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Urbex: ABANDONED Georgian Style FARMHOUSE 

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**DEMOLISHED**
Known as an abandoned century farm I explored, according to my research, the elderly man that lived here died at a ripe old age of 100 years of age on February 26, 2007. Apparently, he did not leave behind a wife. While exploring,, I noticed a lack of female items so I suspect he lived here alone and hoarded a lot of older newspapers and magazines dating back from the 1960s. There used to be an old shed out back that was once used as a church in 1856 until 1884 until the new church was built. The owner of this farm's great grandfather had donated the use of the land for it. I also noticed on the satellite view of this property that there once was a barn or other structure out back that was collapsed. The latest date I could find was on a phone book from 2002-2003, although there may have been even newer dates hidden away with all the papers on the floor.
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11 окт 2013

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Комментарии : 238   
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
Thanks! Glad you enjoyed! That's what I like most about places where there is stuff left behind. You can definitely find more clues from that.
@pbustos4145
@pbustos4145 10 лет назад
Can't say enough about how well you vlog these tours!! I love your steady hand on the camera, love your curiosity bout what you're vlog'ing. Something about abandoned homes that is curious, sad, scarey and wonderful all at the same time!! Thank you for your sharing these with us!
@annasummers5348
@annasummers5348 8 лет назад
These places never seem scary to me. The seem like part of a wonderful history that we are losing. It looked like a raccoon had tried to pull something soft for her babies into the old wood stove chimney. They are great little animals..
@OopzyDayzy
@OopzyDayzy 10 лет назад
i just wanted to say that i truly love your videos. you do research, you dont do damage, and my very FAVORITE feature is that you walk through, showing how the rooms connect so that quirky people like me can reverse engineer the floorplans. other people use so many jump cuts that the layout cant be deciphered, nor can the daily motions of those who lived there be imagined. thank you, thank you, thank you!
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
And thank you! I'm glad you enjoy my style. I like the viewers to see the complete layout as it joins together, and I am glad you noticed and appreciate that. :)
@laurasteele8070
@laurasteele8070 10 лет назад
i was thinking the same thing
@sarahrothfeldt6642
@sarahrothfeldt6642 9 лет назад
Most old houses had windows in there closets, basically for airing out there clothes as they didn't wash their clothes after 1 use, they usually wore them several times. At least that is what I was told. Love your video's, love old houses. A new sub by the way. :)
@VintageVaughnVehiclces
@VintageVaughnVehiclces 10 лет назад
That was a true farm house from back in the day when a farmer had 8 children as field hands,when slavery was abolished and granny in the kitchen at 4 am making huge breakfast feast for everyone.feather beds i actually had a great granny born in 1889-1983 she had a feather bed i slept in and in the morning you awoke in a rut in the middle.you had to fluff it every nite b4 bed, but was unreal comfortable, totally non orthapedic yet look how long she lived.she was awsome cook and there was lard and bacon grease in every meal. smoked for over 30 or 40 years and quit,at age 70 and lived another 20 years ,to almost 100.her husband came home drunk and she kept a shotgun under the bed and would run him off till he got sober...the next morning, he finally ran off and left her with the 8 kids and the farm.Coloreds were not allowed in the house lol.. she was amazing and thats the kind of house she had..
@Kittydoc90
@Kittydoc90 9 лет назад
Happy Spring, Pam! You really did a fine job on this explore, and somebody else commented on something I'd noticed too-you always manage to be methodical so that the floor plan can be worked out. You give the best sense of being there *with* the viewer as opposed to recording *for* the viewer. Very nice. :) This was a very interesting house. Looks like it was pretty grand in its day-big entrance, good woodwork, stoves in most rooms-but boy, it sure was sad at the end! And it sounds like a lot of the *stuff* being for moonshine was a pretty good bet. Thanks for this video, Pam-this one really did come out particularly well.
