Kansas City-Paris of the Old-World Plains
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- Опубликовано: 31 авг 2023
- #oldworld #tartaria #kansascity
An exploration on site of the beautiful Kansas City. Another city at the confluence of major rivers with beautiful art and architecture with an Old-World flair. This exploration focuses on the most amazing landmarks and Old-World signs in this incredible city.
#oldworld #tartaria #kansascity - Развлечения
The image @8:56 is actor Colm Meaney. I thought stating the person was named O'Brien would be enough of a hint. This portion is a joke for individuals who claim someone from the distant past built their house. They claim the person has one name only and built the house all by themselves. I have to have a little fun when I do these videos. It all comes from this really bad episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation called "Up the Long Ladder".
It wasn't *that* bad. I thought the menfolk were shown in a poor way, trying to distill booze inside the hold and being yelled at by the women for being lazy (in a post-scarcity ship), but overall it had a message that was reasonable, solving two problems with one migration without being too overly thick with dogma. Of course, by proxy it basically makes fun of the Irish. I think anyone named Meaney should be the village bully.
"Really Bad" when compared to other contemporary episodes. ;)@@joshgulrud5635
I thought it looked like him as well, plus a Pioneer woman is not going to look like the woman beside him. that looks like a movie or TV show. If this is actually in the history, do they think we're all this stupid?
@@usachris7731 Compliant. ;)
At every turn the narrative is BS....our eyes are seeing the truth, we have to believe what we see!!
I'm from KC. The 1930s buildings are mostly built with concrete. Our Mayor at the time, Tom Pendergast, was considered somewhat of a corrupt individual. He also owned a concrete company. So to increase his personal wealth, most municipal buildings from the time period were built with his concrete. Something about it was especially strong. But anyway that's why the court buildings and PnL building and the auditorium all have those massive blocks. Many of them were overbuilt with more concrete than needed.
Regarding Union Station, there are lots of photos of its construction in an exhibit inside the station. It was also in serious disrepair and restored through a special tax that citizens on both sides of the state line voted on.
Personally as someone who lives here I'm much more interested in the older buildings from the 1800s like the new england building and the old city hall and old union Station which were torn down. There was also a 120 or 140 year old apartment building town down in the 50s or 60s, had over 100 units and very intricate architecture. I believe it became and is still just a parking lot. Even without the notion of an old world civilization, so much in KC has been lost to time. Tons of old buildings were raized throughout the 20th century.
I enjoyed looking closely at the concrete of those buildings from 1914-1937. It is very impressive. It is even more impressive that those buildings from the 19th Century look pristine today.
Ah, concrete. Go-to for mobsters everywhere. It's good for business, and it's good for sinking things in the river. Good stuff.
The Pendergast Machine is just overlooked by history. It's absolutely amazing how the city bond program of the late 20's set the city up to reap the benefits of the New Deal. Not to mention the Harry Truman connection. The nitty gritty of KC is just Fantastic!
@@musicfoundation3300 There is probably a reason and officially Harry Truman was politically out maneuvered despite having a nuclear monopoly.
@@Young_Jack I could've sworn he was. Mandela effect moment for me here
The white building, at 7:51, that says "Hamburger" is an early White Castle. It was built around 1923-24. The building is still there but it is a barber shop and is located at 709 Grand Blvd. Another, lesser known, 100 year old building that has been able to stay out of the way of the wrecking ball.
I was born and raised in Kansas City Missouri. Thanks for showcasing our Show Me State splendor. Most of us overlook our city's architecture and go along with the popular narrative.
Anytime!
My city! Great to skateboard these streets too
I live in the KCPL Building, love it.
I've lived in KC my entire life (34 years). One building I've always wondered about is the "Imperial Brewing Company Brewery" right off of I-35 highway south of downtown. It's been vacant since the 1980's. I always imagine this is what they do with old buildings... they leave it vacant for a generation or two, and then "reconstruct" it and give it a new build date.
