, continuing towards Illinois, seems to have this strange suspicious nature. I wondered if it was from a couple hundred years of people "passing through". It may have been easier for those wanted by authorities or even starting a life of crime, or because they know they're odd or dangerous and have come from somewhere else and need to be able to go anywhere soon... it could have been an original "oasis" to stop for some provisions before moving on. Looking down from a plane or traveling there, then imagining a hundred years ago or more, you can tell there wasn't much beyond it as one point.
      The suspicious nature I mentioned above unfortunately make it difficult for me to get along with those from the area sometimes. Of course some of them are great people, like anywhere, but I found it disturbing when they would pull some shady unfair weirdness (ex: Their condo leaking into mine but questioning why I would want a plumber to look into their place... with all signs of water coming down from them, it obviously turned out to be THEIR fault. Another frustrating time (of many) went from a clean yard to full of cigarettes from their new roommate and I tell them.. their response -"Oh it's not us", then I show them the video of the idiot which anyone could have observed if they were normal and looked outside once or twice, and they reluctantly tell the roommate to stop littering on my yard,
      ... yet watch and talk to me as if I'M the one THEY have to watch closely.
      Also, a girl from St. Louis at my job was often judgmental of some of us while SHE was the newer employee, still learning the job and not very good at it. Caused us LOTS of mess and extra time to repair. We confronted her about the snotty and suspicious attitude, and she totally caved in saying "sorry... I know I know.. I'm sorry". So she KNEW it!!!
      Then she went back to the same crap again and again! I wanted to pound her face in and end her because it was so maddening, and I usually don't feel that way about anybody even though each human can annoy any other, anywhere. I can let a lot go and I don't like awkward situations and I avoid trouble, but she was ridiculously hypocritical.
      Am I stereotyping? Probably. I'm also observant. Here goes whether you like it or not. I don't have a solution other than read it and weep- admit it and work on it.
      The St. Louis folks weren't like many others I've known for decades:
      The small town North-easterner (like myself); Good workers and honest, but pessimistic, "life sometimes sucks, so wake up and stop making it worse for me" attitude. Sometimes we're not fun, but at least we don't put comfort first every time. We expect discomfort.
      The Big town North-easterner; Overbearing and know-it-alls, but can be extremely helpful fi you find an older one. Seen it all, unimpressed, sometimes set in their ways (not unlike the South-easterner), but usually quick minded from necessity. Abrasive but typically matter-of-fact. Overrun with so many arrivals of swindlers from around the world, it can be difficult to find the originals that made those cities so strong.
      The Californian; Fun and "cool", free-thinking but at times dangerously delusional, the optimistic "no worries" approach sometimes crosses over to inconsiderate initiatives, thinking what they do is always better than you even after some evidence to the contrary... but want things to be fun, even if it means comfort for only them. Of course others can be wonderful, but that theme ruined my experience.
      The South-easterner; Can be super friendly, the older ones are good story tellers... but with lazy thoughts entangling what you're trying to do, and with tradition set in stone no matter what you explain and PROVE is absolutely wrong about that tradition. They can come around to still having a beer with you after the disagreement. Found the quiet ones to be great friends. The masses however... comfort came before fairness.
      The St. Louis to middle America folks have variety just like anywhere, good people now and then, but I noticed many were just downright judgmental for absolutely NOTHING, and numb to the fact that they caused you lots of trouble. Very strange. Maybe it's from the transient scams and wild sorts of the 1800's setting the environment.

  • @richardtate8621
    @richardtate8621 Před 10 měsíci +4

    Look at the trees beside the monstrosity of a building. Those trees were not planted recently and there’s no way they just grew perfectly in 2 straight lines. Even if there was a patch of trees and you tried to cut trees out and make that pattern, you could not!

  • @divineshadow4534
    @divineshadow4534 Před rokem +9

    the stuff youre showing isnt of the same quality as the truly magnificent structures that we are talking about , we know the worlds fair buildings were temporary , show the magnificent precise actual stone block stuctures all over the world and its quite a different story , the enormous size , precision , cost , manpower and technology needed for the time would have been impossible according to the current narrative, but i get what you were trying to do

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +3

      Thanks for the respectful comment. I'd be interested in doing videos about large stone structures. Any specific ones in mind?
      On that note - What leads you to conclude the other "old world" buildings were impossible to build? The 1800s was an industrious time with a newly unlocked fuel source that powered the ships, trains, and other machines.

