Whenever I watch your videos I always try to imagine what it was like when people lived there. The happiness that happened there, the sadness. Now to see it like this is weird knowing people lived there.
Being so close to where Sowells house was would be very bone-chilling! He was one horrible serial killer. Hearing the stories from the few who got away from him makes my heart feel like it is going to stop. You have much courage to go in these places! Stay safe!
I live in Cleveland, born and raised, from saint. Clair 105 area. So I truly love and enjoy your videos. It’s so crazy to see these places and actually know where it’s at smh
It makes me so sad that this is my city. We cleaned up some properties at E 93 and Way and in less than 48 hours it was full of tires, the front clip of a car and the house that we boarded up was broken into with a huge Rottweiler chained up to the back door. The house has since been torn down. It was a cute little cottage like house. Must have been nice in its day. Big fountain in back yard ( burried in the weeds). Neighbors want and need help but they wont do anything. We asked them to call us when they saw dumping or worse and we would handle it. They refused. How can you help those who just dont care?
You nailed it again man, you are in my top 3 for UE vids, along with RnK and Bright Sun Films. When Rob did the abandoned funeral home with the glass casket, same place you were maybe at the same time, but I wanted to mention that the wooden box everyone says is for cremation is actually the box in which the new caskets are delivered. People are usually cremated in a cardboard box or a sheet because the residue from those dont interfere with the ashes of the deceased. Keep up the great work brother!
I used to be a Realtor and have been in some sketchy houses and the amount of decay in that first house based on the time it's been empty is absolutely insane. That is very rapid!
Creepy stuff Dane! That first place looked very sketchy with those floors. I know the baseboards were removed, but they still looked like they were separating from the walls. I was holding my breath watching you walk! That wood box may have been a delivery box for a casket? IDK. Great job!
There was one room in that first house where I was afraid you were going to take a step in the wrong direction and your weight was going to be the straw that broke the camel's back. There were a couple of places where the wall had pulled away from the floor and one of them was in a room you kicked open the door and I held my breath. Please be careful. no video is worth a calamity like a building collapsing on you, or falling out from under your feet. Stay safe.
Thanks Dane my friend for sharing with me this video about the Creepy locations in Urban Areas it did look creepy the old building you was in the first and then the old funeral home it was creepy too Dane and i can't wait to see your next video my friend and thanks again and God Bless you my friend.
That apartment was sad. It was large, the windows generous, (I like windows.) the fireplace with broken sconces; all of these spoke of the past. It must have once been beautiful. You could even see that the tenants had spent time on it; one room painted green and the maybe mauve color around the fireplace. They must have liked living there. I would suggest that the wooden crate in the funeral home was not used for anything other than a container a coffin was shipped in. They are protected in shipping, you know, cause most of them, even cheap ones, are expensive. I don't mean to insult your assistant or friend, but who thinks bodies are cremated in groups? Other than for disposal in Nazi concentration camps. After the individual cremation the ashes are placed in a container of some kind: a small box, a plastic bag, an urn, if the family paid for one. Usually they are given to the family unless arrangements have been made for placement in a mausoleum or something like that.
And there is always a fireclay badge burned with the body to identify the ashes afterwards and make sure the relatives get the actual ashes of their relatives back and not any sweeped dirt from the ground. At least in my country.
Eily Bergin I don't know your country, but that is interesting to know. I am in the U.S and I've never heard of that. People could still get "fraudulent" ashes though. Someone could scoop up anybody's ashes and toss the clay thingy in and call it good, but if you believe it's grandpa, isn't it and does it matter? I don't put anything past the avarice of the funeral industry, but they have to burn the body anyway so there's no profit motive I can see to mixing them up...unless medical schools are still paying for corpses.
@@loditx7706 Country is Germany. Funerals are not handled completely by private companies over here like in the U.S. Cemetaries and crematories are run by municipality, rules and standards are the same everywhere. It's quite unlikely that they will just use some ashes because everyone and everything is documented and there are no spare bodies. Sure, you can never be 100% sure but the only thing that happened regarding crematories over here was that some employees took the dental gold out of the ashes and cashed the money. That was a minor scandal a few years ago but I think they collect it now, sell it and donate it to several organisations.
Eily Bergin Thanks for your response. It is generous of you to share. I was being facetious about selling bodies to medical schools. Don't know the history in Germany, but in Britain and the U.S. in the 19th century Resurrection Men made a living digging up the recently dead and selling them to medical schools for dissection.
*LodiTX* You have a good eye. I was quite taken aback to see what had been done to that apartment, as it didn't take any stretch of imagination to see it had been one of the most beautiful apartments I've ever seen. The rooms were spacious, with lots of storage space on shelves, in drawers---everything laid out with care by a designer "who knew his/her stuff." What's more, the damage looked like someone was intent on either "fixing it up" or "improving" it. Too bad.