Old World Pittsburgh, Meadowcroft, Atom Smasher, Carnegie, Star Fort Pitt, Oldest Photographs, PA

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • Howdy ya’ll. Welcome back. Today we will get back to the Old World Series, with a focus on Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. We will take a look at the awesome history of the Native Americans of Pittsburgh, as well as discussing the Meadowcroft Rockshelter, said to be the oldest human inhabitation in all of the “New World”.
    We will briefly discuss the rapid growth of Pittsburgh, as well as the great disasters which struck Pittsburgh, including the Great Fire of 1845. We will then look at some of the oldest and most unique photographs I could find of Pittsburgh, including the funiculars, and the Westinghouse Atom Smasher.
    This video will consist of 200+ unique images of Old World Pittsburgh, as well as focusing on the story of the current narrative. If anything about the narrative or these images sticks out to you, please let me know in the comments below. If you want to rapidly intake this video, play it at a faster speed, as I’ve been known to talk slow.
    I will also leave timestamps down below if you’d like to skip ahead to the Old World Photographs, and simply pause the audio to intake the slideshow at your own rhythm.
    Overall, I’m just really happy to share this content, images, and information with you. I love taking these deep dives into the Old World and seeing what sort of new discoveries we can uncover. Please leave your thoughts and comments down below!
    Intro - 0:01
    Meadowcroft Rockshelter - 1:13
    Native Americans of Pittsburgh - 3:15
    European Settlements and Fort Pitt History - 4:40
    America takes over Pittsburgh, Early History - 7:46
    The Great Fire of 1845 - 10:53
    Old World Photographs Begin - 12:56
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Комментарии • 374

  • @ebt12
    @ebt12 Год назад +8

    I found a lot of errors in this video, but I'll focus on just one. At time point 20:25 you show photos of Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens, opened in 1893. A museum of living plants. It never had telescopes. The photos of telescopes are of the Thaw Telescope, a 30" refractor, at Allegheny Observatory on Pittsburgh's North Side. It opened in 1912.

  • @nixhixx
    @nixhixx 3 года назад +25

    Thanks for this, I'm a Pittsburgher, and there's soooooo much history here, and it has been an incredibly important city, lots of 'firsts' here, too.

    • @nixhixx
      @nixhixx 3 года назад +7

      You missed the fact that we were a Glass city before we were a steel city... hence the PPG buildings at the Point...

    • @meanwolverine4573
      @meanwolverine4573 3 месяца назад

      @@nixhixx give Ford City some credit for the PPG glass too!

    • @ramencurry6672
      @ramencurry6672 2 месяца назад

      Pittsburg is a good place

  • @miltoncallan1471
    @miltoncallan1471 3 года назад +37

    The photo of the stone archway between 2 stone buildings is not a museum . It is the Allegheny County Jail. The Cathedral of Learning (opened in 1936) is a steel frame building with a stone facade. Allegheny Observatory (opened in 1912) is where the telescope you refer to is housed. The glass building with the dome is Phipps Conservatory located on the other side of the Cathedral of Learning, and they don't have a telescope. It's full name is Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens. My Mom lived through the 1936 flood and she shared her experience with me. Buildings were not actually destroyed, but were damaged on the lower floors and basements. A lot of these buildings were department stores and other places that I visited. Many places had plaques indicating the water level during the flood.

    • @krisbarringer1509
      @krisbarringer1509 2 года назад +5

      I was in that old jail right after I turned 18, place was crazy scary.. under ground tunnels where they took us schakled from building to building.. Out in the yard, people could throw us stuff over the wall from Ross Street, even in 1995.. that place was wild!! It’s where CYF is now..

    • @janetcarbone4213
      @janetcarbone4213 2 года назад +1

      Did you see Dixmont?

    • @williamt7664
      @williamt7664 Год назад +1

      Thanks!

    • @Bizarreparade
      @Bizarreparade Год назад +3

      I thought this was the best comment until the guy who went to jail told his little story. Still a great comment!

    • @andrewschrim6676
      @andrewschrim6676 Месяц назад +1

      Thank you for sharing your knowledge about Pgh.

  • @shaneckel
    @shaneckel 3 года назад +12

    This is my home. There's history on every street in this town. Great video.

  • @patriciaschuster1371
    @patriciaschuster1371 2 года назад +6

    Love this! I moved to Pittsburgh in 1983. I was 20....and managed to do everything I wanted to with my life....and miles to go before I sleep, as the poet says.

    • @TechTokOffical
      @TechTokOffical Год назад +1

      Just 10 years after meadocroft was founded lol

    • @tommcmurray3113
      @tommcmurray3113 8 месяцев назад

      Wouldnt it be amazing to learn "more" truth ??

  • @Lved6
    @Lved6 3 года назад +8

    Yea!! 😁 My home towne 😁 ... and still here 👀🤗

    • @Forged721
      @Forged721 3 года назад +3

      Well for heavens sake dont boil water over an Open flame now ya Hear ,,,, you could destroy the entire city 🤣🤣🤣

    • @Lved6
      @Lved6 3 года назад +2

      @@Forged721 🤣🤣

  • @davidcicak8045
    @davidcicak8045 3 года назад +9

    I liked the video. Your mispronunciation of many Pittsburgh area words reminds me of when a local TV station gets a new reporter and they struggle with saying local town names.

