FOUND CAVE UNDERNEATH ABANDONED HOUSE Built in the early 1800’s

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @bcabmac
    @bcabmac 4 года назад +69

    This was a common practice to build the house over a spring source and run it through the basement. It would create a cold cellar where goods could be preserved longer and it also protected the water source at the point of where you draw the water. Usually there would be a settlement basin made of stone just off to the side of where the stone and cement water trough came in. They could wash clothes in the winter in the exit basin troff. They also sometimes put a hand well pump upstairs down to the basement basin for water. There would also sometimes be a flow gate upstream to divert the water during heavy rain or the basement could flood. Sometimes they would divert spring run off to the house sort of like building a house over a creek. Sometimes they'd build right at the source where it comes out of the ground which sometimes had cave or cavern structure around them but with these there was a problem they never considered. The cavern cave would vent radon gas that would accumulate in the basement and trap in the house. I bet if you had a portable radon detector you find it to be a little hot.

  • @donnakeeley7924
    @donnakeeley7924 3 года назад +24

    What you found in the cave is called, a spring house. It would be like a refrigerator to keep fresh milk, and cream, cold. Veggies would be stored in a box or a sack hung from the rafters or in a dry place, to keep cold out of the water. Probably there was a small shack over the top of it where meat and cheese were hung and stairs to the water. Most likely after the invent of electricity, it was abandoned in lieu of a electric fridge. The building would have rotted away and most likely torn down or moved to be used for something else.
    My grandparent had a cellar under their house. Just a hole underneath the floor joices and stairs from the outside, down in the earthen walls of the hole where they kept their canned goods on shelves and used it as a refrigerator before electricity.
    My parents house, had a pull up door in the floor of my closet which was much the same. Mom would open it up to cool the house down when it was a unbearably hot night. We didn't use it at all except for a few times in the summer.

  • @carmenlangland1393
    @carmenlangland1393 5 лет назад +8

    The home is very old,but people can keep hand other people property, vandalised everything is sad,,spring under the home keep home cool,very different.

  • @sandraweaver8376
    @sandraweaver8376 3 года назад

    The spring water was so clear you could hardly tell there was water there. So cool.

  • @marthap5228
    @marthap5228 5 лет назад +1

    The rose wallpaper was pretty. The cave was awesome! Great find!

  • @jackyblue67same10
    @jackyblue67same10 4 года назад +1

    I bet that was a beautiful home back in it's day .I'd say that's over 100 yrs. old & if somebody where to buy that & redo it all it would be like coming back to life .There would be lots of activity in that old house .

  • @toddstropicals
    @toddstropicals 5 лет назад +1

    That would be one hell of a restoration project.

  • @sassyone1435
    @sassyone1435 3 года назад

    Mostintriquing old stone home!! Bet it was something to see back in it's "hayday!?"

  • @Chrrinfj
    @Chrrinfj 6 месяцев назад

    The kitchen was eerie as hell

  • @Teresia12
    @Teresia12 5 лет назад +1

    This is very sad. Sad old houses who need love just sit and rot while ppl live on the street. Incredibly rediculous!!!

  • @tammyjacobo189
    @tammyjacobo189 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome place👌👍😊

  • @davidray4470
    @davidray4470 5 лет назад

    Really would love to see more of the cave

  • @ricklackeysr7876
    @ricklackeysr7876 5 лет назад

    They need to check on the History of that place and why it was abandoned

  • @JeffCookeMI
    @JeffCookeMI 5 лет назад +27

    Nice to see a place not marked up by graffiti or destroyed by vandals. Sad to think that there was once life there and now it's gone. Often while sitting in a room in my own house I look around and wonder how many people have been in this room through time. What events took place here. Arguments, laughter, conversation. etc. and it was only built in the 40s. Old houses would obviously have so much more "history" and secrets. Thanks for sharing the experience.

  • @ryanlangley9695
    @ryanlangley9695 5 лет назад +166

    My grandma died when i was five. I found out this month she entrusted the family homestead to me. My dad has destroyed in 28 years what it took generations to establish. I love these old place's. I hate seeing them abandoned and decaying. I hope i get to save mine before its gone

    • @garywheeler7039
      @garywheeler7039 4 года назад +38

      First priority, make sure the roof doesn't leak. Second, secure and weatherproof doors and windows. Third, make sure water drains away from the house to prevent damp basement or foundation.

    • @ittybittykittymama7582
      @ittybittykittymama7582 2 года назад +9

      Oh, Ryan, how awful for you to go through such betrayal! My mother did much the same to me, stealing the inheritance left to me by her parents, so I can understand your feelings. Please trust me when I say that you should concentrate on taking the steps required to protect any buildings you now own and then look toward restoring not only your grandmother's gift to you, but your fractured relationship with your dad. Don't make the mistake I did. I never forgave my mother for her actions and learned of her death too late to even tell her that I loved her. Many blessings and much love.

    • @skepticalgenious
      @skepticalgenious 2 года назад +6

      My grandfather sold everything his father built to scientology. Even family heirloom items. Best luck sir

    • @paxhumana2015
      @paxhumana2015 2 года назад

      @@skepticalgenious , so he sold off his stuff to egotistical douchebags?

    • @paxhumana2015
      @paxhumana2015 2 года назад

      @@ittybittykittymama7582 , I would ensure that your mother got to be homeless.

  • @bubblesangel555
    @bubblesangel555 5 лет назад +57

    There's so much more too this story, than what meets the eye, there has to be! Even if that was a fast growing type of tree, that tree by the water has to be well over 100 years old. Just imagine what that house witnessed in its lifetime, good, bad, happy, sad, successes, failures, men leaving for war, births in there, and no doubt deaths also. Someone NEEDS to metal detect around there, the findings might be amazing!

  • @claygoodwin8108
    @claygoodwin8108 5 лет назад +347

    The quality of construction of that time. A newer house would have already rotted to the ground

    • @silvana8246
      @silvana8246 5 лет назад +5

      so true

    • @wmcbarker4155
      @wmcbarker4155 5 лет назад +8

      @Kevinicus all of which can be updated as long as not part of the National Trust, then must paint fruity colors and must get their Permission to do absolutely anything

    • @cryipticcreep5586
      @cryipticcreep5586 5 лет назад +4

      @@wmcbarker4155 very true and ridiculous I might ad!