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 9 лет назад
Happy Spring to you, Cristina! Thank you so much for the nice compliment.:) I try my best to show the viewers the layout and give a sense that we are all exploring together. I guess pointing out obvious things also gives that illusion since I believe that is what we'd be doing if we were walking through with one another -- musing. Thanks again as always, Cristina! Always a pleasure to read your nice comments. :)
@AbandonedSteve
@AbandonedSteve 10 лет назад
wow great house. Lot of old stuff in there. Love the older TV. Great Video
@karenlindsey5988
@karenlindsey5988 8 лет назад
Hi TikiTrex! U do fantastic work! I love old houses and I actually live in one that was built in the late 1800's. We, too, have a window in our closet. What I absolutely LOVE, LOVE is when you show us the whole layout of each house! In other words you leave the camera going so we can see how all of the rooms interconnect. I'm always so interested in that part of it. U didn't do that as much in this video but I know it is an old one video. Would it be possible to do that more in future tours? Not so much the big hospitals, factories, etc. just the houses. Thanks TikiTrex! Keep up the great work!
@smilinachya
@smilinachya 10 лет назад
Awesome tour as always, Pam. Love how you find dates of things - which I'm always interested in. Like one person said, the "sporadic dates were driving me crazy." Hard to believe that place only abandoned for a decade! Thanks, Pam! Steve
@MegaMouse30
@MegaMouse30 8 лет назад
This was a beautiful house at one time; thank you tiki for going to the attic, that was cool; I finally realized that I love houses that have a lot of STUFF, all the clues left behind give us a small description of the people who lived there...Great Tour oh yeah; you forgot to say "lone chair" :)
@HelenaMikas
@HelenaMikas 9 лет назад
terrific video ..Really enjoyed ..... Love this pastime but you have a marvellous find ..... Brilliantly filmed and wow you have captured the atmosphere !!
@MTLRow
@MTLRow 10 лет назад
Absolutely one of the best urbex videos,Pam! You are so very talented. I always feel like I'm looking over your shoulder as you explore! thank you for all of your great work; it is very much appreciated!
@GOTTshua
@GOTTshua 10 лет назад
Seeing these vids reminds me of all the great old and abandoned homes I have enjoyed exploring over the years. There is nothing like them.
@cwb0051
@cwb0051 10 лет назад
Wow..that house is very old with the wide floor boards etc.. Another wonderful video Pam..thanks for taking us along..
@abandonedsc4261
@abandonedsc4261 10 лет назад
Pam's videos are the best! She's very thorough and detailed This house had very nice wood work who knows the old man who passed might have lived there his whole life.
@TheSwords99
@TheSwords99 5 лет назад
No sadder word than the word: DEMOLISHED. I would have enjoyed living there and fixing it up. Thanks for doing a video of this house before it got destroyed.
@karablanchard1360
@karablanchard1360 10 лет назад
Beautiful! I absolutely love your videos. Me and my mom sit and watch them together. This place was driving me crazy with all the sporadic dates! I agree with the feathers being from the mattress. If there was one upstairs the wind probably blew them all down and such. Keep up the amazing work. We love you!
@Daviemes13
@Daviemes13 10 лет назад
They weren't making moonshine! That's just old time farm living! I use to help put up caned goods with the family and the one thing is that you saved everything in case you needed to use it of some reason. Farmers had to be self sufficient because you couldn't count on getting or affording help. And if you noticed almost all old farm houses have a front stairs for the family and one that leads to the kitchen area for the hired help for the family. Things were different back then and many women worked for these farmers since they had the where with all the sustain themselves from what they made on the farm alone. Now the taxes are forcing many a land owner to just let old homes go due to the high taxes. Oh and that fact that the rest of the family more than likely have gotten college educations and didn't want to stay on the farm and no one left to take care of the old place and you can't just rent them out to the idiots who tear the shit out of everything. I love the vids and they make me almost cry for the shame of it all. I feel our history just falling apart.
@susanwall6418
@susanwall6418 6 лет назад
Davie Jones Hi Davie. Amen to your comment. If we let the past slip away, how can anyone see how things used to be! It especially hurts to see so many things that I could use in restoring the old farm house that I live in now destroyed. Such a shame :(
@missmartpants2269
@missmartpants2269 5 лет назад
Seems, the government has an agenda of keeping it this way, getting rid of the old ways, and bringing in the new crappy ways. God bless y'all !