    • @jaimelynn1609
      @jaimelynn1609 2 года назад +2

      He pronounced Duquesne correctly. I'm impressed! LOL once I heard someone pronounce it dew-kez-nee LOL

  • @drohegda
    @drohegda 3 года назад +23

    John Brashear was from Pittsburgh he designed and produce telescope lenses some of the best in the world at that time. Over in the north side of Pgh. He was the first manager of the Allegheny Observatory which is still in use. John Brashear and his wife are buried in a crypt in the wall below the main telescope. Thanks Jarrid.

    • @Lved6
      @Lved6 3 года назад +5

      I went to Brashear High School. It’s quite unfortunate that students aren’t taught about the namesakes of all the schools in the city. It’s a very interesting history.

    • @seffbones5655
      @seffbones5655 3 года назад

      @@Lved6 well we were at least South Park got it’s name because it’s the southern part of Allegheny park… how interesting 😂😂

    • @tommcmurray3113
      @tommcmurray3113 8 месяцев назад

      @@Lved6 they ll never do it ....

  • @michiganporter
    @michiganporter 3 года назад +34

    33 skeletons found eh...im sure there were more than that...but the story fits nearly perfect onto the little sign!

    • @rueporter2253
      @rueporter2253 3 года назад +3

      "coughs" Mason's.

    • @hendo337
      @hendo337 3 года назад +3

      That's all the information you need to know that the entire thing is grabbled.

    • @mickguadagnoli8779
      @mickguadagnoli8779 2 года назад +3

      @@rueporter2253 yep, the number 33 is very important to them.

    • @rueporter2253
      @rueporter2253 2 года назад +3

      @@mickguadagnoli8779 33rd parallel too .

  • @ashleygirl0801
    @ashleygirl0801 Год назад +4

    Hi, I was born in 1962. You brought back memories of The Old Ormsby Bathhouse. It was a Clorine pool when I swam in the winter. It is still in Pgh I believe is now next to the Holiday Inn on 10th street that guests could use. Also, I lived on the slopes with a view of the J&L Steel mill, where my father and Granfather worked. I could tell you about so many memories of Pgh. Thanks for all the memories you brought back. I could practically smell the clorine and feel the humidity of the heated pool when I walked in. I saw the overlook down into the pool area that I saw in my minds eye as a child. Me and my friends would walk up and down the slopes to swim in the Ormsby Bath house. It coats under a dollar to enter. I went to the South High School on 10th and Carson and remember hanging out in the Court yard.Very cool history of Pgh, well done including Pittsburgh Past.

  • @tedwebb646
    @tedwebb646 2 года назад +4

    Great job. Pittsburgh simply may be the most interesting modern city in our world. Good job sir.

  • @johnskay8583
    @johnskay8583 2 года назад +3

    As a pittsburgher born raised and lived here most of my life I must say that was a wonderful video and description of our beautiful city thank you so much

  • @illeagle6024
    @illeagle6024 3 года назад +14

    Born and raised in Pittsburgh 😁

  • @drumstick74
    @drumstick74 3 года назад +12

    I'm always impressed with the amount of images you present, plus the depth of your 'digs' !
    Keep up the good work!

  • @donnabailey1136
    @donnabailey1136 3 года назад +10

    Conrad Weiser was my very first ancestor in America on my mother side of family 💕👍 I was amazed that you talked about him 😎

    • @Johnnyk999
      @Johnnyk999 3 года назад

      @@drohegda No clydesdales in Pgh back then! ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)

    • @krisbarringer1509
      @krisbarringer1509 2 года назад

      @@drohegda beat me to it!!

  • @Lved6
    @Lved6 3 года назад +26

    Given what we’ve learned about star forts I would say there was more here than just the woodlands that we’re told. Old world architecture and antiquitech is all over Allegheny County. I wonder what things looked like before the infamous “fire” swept through.

    • @katiecoollady
      @katiecoollady 3 года назад +1

      It looks like they dug the fort out...

    • @johnthompson9513
      @johnthompson9513 3 года назад +1

      It all started with a Spark?

    • @josephram1843
      @josephram1843 3 года назад +5

      We should have an old world/mudflood anomalies tour here in Pittsburgh.

    • @user-K8T
      @user-K8T 3 года назад +1

      It would surprise me if the whole Pittsburgh area was forest. The meeting of three rivers like this is an advantage to hold no matter the culture. One would expect something in the area.

    • @rueporter2253
      @rueporter2253 3 года назад +5

      I'm there right now. I find tons of old cut blocks that look like old castles decimated. All over.

  • @therealitybyjayrocco
    @therealitybyjayrocco 3 года назад +23

    Well done. Pittsburgh at one point in history and possibly still today boasted more churches of all faiths per capita than any other city. More bridges than any other city Sadly your video taught me more about the city than I was ever taught in school. Through my own research as I got older it was evident that they chose not to teach us anything accept about Carnegie William Pitt (very little) Mckees rocks should be celebrated for the Indian mounds but it is a plaque in a park and not a mention even in the McKee rocks school system. I had to find it out on my own. Very sad. While I must state if you lived in Pittsburgh it was one of the most diverse cities early on similar to New York from the late 1800’s on. US steel was at one point the largest Corp in America for decades also a pivotal company that help changed the face of a nation rooted in the shadow of Andrew Carnegie.