That could be! I was banished from the breweries on this trip.
ruclips.net/video/3GTB0DxAISI/видео.htmlsi=H97wfefFhfe5PqLF
I explored the old imperial brewery and climbed to the very top just this summer. I do not recommend, the floors had gaping holes covered with plywood as you climbed + illegal. It’s pretty interesting though and may not be torn down for a while because nobody wants to build anything else right underneath an overpass
This building is no more. It has been demolished. I too had done some urban spelunking in that building both during the day and at night. I had some incredible views. I liked how I-35 seemed to wind around the building itself. It's too bad no one tried to convert the building into apartments or mixed used.
Your boots-on-the-ground close-up filming is amazing I feel like I'm right there and it gives such an appreciation to what they used to be able to do
Thank you, my friend!
11:15 Seashells, laurels, mystery plants and decorative doo-dads. A woman's face from another era and sensibility of beauty. Stone bricks popping out of perfectly flat mystery stone. 11:50 howe exactly does one chisel the pinholes everywhere? Perfect circles. Resembles laser etched or 3D printed stone-crete work. @13:33 they made sure to make the submerged mason-work beautiful.
This video was supposedly made in the summer of 2023, but since we know that was a period of astronomical inflation and economic turmoil it’s suspicious that anyone would have the time and resources to aimlessly wander around filming buildings and commenting about them. However, if we are to take the creators account at face value, we have to wonder why they would use the Richard Bolling Federal Building as an example of “architecture we tend to go with today” since it was built in 1965. Let’s just say I question it. Also, the “IRS Building” was originally the main Kansas City branch of the U.S. Post Office and only sold to the IRS in the 1990’s or 2000’s. Is the creator trying to mislead us by leaving this out? Very intriguing.
😂
Bruh, dude trying to tell a story,let him tell it his way.
don't be stupid !
I love these videos and a lot of his thoughts may have some traction. However this comment was hilarious
Thank you for that
I was just in Kansas City over the weekend and did the historical bus tour! I'm so glad you did this because I had a lot of questions myself about that beautiful city!!
Hope you enjoyed it! Great timing, Milwaukee is coming very soon.
How long does the tour last? Sounds like a great adventure
@@mattmason4589 The historial tour takes an hour and a half, there is also a Mafia tour! I'm going to do that one next! I think there's also a haunted tour. I'm having trouble finding that one though. Well worth it for sure!!!
I recall they push the "Mafia in KC" point pretty hard as though it were not existing anywhere else. ;)
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 very interesting ... Because on the "historical" tour they had many mafia references. Our tour guide, who is driving the bus., Definitely had a script, there was a guy behind him training him on that script .... I started questioning why they would mention some things and not other things.... Very good point!!!
As someone who lives in Kansas city. It is one of the most mysterious cities I've ever been to
Worth a trip down from Michigan to see?
@@mattmason4589 imo everything is worth traveling too. But yes worth traveling from Michigan
@@riles13 on my way:)
@@mattmason4589 the surrounding suburbs are rich with 1800s (his)story so make sure to check some of the smaller cities as well Jesse James/bushwacker history they around here is quite spectacular. They were trying to fight against the "thing" that ate the west. It is quite fascinating around these parts
@@riles13I'm a native of Lawrence. The history of this area is completely overlooked by the rest of the country. Living in the Megalopolis, I'm amazed at how little people know of the history of the KC area, because it was very impactful of the direction our nation went from the 1850's on.
Nice video. You missed the 909 Walnut Tower, another 1930 art deco skyscraper. It's more hidden by other buildings, but I think it's the neatest building in KC.
I was not allowed to film there.
What is now called 909 Walnut Tower was originally known as the Fidelity Bank Building. The bank went under during the depression and it became the main location for Federal government offices in the area until they built Richard Bolling Building. Before the One Kansas City Place Building was completed the Fidelity Building was the tallest building in downtown Kansas City even though the Power & Light Building appeared to be taller because it is at a higher elevation. The original address of the Fidelity Building was 911 Walnut which was changed after the tragedy in 2001.
I lived in KC all my life. My Grandparents lives in Northeast, and we played at Indian Mound Park, and yes there is a mound.
All I can say is wow and thank you.
