THIS story or HIS story: St Joseph Missouri

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  • @RM-kc6qk
    @RM-kc6qk Год назад +21

    My mother worked at the state hospital in the 60s. I remember going there it was a scary old building. In the neighborhood we lived in there was a library that was old world that was on 4 Sq blocks that had trees 3ft in diameter the place felt really old in the 60s. The Carnegie branch library

    • @elim7228
      @elim7228 Год назад +3

      That Carnegie chap was everywhere.... What a nice fellow.

    • @AndyPrawitz
      @AndyPrawitz 8 месяцев назад

      still there

    • @RM-kc6qk
      @RM-kc6qk 8 месяцев назад

      @@AndyPrawitz I take it you have been by the old library lately? It's been 30 years since I've been there. We lived on Ohio St. And went to elementary school there before moving south of KCMO in 1973.

  • @FettiMagazine
    @FettiMagazine Год назад +41

    There was a powerful kingdom in the area once upon a time. That's why all the Kansas City teams are: Chiefs, Royals, Monarchs, the Kings (before they moved to Sacramento).

  • @MariannaKatz17
    @MariannaKatz17 Год назад +14

    Thanks so much for that video. I really appreciate this video! It's what I always had envisioned the area looking like in the past. It has a very OLD FEELING to it. Recently, I had posted a house that was sold on platform. Funny you should also bring it up. I'm very grateful that you did.
    If you take a 75 mile circle with St. Joe being at the 12 o'clock, there are a lot of old towns and strange things in that radius. My grandparents lived in the area and some of our forefathers were from Independence, MO. I went to the University of Kansas in Lawrence, Ks. There a loads of old world buildings on that campus.
    Here's more for the area:
    "Kansas City Bottoms" and floods in KC. The bottoms are mind-blowing. I just drove through that area in April. It's jaw dropping when you drive through the Bottoms. One huge old world brick building after another.
    Topeka (in Kansas) the capital
    Leavenworth and Fort Leavenworth, Ks
    Atchinson, Ks is said to be the birth place of Amelia Earhart.
    Kansas City Country Club Plaza-now that's always been freakish to me.
    Cave Spring Park and the Chimney Trail Loop that's super creepy
    The Nelson Atkins Museum of Art, said to be built during the depression. (I was a volunteer in that structure for a couple of years.) No way we build that.
    Scope Park (MO)
    Kansas City Union Station
    Liberty Missouri and William Jewell College is interesting.
    SubTropolis is another freaky feature of the area.
    That's a good start.
    The entire area is fascinating. There are so many old towns and buildings everywhere in that NE Kansas and North Western MO area. Kansas City is a lot of fun, great jazz, great BBQ, excellent professional sports complex, Hallmark Center/Crown Center are just a few things to do.

  • @dwsperspectiveonreality.659
    @dwsperspectiveonreality.659 Год назад +18

    Hello my name is David I love your content. I love the fact that you're linking the pictures of the inside to the outside of this amazing unbelievable undoable architecture. I live in the South Bronx for the last 10 years in the last five I've been noticing that most of the buildings around here have more than just a little detail it's every building they all have amazing detail to the point where it's overwhelming. Just on some apartment building red brick there are old world sand Stone carved faces popping out of corners and levels in between Windows with the most detailed and unbelievable patterns and gargoyles add just classic detail from what looks like Rome! It's everywhere!

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +3

      I've seen some amazing old world stuff from the Bronx. I should take a closer look...thanks for the kind words.

    • @elim7228
      @elim7228 Год назад +2

      I guess we know the excuse for Bronx Riots now?

    • @AndyPrawitz
      @AndyPrawitz 8 месяцев назад

      Most of these 'impossible' buildings still exist, come see them sometime

    • @missygarner1850
      @missygarner1850 2 месяца назад

      Every time I'm up there (from Tennessee) all I can do is look up in awe and take tons of pics.

  • @MrBlueSky1978
    @MrBlueSky1978 Год назад +7

    The interior shots of the Shakespeare Chateau near the end of this video are mind blowing. We don't know exactly what Tartarian society was really like but they sure put a high priority on visual beauty 😍🤩

  • @gbowman9429
    @gbowman9429 Год назад +3

    When you mentioned "the haunting" of houses narrative, I was thinking just moments before that, that telling people old creepy houses kept people out of them. Mind blowing revelation.