    • @Beautiful13818
      @Beautiful13818 5 лет назад +1

      True

    • @billyklaklas1093
      @billyklaklas1093 5 лет назад

      Clay Goodwin yes I agree but also the materials used had a lot to do with it I think , wood now days gets wet and is totally ruined I also believe that wood is so hard ants and termites don’t like it !

  • @strebis6
    @strebis6 5 лет назад +128

    Just think about all the love and energy put into building that house and now it sits empty.

  • @ExplorationUnknown
    @ExplorationUnknown 5 лет назад +30

    This place is amazing.

  • @cjw2661
    @cjw2661 5 лет назад +265

    I wonder if the house was built over the spring on purpose and if you can access it from inside the house

    • @kurtsgirl2002
      @kurtsgirl2002 5 лет назад +49

      My Grandpas house was built above a spring. He built it in 1946-1948. Not this house though. There was and probably still is ( sold in 1997), a small cement tub like pool for the Spring in the basement. Beautiful clear tasty water🥰
      I wish I could have bought it when my Mom had to sell it🙁

    • @barbaravick5634
      @barbaravick5634 5 лет назад +10

      Cj W
      Of course it was. Better than trotting a mile to keep things cool.

    • @michaelfarmer9901
      @michaelfarmer9901 5 лет назад +5

      Keep the spring close and outhouse far away?! Or septic far away seems water table was not to deep!

    • @jamesevenden6559
      @jamesevenden6559 5 лет назад +1

      @@kurtsgirl2002 how was the tub kept from over flowing?

    • @ColonelCustard
      @ColonelCustard 5 лет назад +4

      LONE WOLF, that appears to be bedrock.

  • @moonstone8792
    @moonstone8792 5 лет назад +57

    Just outside Kansas City, Mo. a friend used to live in an old house that had a HUGE basement. It was a really big basement and I remember one of the walls wasn't finished concrete but was a natural stone formation with water trickling down and seeping back into the pebbly ground. It was like they built the whole house around that spot. I thought it was coolest basement ever!

    • @garyenwards1608
      @garyenwards1608 5 лет назад

      they probably thought the same thing until the trickle became a stream and began to rot their house around them hence the terrible smell

    • @tomortale2333
      @tomortale2333 5 лет назад

      not good...wet/damp/mildew/wet basement...ugh....

  • @unrulyjulie4382
    @unrulyjulie4382 5 лет назад +193

    The reason that the fireplaces are so small is that they burned coal not wood. My 1920 house has the same kind.

    • @Shalom.Aleichem777
      @Shalom.Aleichem777 5 лет назад +7

      Thanks for the info 👍

    • @noworriesmate8287
      @noworriesmate8287 5 лет назад +14

      My first house had what I called a coal pit in the basement. An area probably 4 feet wide, 8 feet long and 5 feet high on the street side. I couldn’t figure out why there was a larger window there blocked off by this stone wall. An old neighbor told me back in the day the coal truck would back up to this opening and shovel coal into the basement 🤔

    • @robertkurz9941
      @robertkurz9941 5 лет назад +2

      I lived in a four story house that had those coal fireplaces in every room but they upgraded the house to gas

    • @andrewdanylchuk5144
      @andrewdanylchuk5144 5 лет назад +11

      Yep, when I was a young boy (only the 60's) my job at home was to shovel the coal into the coal bin after the coal truck dropped off a ton through that basement window. We called that window the coal chute.

    • @loriestevenson3201
      @loriestevenson3201 5 лет назад +5

      @@noworriesmate8287 I have the original coal chute and door on the side of my house built in 1923 Sealed up tight now.

  • @jackoliver4483
    @jackoliver4483 5 лет назад +34

    seeing a aquatic newt in the water down there tells me the water quality is pretty good.

    • @bigsky2693
      @bigsky2693 4 года назад +1

      Jack Oliver can you elaborate ?

  • @veronicamorgan8103
    @veronicamorgan8103 5 лет назад +38

    Another excellent video Kappy! You can tell that many years ago by looking at the stone formation around the cave opening that it was more than likely a artisan well, or spring house. The use of native stone to build the house would have taken a long time to put up,as thick as the walls were. Love the ginger bread wood around the front of the house. I noticed that the fireplaces were smaller than usual, I guess if you had walls that thick, it wouldn't have taken a whole lot to heat it. 10 thumbs up on this one!

  • @cindyreynolds4045
    @cindyreynolds4045 5 лет назад +84

    I love your videos..I always imagine the people who lived in these old homes. Women in their long dresses cooking or making bread........the men out working all day on the farm or hunting. I love the past. Thanks so much

    • @tonywestbrook6436
      @tonywestbrook6436 5 лет назад +10

      It was a simpler time then but in the same breath, a harder life as well. I'm like you in the respect that we love the olden days.

    • @Jameywells777
      @Jameywells777 5 лет назад +2

      I agree so interesting to think how people lived in those days

    • @williamdougie6213
      @williamdougie6213 5 лет назад

      When women knew their place lol.

    • @whatsup7202
      @whatsup7202 5 лет назад +4

      What, no Internet, cellphones or T.V.s???
      You mean, to keep yourself busy you actually had to DO something???

    • @wmcbarker4155
      @wmcbarker4155 5 лет назад

      @@williamdougie6213 "man works from sun to sun, Women's work is never done " just a old saying above my Grandma's kitchen window

  • @opalessense7708
    @opalessense7708 5 лет назад +41

    Love the old stone homes. It's interesting to see the old layers of linoleum, paint, & wallpaper giving you a peek of what the home looked like throughout the years. The cave was really cool...I could hear the excitement in your voice when you found the it. I wonder how far it went and how many buried treasures there are hidden at the bottom of the spring. Awesome explore as always...Thanks :)

  • @donnakeeley7924
    @donnakeeley7924 5 лет назад +108

    Sure wish I'd have found this place 20 yrs ago and renovated it. What a treasure! Anyone with a lick of sense should buy this, fix it and live in it. You can tell it was built from excellent craftsmanship. For less than a cost of a tick-tacky home you could have a beautiful, solid house.