    • @josephram1843
      @josephram1843 3 года назад +2

      I grew up on top of a mound that was removed in Bridgeville. The only reason I found out about it was a small mention in a book on Bridgeville history that said construction of the neighborhood was halted in the 50's when they found the burials and an archeologist from the Carnegie Museum was brought in.

    • @tommcmurray3113
      @tommcmurray3113 8 месяцев назад +1

      They had alot of Cathedrals to fill

    • @tommcmurray3113
      @tommcmurray3113 8 месяцев назад +1

      Great info Are you still there Pgh er since 62

  • @Crystyle2011
    @Crystyle2011 3 года назад +4

    This is so awesome, I live in Pittsburgh and I crazy to see painting and photos of places I drive by every day and know how much part of history my city is, is very cool to look at. I one this I do love about this city is resilient and always growing, developing, and striving to be better.

  • @johnbroadway4196
    @johnbroadway4196 Год назад +2

    Growing up in the late 60's right through the the late 80's. Watching all the great steel mills die slowly, sheer sadness. And I don't even recognize that Pittsburgh. Just the bridges.

  • @Typing.._
    @Typing.._ 3 года назад +8

    I’m in Pa it mind blowing the history out here 🤩 💯

  • @marywhitehead5422
    @marywhitehead5422 2 года назад +2

    At least 4 generations of my mom's family grew up in Pittsburgh. My mom and dad went to and met at Carnegie Mellon university. My grandmother worked her whole life at Westinghouse. Outstanding collections of photos.

    • @michealnormie4572
      @michealnormie4572 2 года назад +1

      Hello Cathy how are you I am born and raised here in Pittsburgh, but currently working now

  • @jaydunn9055
    @jaydunn9055 2 года назад +2

    Born and raised on the Allegheny Ave. Northside of Pittsburgh. Cathedral of learning, and the planetarium. Some great jazz musicians came out of the Burgh, also some hall of fame room quarter backs came out of Western PA. Paint in perfect

  • @dhambone825919
    @dhambone825919 3 года назад +8

    I live in Pittsburgh. Really cool to hear all the names u speak about. They are all names of towns or buildings. Awesome video

  • @changopardomuzik4953
    @changopardomuzik4953 3 года назад +6

    Great content brother 💯

  • @christinemistick4332
    @christinemistick4332 Год назад +1

    I loved this!! I learned a lot and kept correcting you pronouncement!

  • @yubasunproductions2494
    @yubasunproductions2494 3 года назад +2

    Thank you so much. This one is my roots!

  • @calvinlokinferhobbs2249
    @calvinlokinferhobbs2249 3 года назад +2

    Excellent presentation myFriend..Adena, Copena, and Hopewell peoples, the forgotten ones..JustSayn

  • @moviestudioland
    @moviestudioland Год назад +3

    There was the flood of 1936. My dad lived thro that one. But there was also a flood of 1973 or so. McKees Rocks flooded again. water came up from the sewers in the basements

  • @tloc8892
    @tloc8892 3 года назад +6

    Those sneaky ma sons setting the narrative

  • @katiecoollady
    @katiecoollady 3 года назад +5

    @11:52 "The loftiest buildings melting before the ocean of flame" :O

  • @planetx5269
    @planetx5269 2 года назад +1

    Wow, what a great job you did. I lived in Pittsburgh for about 20 years and still go there several times a year. Thank you for your work.

  • @oliverfinkelstein8826
    @oliverfinkelstein8826 Год назад +1

    Go to Pitt. Along the three rivers trail are old structures that I can’t even begin to think how old.

  • @jimlubinski4731
    @jimlubinski4731 2 года назад +1

    I grew up in Pittsburgh. Was raised on Mt. Washington and rode the Monongahela Incline and walked the Smithfield Street Bridge many times. I recognized many of the buildings that survived through the 50's, 60's and beyond. I live in South Florida now, but Pittsburgh will always be my real home.

  • @raycarmack4654
    @raycarmack4654 2 года назад +2

    Great video, born and raised since 1958. There is another interesting story north of Pittsburgh on an Allegheny river tributary called Oil creek. A book titled Petrolia is an easy read and a bizarre telling of the early days of the oil industry.

  • @JP8287
    @JP8287 3 года назад +11

    Lots of griffins in the architecture, reminiscent of Tartaria

  • @d.d.4651
    @d.d.4651 2 года назад +10

    Awesome stuff Jarid. Ive enjoyed many of your videos. Also been researching along the same lines for awhile. The biggest mystery to me is- mound builders, mounds with underground networks built upon by the inheritors. The natives- allegewi/tallegewi/ giants of the allegheny valley (nephilim in the ohio valley) the Allegheny was once called the ohio. The “4th river” flowing salt water underneath the Allegheny. Local knowledge. I remember reading about it as a kid but can find no reference now. Have you seen mention of this or other “indian caves” in the area? I know of one. Close to Natrona. Site of the first dam upriver from Pittsburgh approximately 20 miles. Famous for obe of the first salt mines in the US. Would love to see your research go that direction.