    • @inquisitive-
      @inquisitive- Před rokem +1

      You may have hit the nail on the head. Construct something extreme and disposable to minimize the greatness in the newly founded brick and stone cities that will remain beyond the temporary expiration date set forth for the fair. Use the fair setting to sell the undesirable spoils from said cities and indoctrinate participants

    • @divineshadow4534
      @divineshadow4534 Před rokem +1

      @@newroam hey man , firstly i didnt mean that to come across as negative or anything brother , i can see what youre trying to do and you presented the video well , but some of the examples you showed of the statues and workmanship were obviously of a laughable quality compared to what we see in major cities , obviously plaster and shoddy workmanship in comparison nd some of the construction photos i believe are manipulated but i digress , shame youre not on our side lol

  • @LeftyStratPlayer
    @LeftyStratPlayer Před 8 měsíci +1

    The photo from 2:09 to 3:45 is, in my opinion, evidence that the building is a preexisting structure that is either being renovated or dismantled. I'm personally leaning toward the latter. The dead giveaway, again, in my opinion, is that the exterior walls are complete, and the only work in progress is on the rooftop. (which, coincidentally, always seems to be the case when random "construction" photos of any of these old-world masterpieces pop up) Secondly is the massive limestone or granite blocks that are haphazardly strewn everywhere around the front of the building, along with the giant pile of smaller blocks that looks to have been just dumped there, with no regard to damage, all devoid of any particular order, which would be mandatory if they were numbered to be installed in a predetermined pattern. On the contrary, some of them in the lower right-hand side of the photo look to be in the process of being broken up, perhaps to make them easier to dispose of. Also, the scaffolding underneath the arch has been installed to support and keep the structure from collapsing after the removal of the keystone.

  • @ultrad27
    @ultrad27 Před rokem +2

    Why can't anyone build buildings like this in 3 years now?

  • @troybringsplenty8905
    @troybringsplenty8905 Před rokem +4

    Oh not even, taking it down, that's a hundred man job. Try even setting up a sign on a building without a Crew. Lie's, lie's and lies. Peace out.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      Who says they didn't have a crew?

  • @bubbawatson1852
    @bubbawatson1852 Před rokem +4

    24 people built all this.. pictures look fake. Jon Levi blows this stuff out of water.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      When did anyone claim 24 people built all this?
      Even the mainstream narrative says 10,000 workers.

  • @abinorme
    @abinorme Před rokem +5

    more than building it up it looks like they are tearing it down, piece by piece

  • @jameskoolpa1659
    @jameskoolpa1659 Před rokem +7

    The world History is just agreed upon lies 🤥🏛🕌🏦 🏗🗿it’s deconstructing & the vanilla sky background photo shop 📸🎞 ::: My father was a jet pilot in WW2 : General in the US Air Force ::: worked in intelligence his last 10 years of a 35 year career::: He told me Our recent past 1850’s was very intelligent generation::: And do not waste your time son trying to figure it out 🚫 Follow your heart and be loyal to the family ::: With more knowledge comes more sorrow 🫤🤓🥹 Stop wasting any time looking into these controlling manipulators history. ::: He told me we are living in God’s simulation 😇🕹🖥 Have fun; be good and be nice ; “ Today is your best day And always look forward to tomorrow ::: 😌

  • @crossthreading8157
    @crossthreading8157 Před rokem +3

    Just to look at all the big names behind the financing of these fairs tells the tale.

  • @mkwa06
    @mkwa06 Před rokem +5

    thank you for your insight. I do have a pressing question, in the second letter to congress from president Andrew Jackson in reference to the Indian removal act, who's civilization is he referring to when using the words "monument", "memorials" and "fortresses"?
    English is not my best subject but it dose seem pretty clear cut

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +3

      I read through it once. The footnote says he is referring to the ancient civilizations of mound builders. Cohokia mounds, for example.
      "In the monuments and fortifications of an unknown people, spread over the extensive regions of the West, we behold the memorials of a once powerful race, which was exterminated or has disappeared to make room for the existing savage tribes."
      It sounds like Andrew Jackson was aware of old archaeological sites in the Midwest, and he explained it like the Southeastern tribes could occupy these old lands and revive some civilization there. His speech said that the Southeastern tribes didn't want to live under US law but they also didn't want to move to those new lands further west.