    • @garyenwards1608
      @garyenwards1608 5 лет назад +9

      it was probably abandoned because of the underground cave that has water running through it. that water will unrelentingly come up into the structure causing irreparable mold damage

    • @historybuff5739
      @historybuff5739 5 лет назад +10

      I like stone houses too. But to redo this one would probably be too expensive. The under ground spring is cool, but could present a mold problem. That's probably why it smelled so bad. When I see old houses like this I think of all the people who lived, loved, played, worked, and maybe died here. It's really sad to let an old house go to nothing.

    • @beverlybalius9303
      @beverlybalius9303 4 года назад +2

      Donna Keeley No thank you!!!! A house over water will be full of mold, dampness, rot and rats n snakes!!! I would have the spring out away from the house!

    • @NoxyKreiss
      @NoxyKreiss 3 года назад

      Ross Stroud k

    • @sassyone1435
      @sassyone1435 3 года назад +2

      I understand what you're saying; however, I'm not crazy about the cave system so close to the home??? Neat stone home though!!

  • @vonniek6787
    @vonniek6787 5 лет назад +66

    What an amazing find! I love this old house. Its old and cruddy but could have so.much potential if someone wanted to put time, money, and effort into it. And the area is so peaceful.

    • @tonywestbrook6436
      @tonywestbrook6436 5 лет назад +3

      I noticed those things myself. Would make an envyus weekend getaway home or full-time

    • @garyenwards1608
      @garyenwards1608 5 лет назад

      it was probably abandoned because of the underground cave that has water running through it. that water will unrelentingly come up into the structure causing irreparable mold damage hence the terrible odour

    • @ProperSendoff
      @ProperSendoff Год назад

      It's obviously haunted

  • @toolsteel8482
    @toolsteel8482 5 лет назад +13

    Ah man, I like it. I love the thick walls and the way the window opening flairs out. The two bulb light fixture is cool, early 1900's for sure. They probably kept their milk and meats down in that cave. Thank you for the guided tour.

  • @chaosdemonwolf1
    @chaosdemonwolf1 5 лет назад +60

    It's mid December so I imagine it was pretty cold. And the water in that cave looked good enough to drink

    • @urbanexploringwithkappy1773
      @urbanexploringwithkappy1773  5 лет назад +7

      chaosdemonwolf1 was very chilly down in there for sure! And agreed, tho idk if I would! Thank you for watching!

    • @anthonythorp7291
      @anthonythorp7291 5 лет назад +2

      There could be anything in the water. Just disturbing old stagnant water can kill you. Yes I know its different but the principle is the same.
      Also air quality is such places can kill. Be careful.

    • @lynnelowe7615
      @lynnelowe7615 5 лет назад +1

      @@anthonythorp7291 the water was flowing, not stagnant

    • @anthonythorp7291
      @anthonythorp7291 5 лет назад +1

      @@lynnelowe7615 I said " Yes I know this is different but...."

    • @whatsup7202
      @whatsup7202 5 лет назад +2

      That was some dang clear water.

  • @Rhonda_B
    @Rhonda_B 5 лет назад +57

    Awesome cave! Little salamander at 2:02. I loved the rose wallpaper. What a neat old house.

    • @einblutwolf5356
      @einblutwolf5356 5 лет назад +3

      I was going to comment on the lil guy too. Sharp eye.

    • @672egalaxie6
      @672egalaxie6 5 лет назад +1

      @@einblutwolf5356 me too. pretty cool.

    • @jamies327
      @jamies327 5 лет назад +2

      Rhonda Beigert good eyes! I'm glad you called a salamander and not a lizard. I would have never spotted that. I need to take you with me next time I go hunting!

    • @jimtownsend7899
      @jimtownsend7899 5 лет назад +1

      I saw him, too. Did you notice the fish at 1:53, on the center right of the screen? Little brown fish, just a quick glimpse.

    • @kahalak8171
      @kahalak8171 5 лет назад +1

      @@jamies327 Actually I think wonder if it's called a Newt - who are semi-aquatic.

  • @sarahfarrell8214
    @sarahfarrell8214 5 лет назад +75

    Wow, great find!!! That house is still standing because of the great craftsmanship, what a shame it's not being preserved! Thank you for exploring this house, it must have been so beautiful inside during it's prime!

    • @garyenwards1608
      @garyenwards1608 5 лет назад +4

      it was probably abandoned because of the underground cave that has water running through it. that water will unrelentingly come up into the structure causing irreparable mold damage hence the terrible odour

    • @alexanderthewise1352
      @alexanderthewise1352 2 года назад +3

      @@garyenwards1608 Peobably not. Buildings like this were pretty pretty well understood in the 19th century and they were able to mitigate rising water levels through a variety of means, including plumbing. Here it looks like the simplest solution was taken, which is to build the home well above a natural cave entrance, so water would flood out the cave well before reaching living levels.
      The spring water running through the cave is probably too cold for mold as well. So we keep to stone and mortar for that. Simple. Strong.
      The problem is youre6applying modern home technology to older methods. That's not to say older is better. People say that seeing this. Well. We haven't lost the technology. People can still build these homes, many people. The also charge what they're worth, which is a lot, and then there's the materials. Well over a million. Easily.
      Tye house is likely abandoned for the reason it was built. That home was built around the spring, which provided a mold free way to store food before refrigeration. That home is probably miles from a power line or other utility. Now we build homess around utility and transportation infrastructures. We use the electric utility to power a refrigerator instead of building a spring house that needs a spring. Indeed, if this house is outside of utility access the cost to provide those things could easily dwarf renovation costs many times over.
      Ironically , tech is overcoming some of those obstacles. Some solar panels and a couple seasons, and a radon test (I'd be way more worried about that than mold after seeing the upper levels, which aren't indicative of catastrophic mold damage, just a leaky roof)

  • @jimmybritt9537
    @jimmybritt9537 5 лет назад +157

    I don't know why , but i am fascinated with old stone homes . Both european and american styles .

    • @anthonythorp7291
      @anthonythorp7291 5 лет назад +5

      Me too, there's just something about them.

    • @tonyjones6689
      @tonyjones6689 5 лет назад +1

      check out the stone houses in south australia

    • @jimmybritt9537
      @jimmybritt9537 5 лет назад +1

      @@tonyjones6689 This is news to me , can you help me with a reference point . I appreciate any help you can give me . 👍

    • @tonyjones6689
      @tonyjones6689 5 лет назад +2

      @@jimmybritt9537 the state of south australia in australia majority of the homes are stone to keep out the heat plus not much timber .