KC is a very underrated city architecturally. Although psychotic post war urban renewal efforts obliterated most of the old world architecture, the remaining remnants truly reveal then city's former splendor and wealth. Sad how most current buildings made today completely fail to live up to their ancestral buildings which were built during way less technologically advanced times. smh.
The same excavations of mounds occurred in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania at the same time (McKees Rocks)
Many many mounds. The mound builders/Mississippians. A lot had skeletons of giants. The Smithsonian has hidden a lot but here's the things about the Smithsonian. It was actually stolen from its founders, Moors. It's not New York, New York. It's New York, Morocco. Things were switched. The heart of lower Egypt was Memphis. Egyptian artifacts found in caves in southern Illinois. The Mississippians passed down stories of seeing Egyptian builders going up the Mississippi. Floods displaced many. I believe the Egyptians came from the Atlantic and part of them went west and others went east into Africa and Khemit (later changed to Egypt by the Roman's). The real Israel was in the grand canyon. Israel and Moab were by the real Red sea. California used to be an island and the body of water inbetween was the Red sea. Assyria was in the area of present day Dakotas, Minnesota. Mesopotamia was in present day Iowa, Illinois, Indiana areas. Original Babylon was in Ohio. Garden of Eden was in northwest Florida. Gopher wood is only found in one place on the planet and that would be nw Florida! Clay tablets with Hebrew writing has been found in several places across these lands too, especially Ohio area. The ancient serpent mound is actually the oldest man-made structure on the planet. Researchers are banned from studying it more. There is also a rock quarry in Ohio and the rock matches up perfectly with what the great pyramids were built with 🤔. His-story is the story told to us through the minds of greedy egotistical psychopaths that want control but all empires must fall because the many shouldn't be controlled by the few. Namaste ✨️
It seems that all the other countries stole our “his-story.” It’s nice to see that this city still has some of the original buildings still standing. Thanks for the video.
My pleasure and there were a lot still standing here.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 So why were they so against San Fansico?
@@dannwan8537 any major city was primarily destroyed in the 18th and 19th centuries. Like the Chicago fire in the 1800s. If you look at pictures of it, it looks more like a war zone. Concrete structures destroyed. The natives had great cities here before Columbus was even a though. Speaking of Columbus, he was a black jew from Portugal and was sent to collect data in the Caribbean for the transatlantic slave trade
I have read the supposed discoveries of Christopher Columbus. It’s what I do on Columbus Day now. What he described is what I would call an advanced culture. Divorce and abortion were not a social issue, at least In the Caribbean islands, I believe that was where he was. And who knew there was an herb that would end pregnancy…
@@EL-Ki-Yanas
Smarty-pants!
Me you
😂👉 🤓
Thanks again for showing all this! We would not have been able to witness if not for videos like yours!
I've lived in the Kansas City area all my life. In the late 50s my mom took us on a church trip, we took a train from St Joseph MO to Union Station. I was around 9 years-old and I still remember that dark dinghy old building that really looked like it was falling in...I went back to Union Station a few years ago after the rebuild to what your video shows. I was very impressed with your video. Thank-you
St Joseph would be another great place to go do a video on. KC BEFORE there was KC.
The bias relief sculptured panels in these structures always astound me..wether they be cast or cut..you can't tell unless you are up close.. greatly appreciate you going and having a close look at these places. I'll have to have a wander around Brisbane and take some photos/vidi of any noteworthy stuff and email it to you.
Great examples in Brisbane, please do!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 I shall mate..we can't have you doing all the legwork.. hahaha
I loved your video, I grew up here and it is an amazing beautiful place
Thank you very much. I agree, I think it always has been an amazing, beautiful place and always will be.
Amazing city so beautiful ❤
It really is!
Grew up in Kansas City and would love to return some day. I visited Union Station in the early 90's when it was in decay and there was water in the floor. There was talk at the time of renovation but nothing was planned. Looks amazing now.
It is unfortunate it got to that state but happy we have it restored.