    • @innertechnology7149
      @innertechnology7149 2 года назад +3

      D.D. I also took an interest in these topics and it started in a sweat lodge in Penn hills. There was a Mayan shaman living in the area at one point who we met and he was called upon in his ritual to go to the city of 3 rivers and an underground river. He was told that the underground river will emerge during the 5th sun and he was to do healing work in the area. Thats all I can remember. He told us about this in the sweat lodge

    • @JoseOchoa-ef2vf
      @JoseOchoa-ef2vf 2 года назад +1

      Was his name Miguel by any chance?

    • @innertechnology7149
      @innertechnology7149 2 года назад +2

      @@JoseOchoa-ef2vf Yes! I couldn't think of it but he actually ended up doing my wedding ceremony- Awesome man! Do you know of his whereabouts Jose?

  • @raajeweler6569
    @raajeweler6569 3 года назад +6

    Also..........LOOKS JUST LIKE
    OLD CHICAGO....
    ALL THE BEST......
    Oh ALL TESLA STYLE TECH

    • @drohegda
      @drohegda 3 года назад +2

      Raa Tesla worked for sometime for industrialist George Westinghouse who was from Pittsburgh. Them two did a lot together example with Westinghouse's Co. And Tesla's design they built the hydroelectric plant at Niagara Falls. OK my Friend.

  • @Peephole_Magazine
    @Peephole_Magazine 3 месяца назад +2

    Native Pittsburgher says thanks 👍

  • @donwest8965
    @donwest8965 Год назад +1

    Wow that's awesome info thanks

  • @brutusmagnus3971
    @brutusmagnus3971 2 года назад +2

    The Cathedral of Learning is very interesting!

  • @KateBates22zabu
    @KateBates22zabu 3 года назад +8

    My grandmother said when she moved to Pittsburgh Carson Street had water troughs for the horses. My dad was born in 1916 & remembered the great flood. People were floating down Carson Street on doors he said.

    • @Johnnyk999
      @Johnnyk999 3 года назад +4

      Very cool that your grandma was around to see that era.

    • @user-K8T
      @user-K8T 3 года назад +1

      Weather.gov has a good explanation of flood levels and what they would look like today if you're interested in a different way to view it.

    • @KateBates22zabu
      @KateBates22zabu 3 года назад

      @@user-K8T well they've built dams since 1930, so we haven't seen any flooding in my (73year) life.

    • @user-K8T
      @user-K8T 3 года назад +2

      @@KateBates22zabu that's funny, because there's a whole section of highway we call the bathtub. And in 2018 tons of stuff flooded. So. Much. Stuff. I know that the locks and dams have been doing a lot, on both rivers, so nothing even remotely close to what happened in 1936, but I certainly would never say that Pittsburgh doesn't flood.

  • @NACHOTHEIST
    @NACHOTHEIST 3 года назад +5

    Im from Pittsburgh. I plan on moving closer soon.

  • @skullasylum33
    @skullasylum33 3 года назад +4

    excited for this one thanks (:

  • @tertommy
    @tertommy 2 года назад +3

    Western PA had lots of mounds, big ones in McKees Rocks and Monongahela. Urban legend is Smithsonian took away artifacts since the were at odds with official history.

  • @PUPPYBONZ
    @PUPPYBONZ Год назад +1

    In the 1960's I rode the inclines in PGH. for fun. My dad rode them to work as a kid hauling coal.

  • @baraksteady1341
    @baraksteady1341 3 года назад +4

    Appreciate your historic diligence. 19000 years is a long time for a people. Is that based on cultural memory or artifact? Takes a good reason to leave a home that provides everything, like us assh*les. Came across a quote from a French soldier in Algeria 200ish years ago. He said, everywhere we go, the people run away, and then the trees disappear.

  • @raajeweler6569
    @raajeweler6569 3 года назад +4

    Grand Rising 🌎 WIDE
    WHEN TRUTH IS STRANGER THAN FICTION.......OUR REALM
    IS AWESOME......
    WELLNESS BALANCE

  • @dianaruslander3432
    @dianaruslander3432 3 года назад +2

    Thank you so much for compiling and sharing this history. I was just thinking about the atom smasher today as I was driving and decided to look for some recorde memory online. They tore it down a few years ago and no one knew why. It was one of our favorite things to show visitors to our neighborhood. I never saw a photo of luna park before and do not know where it was located. We native Pittsburghers are so proud of our city and its history. Thank you for the wonderful presentation.

    • @michealnormie4572
      @michealnormie4572 2 года назад

      Hello Cathy how are you I am born and raised here in Pittsburgh, but currently working now

    • @edwardkrivoniak7709
      @edwardkrivoniak7709 Год назад +1

      The entrance to Luna Park was located at the corner of Centre Ave and North Craig Street. The rest of the park extended past the present day Baum Blvd. and over the hill into the gully that the Bloomfield Bridge spans today. It was quite large and many photos can be obtained by just asking Google.