  • @williamwynne88
    @williamwynne88 Před rokem +5

    Very suspicious.
    I hypothesize that these are the photos of them taking it down.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +1

      Any particular reason you thought of that?

    • @williamwynne88
      @williamwynne88 Před rokem +5

      @@newroam I thought my reason obvious. I don't trust anyone to tell the truth when it comes to the past. There is no reason to spend years building just to have a fair for a few weeks then tear it down. I believe they made a couple maybe even a half a dozen. But they dogs not build everything they say they did.

  • @dn744
    @dn744 Před rokem +7

    This is why people should research more. Not just follow the crowd, because its easier 👍

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +3

      People love a good conspiracy.
      If everything is rigged / faked, then I don't have to take responsibility for my own life.

    • @jerseygirlinflorida
      @jerseygirlinflorida Před rokem +1

      The Rabbit hole is deep with no end.

  • @lynnmcmullen3157
    @lynnmcmullen3157 Před rokem +10

    Not really on board one way or the other. But couple things, I have old family photos from the Era and ofcourse there not very clear or in good shape at all as u would expect. Those photos however are absolutely pristine. That alone I find curious to say the least. Other observation is the lack of manpower for such an epic endeavor ,in any Era let alone then. Been in construction for many years and all the scaffolding alone would take an army no question because as u say it's made of wood. Oh and I often wear a tie to work building houses just to try and class up those savages a little ha jkjk

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      Look at the population numbers. I don't think they had a lack of workmen.

  • @snakespear-1
    @snakespear-1 Před rokem +4

    Plaster might be cheap now, but it wasn't then, and why would you have to use such a heavy duty crane, for plaster?

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      Do you have sources about plaster being expensive at that time?
      It was used by museums as a cheap alternative to create plaster replicas of famous statues.
      antiquities.library.cornell.edu/casts/a-short-history

  • @hernandezmarkie7382
    @hernandezmarkie7382 Před rokem +3

    None of these were temporary them buildings have age from weather

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      Weather can do damage within months.

  • @jasparcarnegie
    @jasparcarnegie Před rokem +2

    Insane amount of scaffolding reminds me of the insane amount of people/crowds in some reset pictures.
    Their plaster molds are grotesquely basic compared to the exquisite detailing of the original stonework.
    They used wood in construction because it was quick, and they no longer had the skills to replicate the original stone craftmanship.
    The steel was existing, they repurpose steel not understanding the original purposes.
    The wiring dangerous and crude, but must've looked marvelous, far from how the original lighting worked I'm sure.
    Looks as though they are reconstructing / renovating existing buildings. Rubble piles.
    Where are all the workers for such mammoth projects even by today's standards.
    And so much more

  • @Jarmezrocks
    @Jarmezrocks Před rokem +3

    Hey thanks for showing what a lot of people haven't been able to show?
    I've been extremely skeptical about the World Fair's and have really bought into the conspiracy, till now?
    They made such huge claims about the size and number of buildings for these fairs, that it seemed unbelievable?
    But watching this I got flashbacks of historic photographs I'd seen in the past? Then it occurred to me that some of these pictures would back up the evidence and photographs you've provided here in this clip?
    There is a photo of men loggers that had floated literally millions of logs down the Hudson River and there were so many logs that you couldn't see a river..... Just a sea of logs!
    All I could think of was how much destruction they unknowingly caused? Forget just the removal of old growth forests! Imagine just the sap leaching into river system?
    I digress......as upsetting as it was to see such an imagine, it actually connects the dots with regards to the fair now?
    I now know where they got all the timber for the construction?

  • @soapghost007
    @soapghost007 Před rokem +2

    Hi! Great Video! I've seen some construction photos myself. I really like that you're taking a different approach to this "Worlds Fair" theory. Unfortunately, these photos still don't answer a bunch of lingering questions...
    1. Why were some of the buildings built to be permanent!? (Some of which still remain today). Built out of solid stone.
    2. Why did some of the buildings have fully finished interiors? (fireplaces, crown molding, and so on...)
    3. Why were they advertising and handing out Educational Diplomas? What benefit would this "world class education" get to the average fair goer once they go back to their everyday life's?
    4. What's with the Incubator baby's? Where did the freshly newborn babies come from? Why could you just adopt one?
    5. Why did they chose to build the fairground so far from the City Center of St. Louis? In swamp... They had to build a new railway system just to get the parts there.
    Anyway, just some afterthoughts. Keep up the good work!

