Old World Topeka

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  • Опубликовано: 7 янв 2025

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  • @rudigustin6691
    @rudigustin6691 Год назад +7

    It was really cool of you to plug "mind unveiled".. love their channel.. just like you, they are phenomenal researchers.. Extremely thorough!

    • @JamieCrain5349
      @JamieCrain5349 Год назад +1

      Yes that be awesome collaboration🤩 💕

  • @aliciadane1
    @aliciadane1 Год назад +6

    Just went a few months ago to Topeka to get birth certificates and upon suggestion of the clerk helping us, walked down the street to go in and explore inside the Topeka capital building and Wow. It's even more stunning than you showed. I took many short videos and photos inside if youre interested in any first hand recent photos. I'm relatively new to the old world architecture/alternative history studies involving such, but that wad by far the most beautiful building I've ever set foot in. Truly mind blowing

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +2

      I'm always interested..

    • @brianwesley28
      @brianwesley28 6 месяцев назад +2

      It's easily top 10, maybe even top 5, of the state capitol buildings.

  • @HeidiSlim
    @HeidiSlim 9 месяцев назад +1

    I live across from where Topeka State Hospital was. The asylum was huge, we went in the buildings that are still there. The old clock tower is another one to see too. Lots of strangeness here.

  • @richardrobey9658
    @richardrobey9658 Год назад +6

    That’s one big pipe organ! 😂
    The Topeka high school is just ridiculously large and same for the big post office
    Shockingly the large ymca’s all of them and all of this in Topeka Kansas lol 😂 of all for 13000 people

  • @ourmeltedreality8731
    @ourmeltedreality8731 Год назад +4

    I nominate you the postcard king. Great finds!

  • @0nlytruths912
    @0nlytruths912 Год назад +2

    23:20 check out Virginia city, Nevada, it looks like an old world city. It even has red brick buildings 🙏🙏

  • @mitchdowning8188
    @mitchdowning8188 Год назад +5

    Bordering the Oklahoma Territory, a lot of native American names are used for the towns in Kansas. Like Tulsa, Oklahoma, which took its name from the Talisi (Creek) indian town on the Tallapoosa River in east central Alabama (supposedly visited by Desoto in ~ 1540), the name Topeka sounds similar to the Creek Indian town of Tohopeka at Horseshoe Bend on the Tallapoosa River where Andrew Jackson defeated the Creek Indians in 1814.
    (Within twenty years thereafter the U. S. Government had 23 million acres in Alabama surveyed into Sections for sale and Settlement by the new colonists). The word "tohopeka" translates to "fort" or "fence".
    General Montgomery, who fought with Gen. Jackson was killed at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend. His name was given to the Alabama State capitol city.
    Major Francis Langhorn Dade, survived that Battle, but was killed at the "Dade Massacre" near Ocala Florida by the forces of Oceola to start the Second Seminole War ( " the longest and most costly war with the Indians in U.S. history"). Dade County (Miami) Florida bears his name, as well as a County in Georgia and the city of Dadeville, Alabama ( which is just a short distance from Horseshoe Bend). The remarkable thing here is just how much significance is attached to names and their association with significant battles in the early days of the "founders".

  • @FettiMagazine
    @FettiMagazine Год назад +5

    Thank you for covering Topeka. I noticed all the old buildings there too. No explanations to the building skills, of course.

  • @gisttyler
    @gisttyler Год назад +2

    Good catch!

  • @kujhawks35
    @kujhawks35 Месяц назад +1

    I’m was born and raised in Topeka. Topeka should be bigger but the city is so close to Kansas City that every major companies and businesses want to come in there lured away to Kansas City or Wichita.

  • @timothydillow3160
    @timothydillow3160 Год назад +4

    How anyone can look at that State Capitol building in Topeka, Kansas, and not see something Divine staring at them, is beyond my comprehension.

  • @chadw100
    @chadw100 11 месяцев назад +1

    Concordia, KS is even more perplexing, hope u do one on that place.

  • @theumbrellaarchive3720
    @theumbrellaarchive3720 10 месяцев назад +1

    I am moving cross country and going through topeka kansas tomorrow

  • @Kevin-ho7wp
    @Kevin-ho7wp Год назад +2

    What.. you rock. You are the first to do top ks... anyway that is where I live

    • @Kevin-ho7wp
      @Kevin-ho7wp Год назад +2

      Yea cowboys are good at creating 700ft. Domes

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +2

      love it when I hear from a local with eyes to see..