  • @zeeeOgre
    @zeeeOgre 3 года назад +9

    The old "great fire" trick.

  • @kevinmcclainsr.853
    @kevinmcclainsr.853 2 года назад +1

    I grew up thirty miles east of Pittsburgh, Jeannette Pa. My father worked at the Edgar Tomphson Steel mill. He was a brick mason . His job was to line the coke ovens with new bricks when the old bricks wore out. I can still remember as a kid going with my mother and father on pay day to Braddock to pick up his pay check and go shopping. Those were the good old days.

    • @ronb8052
      @ronb8052 9 месяцев назад +2

      While in college I worked with the old-timers who lined the furnaces with bricks.
      Your dad was a special breed...you most likely have no idea how hard he worked to support you and his family. Before and after that experience, those guys were the hardest-working people I've ever seen.

  • @stevenbrite4056
    @stevenbrite4056 4 месяца назад +1

    I was raised in the Pittsburgh area and also raised in the Philadelphia area. Now live in the area near Erie. All native controlled in the beginning of its birth.

  • @randiD123
    @randiD123 3 года назад +3

    Edgar Thompson works. My dad was a steel hauler and hauled out of many of the steel mills.

  • @vasilis1380
    @vasilis1380 3 года назад +2

    Very well put together! Loved it

  • @patriciaschuster1371
    @patriciaschuster1371 2 года назад +1

    Also, like everywhere else in country, we wanted the land the Indians had lived on for centuries, and took it. Still , it is a blessing to live here.

  • @buckwildgone7942
    @buckwildgone7942 Год назад +1

    You always see pictures of these beautiful, elaborate buildings. Why are there hardly ever any images of them being built??? You'd think that would be a big event or spectacle. The building and opening of the huge masterpieces......

    • @meanwolverine4573
      @meanwolverine4573 3 месяца назад

      The only pics we get to see is painters on sketchy scaffolding whitewashing over the stains left from the cataclysmic flood.

  • @janetcarbone4213
    @janetcarbone4213 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for ur work on this video. Very well done and informative even for someone like me who is from the area. I see you didn’t include the drop in population in the 70’s when the steel went overseas. Very very sad to see those men lose their jobs. Currently you can still see the old soot still on the buildings from years ago. My grandfather would used to tell us about the street lights still needing to be on at 12 noon.

  • @edkelley1649
    @edkelley1649 3 года назад +2

    Yo.... shared with friend from there

  • @cassieeccles7867
    @cassieeccles7867 8 месяцев назад +1

    The train station that is show at the end of the great fire is Union Train Station that was built in 1898-1904. If you look up at the inside of the rotunda, Pittsburgh is spelled with no H. This change was in 1891. The H was returned in July 19, 1911.

  • @mikelander1454
    @mikelander1454 3 года назад +3

    People of the old world would be considered giants compared to us, thus the reason all their architecture is fitting for giant ,. Trust me is settlers coming into a new land would never go to such extravagance on their buildings and technology!!! Where would they find the time or material !! There supposedly were no technology, manufacturing or nothing back then , how would people shape and cut stone and haul it!! I mean there are SO many problems with this that I could not even list them all !! The the architecture does not match the visual population , people who build this extravagant DO NOT where cheap felt/burlap suits and hats and they sure as hell did not use those poor little horses as their means of moving materials!! Lol. Like I said there are sooo many factors that are totally wrong when it comes to these pictures and their storyline narrative!! These folks KNEW SOMETHING about life and the universe that we today cannot even begin to scratch the surface to as knowing this old world way of life ,. From what I read it really was like the golden years , utopia ,. Etc. I'm starting to get the feeling our history timeline is totally wrong and it's hard to say what actual year it really is??? Anyone know?? You can go back useing the bible as your timeline and

    • @GenerateGoodInformation
      @GenerateGoodInformation 3 года назад +2

      One hypothesis Ive heard is it's because they had all the time in the world to spend building lavish works. From all the stuff I've seen now it certainly seems absurd it happened in 17 & 1800's.

    • @itsnick37
      @itsnick37 3 года назад +3

      Could not agree with you anymore, Jon Levi helped me come to this realization, our history is mostly false and we are definitely being lied to or something happened as in a “reset” where people are wiped out and we don’t know our history…. Look at the amazing buildings throughout the world built in times when “we were just starting out” no tech or any kind of equipment to make these buildings possible unless we are being lied to. Whole building timeline of San Francisco is a reality breakdown in itself…..

    • @GenerateGoodInformation
      @GenerateGoodInformation 3 года назад +2

      @@itsnick37 SF history is absurd.

  • @rainabrown2633
    @rainabrown2633 3 года назад +1

    I'd LOVE 💕 to see a video of side by sides of the old world architecture and the pictures of what it looks like today. Thank you 💗.

  • @natalliask
    @natalliask 3 года назад +3

    Old buildings have very much Parisian look and feel

  • @stevenconte4714
    @stevenconte4714 3 года назад +1

    Gov. Dim Witty? That's incredible. I'm perpetually amazed at all the hidden gems in the tri state alone. Thanks to your videos I'm inspired to research my area and it's beyond belief. What an awesome channel. And do you notice that star forts are at their heart pentagon's with points at the angles. Pittsburgh had more bridges in the 19th century than NYC has today. I already knew something was up but now Pittsburgh burned down too? What is going on? I always said carnival rides are the inner gears of old world machine's and now I can see where roller coasters come from. Pittsburgh is fascinating, Crystal palaces, even a Luna park! Thank God for people who love this stuff.

