Still a nice house, would live there yes it looks as though it could be saved the place just needs to be remodeled. Great find Jay, Thank you for sharing🙂👍
I hope can be saved. Yes would live there!! Loved the green in kitchen, (pink too, just not together w green) retractable lamp, glass door knobs, & that truck what a find!!! Thanks, enjoyed so much. :)
This one would need a lot of updating and a new layout inside but I would paint the outside in a traditional manner. it's been a beautiful home and yes, I would live in a home like this :-)
I love abandoned house videos and the detail you put into yours is great. I’d fix this baby up in a heart beat if it was salvageable... out in the middle of nowhere? Check. Waterfront? Check? Lol
I love seeing the old homes. Being 73 it brings back memories of another time and place when roads were not paved and a bridge was two planks. The only heat was a fireplace. Water came from a pump on the porch and my great grandmother cooked on a wood stove and the bathroom was outback. I do want to say I am glad to see you have someone with you. It adds a safety factor to your adventures. Thanks for the time spent making these videos. Younger generations don't understand how different things were 50 years ago.
@@lindaberg9960 I remember when I was little we would wallpaper and buy those plastic curtains and roll out a new linoleum floor. Good till the next spruce up. lol Had to save the floor!
@@garnetbarton3313 LOL! Such great memories!! My grandma always did the wall papering, as my mom didn't like to do it(and wasn't good at it🙄). And I Do remember the plastic curtains!!! Ha Ha! Dont recall them at our house at home, but our neighbors had them! This house certainly was a treasure if memories❤. We didn't know how good we had it!
Regarding access to the upstairs addition--at the beginning of the tour in the kitchen where you have the big red arrow pointing out possible stairs, maybe that was the access. Also, the louvers on the floor and ceiling...were those for a whole house fan? I've seen them before and these look similar, but I thought they would only be on the top floor. You turn on a powerful fan in the attic that vents outside, and you'd open all the vents to draw cool air in from downstairs and vent the hot upstairs air out the attic vent... Pre-air conditioning. LOVE abandoned places! This is what drew me into your channel initially. Don't ever stop doing these. It's amazing how many places are just left to rot instead of being sold or torn down. Always fascinating to go along with you on these adventures. Thanks for including us!
If you remember off the kitchen were those shelves with shoe polish, it looked behind it to be boarded up. That may have been where the stairs to the addition were. These are my favorite videos. Doesn't take long for nature to take over an abandoned home. Thanks for sharing JP!
JP, just wanna thank you for your fantastic timing. I rarely get to enjoy these weekday evening premieres or even Livestreams. But this managed to fit right in before the kids going to bed and their dad out of town. Awesome property, thanks again!
I loved this one. It gave me some clues about the house I just moved into. Historic areal photos show my house was the only home out here for 15-20 miles back in the 70s. We still have the old school pencil sharpener mounted to the steep wood staircase going into the basement. We have a large fireplace down there, which was probably the only source of heat until 1989 when the current furnace was installed. We can tell all of our propane lines were installed about then too. The original kitchen was just the counter and sink, which is still the same, but sometime later, a fridge, stove and dishwasher were added on the opposite wall, all right next to each other. Yes, we have flower wallpaper EVERYWHERE. And we have the exact same ceiling tiles and wood paneling. This video makes me want to pull it down and see what was originally there! The outside of our house has plastic siding but I believe it could've been wood at one point or may still be underneath because our exterior walls are over a foot thick. This video just shows how people used to add layers upon layers of material when updating. We also have a decent size attic as far as we can tell but there is no attic access in the home. We will have to cut a hole in the ceiling and find out what's up there. I cant wait to start remodeling and restore this home to its original state! Thanks for the video! It brought me a lot of insight!
Great find Mike! Love the floral wallpaper and glass doorknobs. Glad there's not junk left behind, it's easier to see the house without it. Abandoned resorts are my favorite, (Nevele) followed by abandoned houses. Great video guys!
The house I grew up in had one of those retractable lights in the dining room. No, I think the structure is too far gone for renovating. The foundation told me so. This video did make me look around the room I'm in and think, (years from now) what would people think about who lived here and how they lived.
I think and ask those same questions anytime I visit an old abandoned house. I wish I could find out some of the history of the place and it's previous occupants. If the walls could speak I wonder what tales they'd tell. So much history just lost in time..
My fav too, abandoned homes...very eerie. This one was good. Loved the old 50's decor..green and pink..lol..and the string on the lights a feature of 50's homes everywhere and floral wall paper. Looks like a makeover under way in the 70's with lovely wall panels. Thank s for the tour. I enjoyed it, as always :-)
I can just imagine it back in the day, beautiful! The rugs in the house were so cool to see! I wonder if the property is for sale? Another great video! Thank you so much!
LOVE your abandoned house videos!! LOVE when you and Mike are together! Great old house and your old vehicle find was awesome. Thanks for a great video. Come again soon Mike!!