I was lucky to work on the renovation of Union Station. It's a fabulous building! It was one of the first projects I worked on as an architect. We got to explore every inch of the building in order to document what had to be done to restore it. I walked on the ceiling of the great hall and peered down through the large hole caused by the years of water damage. One of our trips to the site to verify some existing conditions, we got locked in the building. Now this was before cell phones so we had to try and find a way out. We eventually went down to the lowest level, where all the luggage and mail would be brought in, and found an opening in a large door that accessed the tunnels that extended under the train tracks. Between the tracks were openings where the luggage and mail would be lowered. We climbed up a steel ladder, that was in very poor condition, to the surface during a rain storm. I don't think many people can say that they have been locked in that building but I know of at least two people that can.
In Wesport, kcmo, we also have underground railroads under the store fronts that connect via basement.
I would love to hear more about this
@@renee8096 we also use to have a trolly track that stretched the city. Its all gone now. My great grandmother would tell me stories. Riding a trolly through kcmo into downtown. Position wise, downtown kcmo connects to a Plaza (European Style Arcitecture) high end shopping, Italian themed creek system, that use to allow boats. This Plaza connects to Westport where the underground Rail Road is. I would guess it stretches for 1 to 3 miles by design, but today, its maybe 200 yards. However I am not certain. On 1 side of westport is kcmo, the other side kck. Both are known for the railroads. However the only underground is located in westport. Kck was built by the Military some time ago. There, you will Find Big Houses on top of tall Hills, overlooking smaller houses, and those over looking smaller ones. The House on the Hill would have been a high ranked officer, down hill, lower rank. On the edge of kck is the most expensive built mansion, deffenbaugh, a trash company. The Family shipped Rocks from all over Europe to build their Mansion. It Oversight for employees, another House on a hill. Waldo, another part of kcmo, has a modern history thanks to Kauffman the old Kansas City Royals owner. He was the biggest drug dealer before big pharma salesman caps were made. Waldo is where the Trolly was. Seems Kauffman may have had a hand in renovation or destruction. They added busses, after. Cutting migration to and from certain cities, when they use to be connected. The City has talks here and there, Should we bring the trolly back, na, we are just going to make 1 specifically for downtown. Weird how we downgraded. Hope you enjoyed
I’m trying to map them out, and bring more awareness to this tunnel system. I am pretty sure a good hunk of the metro area is hollow!
@kitchfairman5043 Awesome idea! Indeed, I had no idea there were so many tunnel systems and abandoned limestone caves
Would be interested to see the progress on said map.
Great work Thank you
Thank you, film review coming soon!
So, I was on Google maps and I was trying to get a look at ilus w. Davis park, and it was weird how it wouldn't let me see it. Then I noticed many circles and ovals throughout the city. And lots of hwys converge there as well. Ty for checking this one out in person.
Right at the edge of Kansas City @9:43 in your video. there's a look out tower/fort/bluff. Well there was/is a tram that would take people up. The cliff. But they had to close it because it was too narrow and became dangerous all of a sudden. The tunnel leads all the way to a building that lead into a huge underground area. That is also closed currently still there
The IRS building was the Post Office until the early 2000’s. There is a tunnel that runs to Union station. It used to have train tracks. There is also a warehouse under the MEPS across the street. The tunnel going to Union station was blocked up after the Postal service moved across the street next to Union station.
I will be visiting Kansas City around the last week of next month. They have revamped and rejuvenated their downtown area over the past 20 years. Royals winning the World Series nine years ago and the Chiefs winning three Super Bowls in five years making it one of the top sports cities in the country plus their barbecue. They also have some casinos. Plus the museums are top notch and their zoo is one of the top ten best in the nation.
Thank you for covering KCMO. There are castles and all kinds of Old buildings that nobody wants to talk about.
We used to throw concert parties at one downtown. We have found creepy black magic stuff it it while preparing for one years ago. Really cool old stone castle. I didn’t know there was more than that one.
@@leemartin9579 yes there’s a few in midtown. Where was the one that you guys used for parties?
It was down by I 35 I believe it was near the 20’s or maybe upper teens. I would have to drive down there to check, because it has been so long. My musician years are quite foggy due to partying. It was right near I-35 for sure though.