  • @tribeoflightband8145
    @tribeoflightband8145 Год назад +24

    Love your work man, so it appears the insane asylums were for those who inhabited other buildings, and found the antique-tech useful and subsequently had to be removed. Leaving orphans with no roots. Whoever [they] are atrocious excuses for a human…perhaps the force behind them was a regressive nonhuman race bent on control, greed, and even a harvesting of our consciousness or life force. I don’t know man, but we’ve definitely been lied to and the sheer volume just in this one location, not to mention all the other ones you’ve covered is absolutely astounding. Well done I appreciate your work

  • @jthepickle7
    @jthepickle7 Год назад +37

    You'd think, after 30 years of being a carpenter, that I would have installed at least one window half way underground - but nope!

    • @Effin_the_Chat
      @Effin_the_Chat Год назад +11

      You don't get it. Back in the old days, people who lived in the basement liked to look at dirt.

    • @elim7228
      @elim7228 Год назад +4

      ​@@Effin_the_Chatnot just dirt, but they all had a foot fetish. All of them. Hence the asylums castles everywhere. What do we know!

    • @tsijr915
      @tsijr915 Год назад +4

      @@elim7228 dont forget prone floodings, what free way to wash off when it rains after watching feet and dirt all day.
      We're such a spolied generation to have "in door plumbing"
      (lol)

    • @elim7228
      @elim7228 Год назад +1

      @@tsijr915 that is because most people never had to try and salvage their belongings from dirty cold water in the basement. This would provide them with reasonable explanation to never install windows half buried in the ground in flood prone areas.

    • @TeeMac1620
      @TeeMac1620 7 месяцев назад

      Those buildings have a sidewalk outside the building! If you want to see what it looked like when it was actually used, view the movie "Paper Moon" with Ryan O'neal and his daughter Tatum. The scenes toward the end, were St Joseph and Kansas across the river and one scene takes place in downtown St Joe, outside one of the very buildings you are laughing about. As a child I went down the steps outside many of those buildings. They were simply larger basement windows with walkways and often courtyards built below the ground. I am glad our town's quaint buildings make you laugh so much.

  • @mamat5097
    @mamat5097 Год назад +3

    I love your work. I don't see how one could hold on to the historical narrative we've been given, after viewing your and other's research of ancient American architecture ! I've always been drawn to old and golden era movies. Now, I understand why. Keep up the magnificent work !🙌🏽😊💜

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +2

      The 'romance' of the past is calling to us. Thanks for your kind words..

  • @darianeagan6670
    @darianeagan6670 Год назад +6

    I was once incarcerated at the prison in St. Joe, once an insane asylum. The inside of the main housing complex was built very nicely. It had marble and granite all throughout with brass inlays instead of grout or mortar. This was 18 years ago maybe. Extremely nice on the inside for lunatics or prisoners.
    There are tunnels all under the complex. Many experience hauntings as well…

  • @adamheskett6245
    @adamheskett6245 Год назад +23

    If every stone building built between 1888 and 1892 were added together and the stonecutters or skilled stoneworkers tallied we would find the number required would far exceed the number available worldwide.
    Also, where are the descendants of those stone workers who learned from their fathers or grandfathers how to do any of this stonework. Literally nobody knows anyone who can do this work.

    • @lightwavz
      @lightwavz Год назад +10

      "Hey, look! Free masonry!"

    • @adamheskett6245
      @adamheskett6245 Год назад +9

      @@lightwavz this whole debacle is a nightmare from a Human Resources perspective. Also I’ve noticed either the time period builders of late 1800’s build like ancient castles or just make barn that falls over easily. No middle ground. Either great or crappy.

    • @Kat.Evangeline14
      @Kat.Evangeline14 Год назад

      Supposedly
      Power tools were invented (from the Inventory) in 1896.
      If i am wrong - correct me.
      I just learned that info from watching great channels like this.
      Autodidactic was the first.

    • @AndyPrawitz
      @AndyPrawitz 8 месяцев назад

      St Joseph had a Bricklayers' Union with 124 members in 1898

    • @adamheskett6245
      @adamheskett6245 8 месяцев назад

      @@AndyPrawitz check out Westminster college in Colorado. Built 1892. Looks like an ancient castle for king Ahab of the Bible.

