One of my favorites! The stone house is amazing! The stair case and doors are incredible! Was very worried about the floors for you! The hair thing was most likely a birds nest as they will take horse and cow hair to make the nest softer! Great video!
I love those old stone homes, absolutely gorgeous! Certainly wish the roof hadn't gotten hit by lightening or whatever happened to it. What a shame to just see it sit. Thank you for the tour!!
Beautiful! Love the tractor. Love unpainted wood trim. We should set up government sponsored heritage program. A family that can't afford to maintain a beautiful old estate with historically valuable architecture can apply for assistance to help with upkeep in return for opening up house to public one day a week or something.
That is a hand dug well, not a cistern. Your choice of locations and the quality of your videos are superb! Please watch the language, to keep them family friendly. Awesome job!
Cool place, it's unfortunate the condition the house is in, it was weird though, most the walls and windows were all still intact with the trim but the place has no roof. Nice thing about your videos is you actually know what your talking about unlike some of the urban explorers.
The exterior walls will be there forever, unless somebody tears them down. Those stone walls will never fall down on their own. But in 20 or 30 years, the wood will be completely gone.
Max Zomboni I fully agree with you, when it comes to this place the roof must have just recently collapsed or whatever did happened since most of the interior walls-finishes like the plaster paint and trim are still intact.
Good video! Some of the reasons I like your videos is because th they're localish, me being 2-4 hours north. The one on farms, I farm, I like seeing the old interesting farms. also best if you can talk to old farmers or relatives, I think you should try that sometime with an old farmer you know. Also, like exploring on free time. You should come up to eastern Iowa and NW Il sometime. also I'm only a teen, but that doesn't mean I can't farm.
I know I've seen that type of architecture before with that stone. Not the same house but definitely same style.... I'm pretty sure it was in Jeff co east of 55. Anyway awesome video as always!
That golden Jubille ford is worth some considerable money to a collector. Maybe around $4,000 in that condition. A normal one would only be around $400 in that condition
Hi...I like the house.....lots of hard wood everywhere.....too bad you made the video so short.....just to add more stuff.....but thanks.....like this stuffy.....maybe you can return and take a little more time.....heh.....I would......thanks...see ya*john
That furnace looks a lot like the one we had removed from our house. Too bad this house can't be gutted and rebuilt. I bet there is more time in those stone walls
With stone that thick, that will be there long after the wood has rotten all away. It is interesting how fast nature takes everything back, but stone lasts a long time. A fully intact 1953 Ford Golden Jubilee. Gear heads are going to drool, ha. It is in rough condition, but it is in complete condition.
The house looks older from the outside, but inside it's pure early 1900s. The 5 panel doors, mouldings, and mortise locks are all from after 1900. I think this house is actually a wood house with a stone veneer (like a brick house, but with field stones on the outside). The foundation also looked like a poured concrete, so it could even be as late as 1920s.
My pressing question is How Exactly, do u Know there is still a floor under the carpet or ? stuff on the floor. R u worried about caving into floor below ?
I drove across Pennsylvania a few years back, and I can remember the number of abandoned houses i saw was just staggering. Huge homesteads empty and in an advanced state of decay. I think it's pretty universal. Much of the middle North of about the 39th parallel is becoming empty. They're dying off or moving out.
Enjoyed the video!
This is produced well. Beautiful, appropriate intro music. Enjoy your work.
Really neat and amazingly strong stonework! The whole farm has a eerie feeling to it!
Another AWESOME video, in my opinion award winning! Thanks for sharing.... Hope some salvages those great doors before she's all said & done .
This was really cool!! Thanks for sharing.
One of my favorites! The stone house is amazing! The stair case and doors are incredible! Was very worried about the floors for you! The hair thing was most likely a birds nest as they will take horse and cow hair to make the nest softer! Great video!
Love this old place! :)
Thank you.
great find ...great explore
Nice video
I love those old stone homes, absolutely gorgeous! Certainly wish the roof hadn't gotten hit by lightening or whatever happened to it. What a shame to just see it sit. Thank you for the tour!!
Nice video.
Beautiful! Love the tractor. Love unpainted wood trim. We should set up government sponsored heritage program. A family that can't afford to maintain a beautiful old estate with historically valuable architecture can apply for assistance to help with upkeep in return for opening up house to public one day a week or something.
Very nice find, bad roof you were lucky too be able too walk inside, nice ford aswel.
Great video! I hope you come back to RUclips soon, you have such great content!