    • @Richiebee69
      @Richiebee69 Год назад +1

      And they always seem to blame women for starting these mysterious fires. References to a fire Goddess?

  • @gimomable
    @gimomable 3 года назад +10

    I think Carnegie had his 'hand' in many buildings all over the country. There's several in NC that he is accredited to building

    • @drumstick74
      @drumstick74 3 года назад +4

      I've seen that with famous architects of that era. They are credited for more work than humanly possible...! I don't think Carnegie built all the structures he got credit for.

    • @numberyanbitch
      @numberyanbitch 3 года назад +2

      We have a carnegie in cumbria uk

    • @KateBates22zabu
      @KateBates22zabu 3 года назад +2

      @@numberyanbitch in Pittsburgh we have a Carnegie library in every neighborhood. There are 2 within my walking distance (I'm 73 so don't walk far).
      The Carnegie museum was meant to be free for all but since the 1980"s you can't get in without *required donation* and we say Carnegie differently than N.Y folks.

    • @garystile4955
      @garystile4955 3 года назад +5

      He only made most of the libraries because of the Johnstown flood all the rich at the time let that occur so sick and sad

    • @janetcarbone4213
      @janetcarbone4213 2 года назад +1

      @@garystile4955 that was my thought too. Not that Carnegie wasn’t a naturally generous guy, but I always thought it was based on a guilty conscious for Johnstown

  • @itsnick37
    @itsnick37 3 года назад +3

    There’s always a fire story.

  • @jameszusinas4147
    @jameszusinas4147 2 года назад +2

    My family has lived in the Pittsburgh area since the whiskey rebellion. North side although once it's own city was just as prominent during the indust revo. For the record the french burnt down fort Duquesne them selves before retreating down the Ohio after executing there captives, cutting off there heads and posting them on poles for the British to discover. The french were sure to leave nothing to salvage while leaving few prisoners alive to share warning.

    • @bobbyplummer4415
      @bobbyplummer4415 10 месяцев назад +1

      Northside Perrysville and federal st ext

  • @mikebennett3432
    @mikebennett3432 3 года назад +1

    Awesome video! Thanks Jared!

  • @elettewheeler7893
    @elettewheeler7893 Год назад +1

    33.10 minutes in, the background behind the building is painted. Take it from a painter. They seemed to be using photographic glass plate superimposure from about 1840, at least. The equivalent of modern Photoshop, hence often crude masking of buildings.

  • @timothydillow3160
    @timothydillow3160 Год назад +2

    Some of these buildings in the old photos are only supposed to be 30 -40 years old but yet they are totally weathered and dilapidated, with many broken out windows

  • @Forged721
    @Forged721 3 года назад +4

    Ok so Pittsburg was once a Manufacturing Loviathin with Giant Furnaces Smeltering Iron for America! No less
    And the loane Mother "Boiling water" brought the city to it's Knee's , don't you just love they way they mock our Minds with Narratives

  • @daveprisci1187
    @daveprisci1187 Год назад +1

    Your research and detail are superb. However, for future videos, I must point out that the town with the burial mound is called Mc"Kees" Rocks, not Mc "Gees Rocks. Keep up the informative videos. Thanks for giving me information on my hometown that wasn't even taught in school.

  • @dave3124
    @dave3124 2 месяца назад

    Great video, very interesting

  • @101519e
    @101519e 3 года назад +18

    CARNEGIE WAS A LYING THIEF. TOOK CREDIT FOR BUILDINGS THAT WERE ALREADY THERE. NARRATIVE DOES NOT CONSIDER THE TECHNOLOGY OF THOSE TIMES.

    • @drumstick74
      @drumstick74 3 года назад +8

      I agree. I've seen that with -other- famous architects of that era. They are credited for more work than humanly possible...!

    • @user-K8T
      @user-K8T 3 года назад +1

      @@drumstick74 Carnegie wasn't an architect????? He was a captain of industry. And I've literally never heard anyone claim that he came up with the Bessemer process, just that he stole it from a factory in England and brought it to the US where patent laws were not the same.

    • @user-K8T
      @user-K8T 3 года назад +1

      That's like the least terrible thing he's done.

  • @deadmetal8692
    @deadmetal8692 3 года назад +8

    I'll take Pittsburgh over Philthadelphia any day.

    • @itsnick37
      @itsnick37 3 года назад +2

      Much more attractive and good size Philly is a zoo… same with anything in New Jersey, where I am, and NYC….

    • @gieb6428
      @gieb6428 Год назад

      Philadelphia is in New York

  • @stankygeorge
    @stankygeorge 3 года назад +4

    1:50, that rock shelter looks an awful lot like a melted building!
    8:07, center mass, as the land begins, it looks like hidden art within the smoke of the drawing, depicting a soldier on the left and two galloping horses to the right!
    Zinc roofs (?)!
    Why would Carnage need to find out more about Pittsburgh history, I thought the settlers created its history!
    I feel that the reason Pittsburgh burnt was because it was a target of the world war that was raging at the time!
    Carnage built libraries, museums etc all over America!
    Listening to the official narrative, I have come to realize that fairy tales do not end when you become an adult!