  • @Effin_the_Chat
    @Effin_the_Chat Год назад +23

    For some time now, I've suspected the cause of the mud flood was the eruption of Mt. Tambora in 1815. It spewed so much ash and sediment into the atmosphere that it blocked out the sun and 1816 was known as the year without a summer. The debris would have precipitated in rain and snow and laid down a good deal of fresh new earth. The only RUclipsr I've ever heard propose the same theory is Armored Skeptic. I'm throwing it out there for other people to ponder, criticize, or support.
    If it's true, then we can date mud flood buildings to having been constructed prior to 1815, which would contradict many of the official narratives.

    • @elim7228
      @elim7228 Год назад +1

      Coincidentally, this is their "Napoleonic wars" period, of course. They had to come up with a plausible explanation. Something most people would take in without blinking.

    • @Effin_the_Chat
      @Effin_the_Chat Год назад +3

      @@elim7228 The timeline fits right in with Napoleon. I'm just not sure exactly what's going on there.
      I do know that's the year Mary Shelly stayed inside, buckled down, and wrote Frankenstein.

    • @hawaiiguykailua6928
      @hawaiiguykailua6928 Год назад +1

      Cymatics would be my weapon of choice, if I were a complete and utter sociopath, which I 100% am not:), but that's an insane weapon in the wrong hands.

    • @SGDeGalvez
      @SGDeGalvez Год назад +1

      not trying to imply I know whats up, but the thing that puzzles me with this whole mud flood theory is ..where is the carnage? Bones, semi preserved bodies, horses, carts etc. I mean this thing is confusing as hell. If there was a catastrophe, where is the carnage? These buildings and cities would have had 100's of thousands of people, and equipment to go with it. I cant figure that part of it out.

    • @bluevireo425
      @bluevireo425 Год назад +3

      @@SGDeGalvez Look into the Catacombs....millions and millions under Paris and other cities...and this is only a drop in the bucket of what they let us see...supposedly hundreds more miles of bones where the public cannot explore...!

  • @elim7228
    @elim7228 Год назад +9

    Amazing video. You show so many inconsistencies in the narrative, i can't believe others don't see it. And me - once seen, I can't 'unsee' them LoL
    Thank you for the effort to present hidden in plain sight "his-story".
    My two cents: any building that features a business name or description that's painted over the facade or shown on a piece of dirty canvas - is a building taken over by new owners. The original builders would have incorporated the name into the design of the building as part of a stonework. When you see such on an old photograph - this is a dead giveaway that building has been repurposed by the pirates in suits.

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +1

      Pirates in suits....nice. Reminds me of a Bob Marley lyric, 'old pirates yes they rob I, sold I to the merchant ship'

  • @lightwavz
    @lightwavz Год назад +8

    There must have been some very robust horses and mules in Missouri to haul and hoist all that intricately quarried stone up in the air. Wooden scaffolding? See any brick ovens anywhere? Glass factories? Hardwood forest logging operations?! That's centuries of tree growth if nothing else.

    • @mitchdowning8188
      @mitchdowning8188 Год назад

      Great observation about the lack of infrastructure to manufacture the materials for the large masonry buildings and (star) forts like Ft. Jefferson or Ft. Sumter . It is interesting to consider how many of the colonists were involved in the timber trades in the 1800s and how many "virgin" forests there were at the time. It didn't take long for them to decimate the forests to the extent that soil erosion was carrying millions of tons of topsoil down the Missouri, Ohio, Tennessee, and Mississippi Rivers (to name a few) and into the Gulf of Mexico every year. States like Tennessee were virtually devoid of topsoil and ditches and gulleys were everywhere by the time the TVA was started ( circa 1920s).

  • @iammrpete
    @iammrpete Год назад +4

    Searching for truth is becoming a popular past time. Thank you for all you do. You make my day 😊

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +1

      And you make mine...

    • @hawaiiguykailua6928
      @hawaiiguykailua6928 Год назад

      I do question if we're not inside another theatrical distraction? As fascinating as this topic is, it can't be a coincidence it popped up when it did. Just another fascinating distraction while the current reset marches on no?

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +2

      @@hawaiiguykailua6928 Mmmm...I think we have to wake up and remember before it's too late...and I think that's what's happening. Their great reset is doomed.

    • @ladymeringue9870
      @ladymeringue9870 Год назад +1

      @@hawaiiguykailua6928it’s always healthy to question whether it’s another distraction, however this research has only caught on so quickly because of the internet.
      Same with the actor-based reality which is another mind-blowing phenomenon that would have been almost impossible to prove without the internet.