Love the abandoned videos. Makes you wonder why it was left, who lived there, what did it look like when it was new and full of life, where did the people go......then I try to picture it in my mind. We had one of those pull down lights over our kitchen table in the 60's and 70's. The running boards and fenders looked in decent shape on that truck. Interesting tree. Thinking woodpeckers made the holes but were after food. They don't nest close to the ground or I have never seen them do that. Tree was already dead or dying when they drilled it. Good home for chipmunks. This place was beautiful at one time. I can picture a garden, flowers, maybe an orchard and livestock. So cool.
What a great find, the landscape must have been something when whoever lived there. It looks like it needs to be a new project, but I suppose something could be kept as a reminder of the past, which would be really lovely to include if there was ever a new house. Thank you for sharing.
I really like when you explore explore different places. And when you compare different foods with Lilly. I don’t know if you can bring her on this page with you but it’s fun when you two can compare foods and different things together. She’s such a sweet little girl!
I have been trying to figure out what it is about you that I like the most. I found this video and you had just finished your into and then you said “come along with me” and it hit me, it’s your voice! Warm, mellow, reassuring, welcoming and just plain great! Now if I wasn’t an old lady, I would follow that lovely voice anywhere. Now I love your abandoned explores! This one was really fun to see. I so enjoyed this one and you will probably be hearing that from me often as I am playing catch up from when I first started following you which I think the first video I saw of you were exploring an abandoned water park where their used to be cabins a lake maybe, I know it was awhile ago. Okay, I enjoyed this video and those little round things you found in the bedroom , you would put them under a heavy piece of furniture so you could move it pretty easy. Looking forward to watching more of your videos and I hope to catch your live stream on Sunday. Stay safe and keep up the great explores.
I have that same pencil sharpener from when we were kids. I always smile when I see one. We also had the retractable light fixtures. I love the glass doorknobs! I have a couple from my Great Aunt's house and I have skeleton keys in the house I live in now (a 1939 Gingerbread in St. Louis, MO) and they work. Thanks for posting these old gorgeous homes. I wish people wouldn't abandon them. They are worth saving!
Beautiful Old house, I would have loved to see it when it was new! I can just imagine the family living there and the kids running up and down that long hallway!!
I grew up in a big ol' farm house so needless to say these are my fav type of videos. Sure could relate to alot of items in this house...loved the old truck, the setting with the huge pine 🌲..great video .. Thanks JP & Mike😁👍👍👍👏
Love the abandoned house videos!! This was reminiscent of my grandpa's house, the porch and certain rooms. This house must be Very very old with not much ever done to it. Was probably a lovely place and property years ago. I can see it being costly to heat and repair, probably why it sits abandoned now. It's definitely too far gone to renovate Imo. Great to see you and Mike out and about again!! See you next video.
That was really good. Always enjoyed your abandoned finds. It's what attracted me to your channel. Must have missed this one when first posted. Love the photo montage with the haunting music playing. I wonder how many memories it holds - now lost in time. Makes me feel quite sad...... Thanks......
I love to see abandoned houses. This was a great video. The glass doorknobs were my favorite things. I have originals on the doors of my house, that were given to me by my Mom. Keep up your good work. Sandee
Wonderful video Jay!!! I enjoyed watching this abandoned house video!!! The truck was an amazing surprise!!! Thank you Mike for the great Google Maps find!!! Thank you Jay for sharing!!!
Love these exploration videos. I came upon you by accident, soon realized you are kicking around in Pennsylvania. I live in Montgomery County but have done my share of kicking around in PA. Awesome stuff, guys. Keep it coming!
Awesome find guys!! Abandoned houses are definitely my favorite videos to watch!! I betcha that house was a log home back in the day. The truck was a cool bonus!! Thanks for sharing 👍🏻❤️
I like these kind of videos, yours is the BEST, GREAT steady camera work, unlike most other videos I get motion sickness watching them. Great video & snapshots! I subbed, Thanks for posting.
Your abandoned home videos are awesome!! My mother and I used to do this all the time when I was still living in our hometown of Jonesboro, Ark.Thank you for sharing with us 😊
That old truck definitely does look like an old Fire Truck though the chassis in back a little too long for a pickup...especially with the dual wheels..jmho
Once was a nice warm safe place with a lot of love to give now is cold and damp and slowly turning back into dirt and Earth. Thank you for preserving what was there.
You are right about the paneling. We did the down stairs of our first home in 1969 with very similar paneling. also bought copper-tone kitchen appliances.