    • @tonyjones6689
      @tonyjones6689 5 лет назад +1

      @@jimmybritt9537 google stone buildings in south australia

  • @Saphire_Throated_Carpenter_Ant
    @Saphire_Throated_Carpenter_Ant Год назад +3

    Since nobody else is going to mention it, I will point out the cute little salamander resting in the water at 2:00 😊

  • @LissaSun
    @LissaSun 5 лет назад +168

    Very nice. I would imagine that cave substituted for their spring house and possibly well. Spring house was early form refrigeration.

    • @urbanexploringwithkappy1773
      @urbanexploringwithkappy1773  5 лет назад +17

      LissaSun I would bet you are right! Probably why they built the house above it! Thank you for watching! (:

    • @andrewbrendan1579
      @andrewbrendan1579 5 лет назад +11

      I agree, LIsa. I imagine that water ice-cold year-round. Food put in a watertight container that's put in the water would be well-refrigerated.

    • @ehta01
      @ehta01 5 лет назад +6

      I also agree; one of my houses (1880) had something similar in the basement, tho it was more of a contained spring than a cave like this one. Still connected to a hand pump on the back porch. Also the cause of some moisture issues in my time.

    • @davidbrown8303
      @davidbrown8303 5 лет назад +4

      You are very correct they had them leading to the well so they wouldn't have to walk through the snow in the winter to draw water out of the well.

    • @edwinthompson6510
      @edwinthompson6510 5 лет назад +12

      @@davidbrown8303 Hi David... you're so right my grandma Bickley's farm up in Utah had a well for drawing water.... no running water inside her house which was practically identical to this homestead..winter snow was deep as i remember it.... summer's were hot so when ever mom took me over to granny Bickley's she would say Edwin boy go to the well and draw up some..Ice cream.soda and Lemonade... and bring ya dad a beer.... all these bottle drinks would be in the pail at the bottom of that well ...ice cold.. natural mineral water to drink.. even the farm animals had well water to drink...{{{ today that water costs a fortune..in the supermarkets and grocery stores... we had it for free my childhood was fantastico..ahah all the best David.....Ed

  • @louier66061879
    @louier66061879 5 лет назад +23

    What a shame. Such a beautiful house, abandoned to the elements. Sad

    • @anthonythorp7291
      @anthonythorp7291 5 лет назад

      Yes it is. Sad to is the fact that people lure the property.

  • @anthonyballard9051
    @anthonyballard9051 5 лет назад +46

    Great Find Kappy!... This was once a fine modest size two story Victorian era house built sometime in the 19th Century... and I hope someone would rescue and restore it before it gets to far gone!... And by the way, the stone veneering and the tin roof were what significantly helped save it so far...

    • @EllicottCity1
      @EllicottCity1 5 лет назад +2

      Agreed!

    • @jshel37
      @jshel37 5 лет назад +2

      I hope so, too.

    • @austinwagoncompany
      @austinwagoncompany 5 лет назад +7

      It looks to me like an 1800s stone house with a later add on; no veneer.

    • @michaelthomas7178
      @michaelthomas7178 5 лет назад +8

      Solid masonry wall no veneer.

    • @philtripe
      @philtripe 5 лет назад +4

      the heat system is also a retro fit...it was originally all coal stoves and fire places. the steel roofing and that type of window were common after about 1880 and then it had major renovations in the late 1920's it got electricity and running water

  • @sqeekykleen49
    @sqeekykleen49 5 лет назад +7

    Pail of paint and some Windex it will be good as new. I'll move in tomorrow.

  • @andrewbrendan1579
    @andrewbrendan1579 5 лет назад +22

    I would love to live in a house of that style (Post-Colonial?), it's one of my favorites. Here in south-central Indiana where I live you'll see houses of this style but made of brick or wood which is a little odd because this area is known for it's limestone.---Great to see the chair rails still attached to the walls. I have a hunch that unusual green paint is original to the house. Our ancestors used colors and color combinations that look odd to us today. Kappy, you and your viewers might be interested in the book "At Home--A Short History of Private Life" by Bill Bryson, 2012. One of the many topics the author talks about is the history of paint and colors in houses.---I grew up in a 1926 house and my bedroom had a ceiling light fixture almost if not identical to the one you showed in this house.---I agree with others: that cave might have been a hiding place for fugitive slave on the Underground Railroad.---I saw an outside opening at 8:51. Maybe a crawl space? I wouldn't be surprised if there's so much stone under the house that a basement wouldn't have been feasible to carve out.

    • @sharonstuebi8181
      @sharonstuebi8181 5 лет назад +4

      Lol, I love that green color but im 65 and lean toward shabby shic

    • @sarahstrong7174
      @sarahstrong7174 5 лет назад +3

      Be careful, there can be arsenic in that green paint & in old Victorian wallpapers too.

  • @dadsvespa
    @dadsvespa 5 лет назад +17

    Nice house ! I'd love to restore that place. Beautiful rock walls and deep windows. The cave is awesome too.

    • @johnnyhotrod2608
      @johnnyhotrod2608 5 лет назад

      I live in a mid-1800's house built with very large sandstone blocks quarried from the land around and large chestnut timbers with mortise and tenon joints. Very cool and well built house.

  • @kelli3610
    @kelli3610 5 лет назад +19

    Wish you wore a mask, makes me worry about your health later on.
    Another awesome video thank you

  • @Rocks123
    @Rocks123 5 лет назад +12

    There might be some Indian artifacts in there not sure what State your in but might be worth digging around in there

  • @gcfan803
    @gcfan803 5 лет назад +29

    I love the depth of the windows in those old houses. You don't see that anymore. Nice explore as always!

    • @rocknrolljesus3197
      @rocknrolljesus3197 5 лет назад +5

      Probably dont see that much anymore because most folks walls arent 18 inches of stone anymore 😊

    • @brentguzman-leiva5724
      @brentguzman-leiva5724 5 лет назад +2

      Ide have an oil lamp or candle stick in each window

    • @whatsup7202
      @whatsup7202 5 лет назад +1

      @@brentguzman-leiva5724
      Yeah, and maybe some plants or herbs or something.