  • @dii6266
    @dii6266 Год назад +4

    I really enjoyed your presentation. Lots of great photos, and excellent comments. Just subscribed.

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад

      Welcome aboard...and thank you.

  • @nyquil762
    @nyquil762 Год назад +6

    Your videos are the best brother💯

  • @hiddentruthhiddentruth
    @hiddentruthhiddentruth Год назад +3

    Great video!... and the upper floor removal is definitely spot on and one of the many things done to these buildings... although in a few examples of the before and after pics I'm not sure they are the same building when carefully counting the windows and features to compare the two. That being said, there is a stellar example of roof/floor removal in your video that I wanted to mention... At 50:37 the Noyes Norman building comes up... If you look carefully you will see on the front there are 2 left windows and two right windows and a bigger One window in the center divided down it's middle. Not counting the Base floor where there is a current front door, there are Four floors above the floor with the front door... then One more entire floor on top of That! This is 5 upper floors for a total of 6 floors in all above ground. In the next picture at 50:43, you will see the same building with the same window configuration. Also the side windows match up to the first photo... but in this picture the entire top level is Missing! That leave a grand total of 5 floors above ground with 4 upper floors. This is a direct comparison where the windows match. Even the flagpole on the top corner was moved down a floor in the second picture. The picture scrubbers seem to miss some here and there and that's what shows truth. I visited St. Joseph about 6 months ago but got there end of day when it was getting dark and that and the wind messed up some of the few I filmed not to mention it was quite cold! Hope to make it back sometime.

  • @SGDeGalvez
    @SGDeGalvez Год назад +5

    very interesting 21:32 the relief on the wall is very similar to a depiction of a Sumerian god. Anunnaki style. I've been scouring st lous old world buildings for a couple of years now looking for clues to the builders.

  • @hawaiiguykailua6928
    @hawaiiguykailua6928 Год назад +3

    Great work as always! 1888 electric trams haha. More than a decade behind New Zealand cities and only a year or two ahead of Manaus, Amazonas, which didn't get a road to the coast until the 1970s:) Ah, this realms narratives:)

  • @eesgirl13
    @eesgirl13 2 месяца назад +1

    I live in saint Joseph moved here last year in October from texas the architecture of the buildings and houses is beautiful. I have love for victorian ara

  • @faaqcee7896
    @faaqcee7896 Год назад +2

    8 minutes 35 seconds in.
    If you notice on that side door towards the right of the picture, you'll see that it looks as though a threshold was removed in order to create the entrance way. At the bottom on the left of the doorway, one can see an indent equal to the size of the thresholds of the remaining windows.
    These smaller towns make it very hard to accept the veracity of the current narrative.
    Great work, thanks for the video!

  • @lechatleblanc
    @lechatleblanc Год назад +1

    love love love the background music ... makes it so much
    more intruiging and inspiring...and u pick the best music ... i like how u dont have to play it the whole time...but just spurts of it really helps me stay inspired and engaged in the video

  • @wapartist
    @wapartist Год назад +4

    I gotta tell ya man. I would have thought these theories were absurd until watching several of your videos. Definitely has me looking differently and i do commercial building inspections

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +1

      I appreciate that thank you.

  • @hendo337
    @hendo337 Год назад +1

    That house @5:49 is for sale, it appearantly had elaborate pourches on it, supposedly wasn't a row building despite falt windowless sides, was divided into 6 units. I wish I could afford to go buy it and fix it up. What a gem.

  • @pcguy4648
    @pcguy4648 Год назад +3

    The signage in these old photos just kills me... its such an afterthought application. If I was an architect and commissioned to build a specific set of plans for a specific company, I believe I would inquire if they (the company) would like their namesake or moniker applied within the architecture. Something at the least that meshed or flowed with the stylistic design. Just paint the side of building with block lettering and a cartooney product.. yeah that looks good. In contrast (although also not original), I've seen some of the signage from narrow streets in Europe that employ much nicer looking wrought iron/gold leafed hanging store signs. That style feels more complimentary to the old architecture.

  • @luxuriousfir
    @luxuriousfir Год назад +6

    Awesome content 👍

  • @Billygoat710
    @Billygoat710 Год назад +1

    52:45 still with ya, chuckling right along with ya! Imo your investigation into st Joseph is up there with the most 🤯 places you’d never think buildings as such existed.

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад

      I appreciate that. Always love it when you drop in here..