You are back doing what you do so brilliantly you and Mike exploring abandoned properties yay. I think my mum used to have one of those retractable lights too. I love these kinda videos the best .. i bet it was a real nice house before it was left to rot ... its so sad x
You 2 goofey guys😊🤗. Loved, loved, loved, this walk down memory lane! Pink and green colors were big in the 50's, also that up & down light for over the table, as well as that paneling and ceiling tiles. Strings on lights common also! Noticed the "patched" rectangle along wall in floors of upstairs bedrooms. Those were probably covered up when ceilings tiled downstairs and they had to remove the grates that were in upstairs floors and downstairs ceilings. Would have converted heating system at same time. We had those rectangular "boxes" covered with grates when I was growing up in northern Indiana. One of my sisters figured out how to lift the grate upstairs one time. We decided to make beds for our dolls with pillows stuffed in them. The bottom started to fall out(hanging through downstairs ceiling!!! My sister got a spanking! That was only way to heat upstairs in old days! Heat rose up through those registers. Very ornate as I recall. Probably heated with oil(in big basement tank) in old days maybe. What a walk down memory lane! Oh. And I recall well old trucks with clutch, brake, gas paddle and shifter. That little round "button" on left of clutch was pushed in & out to dim lights. Ah....memories😊❤ Was really surprised at that mess of a basement! So thankful I stumbled on to exploring, and especially you, Mike, Cliff, and your other helpers! Bless you all!
I bet it was something back in the day, I tried to imagine the trees full and green grass, fully maintained. I just really love how old it is😍 that car was amazing to see too🥰
Cool find Mike found! I have pocket doors in my home. It looks as though someone was attempting to restore this place. So sad, once upon a time it was a beautiful home that holds memories! Great find!
Not a bad little place, that pink and green in the kitchen needs to go though. I think it could be updated and made more livable. That huge pine tree is pretty amazing, very old. The vehicle was cool. Thanks JP and Mike
I love exploring places like that.. An extremely old house with nothing around to disturb the explore what could possibly go wrong? lol That hallway was really cool looking. What a nice house, you don't see too many like this anymore and I would absolutely live in one. Awesome explore as always JP!
I grew up in an old farm house. Ours was built in 1909ish. The door knob in the small room downstairs off the kitchen, square one is the same knob in my brother’s bedroom today. The light on the pulley is around the 60’s? We still have one over the kitchen table at the farm house. We also have the crystal looking door knobs upstairs. We were lucky to have closets in each of our bedroom but I noticed no closets in bedroom upstairs. Must have had wardrobes. I was glad all the furniture and personal items had been removed and not left behind. The wall paper in the upstairs hall was probably vinyl coated and it is why it has lasted so long. Flower wallpaper is from the 70’s. I was in my 20’s in the seventies so I know about the decorating over the 50, 60, 70 and up until now. Years ago they wall papered because the walls were lath and plaster and the paper lasted many years. I learned to wallpaper very young and helped my mother. I just wallpapered my kitchen a year ago, it is making a comeback. I love your videos of abandoned homes...it is sad when everything is left behind. This house was well kept and loved at one time. Thanks for the tour! Hugs. PS..the string for the hall light...we had one like that going into the finished attic at the farmhouse which had a bedroom in the attic. Just saying. Shelves in basement was for home canned goods. We canned and frozen everything we could from garden and fruit trees. That was an old farm truck, lots of old farmers had them in the 50’s for hauling everything!
Homes are definitely my favorite explore! I loved the old newspaper from '69, I would have been 2 years old. The old truck was a great find also. Would love to see it refurbished and lived in once again.
Love your abandoned house videos! Keep up the excellent work. The paneling in the one room is the exact same paneling my parents had in their basement. It's from the early 70's, I believe.
Those coaster items at the start stop furniture from making dents in the carpet and linoleum. I could live there no problem fixed up of course. Love farmhouses and cottages.
Not sure how I missed this one, this place is absolutely beautiful. That inside with the wood paneling, the pink and green, just amazing to see!! And that truck was spectacular as well. It may have been a box truck at some point, those two pieces of lumber running down the frame rail are what they use to put in between whatever bed is on there in the frame rails, usually a box. They still do that today with modern trucks, the u-bolts that were there is clamps the wood to the frame. Amazing find my friend, I really enjoyed this one, thank you for taking us along
Neat thing about those old cars...that flap on top of the firewall, in front of the windscreen. Genius. There has to be 2nd story access, that seems too extensive for an attic.
I liked this house. It has some features that were in my grandparents house such as the old door lock, the bare bulb light fixtures and the pink color scheme :-) I appreciate how you take your time filming whole rooms and going through in an organized manner so that we can see the floor plan. I enjoy that more so than seeing what things are left in it. I think that possibly the kitchen area was the original house because of the whole log beams in the basement. The room you first came in could have been the main living area and there may have been a sleeping loft upstairs accessed by ladder. The bathroom would have been installed way later. Great video! This one really grabbed my imagination!