    • @MJkatzTheWriter
      @MJkatzTheWriter 5 лет назад +1

      @@brentguzman-leiva5724 While I agree 100% that this would look beautiful, I doubt either of us would do this if we lived back then. Making candles at home would end up being a costly and time-consuming project, and buying oil and wicks for the lamps wouldn't have been worth the wasteful lighting of rooms that had nobody in them. My grandmother's rule of thumb seemed to always be "Waste not, want not!" Lol.

  • @TippyPuddles
    @TippyPuddles 5 лет назад +2

    The original clothing hooks are on the wall. They did not have closets. I lived in a house where they were left in place because they added value to the home (original).

  • @melissaboggs5889
    @melissaboggs5889 5 лет назад +18

    Another beautiful home!! I’m wondering if the caves were used for travelers needing a place to hide. Thanks so much Kappy for sharing your awesome find! Have a great weekend. 😊

    • @urbanexploringwithkappy1773
      @urbanexploringwithkappy1773  5 лет назад +5

      Melissa Boggs Interesting observation! I could definitely see that! Thank you for watching and the kind words! 👍

    • @EllicottCity1
      @EllicottCity1 5 лет назад +3

      If this house is in Maryland very well could have been! Birthplace of Harriett Tubman. I'm also thinking that the spring was used as their water system -?

    • @cherbear1996
      @cherbear1996 5 лет назад +1

      Ellicott City I got lost years ago trying take take a back road from Dover, de to rehoboth beach..I ended up in Maryland on the Harriet Tubman (highway? ) I wanna say it was route 10..anyway..I love getting lost so I didnt mind, but when I realized where I was, I felt touched inside..and the scenery was beautiful...i saw the Mason/Dixon signs and I felt like I had just drove into a history book from high school...i couldn't stop to see any historical sites or museums tho..its been years and I've always wanted to go back, I just havent..would love to take the kids n grkids to see as well...thanks for bringing that recall to my mind..

  • @kallenflannery-knight4740
    @kallenflannery-knight4740 6 месяцев назад +2

    I know where this is! This cave connects to another cave about 5 minutes up the road in the town north of the house. Was discovered by someone dropping hay straw in the underground creek north, and eventually floated to the water in that entrance

  • @nancysparkplug
    @nancysparkplug 5 лет назад +15

    Fascinating. I felt like I was right there with you- thanks for another great video!

  • @seymorekeester2193
    @seymorekeester2193 5 лет назад +4

    I grew up in Western NY along the Erie canal. Lots of old stone houses. The workers digging the canal used the stones they dug up to build houses. Pretty cool.

  • @dmoser1783
    @dmoser1783 5 лет назад +11

    @7:26...I had the exact fixtures in my house when I bought it. It's 1940's. I was going to restore them when I rewired but they turned out to be flimsy tin...lol.

  • @corvettebmw
    @corvettebmw 5 лет назад +2

    Houses in this era were built with pride, now its how many houses can we build quickly, and how much money will we make as quickly as possible, who cares about the house as long as it looks good.

  • @leslienimmo3247
    @leslienimmo3247 5 лет назад +20

    I bet that water inside that cave was to supply the house and the house was intentionally built over it. Beautiful stonework, with the thickness of those windows this place is definitely old. Looking forward to the next video. As always be careful and stay safe.

    • @garyenwards1608
      @garyenwards1608 5 лет назад

      ill bet that water was ground water that eventually found its way into their cave basement and forced them out hence the terrible smell

    • @jakeforrest
      @jakeforrest 5 лет назад +1

      Maybe they had an electric pump, that could pump the water up in the house from the cave.

    • @zhongyunjiang248
      @zhongyunjiang248 4 года назад

      Hi hi

  • @KD6OTTEMMA
    @KD6OTTEMMA 5 лет назад +7

    What a beautiful historic home! It would be nice to have historical details for this home, I wonder if it could be salvaged and restored. It seems a shame to let it fall victim to the ravages of time and fade into the mist.

  • @fnordhorn
    @fnordhorn 5 лет назад +5

    The cave is most likely where the house got there Spring Water from.

  • @EllicottCity1
    @EllicottCity1 5 лет назад +17

    I LOVE moss, not sure why but I've always liked it~ that cave was an extremely cool find!! You always find the most unique homes- ty!!🙂

  • @TeamTrumpUSA
    @TeamTrumpUSA 5 лет назад +9

    I always thought The National Register of Historic Places would protect structures of historical significance from the wrecking ball. I was wrong and should have known better. Our family plantation was sold (stupid move) back in the 1940's. Ironic, it survived the Civil War but not the wrecking ball. The only record that remains are photos that are in my possession.
    Sad to see the home you discovered meeting the same fate. But, that is progress, or so they say.

    • @edwinthompson6510
      @edwinthompson6510 5 лет назад +1

      Hi Micheal you have hit the nail right on the head....i to lived on a farm in Northern Utah 2017 i had to sell up and move :: our farm was was built in the early 1800s by my 5 times grandfather who travelled across to Utah with Brigham Young in a covered wagon ... historical history before our Civil.War... no when i asked they said the funds weren't available to purchase my property if i would have made a gift to them then that would have been different... problem with that is neither parties wanted both house and land OK a little history ...seeya Micheal....Ed

    • @josephholdman1037
      @josephholdman1037 5 лет назад

      People were getting sued for espestce!