  • @karmenchristensen9845
    @karmenchristensen9845 Год назад +5

    Governments got the best of the best buildings, didn’t they? Post offices, courthouses, city halls..... bastards.

    • @hawaiiguykailua6928
      @hawaiiguykailua6928 Год назад

      Don't be so sure of that, most likely they were selected due to there cymatics. There's a very real reason why good people go evil once inside these buildings of "power" and the real controllers knew which ones to choose to send there lemmings into from get go. Seems the cymatics in these have kicked up to pure insanity level the past decade plus?

  • @dn744
    @dn744 Год назад +4

    Something people often forget about machines. Not all are electrical. In 1712 Thomas Newcomen made commercial steam powered machine. Over the next 50 years, this kind ran everything from lathes and saws, to stone cutting. Yet for hundreds of years before, they were powered by water wheels and pulleys. Industry didn't begin with electric 😊

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +5

      You make a good point...but still...there are holes.

    • @dn744
      @dn744 Год назад +1

      @@oldworldex yes, masses of it still isn't answerable. Wars hide history well. Whoever wins, tells their story.

  • @lightwavz
    @lightwavz Год назад +1

    You know, when you stare at the title "Live Stock Exchange" for a few minutes with a freshly opened mind, new ideas start rolling out. Insert every emoji here.

  • @MegaTriumph1
    @MegaTriumph1 Год назад +3

    One thing that strikes me besides the artwork is the fenced off flat tops on some of those old buildings. I mean if its going to rain a flat topped roof area would be harder to maintain. It must of been used for something else and no I don't mean a look out area I mean so other means of transportation.

  • @Kat.Evangeline14
    @Kat.Evangeline14 Год назад +1

    This research fascinates me so & their lies are exposed - for me at least. I appreciate your time and dedication
    At least I know what not to believe; His story.

  • @pmg8822
    @pmg8822 Год назад +3

    Also there was a story of how the town was littered with tunnels.......supposedly a bulldozer fell into one during a construction project

  • @Billygoat710
    @Billygoat710 Год назад

    33:00 BOOM! Great find and eye! This is a massive tell of, as you said, a repurposed building.

  • @scottbaker-ScottyB
    @scottbaker-ScottyB Год назад +2

    Ha ! , Last mention " Just mentioning newspaper clipping " Turkish Baths " would indicate a time period (give away ) a possible date of the late 1300's when St. Joseph , Missouri city was built .

  • @brandichristopher8521
    @brandichristopher8521 7 месяцев назад

    Krug Park used to be a very popular place back before my time. My mom told me those archways used to have bars over them. They kept lions in them. You should look into the park.

  • @MrJamesschro
    @MrJamesschro Год назад +4

    Crazy to see the shot in the 1870s with around 20k people living there.
    My home town in Connecticut had about 20k people, just a bunch of old wooden houses, biggest buildings were the schools which were also small and not very ornate.
    That seems like the part in history that makes the least amount of sense... These fully developed town centers with cobble paved roads and rows of ornate multi story stone and brick buildings.
    It just seems impossible...

    • @MrJamesschro
      @MrJamesschro Год назад +2

      The Lunatic asylum alone looks like it could house about 3000 or 4000 people....

    • @elim7228
      @elim7228 Год назад

      And we know these people were counting every penny. They literally gave their children away to start working at ages 6-7 . Yet, they were so generous when it came to decorating the local "opera" house. Opera? All they really needed was a saloon next to the liquor store. What a mind job....

  • @joehill8014
    @joehill8014 Год назад +2

    Have you ever considered the Golden Ratio when looking at old buildings that appear to have been partly buried by mud flooding. Some thing just looks off. Look at 15:04 the front view of that building just doesn't look right. I am sure the architect designed this building based on the Golden Ratio, and at one time its portions were symmetric and eye catching. But after the flooding and repair work you can see that the full effect of the Golden Ratio is gone.