The missouri and Kansas rivers come together at Kansas City, this is why the site was important for a town and not further down river. The "levy" is actually the bluffs original to the town. Some of the original buildings were built downward instead of upward. As time went on, of course, much of those bluffs were leveled out. Quality Hill still sets high overlooking the west bottoms. It's not difficult to ascertain what was happening at all - there really were these bluffs and over time they were dealt with until we have what we have today.
I would be interested to watch that process unfold. :)
So cool.🤙🏻
I have to say, I am very impressed with your work. I’ve grown up in St. Louis and still reside here currently, growing up seeing all of the old architecture and learning the history behind it all has always raised a lot of doubt and question for me. It’s nice to listen to someone who feels the same as I, and I love looking at all of these pictures. Never knew they were around till I came across your channel. Thank you and I hope to see more!
I have done two videos on St. Louis!
Great video!
@7:57
That little white building is still there. I always loved that place. Its a barber shop
7:57 so many different auto makes for the time tells a story. Glad to see people awaking! Great video!!
Very Romanesque feel to most of these buildings and tower.
Check into Saint Joseph Missouri. They were far larger then Kansas City, MO however during a town review Saint Joseph refused to allow the train bridge to be installed as it was a fad that would not last. During that period Saint Joseph Missouri the home of Jessie James and the Pony Express was twice the side of Kansas City.
Sure, that is if one takes the historical account that it was at face value. I do not take it at face value. Thanks for the recommendation though, I will take a look.
This is true!!
Yep. Back when Kansas City was just West port. The eastern edge of the wild West.
Love the video. The Plaza was designed to replicate the city if Seville Spain. It was the first shopping Mall built in the US. It was also one of the very few outdoor shopping malls built until the 1990's.
I enjoyed it, even more when they had access to facilities. ;)
Great work!! Would love to see you do portland maine!!
The building next to Power and Light is the President Hotel completed in 1926, sat vacant from 1980 and reopened in 05' and is now run by Hilton.
That turning train bridge is still there today . I seen it turn last year while at the town of Kansas Lookout bridge. Very cool to see!
I’m kinda freaking out over realizing that over the last twenty years many of these structures over the entire country have done stints of renovations or construction repairs where they were closed for periods of time (enough to allow for plenty of documenting and photo evidence) it all would make sense if that was for the reset we’re facing today….. I’ll put my foil hat back on n let myself out now 😂 but I’m just saying……..
It is good timing for sure!
My TFH been on so long, it’s getting a little rusty…😂🏛
Good job brother
Really interesting city. In the heart of the USA...
I would rephrase that and say, The Heart of America " USA is a corp! America is the land that belongs to the people as all these old world city structures are showing us😊🌠
Nice video highlighting the City I was born and raised in. There's a deep rich history. To get the jist one just needs to know where to look. For example one of many key figures, JC Nichols had much to do with the development of our City. There are many museums and similar facilities throughout the City that cover the majority of the City's history.
The New York life building doors for Giants!!!!😮
They all were built for giants, right ....I mean look at the height of the ceilings inside of all these buildings!! 💥💥
Big thanks for shouting this video during the most hot day of this crazy summer !! You made laugh so good when you make an impression of mister carl this is so funny you got it dude !!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Been waiting for this one for a while, hell yeah
A new favorite channel-- amazing work here!!
Glad you enjoy it!
Excavating the bluffs: KC was built at that location because of the natural rock ledge serving as a wharf for the steam boats, which saved much time over taking a wagon from St. Louis. From KC, folks would go to Westport to join the wagon trains heading West.
Railroad hub: KC was racing St. Joe to build a Railroad bridge across the Missouri. KC won, rewarded with the cattle yards and meat packing plants to feed the East.
This is a wonderful recitation.
Kansas City is so cool!
Here's a deeper dive into the 'mainstream narrative'. 😉
The "art deco" buildings springing up during the depression came out of the corruption of the Pendergast era. A closed crony-capitalistic loop of local government, prohibition bootlegging, concrete and construction companies, and the mob. The Music Hall, Liberty Memorial, Union Station, KCP&L Building, bridges... are all "Kansas City concrete." It's everywhere, and glows golden in the light of the setting sun. 😍
It's been said that there's so much concrete in these old structures that they're cheaper and easier to repair than demolish.