Hi wow this reminds me if my grandparents house before it burnt down . let's see if I can date this house. The trees used for the supports in the basement were used about 1850 to 1880's . after that the beams were finished better. My guess is that the person's who owned it either died or ended up in a nursing home and they put the alarm system in to watch the house. Also the motion detectors in rooms could also be used to make sure an older person is walking around and is ok. A lot of this house reminds me if my grandparents they were dairy farmers outside of Towanda pa. Their house had small rooms mixed with bigger rooms too. As they got older they lived downstairs. The furnace was around in the 60s. My father was a heating contracted and as a child I saw similar furnaces. I love the flower prints and the styles are from I think the 60s too. Possibly the 50'$. I enjoyed this very much thank you for sharing it. It brings back memories of a wonderful times.
Someone obviously liked the color pink! What a cool explore - refreshing to see no graffiti. The narrow steep stairs sure brought back memories for me. My Aunt and Uncle had an old house next to their home and us kids would play in it - it had a really steep staircase with narrow treads that scared the crap outta me! I remember those old lamps with the retractable cords. Do you know how many acres were part of this place? Very cool find!!
These are my favorite videos. You do an awesome show on them. Some people just walk around but you interact as if we were there wanting to buy. Keep it up and show me more!! Love the pictures at the end. Some deserve a frame and put on my wall, lol
Really good video, you go to some very interesting places. I want to find some places like those as the weather improves. You do a great job making your videos and I always enjoy watching thanks and stay safe.
It’s odd to have items from many years ago along side of more recent items. Somethings just not right with that house. Many stories never known by us. Cool video.
i do remember that retractable lamp, had one like that in our house when i was a kid . great explore...really liked that old truck...antique vehicles are interesting to me
What an awesome find! Love the abandoned houses! Glad to see the new occupants are 'hanging' around and enjoying the place!! I think the windows are called recessed! The tree looks like a Pileated wood pecker was looking for bugs! I wonder if the old truck was a logging truck?! My daughters house is an old brick house built in the late 60's or early 70's, it has a working retractable lite in the dinning room!!! I remember having one when I was a kid!!! Thanks for another great adventure!
I used to live in an old house almost identical to that. Lived there for about 25 years. I walked away from it, and left most everything in it. If you ever run into a similar house in the piney woods of East Texas, it's mine. I still own the property, but relocated to another county and built my dream home. I should probably sell that place, but the property has been in my family for many, many years. I enjoyed this video. 👍
Do you think those home can still be saved? Would you consider living in a home like this? Let's hear what you think!
Still a nice house, would live there yes it looks as though it could be saved the place just needs to be remodeled. Great find Jay, Thank you for sharing🙂👍
I bet it would take a boatload of money to fix it up. I like the kitchen color scheme.
I hope can be saved. Yes would live there!! Loved the green in kitchen, (pink too, just not together w green) retractable lamp, glass door knobs, & that truck what a find!!! Thanks, enjoyed so much. :)
This one would need a lot of updating and a new layout inside but I would paint the outside in a traditional manner. it's been a beautiful home and yes, I would live in a home like this :-)
I love abandoned house videos and the detail you put into yours is great. I’d fix this baby up in a heart beat if it was salvageable... out in the middle of nowhere? Check. Waterfront? Check? Lol
Homes are my favorite abandoned explores. No vandalism or graffiti makes my heart happy!
💙😊
SO BEAUTIFUL BUT SO SAD. THANK YOU AND GOD BLESS. LOVE FROM VA.
I love seeing the old homes. Being 73 it brings back memories of another time and place when roads were not paved and a bridge was two planks. The only heat was a fireplace. Water came from a pump on the porch and my great grandmother cooked on a wood stove and the bathroom was outback. I do want to say I am glad to see you have someone with you. It adds a safety factor to your adventures. Thanks for the time spent making these videos. Younger generations don't understand how different things were 50 years ago.
Just wanted to say that I think it's great that you narrate literally everything for the vision impaired fans. Very thoughtful. :)
You're very welcome.
Abandoned homes are my favorite ♡
Yes, I do. I love you. Showing us these homes. Some of them are very very beautiful.
Love exploring old abandoned buildings. Glad i get to do that thru yours and Mike's eyes. Keep finding more for us to see
Oh thank you, I was having abandoned house withdrawals!! Yes I could live here if not so lost to decay. I love old farmhouses.... Thank you!!
I really enjoy looking at these homes. Makes you think about the families that used to live there
Abandoned explores are my favorites. Loved the old farmhouse and that you took your time documenting it.
Abandoned homes are my favorite! And was one of the reasons that I subscribed to your channel. I love your videos, I look forward to the next one ; )
I think they are furniture coasters. When I was a kid we had heavy glass ones. It's to protect the linoleum.
Yes! The looked little different that our old ones. That old linoleum has to be protected from furniture kegs!
@@lindaberg9960 I remember when I was little we would wallpaper and buy those plastic curtains and roll out a new linoleum floor. Good till the next spruce up. lol Had to save the floor!
Garnet Barton you are the first person that remembers plastic curtains. My mom has them when I was little.