  • @bigczech7
    @bigczech7 5 лет назад +3

    Nice to see one of these old places with no vandalism

  • @pushmearound
    @pushmearound 5 лет назад +14

    Wallpaper! That cave was freaking awesome

  • @freekayn2
    @freekayn2 5 лет назад +15

    linoleum not floor paper

  • @samlogosz8422
    @samlogosz8422 5 лет назад +21

    It would be a cool house to renovate. Right up my alley. 😀

    • @janicemacon9819
      @janicemacon9819 5 лет назад +2

      Yes

    • @jmason3904
      @jmason3904 5 лет назад +3

      Hi 🙂✌🌻🌸🌺 I humbly suggest to first go to the town assessor of property values(total cash value of house and acreage (owned land ) value) - back property taxes accrued over the years🏚🚨🚧 - interest included😒 🚧- it can all add up to quite a hefty sum😕📈😱😭💰💰💰💰 - that some maybe cannot afford ...😱😨💸💰💸💰💸💰💰💸 ..The bigger the house🎑🏠🏚🏰🏬🏥🏙 , the higher the taxes - All back taxes must be paid In FULL 😱😨before one can take ownership of the property's Legal Deed of ownership ...😱🙁😦😧😞📈🏦🤑🕴🤑🕴😒🙄🙂😪😪😪...no matter how long it takes to pay it up in full📆📅📅📅📅📅into the months - maybe even years - decades - 📈🔮💰💰💰🚧😱😨😭💔💙💔- no wonder some abandon the properties ..hardly seems worth it - what a waste - just my humble opinion - because of greed🤔🙁 🤑🤑💸🤑💸💸💸💰💰💰💰💰💰😈💨👿👺👹💩💩👎👎👎🤑😪😝....🏛🏚 .... (§). 🙂🌻🌼🌺🌸🌷🍀🍀🍀🍀👍☕🍝🍖🍛✌

    • @whatsup7202
      @whatsup7202 5 лет назад +4

      @@jmason3904 more emoticons please.

    • @ropiequet5239
      @ropiequet5239 5 лет назад +1

      @@whatsup7202 a little distracting, wasn't it?

    • @stacyk692
      @stacyk692 5 лет назад +2

      Sam Logosz - I have a house built in 1915 I want to sell... original wood flooring under the carpets, walls are lathe and plaster, 10 ft ceilings w/crown moldings, 5 bedrooms, 2 bath, study w/pocket doors, inside doors have original hardware w/brass doorknobs & I have most of the skeleton keys (still work too!), dining room has 5 ft wainscoting topped with a plate rail, and a built-in china hutch that has a beveled mirror and leaded glass doors. The living room has 2 built-in curio cabinets with leaded glass doors that match the china hutch. 2 bedrooms have chester drawers built into the walls... Almost all of the windows are original single-pane, hand-blown glass (but I do have glass storm windows to add on in winter.) Main floor bath has original porcelain-covered cast iron claw tub (bath stays hot for SO long!💖) Upstairs bath has original porcelain-covered cast iron corner sink, with separate hot & cold taps... The basement is unfinished, as the door used to go down to a root cellar instead of a concrete basement.... interested??

  • @suziematthews3075
    @suziematthews3075 5 лет назад +5

    Really enjoy your videos. You have knowledge about what is in the houses and take your time to look at things in them. There aren’t enough explorer like you. You teach a class!! And the best parts are no long winded intro, no goofy music or stupid sound effects.

  • @sharonlegnon427
    @sharonlegnon427 5 лет назад +32

    Oh you have to go back just to check the cave further. They have built there for a reason!!!!! Looks like it may be limestone. Excellent water. I was hoping you had checked out the basement. There was an outside door. Awesome find.

  • @ccooper04
    @ccooper04 5 лет назад +2

    At the 2:00 mark you see a lizard or what not in the water or on a rock

  • @Hunkerbunker346
    @Hunkerbunker346 5 лет назад +16

    Salamander at 2:02 sitting on the stone .. really cool house to, imagine how it looked brand new.

    • @themanwiththeplan411
      @themanwiththeplan411 5 лет назад

      Ha! I noticed the same thing. I was wondering if I'd see it in the comments...

  • @debdennis5373
    @debdennis5373 5 лет назад +9

    Folks, the "underground railroad" was not literally underground. It means hidden or on the down low.

    • @urbanexploringwithkappy1773
      @urbanexploringwithkappy1773  5 лет назад +1

      It’s a decent assumption tho, this house sits right along the mason dixon line, in cavetown maryland

    • @TippyPuddles
      @TippyPuddles 5 лет назад

      @@urbanexploringwithkappy1773 Oh! I live on the Mason Dixon line.

  • @darlenerussell1077
    @darlenerussell1077 5 лет назад +11

    ANOTHER GREAT VIDEO 👍 ❤️ KAPPY BECAREFUL OUT THERE 👍 ❤️ WHEN YOU GO IN A CAVE 👍❤️

  • @LEGN0ME1
    @LEGN0ME1 5 лет назад +20

    There was a basement showing in your end shots, also the attic does have windows in it, any way that you saw for getting into them.

    • @sharonstuebi8181
      @sharonstuebi8181 5 лет назад +5

      bet it was a trap door system to the basement

    • @rocknrolljesus3197
      @rocknrolljesus3197 5 лет назад +5

      I was going to mention those also. The most interesting stuff is usually in the attic and cellars!

    • @billmccall2912
      @billmccall2912 5 лет назад

      Thanks for making this video... I can't get enough of ones like this...thank you again

  • @roxxic3677
    @roxxic3677 5 лет назад +7

    The house may have been used as a stop over for the underground railroad. You'd be surprised how many houses have that history!. Love the house can see it must have been a beautiful home before it was abandon and left to the elements. What a shame another home left to rot away.

    • @janeblake5083
      @janeblake5083 2 года назад

      That was my first reaction as well. My family was from Owen Sound, Ontario, the end of the underground railway. So many homes there have similar areas, used for refuge.

  • @LL-sq8se
    @LL-sq8se 5 лет назад +24

    You could go magnet fishing under that house! Great video 👍 🙋🕊️ Thanks Kappy!

    • @EllicottCity1
      @EllicottCity1 5 лет назад +3

      Great thought! Side note- I really want to start magnet fishing! Think I have some more learning to do as far as what type of magnet, rope, etc.

    • @cherbear1996
      @cherbear1996 5 лет назад +2

      Never heard of magnet fishing..now..will be on internet learning about it all day, lol

    • @bigredc222
      @bigredc222 5 лет назад +2

      It seems to me you wouldn't find much in that cave, the only things down there would have to have been dropped by a person, how many people have been down there and lost something, I guess there's always a chance someone hid something in there?
      It's great that the house is so dry inside, that makes it a lot easier if someone wants to restore it some day.

    • @fire171rescue
      @fire171rescue 5 лет назад

      L Iez

  • @benrandomly2016
    @benrandomly2016 5 лет назад +6

    The rock to build the house was cut out of that hillside exposing the caves. The wood was probably what was cleared to build the house. It looks like the last residents lived there in the '60s, no later than possibly the '80s.