    • @Kevin-ho7wp
      @Kevin-ho7wp Год назад +1

      @@oldworldex I'm still excited to see the vid. Iv been watching old world Florida..my fav. All the ch. And now I find yours... keep up the good work.yo

    • @Kevin-ho7wp
      @Kevin-ho7wp Год назад +1

      Actually he is my fav. But I just told Lucius old world dude. That you f#$+N rock for doing it first.....

    • @Kevin-ho7wp
      @Kevin-ho7wp Год назад +1

      Ok anyway I will watch again and share probably ten times easy eventually..... most of those buildings are not around....top.high.i grad. 91

  • @hawaiiguykailua6928
    @hawaiiguykailua6928 Год назад +1

    I'm heading to Dog Heaven, no his-story, no mudflood, no wars, no religion, no gods, no domes, no palaces, no government, no overlords. Just quiet skies, open fields, sandy beaches and my 3 amazing boys, whatever form they may have taken. 😊

  • @cathybroughton66
    @cathybroughton66 Год назад +5

    These buildings were dugout from a mud flood.

    • @JamieCrain5349
      @JamieCrain5349 Год назад +3

      Yes, worldwide flood Noah’s flood. Our timeline is altered to cover up the fact that when and Jesus comes back, it’s for his second time and we are in the little season. It clearly says in the Bible, the ones who hung them on the cross that they and their children would witness him coming back, but these church goers and preachers these days skip over that part of the Bible because it keeps control of everybody layers and layers and layers of lies

    • @JamieCrain5349
      @JamieCrain5349 Год назад +2

      It wasn’t the slaves that built these buildings. It was the slaves that dug them out.

  • @ourmeltedreality8731
    @ourmeltedreality8731 Год назад +2

    It’s great how Wikipedia shows us “how it went down” lol. Great stuff Chris.

  • @howardharrisonphotosforever
    @howardharrisonphotosforever Год назад +3

    nice vid! We used to live in Great Bend Kansas for a number of years! what no fire?!?

  • @NewWestReset
    @NewWestReset Год назад +3

    Nice job on this, bud. A lot more in Topeka than I thought there would be. That old High School is magnificent! Thanks a lot. Cheers!

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +1

      Thanks for watching Frankie..

  • @mikebennett3432
    @mikebennett3432 Год назад +2

    Check out the architect Nicholas J. Clayton. In some of your previous videos you note that individual architects are credited with designing numerous buildings in a short time during the 1800’s. This guy was another busy-beaver!😂

  • @MegaFrankgarcia
    @MegaFrankgarcia Год назад +3

    Great Video, after watching videos of the old world like this & others, and doing my own research of my city (Louisville) I can honestly say that these cities are homogeneous with one another, it's the same buildings, same schools, same architecture , same grid planned city, you could do a comparative look at my city & Topeka & see the same buildings, designs & layouts. @ 7:46 The giant cabbages, it looks like to me that the giant cabbages in the foreground have been cut & pasted in there, and up scaled to look bigger than normal, theres no shading or shadows to them, or settling of a flat bottom, and the cabbage being loaded looks like the cabbage on the left in the foreground. IDK if you noticed but thats my perspective, but my glasses could be dirty too....!!

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +3

      Oh ya cabbages are early photo manipulation...just shows that they were capable of manipulating images at an earl time period. Louisville is incredible..

  • @SIXX2772
    @SIXX2772 Год назад +5

    We have become aware of just how deep the lie goes!

  • @kitchfairman5043
    @kitchfairman5043 Год назад +4

    I reckon public transportation made that town a lot better than it is today. I always joke, and say I do not recommend going to Topeka. You may get a flat tire and be stuck there the rest of your life. It Is that oppressive! All the carpenters, craftsman, and architects came from Stoll😅

  • @jamesappleton5063
    @jamesappleton5063 Год назад +2

    Great work, I am so confused on all the timelines but this helps the puzzle.

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +2

      There's no clear picture really...just a lot of speculation as a result of the story not adding up. thanks for watching.

  • @steveodonnell6533
    @steveodonnell6533 Год назад +2

    👍👍👍👍 good episode!