  • @MrHorse-by3mp
    @MrHorse-by3mp 3 года назад +2

    "I am not speaking of mere filth. One expects steel towns to be dirty. What I allude to is the unbroken and agonizing ugliness, the sheer revolting monstrousness, of every house in sight. From East Liberty to Greensburg, a distance of twenty-five miles, there was not one insight from the train that did not insult and lacerate the eye. Some were so bad...that they were downright startling; one blinked before them as one blinks before a man with his face shot away. A few linger in memory, horrible even there...They have taken as their model a brick set on end. This they have converted into a thing of dingy clapboards, with a narrow, low-pitched roof. And the whole they have set upon thin, preposterous brick piers. By the hundreds and thousands, these abominable houses cover the bare hillsides, like gravestones in some gigantic and decaying cemetery on their deep sides they are three, four and even five stories high; on their low sides, they bury themselves swinishly in the mud...Not a fifth of them are perpendicular. They lean this way and that, hanging on to their bases precariously. And one and all they are streaked in grime, with dead and eczematous patches of paint peeping through the streaks..they have the most loathsome towns and villages ever seen by mortal eye. I award this championship only after laborious research...I have seen, I believe, all of the most unlovely towns of the world; they are all to be found in the United States...But nowhere on this earth, at home or abroad, have I seen anything to compare to the villages that huddle along the line of the Pennsylvania from the Pittsburgh yards to Greensburg. They are incomparable in color, and they are incomparable in design. It is as if some titanic and aberrant genius, uncompromisingly inimical to man, had devoted all the ingenuity of Hell to the making of them. They show grotesqueries of ugliness that, in retrospect, become almost diabolical. One cannot imagine mere human beings concocting such dreadful things, and one can scarcely imagine human beings bearing life in them...It is incredible that mere ignorance should have achieved such masterpieces of horror... Here is something that the psychologists have so far neglected: the love of ugliness for its own sake, the lust to make the world intolerable." - H.L Mencken, "The Libido for the Ugly" (1927)

  • @johnjoyce2202
    @johnjoyce2202 2 года назад +2

    Pittsburgh pride!

  • @macoediv
    @macoediv 2 года назад +1

    That tallest educational building looks similar to a building we have in Lagrange Kentucky that has been turned into a prison. a tower in the middle of a huge field

  • @originalsupermommy
    @originalsupermommy 3 года назад +3

    I used to live up the street from that Westinghouse facility. I believe it is an atom smasher.

  • @Johnnyk999
    @Johnnyk999 3 года назад +3

    Nice photos of OW Pittsburgh! Just FYI - the audio level fluctuates widely between spliced segments, making it necessary to repeatedly adjust the volume level. The video composition software should have the capability of 'normalizing' audio (to help prevent that). Thanks for your work.

  • @iamhearelshaddai
    @iamhearelshaddai 2 года назад +1

    I find it interesting that this great flood happened exactly in the middle of emsworth loch/dam construction immediately downstream. 🤔

  • @kristimcgowandarkoscellard3126
    @kristimcgowandarkoscellard3126 3 года назад +14

    So they lived there “continuously” for 19,000 years and they only built this rock shelter? 19,000 years is a really really long freakin time! If they were there for that long why the heck did they ever leave and shouldn’t they be the “real native” people? When you can find whole city streets with price signs still in the shop windows buried underground in places like Atlanta that everyone “forgot” was there and was supposedly buried only 100 year ago, how can they say they “know” these people lived there for 19,000 years? 🤔
    Cheers

    • @FRESHboosters
      @FRESHboosters  3 года назад +4

      Very good point. It’s due to the carbon dating of the item’s found at the Meadowcroft site. Apparently these items carbon dated back to over 19,000 ago the whole way until modern times, or roughly 300 to 400 years ago. I do understand what you’re saying though, it’s hard to trust the narrative given.

    • @philtanics1082
      @philtanics1082 3 года назад +7

      "Carbon dating"..... lol

    • @johnthompson9513
      @johnthompson9513 3 года назад +2

      @@philtanics1082 ; They create terminology for everything And if that fails.... well you get what's being pushed∆=√ today

    • @GenerateGoodInformation
      @GenerateGoodInformation 3 года назад +2

      @@FRESHboosters I just recently heard of another site in the US that is supposed to be the oldest inhabited people, not pitts. To much information swimming through my head to recall where. Love that people are spending time getting closer to our true history!

    • @itsnick37
      @itsnick37 3 года назад +3

      Imagine believing in carbon dating……

  • @rainabrown2633
    @rainabrown2633 3 года назад +3

    Did every major city have a Luna park?

  • @Pittsburghestatesale
    @Pittsburghestatesale 2 года назад +1

    Someone might have already corrected this but if not, the Telescope was in the Allegheny Observatory in Perry Hilltop, NOT in the Phipps conservatory.