    • @REVNUMANEWBERN
      @REVNUMANEWBERN 5 лет назад +1

      One of the bath tubs was 1955 / 1960's era

  • @edwardkellogg1284
    @edwardkellogg1284 5 лет назад +13

    Great find. I'm wondering if that stone on the foundation was used from the cave area. Light fixture in a bedroom was really nice. The cave is pretty cool. Another enjoyable video.

    • @garyenwards1608
      @garyenwards1608 5 лет назад

      they built it from the cave stone and disturbed the ground water which eventually became a stream that began to rot their house around them hence the odour

  • @santillbrezon2161
    @santillbrezon2161 5 лет назад +2

    A person would need a lot of money and a lot of people to restore this house.

  • @SRay-or3nc
    @SRay-or3nc 5 лет назад +47

    I imagine that cave was used as a spring to keep things cold. My grandparents had something similar although not a cave just a cold spring where they kept their butter and milk. They didn't have electricity for some time.

    • @tonywestbrook6436
      @tonywestbrook6436 5 лет назад +4

      My mind wondered in that direction, too. If I were a child raised on that property, it would be my personal fort and hideaway. I also wondered if any military memorabilia may be buried neath the surface.

    • @garyenwards1608
      @garyenwards1608 5 лет назад +1

      they built the house from stone from that cave which eventually caused the ground water to form a steam which caused the house to begin to rot hence the smell

    • @donnagagne3813
      @donnagagne3813 3 года назад

      S.Ray; I was thinking the same thing. I've seen an old house a lot like this with water running from under the house. Used for keeping things cold; even in summer.

  • @kristineguetschow9134
    @kristineguetschow9134 5 лет назад +85

    I hope you had someone with you! The cave was cool, but what if you slipped and no one knew where you were? I want to watch a lot more of your videos, so please stay safe! Were you able to research this house to see if the cave system is known? There was a basement - the cave! Beautiful stonework! The thick window sills help to date this house to the 1800’s. Pretty neat old house! Thanks for the tour!

    • @zebdoz333
      @zebdoz333 5 лет назад +3

      @@BillSmith-ku1tp damn dude, ever heard of Valium? explore it deeply

    • @mr.archer4108
      @mr.archer4108 5 лет назад +2

      Yes @@BillSmith-ku1tp let the fuzz see what the videographer "did" to your home. Caused it to fall apart. How about you upload pictures somewhere of the beautiful place before the trespassing happened so we may see an instant total decay and ruin afterwards? Sadly now it looks like it's ready for condemnation and you won't be able to occupy your home any longer if the home inspector investigates. I'm interested, where on earth is this place? From the sound of your accent it's in Arkansas or Tennessee?
      Blessings.

    • @6181green
      @6181green 5 лет назад +2

      @@mr.archer4108 his bio says he is on the east coast

  • @dianegrimes3975
    @dianegrimes3975 2 года назад +1

    I love looking at these old houses especially the floors,windows and doors thanks for showing them.

  • @patmurphy389
    @patmurphy389 5 лет назад +8

    kappy, that place is awesome!...did you get to look into the cellar area?..I could see someone fixing that place up & making it liveable again if they had the time & the money or know how!...ty for taking us w/you

  • @Ld-jp8gq
    @Ld-jp8gq 5 лет назад +2

    After you show the turn of the century light and you go into the room there is a mist that goes in front of the lower left corner of the camera.

    • @janicemacon9819
      @janicemacon9819 5 лет назад

      There sure is ,it's very quick,but I saw it,wish I could go there and explore soooo bad

  • @ExploringAndMe
    @ExploringAndMe 5 лет назад +9

    Great job dude!

  • @whattheghost3416
    @whattheghost3416 5 лет назад +1

    Just liked & subscribe 👍 & 🔔 turned on too. Enjoyed this. Will diffinitley be checking out your channel 👍😎 & Merry Christmas 🎄 🎁

  • @kykynb97
    @kykynb97 5 лет назад +4

    It's 2:36am and I just screamed, "SALAMANDER!" out of pure excitement lmfao that was a huge one! 😁

  • @deanlarson2375
    @deanlarson2375 5 лет назад +1

    WHERE is this?? Eastern PA? A wealthy family built that house...stone...gingerbread on the porch. Porches were entertainment and socializing. Evenings, especially Sundays, people would sit on their porches and watch buggies go by....many showing off a new brightly-painted buggy or a high-priced buggy pony...[some they could identify from a long ways off by the horse's gait] riders would call on friends...chilled tea and a cookie while visiting on the porch....exchanging "pleasantries" and commenting on passing traffic or the news.
    Never again....

  • @reiramiya8805
    @reiramiya8805 5 лет назад +6

    Very cool find! Thank you for sharing!

  • @breeg5490
    @breeg5490 5 лет назад +2

    I think that your next career move should be realtor to the urban disadvantaged homes of America. Just look at all the comments. They are in love with these homes apparently LOL

  • @combatgirl38
    @combatgirl38 5 лет назад +5

    What a beautiful house on the outside with great potential inside. The property with it's underground waterway makes it even more amazing! What state is this in? I'm curious because there's still green and it's almost January.

  • @dukeboy09
    @dukeboy09 5 лет назад +1

    Makes me sick when I see a home like this go to waste Most ignorant people would tear it down and build some garbage double wide in the place of it just because it’s “old” and “out of date” but I’d rather have a house from this era 1880s-1930s than some new junk

  • @Oldgringo47
    @Oldgringo47 5 лет назад +7

    Incredible find. Please do an update.

  • @beccareul
    @beccareul 5 лет назад +1

    Now this is just ridiculous, when you said metal detector, stg I was thinking the exact same thing,and the same thing happened when I watched the last video when you said that picture looked like Bob Ross. We must be on the same wavelength! Too funny.

  • @susan5301
    @susan5301 5 лет назад +9

    Really cool explore! Thanks for sharing!

  • @harrypeters8306
    @harrypeters8306 4 года назад +1

    Someone can buy and repair this old gem! I think that the cave was used as an old root celar! I spent 45 years working on buildings just like this one, and from a glance I'd say it's a good candidate for restoration,! You gotta have a dream, fixing this lovely old home would be a dream come true...