I wonder what happened to him
nice video man
That is a hand dug well, not a cistern. Your choice of locations and the quality of your videos are superb! Please watch the language, to keep them family friendly. Awesome job!
Cool place, it's unfortunate the condition the house is in, it was weird though, most the walls and windows were all still intact with the trim but the place has no roof.
Nice thing about your videos is you actually know what your talking about unlike some of the urban explorers.
The exterior walls will be there forever, unless somebody tears them down. Those stone walls will never fall down on their own. But in 20 or 30 years, the wood will be completely gone.
Max Zomboni I fully agree with you, when it comes to this place the roof must have just recently collapsed or whatever did happened since most of the interior walls-finishes like the plaster paint and trim are still intact.
quite a nice place, looks to of been cleared out but that tractor is nice!
Good video! Some of the reasons I like your videos is because th they're localish, me being 2-4 hours north. The one on farms, I farm, I like seeing the old interesting farms. also best if you can talk to old farmers or relatives, I think you should try that sometime with an old farmer you know. Also, like exploring on free time. You should come up to eastern Iowa and NW Il sometime. also I'm only a teen, but that doesn't mean I can't farm.
Damn, as a collector, that 1953 Ford Golden Jubilee is actually a pretty collectible tractor shame that it's rotting away
man I would of left with the condition of that place. could come down anytime or you could fall through! you're more brave than me!
Oh, man, I would too!
I love stl or Missouri videos!! my area!!! :) Jamestown mall!!!:)
I know I've seen that type of architecture before with that stone. Not the same house but definitely same style.... I'm pretty sure it was in Jeff co east of 55. Anyway awesome video as always!
After seeing the hole through the floor of the house, I was so nervous when you were walking around and hearing the crunching :(
That golden Jubille ford is worth some considerable money to a collector. Maybe around $4,000 in that condition. A normal one would only be around $400 in that condition
Hi...I like the house.....lots of hard wood everywhere.....too bad you made the video so short.....just to add more stuff.....but thanks.....like this stuffy.....maybe you can return and take a little more time.....heh.....I would......thanks...see ya*john
That furnace looks a lot like the one we had removed from our house. Too bad this house can't be gutted and rebuilt. I bet there is more time in those stone walls
With stone that thick, that will be there long after the wood has rotten all away. It is interesting how fast nature takes everything back, but stone lasts a long time.
A fully intact 1953 Ford Golden Jubilee. Gear heads are going to drool, ha. It is in rough condition, but it is in complete condition.
Great house. It could still be saved. All someone would have to do is rebuild the interior and build a new roof on it.
lets see the northwest plaza video 😉
Jerry Seinfeld how about mills mall... LOL that's right it's still open... for now
Jerry Seinfeld Isnt that under demolition?
Crestwood is under demolition
Cutesy ending. Don't start gettin all Dan Bell on us or anything. Keep it real.
I had another like 3 minutes of footage at the end but it was boring so I cut it. I guess it leaves an awkward cliff hanger doesn't it
It makes my hands sweat, watching him,LOL
What happened at the end?
I went home
The house looks older from the outside, but inside it's pure early 1900s. The 5 panel doors, mouldings, and mortise locks are all from after 1900. I think this house is actually a wood house with a stone veneer (like a brick house, but with field stones on the outside). The foundation also looked like a poured concrete, so it could even be as late as 1920s.
Real stone houses have very deep window wells (from the inside).
Maybe do these with someone just in case?
After you do a few it's not as daunting as you'd think. As long as someone knows where you are
Some of the richest people in the world don't know what to do with all their money. Here is the answer
What music is used in this video?
That's a good 25 years of abandonment.
CoinHuntingDrew I'd say 35.
My pressing question is How Exactly, do u Know there is still a floor under the carpet or ? stuff on the floor. R u worried about caving into floor below ?
Rhonda raisin I was holding my breath for him!
Bonjour,
ont vient de commencer les explorations [urbex] pouvez-vous faire un tour sur notre chaîne et nous dire ce que vous en pensez? merci.
is this somewhere in Missouri?
That's what I was thinking
Yes central Missouri
BackyardExploration what county?
I drove across Pennsylvania a few years back, and I can remember the number of abandoned houses i saw was just staggering. Huge homesteads empty and in an advanced state of decay. I think it's pretty universal. Much of the middle North of about the 39th parallel is becoming empty. They're dying off or moving out.
Poor old Ford jubilee
I hope you don't do these explorations alone! You could become seriously hurt!