@AbandonedNorthJersey
@AbandonedNorthJersey 10 лет назад
This is definately top 10 of your best urbex vids . I enjoyed it .Your welcome and thank you as well .
@margannaful
@margannaful 10 лет назад
I was so excited to see that you posted a new video! As always, I thoroughly enjoyed it.
@tinkerspell4850
@tinkerspell4850 10 лет назад
wow - great and thorough video. This is the kind of house exploring I enjoy. Thanks so much.
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
Thank you, Bettie! I'm glad you enjoy this.
@StivNagen
@StivNagen 10 лет назад
Another great video, Tiki! Loved it!
@maunster3414
@maunster3414 6 лет назад
Those feathers are probably from down bedding, pillow, mattress. Century farm designations were given in 1967 to farms that had been in the same family since 1867. My grandfather's farm was a century farm. Truly a stunning house in its day. Although I know that we all die eventually, I still say it is a shame that so much of old Ontario is gone. TikiTrex, thanks again for your work. It will be a delight for some future historian.
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
Thank you! Yeah, the windows were actually even separated from the house. Bizarre.
@DermochelysCoriacea
@DermochelysCoriacea 10 лет назад
I just discovered this UE series. I love this. I'm going to enjoy your videos!
@tealapowell5241
@tealapowell5241 10 лет назад
Hey Pam, that was a very interesting video! What an odd house. That was a very old meat grinder on the table. I love old stuff & I noticed a few items that perked me up when I saw them...lol.. I think the feathers may have been from the pillows & or mattresses. My mom had those & I hated them because the feather tips would stick out. I like the crackled paint effect & that one door I'm sure came by that naturally over time. You're a brave woman & I'll say again you are the best!! Stay Safe!!:)
@annegleason8442
@annegleason8442 Год назад
I love your videos!!!! I love abandoned places!!!!
@jessicamccue5652
@jessicamccue5652 10 лет назад
What a great old farmhouse! I love the old wood work throughout.
@Clblackburn1969
@Clblackburn1969 10 лет назад
Thanks for the tour Pam! That house did look like a horror movie set.. Glad you made it through. Lol love all your videos
@tommax26
@tommax26 10 лет назад
Yes, Pam, I throughly enjoyed the tour with you. Which brings up a question. Even though you are doing your camera work-exploring alone, do you feel the companionship of each viewer as if each of us is with you? ...giving you moral support as you walk into eerie rooms? Hearing you voice as you carry on conversations with us, observing this and that, makes me feel like we are rubbing shoulders and pushing back cob-webs for each other...haha. Love it. - Tom
@missmartpants2269
@missmartpants2269 5 лет назад
The feathers look like they came from the pillows in the attic. This was very interesting one. God bless!
@nidaauto
@nidaauto 10 лет назад
Another great video, thanks for posting.
@susanwall6418
@susanwall6418 6 лет назад
Hi TikiTrex, love your video. I think that all those feathers were saved in storage to make feather beds. My GreatGrandmother made one and I used it when I was a little girl, it was so soft and warm! Such small feathers were probably blown all over by the breeze throughout the house. So glad you got out there and documented this great old farm house before destruction. I wonder if you know do they save the doors or banisters for resale? Take good care of yourself.
@JosieM47
@JosieM47 10 лет назад
Love your videos, thank you for sharing!
@trenchant2
@trenchant2 8 лет назад
I think the feathers were from pillows that you can see in the attic. The attic which you were hesitant to explore but did, brave you. I love these videos!! You seemed a little spooked by this place, and not just from the farmer next door. :)
@adamchoruzek3805
@adamchoruzek3805 10 лет назад
we would get along very well. I also love to explore old abandoned farmhouses. You should come to iowa someday. there all over and Kansas to
@MissPurplePotato
@MissPurplePotato 10 лет назад
I've been watching your interesting videos for quite some time now. You are so brave! I appreciate that you are very thorough and you talk throughout the home. I keep thinking, "I wonder what happened here?" or why folks leave in things in such disarray or what the home looked like when it was new and filled with a family living there. Finding calendars is great. I keep wondering if you ever come across someone inside the house; I hope you have something with you to protect yourself.
@raywilliams5044
@raywilliams5044 8 лет назад
Great explore. Thanks.