When I was little we also had the plastic curtains, my mom always bought them.
@@garnetbarton3313 LOL! Such great memories!! My grandma always did the wall papering, as my mom didn't like to do it(and wasn't good at it🙄). And I Do remember the plastic curtains!!! Ha Ha! Dont recall them at our house at home, but our neighbors had them! This house certainly was a treasure if memories❤. We didn't know how good we had it!
J, awesome find!!!! I love old and or just abandoned houses! Keep on Showin and say hi to Jill and Lily!!
Regarding access to the upstairs addition--at the beginning of the tour in the kitchen where you have the big red arrow pointing out possible stairs, maybe that was the access.
Also, the louvers on the floor and ceiling...were those for a whole house fan? I've seen them before and these look similar, but I thought they would only be on the top floor. You turn on a powerful fan in the attic that vents outside, and you'd open all the vents to draw cool air in from downstairs and vent the hot upstairs air out the attic vent... Pre-air conditioning.
LOVE abandoned places! This is what drew me into your channel initially. Don't ever stop doing these. It's amazing how many places are just left to rot instead of being sold or torn down. Always fascinating to go along with you on these adventures. Thanks for including us!
If you remember off the kitchen were those shelves with shoe polish, it looked behind it to be boarded up. That may have been where the stairs to the addition were. These are my favorite videos. Doesn't take long for nature to take over an abandoned home. Thanks for sharing JP!
Wow, that truck at the end was incredible. Wish we knew it's history. Nice find altogether JP. Kudos Mike
JP, just wanna thank you for your fantastic timing. I rarely get to enjoy these weekday evening premieres or even Livestreams. But this managed to fit right in before the kids going to bed and their dad out of town. Awesome property, thanks again!
I loved this one. It gave me some clues about the house I just moved into. Historic areal photos show my house was the only home out here for 15-20 miles back in the 70s. We still have the old school pencil sharpener mounted to the steep wood staircase going into the basement. We have a large fireplace down there, which was probably the only source of heat until 1989 when the current furnace was installed. We can tell all of our propane lines were installed about then too. The original kitchen was just the counter and sink, which is still the same, but sometime later, a fridge, stove and dishwasher were added on the opposite wall, all right next to each other. Yes, we have flower wallpaper EVERYWHERE. And we have the exact same ceiling tiles and wood paneling. This video makes me want to pull it down and see what was originally there! The outside of our house has plastic siding but I believe it could've been wood at one point or may still be underneath because our exterior walls are over a foot thick. This video just shows how people used to add layers upon layers of material when updating. We also have a decent size attic as far as we can tell but there is no attic access in the home. We will have to cut a hole in the ceiling and find out what's up there. I cant wait to start remodeling and restore this home to its original state! Thanks for the video! It brought me a lot of insight!
Great find Mike! Love the floral wallpaper and glass doorknobs. Glad there's not junk left behind, it's easier to see the house without it. Abandoned resorts are my favorite, (Nevele) followed by abandoned houses. Great video guys!
The house I grew up in had one of those retractable lights in the dining room. No, I think the structure is too far gone for renovating. The foundation told me so. This video did make me look around the room I'm in and think, (years from now) what would people think about who lived here and how they lived.
If I had the money I'd take on the project in a heartbeat.
I think and ask those same questions anytime I visit an old abandoned house. I wish I could find out some of the history of the place and it's previous occupants. If the walls could speak I wonder what tales they'd tell. So much history just lost in time..
Thank Mike for finding this house!
Thank you Connie
Thanks Mike!!
@@GoodDayforDecay Thank you Mike....great find.👍👻
My fav too, abandoned homes...very eerie. This one was good. Loved the old 50's decor..green and pink..lol..and the string on the lights a feature of 50's homes everywhere and floral wall paper. Looks like a makeover under way in the 70's with lovely wall panels. Thank s for the tour. I enjoyed it, as always :-)
Love super old abandoned houses! Thanks for sharing! Thumbs up 👍
👍
I can just imagine it back in the day, beautiful! The rugs in the house were so cool to see! I wonder if the property is for sale? Another great video! Thank you so much!
LOVE your abandoned house videos!! LOVE when you and Mike are together! Great old house and your old vehicle find was awesome. Thanks for a great video. Come again soon Mike!!
Love the abandoned videos. Makes you wonder why it was left, who lived there, what did it look like when it was new and full of life, where did the people go......then I try to picture it in my mind. We had one of those pull down lights over our kitchen table in the 60's and 70's. The running boards and fenders looked in decent shape on that truck. Interesting tree. Thinking woodpeckers made the holes but were after food. They don't nest close to the ground or I have never seen them do that. Tree was already dead or dying when they drilled it. Good home for chipmunks. This place was beautiful at one time. I can picture a garden, flowers, maybe an orchard and livestock. So cool.
I love all of your videos but especially, the abandoned homes! Great video!