    • @silentwitness4843
      @silentwitness4843 Před rokem +1

      Chicago 1893 was also built on water.. so the story goes .. how could a building that holds 100,000 people be built on stilts? And out if just wood?

    • @corvussheperd8046
      @corvussheperd8046 Před rokem

      What do you mean "so far from the City Center of St. Louis"? The grounds are only ~5 miles from the riverbank. Forest Park has been inside city limits since 1876.

  • @1puppetbike
    @1puppetbike Před 11 měsíci +1

    8:23 That is not new plaster construction. that is old and weathered. New items were added for sure, but the old stuff was just old. It's a trick

  • @hernandezmarkie7382
    @hernandezmarkie7382 Před rokem +2

    All of them big buildings are already built

  • @mak1532
    @mak1532 Před rokem +1

    Great video! You are right the others don’t show these construction photos which is strange. Are there construction photos like these of the columbian exposition in Chicago? I have seen some of the Panama one in SF.

  • @davidcurry9292
    @davidcurry9292 Před rokem +6

    That pully system reminds me of the trolleys the hay barns had in loft to move loose hay or square bails.

  • @stonesoup842
    @stonesoup842 Před rokem +3

    I’d like to see a modern construction crew do that in the amount of time it took those guys to build. My town just got a new McDonald’s and it took them 4 months to build it. World fair guys coulda done it in a day or two. With no heavy equipment

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +1

      Haha that would be a great head-to-head

  • @allangoldstraw6179
    @allangoldstraw6179 Před rokem +4

    Really honest & good video & yes there is a lot of wood in these scenes, but let's back up and take a good look, @ 1.42 the workmen wearing 5 ties between them + one pocket watch & all wearing hats, trousers that were way too long for most of them and didnt match the top half of their attire not to mention shoes worn by most & not boots, the man with the hammer in his belt had an awfully clean shirt for someone doing that kind of work, then there are the trees & yes look at the right window rear of building take me to a new build site that has trees that close.
    The wooden cranes looked very odd no counterbalance and no ropes bracing some of them and then there is the vanilla sky, every photo with wooden scaffolding and wooden construction comes complete with Vanilla Skies & that is also odd given the light and definition of these photo's.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +1

      Regarding the vanilla sky, I did some more research on that & posted a video here:
      czcams.com/video/RVx4fwk3mv4/video.html
      The camera technology of the time was not good at capturing bright sky in balance with the darker ground/buildings. The sky would get washed out completely and turned out an sad gray color when printing. It was common for photo developers to manually blotted out the sky so that it printed with a clean bright sky.

  • @snakespear-1
    @snakespear-1 Před rokem +3

    I guess you believe they built all of that in a years time also.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +1

      The official narrative days it took 3 years and 10,000 workmen.

  • @B44tk47
    @B44tk47 Před 6 měsíci +1

    HD retouched! Thanks St. Louis library 😂

  • @jeffandersen7397
    @jeffandersen7397 Před rokem

    Thank you for posting these. I've been watching all these "Mud Flood" videos, knowing that a logical explanation existed. I think a majority of the Channels running Tartaria/ Mud Flood theories are just jumping on the bandwagon and would prefer to Not have these construction photos in the mix. It's probably fair to say that some of the other people posting these type of conspiracy videos are truly curious and just not very clever. Now, regarding the mud flood concept, I do find it curious that almost every major city from the 1800's appears to be built on top of remains of earlier structures. But i'm sure if we could fund some serious research we'd find a logical explanation.

  • @jamesgoldstien1468
    @jamesgoldstien1468 Před rokem +1

    A lot of these fairs was just Temporary for the event to show case whatever the display was

  • @MultiBrad777
    @MultiBrad777 Před rokem +1

    not very convincing…. We see roof repair we see wooden scaffolding over already built buildings We say ornamental and façade work but we see no building of a structure from the ground up no masonry work going on no blockwork we see mostly suits and very few workers where thousands would be necessary….etc etc

  • @hellodenise9612
    @hellodenise9612 Před rokem +4

    Thank you! This really helps to solve how these buildings were made. No wonder they burned down! The abundance of wood is mindblowing!!

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +2

      Yes, there were a lot of fires during that time period when everything was wood and electricity was a new thing.
      Regarding this particular world's fair in St. Louis, they say that most of the wood was repurposed to build homes for the Italian immigrants and some of the smaller buildings were moved and converted to nice homes.