@Homegrown_Values
@Homegrown_Values 10 лет назад
Love the old trim, what a gem
@sheapiland8779
@sheapiland8779 5 лет назад
I can imagine that this was a very nice home back in the day. It's a shame no one restored this house.
@NewEnglandOtaku
@NewEnglandOtaku 5 лет назад
Greetings from Southern Vermont. Where I used to live in Whitingham there were a few abandoned houses, but I only went into the brick house, it was a pretty building built in the 1860's starting life as a log cabin and I guess by 1880, it was converted to a brick house. When the front wall came down, that was the first time I went inside.. but it was so bad inside, the second floor was sagging to the first, the first floor sagged down but didn't fall in when I walked on it... found the place in 2013 and watched it fall into ruin and kept track of it until 2018, it's still standing... even though it's been vandalized so much and it keeps buckling under the weight.. but I did so much research on it and when I was proudly talking about what I learned, people told me they didn't care.. so I pretty much stopped but I still go back for photos.. surprisingly the floor where the main staircase was gone before the wall came down... it all eventually fell into the basement.. the railing was literally stolen from the stairs... and some time between 2017 and 2018, the vandals went in for the last time to shove what furniture was left into the basement, shove old books down into the basement and old records as well in the basement which is full of water now. the support is basically rocks.. no clue if there's an oil tank down there.. there was an antique stove in the kitchen but I think that's in the basement now
@bobbygarmon9933
@bobbygarmon9933 8 лет назад
nice House I loved. the tour Pam
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 8 лет назад
Thanks, Bobby. I'm glad to hear.
@klausfroehner4411
@klausfroehner4411 5 лет назад
I Love your Videos!!!! Thank you for everyone!!!!!!!
@bethkeirstead131
@bethkeirstead131 10 лет назад
You should come to Nova Scotia! There are tons of abandoned places/houses here!!! Love your videos!
@mrmaestro04
@mrmaestro04 10 лет назад
Great job on this one. I would been afraid to breathe.
@LeDiskoLove99
@LeDiskoLove99 10 лет назад
Gorgeous house actually, too bad it hasn't gotten the attention it deserves. Great video! Thanks for sharing!
@Carballoca
@Carballoca 10 лет назад
Always makes me happy when I see you have posted another video. IMO your the best urban explorer herexon YT. What a huge house makes you wonder how many people lived in it at one time. Was it one huge family or a couple familes or with extended family members did look like there was any signs of kids being there. I always make up senerios in my head when watching videos like this...lol Wonder what was up with all the milk jugs and what did they use them for...lol
@MrTimRoyal
@MrTimRoyal 8 лет назад
This house has a true Gothic feel. The blue painted Windsor chair was nice.
@MrTimRoyal
@MrTimRoyal 8 лет назад
+Tim Royal Would also love to have the mural of the lady in the red dress and fur stole. Or is it a coat with a fur collar? Was she the Chatelain?
@ronniconnelly5022
@ronniconnelly5022 10 лет назад
Wonderful old home. Sure wish people would start rehabbing them.
@nuffinedited2
@nuffinedited2 10 лет назад
great video, the old couches and chairs as well as automobile seats use to be stuffed with an old spanish moss some were even filled with old straw....that house must have been a real beauty in its day so sad to see no one wanted to live there after the elder man passed on
@ellenjefferies7310
@ellenjefferies7310 9 лет назад
That fur thing is an old sleigh blanket!!! Used to snuggle under in a "One horse open sleigh!!!" How cool!!! Those date from the early 1900's and it is a full horse hide with a very thick wool felt backing, the felt on the edging is cut in a decorative fashion. I am so fortunate to have two of them. I purchased them 2 different Estate Sales. Another NEAT house you found there, WOW!!!!
@alibabafurball
@alibabafurball 9 лет назад
awsome vid!!! This house was about to go. Even with the better beams used in the day the wall crack you can see through to the out side means it is about to colapse. Another sign is the center room. Step on the floor and the ceiling moves...wow. Thank you ever so much for showing this one. Makes me feel they were keeping the house around in his memory, and given the state of the house, this vid deffinately will prlong the memory of the man. I bet most folks in the area knew this man!!! Just them can of corn syrup i bet he was a moonshinner. That syrup sure pumps up the alcohol and smoothes it out.