💙
Love love love abandoned house videos !! Can never be too long or too detailed!!
I love you videos of abandoned houses and buildings. You do a fantastic job, thanks
I like abandoned houses. Pretty neat home. Would take a lot to fix up.
What a great find, the landscape must have been something when whoever lived there. It looks like it needs to be a new project, but I suppose something could be kept as a reminder of the past, which would be really lovely to include if there was ever a new house. Thank you for sharing.
💙👍
I really like when you explore explore different places. And when you compare different foods with Lilly. I don’t know if you can bring her on this page with you but it’s fun when you two can compare foods and different things together. She’s such a sweet little girl!
I have been trying to figure out what it is about you that I like the most. I found this video and you had just finished your into and then you said “come along with me” and it hit me, it’s your voice! Warm, mellow, reassuring, welcoming and just plain great! Now if I wasn’t an old lady, I would follow that lovely voice anywhere. Now I love your abandoned explores! This one was really fun to see. I so enjoyed this one and you will probably be hearing that from me often as I am playing catch up from when I first started following you which I think the first video I saw of you were exploring an abandoned water park where their used to be cabins a lake maybe, I know it was awhile ago. Okay, I enjoyed this video and those little round things you found in the bedroom , you would put them under a heavy piece of furniture so you could move it pretty easy. Looking forward to watching more of your videos and I hope to catch your live stream on Sunday. Stay safe and keep up the great explores.
Aww thanks jean 💙
The carpet upstairs, looked like it had a body wrapped in it,!!!! Gave me quite a start!!
Definitely love the abandoned home video's, it's hard to stop watching them! Thank you for doing these videos ☺💖
💙
really in great shape ! no one destroyed the house ! always wondered ? what happen ?
how come they didnt sell the property ? amazing find JP !
I have that same pencil sharpener from when we were kids. I always smile when I see one. We also had the retractable light fixtures. I love the glass doorknobs! I have a couple from my Great Aunt's house and I have skeleton keys in the house I live in now (a 1939 Gingerbread in St. Louis, MO) and they work. Thanks for posting these old gorgeous homes. I wish people wouldn't abandon them. They are worth saving!
Beautiful Old house, I would have loved to see it when it was new! I can just imagine the family living there and the kids running up and down that long hallway!!
I grew up in a big ol' farm house so needless to say these are my fav type of videos. Sure could relate to alot of items in this house...loved the old truck, the setting with the huge pine 🌲..great video .. Thanks JP & Mike😁👍👍👍👏
Great find Mike! I like you two together 😄
Abandoned videos are back ..keep it up ..gave ya a thumbs up👍
I absolutely love your abandoned home videos. Actually all of your abandoned videos!
I love when you explore houses the most. But I enjoy the surroundings outside as well. Good find.
Nice find with the old truck....I'm sure it was a beautiful home at one time
I have an old door from my Great Grand's place that Green and I love it. Lead paint and all
Love the abandoned house videos!! This was reminiscent of my grandpa's house, the porch and certain rooms. This house must be Very very old with not much ever done to it. Was probably a lovely place and property years ago. I can see it being costly to heat and repair, probably why it sits abandoned now. It's definitely too far gone to renovate Imo. Great to see you and Mike out and about again!! See you next video.
Wow! I loved exploring this house!
💙
Enjoyable video, JR. Thanks! I enjoyed seeing the old UHF-TV antenna on the roof and one thing that really stood out........no graffiti!
How much land
Creek. Pond pls answer?
That was really good. Always enjoyed your abandoned finds. It's what attracted me to your channel. Must have missed this one when first posted. Love the photo montage with the haunting music playing. I wonder how many memories it holds - now lost in time. Makes me feel quite sad......
Thanks......
A lot of old stuff left behind, nice to see that old house. its like a time capsule, i love the video JP.
👍
I love to see abandoned houses. This was a great video. The glass doorknobs were my favorite things. I have originals on the doors of my house, that were given to me by my Mom. Keep up your good work.
Sandee
Wonderful video Jay!!! I enjoyed watching this abandoned house video!!! The truck was an amazing surprise!!! Thank you Mike for the great Google Maps find!!! Thank you Jay for sharing!!!
Love these exploration videos. I came upon you by accident, soon realized you are kicking around in Pennsylvania. I live in Montgomery County but have done my share of kicking around in PA. Awesome stuff, guys. Keep it coming!
Awesome find guys!! Abandoned houses are definitely my favorite videos to watch!! I betcha that house was a log home back in the day. The truck was a cool bonus!! Thanks for sharing 👍🏻❤️
👍
I like these kind of videos, yours is the BEST, GREAT steady camera work, unlike most other videos I get motion sickness watching them.
Great video & snapshots!
I subbed, Thanks for posting.
Thanks for watching
The green painted wainscot appears to be old fashioned masonite tile board
I agree. We had it in our bathroom in a house we bought in the 70's that was built in the 50's.