  • @hiddentruthhiddentruth
    @hiddentruthhiddentruth Год назад +3

    The picture of the steel structure that you don't think is real... I would add that everything I'm aware of so far regarding the construction of these buildings is using only wood and brick. No steel at all until they added the piece over the entrance when they knocked out the huge hole where they put the wood facade fronts. I'd like to see one of the demolitions in pictures and see if there is any of that steel shown underneath. In my view it's all brick and wood beams in the large buildings. Any feedback or pictues definitely appreciated.

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +1

      Thanks for your input. I enjoy and respect the work you do.

    • @hiddentruthhiddentruth
      @hiddentruthhiddentruth Год назад

      Thanks and same! I should be able to go to Topeka at some point. I visit that area often. Kansas is great because the supposed history narrative is so recent (around 130 years ago when things were supposedly brand new) but yet juxtaposed with what you see with your eyes which shows age way older than twice 70 years which is an easier way to quantify it. 70 is barely anything in building aging/weathering. Twice that all the sudden things look ancient?

    • @JamieCrain5349
      @JamieCrain5349 Год назад +1

      Agree, hidden truth!!!!!!!!!! I absolutely agree!!!!!!!!

  • @MrBlueSky1978
    @MrBlueSky1978 Год назад +4

    Visually the thing that stands out to me in this video is the number of buildings with large numbers of steps leading up to the main front entrance. Little logic in building structures in this fashion. Having done the research it leads to the liquefaction of the ground event where the buildings sank and during the clean-up/cover-up period constructing steps up to what was an upper floor in order to make the structure usable. A lot was going on in the first half of the 19th century little of which we've been told about by the mainstream 🤔🤫🤨

    • @mitchdowning8188
      @mitchdowning8188 Год назад +1

      The "afterthought" or "post- construction" steps bother me. too. The remarkable thing about "mudflood" buildings is the uneven ground that surrounds them, yet the structures remain relatively level. Somehow the pictures of Christchurch. NZ, after the earthquakes there in recent years, where liquefaction is said to have occurred, appear to show greater structural damage to the buildings there. Is it possible that some other type of cataclysm caused the "mudflood" , or I am just not interpreting this correctly?

    • @stephenhendrix1787
      @stephenhendrix1787 Год назад

      ​@@mitchdowning8188im sorry but everything you just said makes no sense and no there wasnt a mudflood

    • @stephenhendrix1787
      @stephenhendrix1787 Год назад +1

      You do realize that buildings have foundations right? Concrete foundations.

    • @mitchdowning8188
      @mitchdowning8188 Год назад +2

      @@stephenhendrix1787 "Mudflood" is a term used, by some who doubt the historical narrative, to describe the berms ( accumulated soil/earth) that surrounds the lower levels of old masonry buildings in many cities in the U.S.. These buildings have windows and sometimes ornamental columns that were often later sealed with brick and only appear partially at the current groound level. This is unlike typical basements (which are used as part of the FOUNDATIONS) esp. in buildings where the frostline is > 30" . (Note:. In the current world climate, permafrost occurs in Alaska, but there are a lot of monolithic slabs on grade used in the southern U.S. States) I won't bother going further. We just aren't seeing things the same way.

    • @stephenhendrix1787
      @stephenhendrix1787 Год назад

      ​@@mitchdowning8188yes we do not think the same, because mudflood theory is bullshit. Even though there is a lot of evidence to disprove it, people think all of history is a lie.

  • @rustycarpenter1219
    @rustycarpenter1219 Год назад +3

    Very cool

  • @createa.googleaccount713
    @createa.googleaccount713 Год назад +1

    KANSAS??? 😲😳🤯

  • @KansasFarmer620
    @KansasFarmer620 8 месяцев назад +1

    What about Charles van trump who found my town garden city Kansas....it's a damn rabbit hole with that guy

  • @o-i-see.4025
    @o-i-see.4025 Год назад +2

    It would b intresting to know what the quality of steel RSJs was back in the 1800s, was protective paints used to protect it from rusting over the course of time?
    Bridges r continuously re painted to protect the steel frame work.today steel is better quality and is pre treated with protective coatings.steel inclosed with stone or brick face work cannot b re painted the cavity between will inevitably contain moisture eventually it will cause rusting.direct exposure to weather is not the reason metals rust moisture and air is all u need.is it possible to know the durability of unprotected steel from the times🤔
    In my exspirence steel used as lintels in exterior walls of old buildings is always rusted so badly its removed and replaced with concrete reinforced lintels or a modern steel cat nik, Rsj H frame style. H being the view from end on of a steel lintel....a common type RSJ to span gaps above windows and doors to maintain structural integrity, where brick or stone arches and soldier courses are not used...👍

  • @JamieCrain5349
    @JamieCrain5349 Год назад +2

    How do they lay out a grid perfectly aligned? Did they have a crystal ball knowing that the buildings go next in certain spots? And we never see the actual architectural building layouts of these architectural plans or actual building, there was steel in these buildings. How did they work with the steel and rebar that would take iron and steel workers but we didn’t have those tools back then 😂supposedly the horse could not have done the iron and rebar for the building, as well as carry the bricks, the marble, Roman columns, statues, etc.