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
That does makes more sense. Thanks, MDF!
@evangelinebellinger
@evangelinebellinger 9 лет назад
That outlet on the wall was an old gas vent for gas powered lights, that had been plugged up.
@buddylight2191
@buddylight2191 10 лет назад
I find your videos are very interesting, and I prefer your videos over other similar ones. If possible could you show better/longer shots of the heating and pump systems in these places? I think the feathers may have come from the mattress because they look like old feather beds. Thanks for posting them.
@jamieniver3935
@jamieniver3935 10 лет назад
Love your videos! New subscriber but I have seen almost all of them. I bet the other commenters were right those feathers were probably from a pillow. I had an old one but I had to put it away to be repaired, the new feather pillows don't work as well lol. I love the old farm houses and that place seemed huge. I give you credit on doing the exploring you do. Its interesting but i don't have the guts lol.
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
Thank you for subscribing along with your comment, Jamie! I'm glad you enjoy my videos! Yes, a feather pillow seems more plausible. :)
@yvonnejohnston7422
@yvonnejohnston7422 10 лет назад
in the older days they used to stuff mattresses with feathers and the pillows, i bet thats where the feathers came from...
@Victrod3
@Victrod3 9 лет назад
when I was 16 I found two abandoned houses. Like the people just vanished. every thing was still there. I took a lot of stuff. Was so eerie but I wouldn't do it now. Love your vid's and sexy voice. thank you for brining back the memory's
@annieann4527
@annieann4527 10 лет назад
Very amazing house. Looks to of been built in the early to mid 1800's. Light switches use to turn instead of flip. The feathers look like the type used to stuff matress & pillows. I really like the way you show everything with your camera. I would love to renovate & live there.
@abtv4814
@abtv4814 9 лет назад
would love to see those floors and woodwork redone! beautiful
@alibabafurball
@alibabafurball 9 лет назад
This is one dangerous house !!! That middle room is cantelevered now on the crumbing foundation making it imposible to rip that up to even recycle it with out killing yourself in the cave in. I am so glad that ceiling didn't go when she was hearing the ceiling move. Just imagine the sheer mass of weight on them beams and how a person can just move the ceiling steping on the floor!!!!
@ChaosMagnet
@ChaosMagnet 8 лет назад
I went in here a few years ago. I had a very strange experience while I was up in the attic. I was alone, but I heard voices and footsteps from downstairs. I went downstairs, figuring that what footage I had already got was all I was going to get before being told to leave. But no one was there! The voices were loud, distinct, and sounded like they came from inside the building. And the footfalls were heavy, thumping treads that easily allowed me to determine what room they were coming from. It sounded like 2 men, one old and one younger. But there was no one but myself inside or on the property or surrounding area. Very freaky.
@deirdrepasko9056
@deirdrepasko9056 7 лет назад
The original owners letting you know, that they never really left....
@cwb0051
@cwb0051 10 лет назад
wonderful..watched this again...bet that elderly man was born and raised in that house..wow so much history...
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
I'm glad you enjoyed it, thanks!
@CoreyDeWalt
@CoreyDeWalt 10 лет назад
those tvs need to be in a museum.
@RebeccaMoody21sm01ur80f
@RebeccaMoody21sm01ur80f 9 лет назад
nice find!!
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
Wow! Thank you, Moo Cow, and to everyone else for your ongoing support and positive comments! It's much appreciated! :)
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
That's awesome! Thanks!
@kathenderson5105
@kathenderson5105 9 лет назад
Those milk jugs looked like they were tied together to make like a bobber for fishing, and probably the head cheese was bait for fishing, at least a commercial fisherman for local stores or a big fish fry. I would hope the head cheese was not for someone to eat, however my mother loved head cheese.....yuk! Great video, I just love the old houses! :)
@fighterjoe22
@fighterjoe22 10 лет назад
Wow I am glad to see another video from you. :) I think those news papers from the 60s through to the 80s was from the original owners and maybe stuff from a decade ago is from squatters. It would explain all the random mounds of pillows on the upper floor.