    • @hellodenise9612
      @hellodenise9612 Před rokem +1

      @@newroam I'm from KC Missouri and it's so interesting! Thank you!

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      @@hellodenise9612 That's so cool! There are a lot of interested buildings in the Midwest.

    • @hellodenise9612
      @hellodenise9612 Před rokem +2

      Kansas city had something called City of lights around that time? I think? Also Kc MO is called the city of fountains. In the 1920's, one of the developers made the first (in USA) "shopping mall" or area called the Plaza. It was spanished influenced and there is a tower that looks just like the one on Spain. KC area has alot of history. It's not the best place to visit for a crazy time, but it is a great place to raise a family. You might get crazy now and then but people are usally working and going school but if you want a crazy time you should come for a Chiefs game and tailgate! Thank you!

  • @0650asanders
    @0650asanders Před rokem +2

    They could just as easily be photos of them taking the structures down or even repairing then. Also makes zero sense they would put that much effort to erect those structures and take them down after a dew years. The photos do show they are moor than plaster a jew sauce

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      These fairs were the tech conferences of the time, except they didn't have iPhones and computer chips to blow their money on... they had engines, steam, coal, oil, steal, construction advancements.
      The equivalent today would be like Dubai or Qatar, where they have the excess oil boom money (similar to early US).
      Temporary stadium example: www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2022/nov/13/qatar-world-cup-stadiums-pitch-fever-at-any-price

  • @hernandezmarkie7382
    @hernandezmarkie7382 Před rokem +2

    Yea that guy with a single Hamer built them huge buildings 😆

  • @richardtate8621
    @richardtate8621 Před 10 měsíci

    I believe the smaller buildings were built when they said but the main huge buildings are something different all together

  • @timberburr6335
    @timberburr6335 Před 7 měsíci

    Have been so curious.
    Very insightful. Excellent photos.

  • @jaylacue5992
    @jaylacue5992 Před rokem +3

    Very interesting video. Thanks for posting. Like others have commented, we should wonder if these have been edited or if these photos are of deconstruction/manipulation. However, i'm not so sure of that. These look like compeling images of 1904 worlds fair being built.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +1

      It's good to question the source of evidence.

  • @dcummings7253
    @dcummings7253 Před rokem +1

    Even still. What was the point of them? And who payed for it all? All these fairs are still to hide something going on. I feel the Fairs are the left hand so we aren't looking at what the right hand is doing at the time. Like what happened in the act of 1871, talk about the creation of the FED. Creation of Income Taxes. These where the Distractions of the day.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před 8 měsíci

      The modern Olympics are the same. Lots of spending, 1 event, and then no funding to maintain it after the event.

    • @dcummings7253
      @dcummings7253 Před 8 měsíci

      @@newroam The promoters make money at the Olympics. Who made money here? Nobody. I think you need to look harder at what was really going on.

  • @sJs78
    @sJs78 Před rokem +1

    There should be hundreds of workers around, or at least a lot more per photograph..?🤷.

  • @B44tk47
    @B44tk47 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Vanilla skys! Where’s all the airships? 😂

  • @KeikoFXDesigns
    @KeikoFXDesigns Před rokem +3

    Tartarian fan boi's are gonna think these structures were being dug out lol.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +2

      You're right - someone commented that last week.

  • @stephenmartinez6359
    @stephenmartinez6359 Před rokem +2

    Scaffolding = construction dont you EVER question it. 🙄

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      😆 Don't question the questioners either!

  • @jeremymarczak4357
    @jeremymarczak4357 Před rokem +2

    How many years to build!?

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      In these records, they show photos from 1903 and 1904, so my guess is 1-2 years in total.

    • @jeremymarczak4357
      @jeremymarczak4357 Před rokem +2

      @@newroam hello two years ?
      The quarries did not open before 1890 , the pre cast was made with cement which at this time was imported from England “ hydraulic” not enough crew for what was at hand?,
      Great work!

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +1

      The official story says 3 years and 10,000 workmen.

  • @patno7700
    @patno7700 Před rokem +1

    I do appreciate you giving us a different perspective and making a case for the narrative possibly being true. The truth is ultimately what we seek. However, I also say that it would have been very tough to put this all together in the timeframe we have been told. I have seen a short video of the German section and I have to say if they really put all of that together in a short time they really did a great job of making it look good!