There's gotta be so many bodies buried in the very walls of this city. 😅
Love your channel, bro!
That guy doing anything is hilarious.....
I loved this video particularly so because I lived there and still reside fairly near KC. I was confused because it seemed like you have alternate ideas about the facts. I would be interested in hearing those. You are right about the extravagance of the time, it is interesting. Give us some of your thoughts! Once again, great video!
It is on the channel theory video playlist if you are interested.
Very good description.. very good presentation. My hometown aswell. Has been an eye opener after watching jon for tge past 4/5 years. Thank you for your indepth independent research. "Boots on the ground".. well done❤
Glad you enjoyed it!
In Louisiana as a child there were a variety of types. Swing was one.. bridge tenders would live in a little house.. I'll post it w/ ur show on Truth Social
The city was built where it was because earlier there was already a trading post inland called Westport and the boats would stop at Westport Landing as the most convenient place to unload goods and haul them up to Westport. Westport Landing later became know as Kansas (the city).
Ive always wondered. Its crazy how the city sits on a huge rock. Going from kansas on 635 into Missouri, its Huge cliff looking mountain.
Fun fact : There are tunnels going between the courthouse and city hall used to walk perps from the court to the jail and vice versa.
Not the first time dug out cities occurred, Petra enstoned was dug out not by desert pirates (Nabateans) but by electronic drill equipment and not fully and then possibly abandoned -- The same with indian shrines we see stone work partly excavated and if the same work of excavation were attempted our drills would probably break at the attempt. Who were the excavators of these sites? Digging out of dirt and ashes is one thing, but out of stone? Moreover, the preservation of these structures is impressive if they were indeed deeply encased or entombed in dirt. Surely erosion and other factors would have caused significant destruction? It's a marvel, all of it. Perhaps the point is that it is left a marvellous mystery and the impostors who took credit for Philladelphia, Kansas City and other glorious cities only reveal their brief glimmer - as an insignificant people without mettle - in a longer richer history of earth. I'm speaking of the Mark Twains that scatter all US history and surely the majority of modern civilizations that inherited unjustly.
Great Video
Thanks!
Of all the ancient buildings I've seen, I actually find KC buildings very beautiful and the most aesthetically pleasing.
Another great show my brother.
Much appreciated!
You should do a video on the KC underground! Lots of tunnels all around the city
Thank you.
You're welcome!
Cant wait to see you do El Paso.
Apparently during the great depression 1000's of unemployed top notch construction workers flocked to K.C.
So many huge buildings being built in one place at the same time.
They also had some great concrete formulas in those buildings too.
I'm 55, lived in KC all my life and have never heard of this Donnelly dude. There are no streets or buildings named after him .
I love that my two favorites work together! You guys are great. Thank you!
We are the borg.Resistance is futile. That cracked me up! I live in Kansas City and I agree with you 100% the old world buildings are so much better! And I've been looking into some of these buildings and the timeline doesn't fit at all .
At 8:51 - is that a photo of the actor Colm Meaney - who played O'Brian on Star Trek?
It is, a joke directed at all those who claim there is some person in the distant past with only one name that they swear built their house. ;)
the geographical center of the USA is actually a farmer's field in KS< about 4 hours west of Kansas City.
I dont feel that there is some hidden history like the worlds fairs i have learned about, however as a kansas city native, i really look forward to maybe a time when we go back to great masonry, down in the plaza, there are some homes made of masonry that will blow you away. I would like to also add, as someone in the concrete industry, i can say that concrete today is not what it was in yesteryear, not because we forgot how to make great concrete, but more so there are shit tons of environmental regulations around the industry and it has had a serious negative effect on the quality and longevity of the concrete. One last thing, i promise, on the SE corner of Little Blue Pkwy and I-70, there used to be an old fort or castle like stucture up on the bluff years ago before they developed the area and added the exit/on ramps to little blue pkwy and i70, i was but a child but i wish i would have explored them, but they like many things were private property, but over night they bulldozed it and the bluff and brought it down probably 50-100' and flattened it, didnt develope the land for 20 years after the removal....