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
A few people have mentioned that's where the feathers are likely from. I've never heard of feather mattresses before that. I guess you learn something new every day. Thanks for commenting. :)
@gbpetitt
@gbpetitt 10 лет назад
Another cool one Tiki! Thanks!
@HoschtonBoy
@HoschtonBoy 10 лет назад
I have been looking for one of those old large meat grinders for years. I can't find one and you fall over one. Fate is not on my side. Good video, keep up the great work.
@norapeeps1313
@norapeeps1313 10 лет назад
TT,I am soooooo glad I stummbled upon your vids! You are,in my opinion,the best camra person I have seen, very steady hands :) you talk us thourgh every step, you look at all the stuff..(.I love looking at stuff! the more stuff to look through the better), you do reserch, you walk us around the outside first to give us the full picture,then WE ALL go in together :) You are awesome at this.I wish I had places like that to explore. Oh , and you are very brave...not sure if I could go into a house at night...alone. So thank you very ,very , much for your vids. :) Oh...dont forget to keep a stick in the car for battling cobwebs :)
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
Thank you for the inspiring comment! I really appreciate your positive feedback and am glad you enjoy my videos. A stick is definitely a good idea :)
@laurasteele8070
@laurasteele8070 10 лет назад
i agree
@asankaw1
@asankaw1 10 лет назад
I agree too
@nixkigreen
@nixkigreen 10 лет назад
Hi tiki... holy milk jug art...lol! Another terrific video......so happy to see your latest adventures....xoxo Nikki
@mettahuttravels3183
@mettahuttravels3183 10 лет назад
Weird Pam, some of those pipes in the basement looked new ??? along with a small water heater. take note of those jars used for preserving, they are now hard to come by and are an important part of our history for without them our pioneers would not have survived, amazing house keep up the good work Pam it's all very additive & very interesting.:-]
@scottbrixius6219
@scottbrixius6219 10 лет назад
the steel round deals in the floors and walls, are called transfers. i work in HVAC and back before forced air was brought into homes, it would allow heat from downstairs to rise and travel throughout the house.
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
Interesting to know. Thank you for pointing that out.
@agems56
@agems56 10 лет назад
About your question on just who is farming these days, it is for a sad but true reason that it takes huge corporations to run the farms these days. Gone are the small Ma and Pa egg and poultry farms that I used to buy our eggs from. An independant farmer just can't compete anymore. It also scares me how many former farms are converting to developments, or manicured acreages
@colinburchill7519
@colinburchill7519 10 лет назад
super vid. looks like the place will fall down next time there,s a storm. some old folk just never throw stuff away. I think all the feathers came from old bedding, but they did look rather too new for that. so who knows? once again,great work.
@genedavis101
@genedavis101 10 лет назад
Head boards and head cheese, I was thinking it while you said it.. Made me laugh! Great video.
@Cindy7777777
@Cindy7777777 10 лет назад
You can tell in it's day it was a gorgeous farmhouse!!!!!! So sad to see it this way now!!!
@TheSpazModic
@TheSpazModic 10 лет назад
A great video of an original, unmolested old house. It's virtually unheard of to see the old knob and tube switches still in place. It looks like a familiar story in rural areas...the heirs want to use the farm land, but have no use for the old house. But it looks like this house has serious problems lol.
@marlacarter9399
@marlacarter9399 5 лет назад
Hi Pam. I am from south central Kentucky USA. I heard you mention Ontario in one of your videos. Is that where most of your videos are from? This is my first comment. This house was beautiful to me! You do make me feel as though I’m exploring with you. You do a great job! Just found your videos a few days ago. Thanks for sharing 😃
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 5 лет назад
Hi Maria. Welcome to my channel. I’m glad you are enjoying the videos. Yes, they are mostly from Ontario.
@Skooterbird
@Skooterbird 10 лет назад
My daughter loves going through empty homes and buildings, you and her would make a great team....pat
@workonitm8
@workonitm8 10 лет назад
I have always liked your presentation of these video's. Some of the others have annoying chatter and/or heavy breathing that is a turn off, camera motion that makes me sea sick. You're the best Pam, I'll easily give you a 10 in old house explorations.