  • @goldbaron357
    @goldbaron357 2 года назад +1

    Keep in mind an ounce of gold was about $17 back then when you think about the value of iron and etc supposedly produced in pittsburgh back then...

  • @Typing.._
    @Typing.._ 3 года назад +4

    I flew from Ca to Pa to see it

    • @gieb6428
      @gieb6428 Год назад +2

      We have a California right here in pa.

  • @RU3YJB
    @RU3YJB Год назад

    The salt water spring feeding the bath-house is a part of the petrochemical phenomenon that exists thru Western PA: note Oil City, Slippery Rock, and "Pennzoil". It was typically called a "brine" by people who had gas and oil wells on their properties. You could pipe the humid natural gas into a home and feed your furnace. If it got too cold the water would freeze in the line and your furnace wouldn't work. The derricks in one of your photos is actually a scene of Washington, PA. That "brine" would be toxic if ingested. I'm not sure what bathing in it would do for you -- but a pregnant woman or new mother sure wouldn't want to be in that. Probably not their usual clientele, tho. My guess is some enterprising business man was collecting the black gold / crude oil and /or natural gas and using the brine as a "value added" feature.

  • @yinzspectations
    @yinzspectations 3 года назад

    Born n raised in Da'Burgh , ty fehr makin dis N'aht 💯👍

  • @acn4962
    @acn4962 2 года назад +1

    And of course a great fire and the story behind it. Goodness. How dumb do you think we are. I think that story is used in every city around that time.

  • @bettyb1313
    @bettyb1313 3 года назад +1

    I grew up next to the atom smasher we called it the light bulb... I have dozens of pictures of it...

    • @mikee2923
      @mikee2923 4 месяца назад +1

      I worked as a subcontractor and took care of the air conditioning at the Westinghouse Forest Hills site for its last few years of operation. I actually was able to tour inside the atom smasher. It was fascinating to see the inner workings of it. I believe they said it would be still be functional if everything was still hooked up inside. This was sometime in the mid 1990s.

  • @franks.jr.7236
    @franks.jr.7236 3 года назад +2

    Another great video! I Live in johnstown pa.

    • @TheRhNegative
      @TheRhNegative 3 года назад +1

      Aw! My Grandpap retired from Gauthier division and my dad worked for Bethlehem Mines in Mineral Point

    • @franks.jr.7236
      @franks.jr.7236 3 года назад

      @@TheRhNegative well that is just over the hill from me I really live in southFork pa.

  • @RyanSauvageau-t8s
    @RyanSauvageau-t8s 7 месяцев назад +1

    🌹

  • @steverorison665
    @steverorison665 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for this. Life long Yinzer and I learned more about my city's history during this video than my entire 39 years

  • @cathycider7018
    @cathycider7018 2 года назад

    Job well done. I would like to know more about the old castle jail off Grant street. When was it built and by whom.

    • @michealnormie4572
      @michealnormie4572 2 года назад

      Hello Cathy how are you I am born and raised here in Pittsburgh, but currently working now

  • @bunnyfoofoo9695
    @bunnyfoofoo9695 Год назад +1

    My Grandma and Grandpa on my Moms side had a farm right there. I almost bought that farm when my Grandpa passed away but decided not to. How strange is that?

  • @kevintucker3354
    @kevintucker3354 3 года назад +4

    I love this subject, but the narrator’s continuous question drives me crazy!

    • @skullasylum33
      @skullasylum33 3 года назад +6

      how do you normally narrate your videos kevin?

    • @loralee9004
      @loralee9004 3 года назад +2

      I think it's kinda cute! 🙂 like he's giving his audience the chance to make up their own mind. It's like his signature trademark! With such a distinct voice, you'll always know who you're listening to, right?!

  • @randyrider3187
    @randyrider3187 2 года назад

    In pictures there was a Chinese theater. I thought I knew a lot about Pittsburgh. I never knew there was a Chinese theater here. Do you know where it might have been located in town? Thank you. And it was a great video. Keep it up.

  • @lucasmerker742
    @lucasmerker742 2 года назад

    please move down the Ohio river a little bit and do one on Cincinnati Next!!! Its my home town and has many relics and mysteries. (start with the 1848 Cincinnati daguerreotype panorama) Hamilton Ohio could also be included in that. its just around the corner up the Miami River.

  • @monmixer
    @monmixer Месяц назад

    You could barely breathe if you lived around around the river. The smoke from the mills, plating plants, glass factories etc was horrible. It was where I lived down river about 50 miles west of the point where the 3 rivers come together or rather the 2 rivers turn into 1 river. Mon and Allegheny turn to the Ohio. Crazy because the mon river is pretty far into WV and we would get flooded with not much rain if they got a shit load because the Mon is North flowing river.

  • @markmuller8177
    @markmuller8177 2 года назад

    I love your video and appreciate all the work that went into it. One thing though, you confuse Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens with Allegheny Observatory.

  • @kellyjohns6612
    @kellyjohns6612 2 года назад +1

    My birthstone is blue. My daughter's is yellow. My son's is red.
    The 3 stars on Steelers logo = family
    BLACK N YELLOW,
    BLACK N YELLOW