We had it in our bathroom and kitchen in the early-mid 60’s!
Your abandoned home videos are awesome!! My mother and I used to do this all the time when I was still living in our hometown of Jonesboro, Ark.Thank you for sharing with us 😊
Thanks lynn
She is one old home. I wouldn't fixed this one. Thanks for the video Jay.
💙
That was amazing I really liked the old truck, someone could use some of those parts to restore another one. Thank you JP and Mike.
That old truck definitely does look like an old Fire Truck though the chassis in back a little too long for a pickup...especially with the dual wheels..jmho
Once was a nice warm safe place with a lot of love to give now is cold and damp and slowly turning back into dirt and Earth. Thank you for preserving what was there.
You are right about the paneling. We did the down stairs of our first home in 1969 with very similar paneling. also bought copper-tone kitchen appliances.
You are back doing what you do so brilliantly you and Mike exploring abandoned properties yay. I think my mum used to have one of those retractable lights too. I love these kinda videos the best .. i bet it was a real nice house before it was left to rot ... its so sad x
You 2 goofey guys😊🤗. Loved, loved, loved, this walk down memory lane! Pink and green colors were big in the 50's, also that up & down light for over the table, as well as that paneling and ceiling tiles. Strings on lights common also! Noticed the "patched" rectangle along wall in floors of upstairs bedrooms. Those were probably covered up when ceilings tiled downstairs and they had to remove the grates that were in upstairs floors and downstairs ceilings. Would have converted heating system at same time. We had those rectangular "boxes" covered with grates when I was growing up in northern Indiana. One of my sisters figured out how to lift the grate upstairs one time. We decided to make beds for our dolls with pillows stuffed in them. The bottom started to fall out(hanging through downstairs ceiling!!! My sister got a spanking! That was only way to heat upstairs in old days! Heat rose up through those registers. Very ornate as I recall. Probably heated with oil(in big basement tank) in old days maybe. What a walk down memory lane!
Oh. And I recall well old trucks with clutch, brake, gas paddle and shifter. That little round "button" on left of clutch was pushed in & out to dim lights. Ah....memories😊❤ Was really surprised at that mess of a basement! So thankful I stumbled on to exploring, and especially you, Mike, Cliff, and your other helpers!
Bless you all!
Very interesting-sad to see it abandoned.
Great seeing an abandoned house again and that cool old truck carcass. In the past, I have done paintings of similar old vehicles.
NEVER have seen a salmon kitchen w that accordion door before!!! Cool!!! Great old house, and setting.
I bet it was something back in the day, I tried to imagine the trees full and green grass, fully maintained. I just really love how old it is😍 that car was amazing to see too🥰
I think about that too. Its a nice simple and quiet location.
@@JPVideos81 Definitely!
I love old houses. My house is 100 years old and has those steep stairs. This must have been a nice home in it's day
Cool find Mike found! I have pocket doors in my home. It looks as though someone was attempting to restore this place. So sad, once upon a time it was a beautiful home that holds memories!
Great find!
I really enjoyed watching this , love the old retro look , thanks for sharing 😊
😊
I loved this video! Such a cool house.
Reminder is on ...the photos are great !
I love going thrrew old houses that melted my heart good find JP. There is still stuff they could of saved like the hard wood floors.
💙
Not a bad little place, that pink and green in the kitchen needs to go though. I think it could be updated and made more livable. That huge pine tree is pretty amazing, very old. The vehicle was cool. Thanks JP and Mike
Thats a really cool Grill-room. haha. Love your abandoned home vids with Mike. ps great find mike!
I love exploring places like that.. An extremely old house with nothing around to disturb the explore what could possibly go wrong? lol That hallway was really cool looking. What a nice house, you don't see too many like this anymore and I would absolutely live in one. Awesome explore as always JP!
I grew up in an old farm house. Ours was built in 1909ish. The door knob in the small room downstairs off the kitchen, square one is the same knob in my brother’s bedroom today. The light on the pulley is around the 60’s? We still have one over the kitchen table at the farm house. We also have the crystal looking door knobs upstairs. We were lucky to have closets in each of our bedroom but I noticed no closets in bedroom upstairs. Must have had wardrobes. I was glad all the furniture and personal items had been removed and not left behind. The wall paper in the upstairs hall was probably vinyl coated and it is why it has lasted so long. Flower wallpaper is from the 70’s. I was in my 20’s in the seventies so I know about the decorating over the 50, 60, 70 and up until now. Years ago they wall papered because the walls were lath and plaster and the paper lasted many years. I learned to wallpaper very young and helped my mother. I just wallpapered my kitchen a year ago, it is making a comeback. I love your videos of abandoned homes...it is sad when everything is left behind. This house was well kept and loved at one time. Thanks for the tour! Hugs. PS..the string for the hall light...we had one like that going into the finished attic at the farmhouse which had a bedroom in the attic. Just saying. Shelves in basement was for home canned goods. We canned and frozen everything we could from garden and fruit trees. That was an old farm truck, lots of old farmers had them in the 50’s for hauling everything!