@elkidee1
@elkidee1 10 лет назад
excellent as usual. I think it would be likely that the house has been vacant for years and years and whoever owns it has just dumped junk or left the place to disintegrate. I am amazed with how the old wallpaper seems to hang off the walls like drapes hang on windows. The stoves or rather where there were stoves were hazardous looking in that I think it was creosote dripping down the walls. I wish these old places could actually talk. Thanks again!
@dave1135
@dave1135 10 лет назад
I noticed upstairs the mattresses you saw and what you thought were large pillows were most likely old feather beds. And there were feather pillows in the attic. That's where the feathers came from.
@jimsoutdooradventures2748
@jimsoutdooradventures2748 10 лет назад
Nice,,Headboards and Headcheese,,LOL!!! Another great video,i love the old house's, they remind me of my grandparents,my grandma had a vaccum just like that.
@HoschtonBoy
@HoschtonBoy 10 лет назад
The one big room upstairs had what looked like an old save in the floor. The round thing. A lot of the really old houses had those and a large carpet to cover them. We had one like that in the old farm I grew up in.
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
Thanks, Steve.
@louisemissouri4410
@louisemissouri4410 10 лет назад
Feathers were all from the mattress's and the pillows in the attics. There was a maid's appartment and maids quarters upstairs. They would cook downstairs in the winter and in the back of the house in the summer, to keep the odors out of the main living area's. Most house's that old would have each room have their own wood stove's. It was a great look to the past. :)
@TraditionalHymns
@TraditionalHymns 10 лет назад
I once had a feather pillow! It was annoying because some spilled out lol.
@louisemissouri4410
@louisemissouri4410 9 лет назад
I had a feather mattress, you can still buy them. It was cool in summer and warm in winter and it enveloped you like a good hug. It wore out and I have missed it ever since. I still use feather pillows. Love em. :)
@Daniel28021991
@Daniel28021991 10 лет назад
Great like every time!
@ndog2005
@ndog2005 10 лет назад
Great video, as always. In it's day, that had been one Beautiful house. The windows above the doors, are called transdom (spelling??), had a house with one.. Solid paneling.. At 10:13 were the walls separating from the window?? that's where you comment about the settling of the house.. Would be nice to see it restored. Thank you so much..
@TikiTrex
@TikiTrex 10 лет назад
Why didn't I think of that? Thanks for pointing that out.
@desmondmchugh1006
@desmondmchugh1006 10 лет назад
I know where this house is!!! Has always interested me :) Thanks
@penniesfromheavon
@penniesfromheavon 10 лет назад
those switches are more commonly used for gas lighting. those feathers are probably from the mattress's that you called pillow/mattress's most likely this was a boarding house especially with the "common" room upstairs. this house reminds me of the Mennonite house (from the outside) I love the older homes like this thx for another great vid!
@MrHarrylime74
@MrHarrylime74 10 лет назад
thanks,amazing
@lanescanner7063
@lanescanner7063 10 лет назад
I love your videos, and I've noticed one main connection between a lot of them. The farm houses are abandoned...........SO WHO IS FARMING THESE DAYS??? I just wonder why none of the ones you took us through were picked up by younger generations, other farmers, etc. Just sad that most of them look like they would be awesome farms to work and they're just dying. Sad. Thanks again! LS
@agems56
@agems56 10 лет назад
You will see my reply on the comments section of Exploration of a Georgian Style Farmhouse on You Tube Andrew Gems
@azbycxdwesmit3705
@azbycxdwesmit3705 10 лет назад
farming is too hard of work for most of the younger folks now-a-days..
@TheeAbstractHero
@TheeAbstractHero 10 лет назад
AZBYCXDWE SMIT Yeah for the 80.7% of americans (not just youth) for sure. When you're outside of the urban areas you'd be surprised. Out there people actually have a work ethic.
@maunster3414
@maunster3414 6 лет назад
Oh how I wish I had photographic equipment with me when I was so actively exploring in the 70s and 80s.
@76southernpride
@76southernpride 10 лет назад
shame this piece of history is going to waste. it must have been really nice at one time. the woodwork is evidence of that. really enjoy your videos. thanks for sharing