    • @patno7700
      @patno7700 Před rokem

      Oh and if you are able to please provide construction photos of Manhattan, the railroads and the interstates.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +1

      The mainstream history says it took 3 years to build the St. Louis fairgrounds. To me, that seems like a long time.

  • @HollerLogs
    @HollerLogs Před rokem +2

    with all due respect, i don't think you know jack squat about construction.. have fun with the WEF with your buddy Ewar

    • @TradersWorld11
      @TradersWorld11 Před rokem +1

      Millions of people looking for construction photos and unable to find any…. Now all of a sudden they are everywhere. Very suspect.

  • @juli_gotshal
    @juli_gotshal Před rokem +1

    How can you tell if these aren't DE-construction pics? They could have been stacking up the pieces to sell off. This sort of explains broken lions @6:10 .

    • @gregdsmusiccaptures1578
      @gregdsmusiccaptures1578 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Beautiful observation.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před 8 měsíci

      I don't know who would buy an old plaster lion that's broken

    • @cobman
      @cobman Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@juli_gotshalI agree that people buy parts. You implied that they were ransacking these for profit, as if it were gold from a royal grave.

  • @traumaballz4189
    @traumaballz4189 Před 9 měsíci

    Granite block construction of walls/pillars (2:08) ... notice the granite block construction of arches. hmmmmm. Looks like the old world artisans took some pictures of their work. No narrative today about this type of build . . . but I'm sure the story is being workshopped. Saw one similar to this in a time lapse video of the making of Disneyland . . . they built a granite arched bridge . . . the Ol' Old World at it again. Funny, Seattle had a Worlds Fair in the 60s that looked very similar to our Disneyland . . . . hmmmmm . . . saw that one on an Elvis movie, titled "It Happened at the World's Fair". Old movies unveil more than you would think. That's enough out of me . . . enjoy the research.

  • @leilo8330
    @leilo8330 Před rokem +1

    Doubt all of it

  • @jkm3297
    @jkm3297 Před rokem +2

    Vanilla skies in all of them

  • @susanclark6987
    @susanclark6987 Před rokem +1

    Great video.. I don't know what people would have done without wood from day one.. LOL thanks so much for the video..

  • @shannonc6068
    @shannonc6068 Před rokem

    Great shots of the construction looks like it was meant to be permanent so now can you tell me why most all of them were torn down because they were only meant to be temporary

  • @michiganporter
    @michiganporter Před rokem +1

    Serious posing for the camera

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      Because if they didn't stop and pose, they wouldn't show up

  • @dave-si1vq
    @dave-si1vq Před rokem +1

    Well I have never seen such clear photos in my life!! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @billymoore4788
    @billymoore4788 Před rokem +1

    Where’s all the workers. construction jobs have more people on them today with better technology if they have less technology back then they would’ve had a whole lot more people. What was the time period for completing this worlds fair

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +1

      The official story says 3 years. I would assume they weren't working non-stop for 3 years. We don't know if the photographer went on a weekend. We also don't know if the camera exposure was set so high that moving objects didn't get imprinted in the film.

  • @julieschneider7445
    @julieschneider7445 Před rokem +1

    Solar panels?? Weird see the last image …

  • @muttnaughton9223
    @muttnaughton9223 Před rokem

    1:40 dude looks like Edison.

  • @B44tk47
    @B44tk47 Před 6 měsíci +1

    A KIT!!!! HAHAHA 🫵🏾🥳

  • @trudiriddle8000
    @trudiriddle8000 Před 8 měsíci

    Deconstructing or constructing

  • @beverleyhealy3775
    @beverleyhealy3775 Před rokem

    Bit like the 'world cup' buildings today. Huge temporary vanity projects.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      That's right. I was actually going to do a video on that. There are a lot of temporary stadiums being used today.

  • @muttnaughton9223
    @muttnaughton9223 Před rokem

    great job.. thanks

  • @cryptoalchemist369
    @cryptoalchemist369 Před rokem +1

    well done mate, well done

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      Thanks 👍
      I see you do live streams. Just curious, what topic is most perplexing for you lately?