Homes are definitely my favorite explore! I loved the old newspaper from '69, I would have been 2 years old. The old truck was a great find also. Would love to see it refurbished and lived in once again.
I have a new abandoned farmhouse coming out soon.
Love your abandoned house videos! Keep up the excellent work. The paneling in the one room is the exact same paneling my parents had in their basement. It's from the early 70's, I believe.
Thanks
Those coaster items at the start stop furniture from making dents in the carpet and linoleum. I could live there no problem fixed up of course. Love farmhouses and cottages.
I would love to go through these old abandoned homes. So interesting!
I will be at work when this starts. Will watch the replay later.
Abandoned homes is my favorite video type!
Not sure how I missed this one, this place is absolutely beautiful. That inside with the wood paneling, the pink and green, just amazing to see!!
And that truck was spectacular as well. It may have been a box truck at some point, those two pieces of lumber running down the frame rail are what they use to put in between whatever bed is on there in the frame rails, usually a box. They still do that today with modern trucks, the u-bolts that were there is clamps the wood to the frame.
Amazing find my friend, I really enjoyed this one, thank you for taking us along
I always love the pictures at the end...some of those could be put in frames ...pretty cool 🧱🏗🏚🏠
Lisa you can buy some of Jays beautiful pictures. I wish one day he'd make a book of them. It would be fantastic.
Neat thing about those old cars...that flap on top of the firewall, in front of the windscreen. Genius. There has to be 2nd story access, that seems too extensive for an attic.
I liked this house. It has some features that were in my grandparents house such as the old door lock, the bare bulb light fixtures and the pink color scheme :-) I appreciate how you take your time filming whole rooms and going through in an organized manner so that we can see the floor plan. I enjoy that more so than seeing what things are left in it. I think that possibly the kitchen area was the original house because of the whole log beams in the basement. The room you first came in could have been the main living area and there may have been a sleeping loft upstairs accessed by ladder. The bathroom would have been installed way later. Great video! This one really grabbed my imagination!
Its possible
Hi wow this reminds me if my grandparents house before it burnt down . let's see if I can date this house. The trees used for the supports in the basement were used about 1850 to 1880's . after that the beams were finished better. My guess is that the person's who owned it either died or ended up in a nursing home and they put the alarm system in to watch the house. Also the motion detectors in rooms could also be used to make sure an older person is walking around and is ok. A lot of this house reminds me if my grandparents they were dairy farmers outside of Towanda pa. Their house had small rooms mixed with bigger rooms too. As they got older they lived downstairs. The furnace was around in the 60s. My father was a heating contracted and as a child I saw similar furnaces. I love the flower prints and the styles are from I think the 60s too. Possibly the 50'$. I enjoyed this very much thank you for sharing it. It brings back memories of a wonderful times.
Someone obviously liked the color pink! What a cool explore - refreshing to see no graffiti. The narrow steep stairs sure brought back memories for me. My Aunt and Uncle had an old house next to their home and us kids would play in it - it had a really steep staircase with narrow treads that scared the crap outta me! I remember those old lamps with the retractable cords. Do you know how many acres were part of this place? Very cool find!!
Not off hand. But definitely a few acres.
These are my favorite videos. You do an awesome show on them. Some people just walk around but you interact as if we were there wanting to buy. Keep it up and show me more!! Love the pictures at the end. Some deserve a frame and put on my wall, lol
😊💙
Really good video, you go to some very interesting places. I want to find some places like those as the weather improves. You do a great job making your videos and I always enjoy watching thanks and stay safe.
Ty
Houses like that brings back memories.
Great find. Thanks guys!
It’s odd to have items from many years ago along side of more recent items. Somethings just not right with that house. Many stories never known by us. Cool video.
i do remember that retractable lamp, had one like that in our house when i was a kid . great explore...really liked that old truck...antique vehicles are interesting to me
Glad to see Mike back with you
Thank you Betty
Love these videos.
What an awesome find! Love the abandoned houses! Glad to see the new occupants are 'hanging' around and enjoying the place!! I think the windows are called recessed! The tree looks like a Pileated wood pecker was looking for bugs! I wonder if the old truck was a logging truck?! My daughters house is an old brick house built in the late 60's or early 70's, it has a working retractable lite in the dinning room!!! I remember having one when I was a kid!!! Thanks for another great adventure!
I love these old farm houses lets us see how the older folks lived
I used to live in an old house almost identical to that. Lived there for about 25 years. I walked away from it, and left most everything in it. If you ever run into a similar house in the piney woods of East Texas, it's mine. I still own the property, but relocated to another county and built my dream home. I should probably sell that place, but the property has been in my family for many, many years. I enjoyed this video. 👍