I can date any building I know style very well. 👍👍👍
Looks just like "Seattle" Exactly!
Wow! I am born and raised in KC and never been presented with its history or architecture before. I’ve been to the Nelson’s Art Museum many times even recently and have never noticed the inside architecture and painted walls. You’ve peaked my curiosity! What are your ideas of what has been covered up in our history? Do you have a video that goes in depth?
I never appreciated Nelson's architecture either until I started looking closer.
Here is the channel theory video and the Last Reset Playlist if you are interested:
ruclips.net/video/bziB67biKhU/видео.htmlsi=aGJyJL71mKQix8Gw
ruclips.net/p/PLAOnr94bcrC_NCnAZ0bTwJsc9yT_VGPQI
I have always been amazed at the old world architecture and I often wonder just how did they cut and polish the marble columns in the art museum, as just one example. The planning
and ordering of such materials, as well as finding companies to create such features, and then promising a short timeline to make, ship and install just does not add up. Cranes and or lifting equipment still seemed primitive up until fairly recent times, and you don't see said equipment in almost all of the construction photo archives. There seems to be plenty of videos of street life during the earliest years of video technology, but nothing as far as skyscraper timeline construction goes.
It is the same issue with the construction of vast infrastructure around the Land in the early 20th Century.
YOU SHOULD COME TO NORTH CAROLINA. The energy here is something of a different world, I guarantee if you do some looking there is a great discovery waiting to be found
Yes,Kansas City is bigger than Saint Louis,but it is also BETTER!
@4:06 mystery horizontal lines. Desiccated landscape, resembles terraforming Mars. @6:27 finally some plant life! Sage brush and flowers? No grass on low area. Makes sense with foot and horse traffic, I guess. What trees are those in the back? Not oaks etc. Random rocks bottom right resembling blasted concrete. Just below turning bridge -- are those people swimming?
Is is just me, or did anyone else notice that the old photo of O'Brian looks almost EXACTLY like the guy who played the Miles O'Brien character on Star Trek DS9!?! It's uncanny!
It is Miles O'Brien (Colm Meaney), check out the pinned comment up top.
The President Hotel at 14:59. Built in 1926. Very grand hotel, that is before the Hilton got ahold of it. Totally destroyed the beautiful lobby.
The construction of Union Station, the Power & Light, Jaxco courthouse and City hall are all quite well documented in photos. Photos that you probably saw when you found the early dirt digging photos you showed us. I do believe that some buildings were found from the old world, these are cheap imitations. And by the way...KC thrived comparatively during the depression because they ignored prohibition laws. Blues Jazz Booze and concrete, baby
They ignored other laws and mandates in the 2020s too. ;)
Yep. The good old "Pendergast Era."
The York Life Building I would love to know the story behind that one. The inside of some of these buildings is absolutely unbelievable. It parallels or supersedes the outside architectural beauty. I hope you are able to do many more eyes on a city. Being able to see an up close live filming takes it to another level on perspective. Anyone notice that it seems there are a lot less fires in Europe around this period in history than in America at this time. I wonder what the ratio would be truly be. And yes my personal favorite The Holy Roman Catholic Church. I’ll leave it at that.
You forgot to mention the shootout at the union station between mobsters and police. The bullet holes were supposedly left when the renovated. The city had every intention of tearing down our union station. A nonprofit group lobbied to keep and renovate with science city inside plus more.
Most of the jobs,economy and wealth is in Johnson county Kansas now.
And the boredom
You can find out every building name with the Sanborn Insurance maps in the KC puplic library online in th MO Special Collection. They go way back
Great video, but you should have pointed out the freemason M sign on the hand of the painting.
Pointing that sort of stuff out becomes the whole video. You are kind enough to do it in the comments. ;)
You should go to Columbia, Missouri and see those humongous pillars they have on the Mizzou campus that they say were part of a structure from the early 1800s and destroyed in a fire
I saw them many times. It definitely fits in well with the Grand Avenue Water Column, I mean tower in St Louis.