  • @danthoreson4062
    @danthoreson4062 Год назад +2

    Holy cow

  • @whome1636
    @whome1636 Год назад +1

    KC, old world capital city?

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +3

      KC and St Louis are something special for sure..

    • @Sqsq909
      @Sqsq909 Год назад +2

      Cosmopolitan Indigenous megalopolis

    • @whome1636
      @whome1636 Год назад +2

      @@oldworldex If you see the old world maps, all roads lead to KC as the center point. I believe all the major cities are old world cities, because you can see the perfectly drawn out city grids on the old maps, when cities had like a few thousand people. A youtuber also showed on google earth, hundreds (probably thousands) of these grids, landing strips, all over the world, where modern humans never supposedly lived on. Amazingly most of these grids were never taken back by nature. Definitely better thought out, engineered and applied.

  • @OGknowbuddy
    @OGknowbuddy Год назад +2

    construction photo is a repair. you would never build like that

  • @stephaniefox860
    @stephaniefox860 Год назад +3

    Do we know why the population increased (exploded) 663% in 10 years? From 1860 - 1870. Anyone? During the Civil War?

    • @mitchdowning8188
      @mitchdowning8188 Год назад +1

      There were 200,000 mercenary soldiers, veterans of European Wars, who were recruited by the U.S. for the Union Army ( ~ 2/5 of the total Union forces). Many of these soldiers were from Germany. After the Civil War, members of their families and friends are said to have immigrated to the U.S. -mainly to the midwest and upper midwest States. The records for much of the immigration to port centers during the 1800s are lacking, having fallen victim to fires like those that ravaged so many cities during that era. There are extensive records available on the internet, which provide some interesting data about the Soldier induction centers, and population distribution in cities on both sides of that conflict.

    • @Sqsq909
      @Sqsq909 Год назад

      I pray I don’t trigger anyone here but in my conception I see these troops participating in a mission to impregnate the Indigenous women and likely killing or kidnapping the men

    • @Sqsq909
      @Sqsq909 Год назад +1

      @stephaniefox860 do you mean global population? Or US? I don’t imagine census data was very accurate back then. It’s interesting to think what the population was like at the dawn of the age of photography

  • @derekgantt6282
    @derekgantt6282 Год назад +1

    What would all these architectural reconstructions mean to colonial world..seeing these ideas disperse among the original inhabitants...what would they be seize with..or how did British observe these unique castles and major engineering abilities...astonish scientific..world developed..along side electrical..realms...so what about franklin kite..story..or architects of our Constitution...is this up in air. Were ever it falls...tragic historical deception..cover up...wild wild west...showtime history....force removal is big world wide...take over...I wonder what's next...chapter will show...my explorers..ventures..capsided..

    • @JamieCrain5349
      @JamieCrain5349 Год назад +2

      @ Derek that’s where the asylums came in or they were killed and the children were collected and put them orphan trains to dig out everything

    • @derekgantt6282
      @derekgantt6282 Год назад +1

      I deeply appreciate being intune. With this generation of light givers..so much to imbue. A fragrance of high concern. People need to have the same footing to start. A wonderful golden age. Or like Jade inside deeper realities. Of future builders worldwide. Who are humanity at her best foot forward. Respect solid truth.

    • @braff4135
      @braff4135 Год назад +2

      Geary County, where they claim the limestone came from is 65 miles away. That's over 2 days by wagon, all conditions perfect. The rail line was completed between these places in 1866.
      Please do a video of Ft. Riley Kansas. The original post is magnificent. It's in Geary County

    • @derekgantt6282
      @derekgantt6282 Год назад +1

      @@braff4135 thankyou for the follow up..I was born in Philadelphia in 1952..just a child brought up with people..in my respect..usually travel on subways and amazing underground trolleys..go my explorers comrades.every detail.