  • @chrisdixonstudios
    @chrisdixonstudios Před rokem

    All Knowledge and tech of today is built upon yesterday's best. In today's global economy, The real question is what technology and materials from our inheritance is being withheld so that only the few can exploit while taking credit for our labors??
    The past is full of beautiful knowledge and also abusive "Kings" and warmongers.. Do we really want our children's future to be the same? Without true Love for one another all will be lost in the next "mudflood".
    In all our blocky borg collective cloned homes and buildings, Who still teaches, values and persues such skills as our talented ancestral craftsmen and workers once posessed?

  • @chenellgilmore6966
    @chenellgilmore6966 Před rokem

    Thanks for the find

  • @rickeyferguson6904
    @rickeyferguson6904 Před rokem +1

    What happens to all that after the Worlds Fair?

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      Most of it was dismantled and reused soon after the fair.
      Some of the wood was used to build homes in St. Louis. The smaller pavilion buildings were moved to city lots and were converted to houses or shops. The art and sculptures were moved to permanent places to display or sent back to the contributors, like the Vulcan statue of Birmingham Alabama.
      More here:
      www.thetelegraph.com/news/slideshow/Here-s-some-remnants-of-the-1904-World-s-Fair-you-227820.php

    • @angelawoodhouse6292
      @angelawoodhouse6292 Před rokem

      ​@@newroam

  • @Otis-Tank
    @Otis-Tank Před rokem

    there is a huge archive that shows the interiors of many many of these buildings at the fair and they are indeed wooden..

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +1

      That's a good point. I have seen a lot of those photos. There are some with steel frames too, which was still common in that time.

  • @Mimi-mm5hf
    @Mimi-mm5hf Před rokem +1

    These pictures have been faked

  • @Berovidal
    @Berovidal Před rokem

    No clouds, no sky. Photoshop v. 1.9.0.0

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      I made a video to comment on the "cloudless skies" of old photos. If you're interested!
      czcams.com/video/sEy3NIgMb9I/video.html

  • @michaelsullivan3443
    @michaelsullivan3443 Před rokem

    Sears catalog cities

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      Haha, there ya go. Pre-fab before it was cool.

    • @michaelsullivan3443
      @michaelsullivan3443 Před rokem

      @@newroam I'm pretty sure you truly use to be able to purchase a home from Sears catalog way way back but I could be wrong

  • @sc2543
    @sc2543 Před rokem

    Thanks 🌎⚡☀️+/-🌙⚡🌏

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +1

      I enjoyed this comment

  • @DaemonZodiac
    @DaemonZodiac Před rokem

    Bbb

  • @zdeslavschreiber
    @zdeslavschreiber Před rokem

    czcams.com/video/gCzIvRbqizs/video.html
    Jarid Boosters podcast ?

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      Gas lights in Paris? Thanks for the link. Any comments about it?

  • @ShoneDaddy
    @ShoneDaddy Před rokem +3

    I love seeing all these dumb, John Levi-esque world fair theories being put to rest. Good work.
    Thus stuff seems hard to swallow for people who have no knowledge of construction.
    The fact is ornate plastering is a lost art. That’a why all of this work seems so impressive when being looked at through a modern point of view.

    • @bricio4688
      @bricio4688 Před rokem +6

      Sure. Perhaps it was built in tandem. Still hardly explains the evidential photos of Incubator Babies and such things of a more grotesque nature, the sort of content history would very much like to bury.

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem +4

      Thanks. You make a good point about our modern point of view... It seems so bizarre to us that people in the olden days would spend time on making things look beautiful.

    • @WimsK45
      @WimsK45 Před rokem

      Jon Levi actually debunked these photos. How are these people with mud roads, horses and buggies have just the idea to build such grandiose architecture ? If they hid the fact that we inherited everything from a past civilisation, they are 100% capable of faking photos and doing miniatures.

    • @WimsK45
      @WimsK45 Před rokem +1

      @@newroam Photoshop, Miniaturization... They HID a fucking civilisation 🤣 These primitive people would never even imagine to build such grandiloquent and futuristic stuff. They are barely able to make their wood cabin stand up !

    • @ShoneDaddy
      @ShoneDaddy Před rokem

      @@WimsK45 Go take your meds bro

  • @ronniebrown1423
    @ronniebrown1423 Před rokem

    Dude❗🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @i.r.baboon
    @i.r.baboon Před rokem

    ❤️💛💚👍🏽

    • @newroam
      @newroam  Před rokem

      Thanks for the comment!

  • @f.t.p.b.t.p.
    @f.t.p.b.t.p. Před rokem

    youngblood . bringit boi !!