Ah, Kansas City! Thank you so much. And thanks for doing this in the KC heat. It's not a pleasant heat, either! You know that you just scrapped the surface! Sounds like you know the place by calling the Liberty Memorial, the Liberty Memorial, because that's what it is. Did you go to the bottoms and the chimneys? Thanks for pointing out the questionable Plaza.
One summer I was a tour guide at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. I attended a nearby university that sports a mythical bird as its mascot. I was on the five year plan. KC is a fun town. I would love to live there, but it's just too darn hot.
These city explorations are just to increase Old-World awareness for those that have not been there. Independence alone could fill about a 3-4-hour video with a lot of footage to spare.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 My apologies.
@@MariannaKatz17 I was just explaining the approach. :) You are absolutely correct that there is much more in KC. I have to leave some material for future videos. I wouldn't want to run out. ;)
Rock Chalk!
@@estimatedprophethawkIt is a really a bizarre existence if KU ever becomes more of a football school than a basketball one.
Our currency has been completely fiat since Nixon administration but even when backed by gold or any other medium a currency is still nothing more than a construct of those who control its manufacture and value. It is itself a medium for making others manifest a desired will.
Anything is possible when in reality there is No limit on $
@8:58 I swear that's an actor from present day. Colm Meaney, an Irish actor.
Yes, it is a joke towards everyone who says someone with one name built their house.
Nice. I guess it went right over my head. To be fair though, there are a lot of people from the past that seem to have a famous counterpart doppelganger today. I just figured this was another instance of that.
Anyway, great content.@@Restitutor_Orbis_214
I remember when they showed a photo from the past that looked like Jon Levi!
You had to cover the Ancient Egyptian artifacts at the Nelson Atkinson museum. Had Annunaki statues
I am always leery about what a museum presents. :) It is very interesting at face value.
Need a video that takes a closer look at all the statues, carvings, etc that are around and built into these building's. You zoom in on some of them but not for long. They definitely don't look Like our people. Always look like they are in robes or no clothes, holding strange objects. If someone has made a videos about some of these , I'd be interested in watching it.
Wow, most of these RUclipsrs only use google and don't bother with boots on the ground. A comment like this makes one see why that is the case.
A group of stills would be better for depicting the artwork than a live video on a hot day. It is a great analysis idea.
I ment no negativity in my comment. Your videos are great , fascinating and well done. The statues and carvings just jumped out at me and are probably alot of research just by themselves. Thanks for all you time and exploration
@@legomylinda I didn't perceive it as negative. It is a marvelous idea for an exploration, and I appreciate you sharing it.
Building at 11:24 Phoenician shell decor 😮
Or whtaever the name originally was! It would be so cool to know that.
Another show stopper LA☝️(had to dbl-chk I used the right finger- hey now). “Dug it out pics” are what first pulled me down this rabbit hole. One of the early JonLevi bits with the panoramic of SF and a bunch other pics showing KC. I was like WTF…They dug it all out…🤯. Doesn’t even look like they bothered finishing the job in KC. They were like …Nah, we’re good. It’s hilly here. Just lots of hills. Now move along…🏛
The mystery building at 24:33 looks somewhat similar to classic movie collector Wade Williams's mansion
I've got a video of a 400 year old free energy device that is still operating, if anyone is interested. Links pinned in latest video.
I’m interested man
@@dominicd7610
Press the green button. It's the latest one, called The Holy Grail.
Wow, O'Brian looks like the same name as the guy in Star Trek deep space 9
Kansas City and Tulsa call their art deco style from the depression era Pueblo Deco.
Interesting. I find all of this fascinating and interesting and at the same time it's annoying and disheartening. Living in a world of deception not knowing what is what and on some crazy ruins. I think it sucks. It's frustrating as of lately.
Perhaps it helps us to realize it is easier for it all to happen when we remain unaware. Once we are aware we can take a different course for ourselves and help others become aware. I understand the feeling though.