  • @jasonchristian5204
    @jasonchristian5204 5 лет назад +12

    Awesome find my friend,as always👌

  • @jaunabeeks3572
    @jaunabeeks3572 Год назад +1

    There's an old house here in WA. state where I live, (no, not anywhere near freaky, disgusting, Seattle area), that was built over a lava tube, (cave), and the people that owned it back in the day used to make cheese. They put a metal spiral staircase that went from the front porch, down into the cave to leave their cheese in it as it is a steady, I can't remember now what the temp is, degrees. The original family still owns the house and property, and if you're respectful the sisters will let you come onto their property and there you'll find the cave head. Once you get to the spiral stairs, you'll know you hit the end of the cave.

  • @joharmon2148
    @joharmon2148 5 лет назад +9

    Very interesting place, when it was first brought up about the cave under the house I thought maybe it was part of the underground railroad, but then the water came into play so I don't know.

    • @andrewbrendan1579
      @andrewbrendan1579 5 лет назад +2

      I was thinking the same thing, Jo. That cave could have been a hiding place for escaping slaves.

    • @urbanexploringwithkappy1773
      @urbanexploringwithkappy1773  5 лет назад +5

      It sits right along the mason Dixon line so I wouldn’t be suprised, thanks for watching!

    • @andrewbrendan1579
      @andrewbrendan1579 5 лет назад +3

      I'm adding on to my earlier comment! I wonder if this scenario could have/might have happened: former slaves staying in the main part of the house but using the cave only in an emergency. Perhaps some kind of wooden platform so no one would have to sit on rocks or in the water and maybe there's a place further along than Kappy explored that could have been a better hiding place? If there were people using dogs to track runaway slaves, those people would probably have had to stay in the cave while at this house. I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of information died with Underground Railroad conductors who never revealed their secrets.

    • @jamescarter8421
      @jamescarter8421 5 лет назад +2

      The Underground Railroad wasn't actually underground. That's just what they called it

    • @andrewbrendan1579
      @andrewbrendan1579 5 лет назад

      I know that.

  • @santillbrezon2161
    @santillbrezon2161 5 лет назад +2

    This looks like it's in America I would love to restore a house like this in America.

    • @TippyPuddles
      @TippyPuddles 5 лет назад

      Unfortunately, there are lots of similar houses abandoned. Most build out of field stone. They get musty real fast when left abandoned. I lived in one and moved south to MD and went every few weeks to check it. Within one month it got musty and you'd think it was abandoned for years.

  • @RhodeIslandWildlife
    @RhodeIslandWildlife 5 лет назад +6

    Those small fireplaces were "coal hearths" they weren't made for burning logs.
    Couple of pointers for you:
    Always stay to the side climbing those old staircases, you'll live longer.
    Any time you find a set of built-in drawers, pull the bottom drawer all the way out, be careful of critters that may be hiding amongst the stuff that fell out of the drawers over the years and check for loose floorboards under there. it was a common spot for stashes.

  • @MrMisanthrope1RBjr
    @MrMisanthrope1RBjr 4 года назад +1

    that is a sistern, very common in houses this age, it collects rain water for washing but not drinking. eve troughs on house run water into sistern.

  • @jimbriggs8648
    @jimbriggs8648 5 лет назад +9

    this is like red dead redemption..need to loot some horse bitters and coffee

  • @Mr.Big-Gunz
    @Mr.Big-Gunz 5 лет назад +1

    Stop poking ur nose around where it doesn't belong,,consequences & repercussions. ...

  • @kristy7174
    @kristy7174 5 лет назад +5

    A very different kind of house. Interesting. The rise wallpaper n ild fire mantels n deep windows. Cave was most interesting. Great find great video Kappy. Stay safe and God bless.

  • @ivanahanaivana
    @ivanahanaivana 5 лет назад +1

    At exact 2:00 minutes into the video there was a humanfish laying on the left. A very rare cave animal. This means, this cave goes very deep benith the earth surface and that the water must be clear and unpolluted.

  • @dawnbenchley7237
    @dawnbenchley7237 5 лет назад +8

    The ceiling fixture you said went back to the turn of the century. The house I grew up in was built in 1886 and had ceiling fixtures like that.

    • @edwinthompson6510
      @edwinthompson6510 5 лет назад +3

      Hi Dawn Yeah your right about the date... i was raised on a farm homestead in Utah date 1800s great great great grandad built it having travelled from the east with Brigham Young... land was plentiful then just settle and build a house like this one and farm the land.. as far as the eye could see.... {{ i recently 2017 sold the land {{ the house was worthless to the buyer... pity{{ i tried to sell to preservation organisation but not interested the land went to a church federation for housing so they said }} i have since found that to be a lie...the house has since been demolished... that really upset me nothing i can do ..........Ed

    • @tenlittleindians
      @tenlittleindians 5 лет назад +1

      It's not that old! Most people still did not have electricity in the 20's except for people living in the cities. Almost all old radios from the 20's ran on batteries because electrical lines to houses was not common yet. The house may be older but the light fixture is not.

    • @MrWadsox
      @MrWadsox 5 лет назад +1

      @@edwinthompson6510 My childhood home was torn down too. That can piss you off if you had a happy childhood like me.

    • @edwinthompson6510
      @edwinthompson6510 5 лет назад +2

      @@MrWadsox Hi there thanks for your reply Yeah i know what you mean being Peed off the day i left loaded my gear into a 18 wheeler.. drove down that old dusty road for the last time : stopped my 4+4 got out looked back and i swear as god my witness my Mom Dad and Granny Bickerly were standing outside on the porch with my old dog"Jefferson" all long time passed away.. god rest their souls...im now 77yrs old my childhood was fantastic didn't want for anything served my time in Vietnam as a Helicopter pilot came home after a while in New York kept the farm .. until recently now i live in Beverly Hills crazy really im a country boy at heart and seeing these old farm homesteads Kappy post up tug at my heart strings but life has to go on but at what cost : OK Green Genes Seeya and great talkin to ya bye god bless........Ed

    • @swiley223
      @swiley223 5 лет назад

      They were added latet

  • @rosaliesemrau7709
    @rosaliesemrau7709 5 лет назад +1

    Too bad someone don't buy it and restore it. It looks a little rough but it looks salvageable. The stone walls really protected it from the elements. Reminds me of a house a friend of mine and her husband restored. It also was in worse shape than this one.