  • @drs7804
    @drs7804 6 месяцев назад +1

    Well we are so sorry that so many of the Mental Health Hospitals around America have been shut down to your determent. You sir, certainly need continued treatment. I'm 68 and have lived in St.Jo.Mo. since 1985. Yeah, many of these buildings remain, many are gone. When the tax cost remains but the usefulness of the building has gone, they often are demolished. Also, when the tops might fall off when aged and injure pedestrians, is a reason to remove the ornate trim at the top of the buildings.
    As for the slopes we see on the ground level and the half basement windows, this is due to St Joe being a River Town and very hilly ! And, as much light as possible was needed in those basements before electric lighting was in its prime.
    Yes, there was an 'OLD WORLD' and a World Flood which happened more close to 4400 years ago, not 200 years or Whatever you're saying. That 'Noah's' Flood did resculpture the surface of the planet, such as the Missouri River Valley, etc.
    There was nothing but Native Americans scratching out their living in the forests and meadows here before 1826 when Joseph Robidoux (pron. Ruby-Due) arrived and set up a trading post. Since then the town gradually grew, and I'm sure if you look at other American Towns of the time like Chicago or St. Louis, they too had Ornate buildings (as the history of America was one of the greatest economic engines, before the freebies and regulation of today slowed growth down). Saint Joseph, Mo. gained its wealth from the Wagon Train Industry that started here for further western expansion. The Railroads were set to build St.Joe up more, however the town called Kansas City just to the South won that bidding war and St.Joe never got bigger . However, It was in its day one of the wealthiest cities in the U.S.

  • @dn744
    @dn744 Год назад +3

    The UK always says Roman road, to any that were cobbled. So I thought that's how it was. Till I travelled. Roamans didn't go to India, Cape Town, Australia or New Zealand 😕 but I still found cobbled Streets? It only sparked my curiosity, to lots more 😊 Plus with an expanding population, why so much dereliction 😮

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +4

      Roman seems to be the fall back answer in the UK for anything that gets unearthed. I think it's a cover story for the old world...the old empires were just a global civilization that existed realmwide.

    • @dn744
      @dn744 Год назад +1

      @@oldworldex Yes, 100%

    • @maggiemae7539
      @maggiemae7539 Год назад

      Rome was an empire! They ruled the world!

  • @6rowmafia943
    @6rowmafia943 Год назад +1

    I was an electrician in the local union is st. Joe for 20 years. I have personally worked in most of the buildings in this video. The one I would like to point out is at the 47 min mark. That is the downtown libray/school district office. I worked on the main floor/basement remodeling of that building 20 years ago. Right of the entrance through the front doors in the tile floor is the year 1900, for when the building was built. In the attic on the steel beams are names and dates of construction workers dating back to 1900 (I added my name too). Inside an interior wall I found a crumpled up piece of st. Joe news press from 1900. The "old world" stuff intrigues me but I have seen proof otherwise. P.S the building was originally plumbed for lighting using gas.....also I have a "theory" on the lower level windows, I belive it was for daylight to light those areas. JMHO.

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +1

      It's an interesting city. Thanks for your input here. You have to wonder when did we stop putting the date of construction on the buildings...why wouldn't we be carrying on that practice into the modern day? The construction process and many of the timelines for these construction processes don't fit....hence the speculation.

  • @randibabb8559
    @randibabb8559 10 месяцев назад

    I love the video and it’s constant urging to question what is shown and what was actually in existence, however I was born and raised in st Joseph Missouri and I have some information u may benefit from… around the 1900’s we were competing with Kansas City and everything that traveled via railroad/ river/barges and new roads to our city whether it was traveling or settling people the rural areas surrounding our city was also growing and I have no idea how populations were counted for those building the massive archeological buildings (likely migrating workers from rural areas or barges or railroad cars.. but I offer for you to come see for yourself many have tscaled down or destroyed/crumbled. But plenty still stand . As for krug park it was a family estate and me krug left it to the city for all to enjoy and it was evolved into the beauty it is in its own rite. And the windows leading underground into basements or massive tunnels that housed machinery creating extremely hot steam that generated power to the businesses in the buildings prohibition and Underground Railroad and even mob dealings but today is our sewer system…

  • @allenschmitz9644
    @allenschmitz9644 Год назад +3

    Yea it was all street to street fighting and bow and arrow snipers from every tower in St, Joe back in the day.

  • @karmenchristensen9845
    @karmenchristensen9845 Год назад +3

    When you look at all the buildings that were chopped off - taken down a few levels- one can see where the excess bricks came from to build the boxy, bland buildings in the downtowns.

  • @michaeltreacy6356
    @michaeltreacy6356 Год назад +5

    While I myself am a fan of the old world ("Tartarian") hypothesis, we do need to keep in mind that France held the Midwest for some time and many of these structures might well be correctly attributed to their presence. This period is only glossed over in public school.

    • @lightwavz
      @lightwavz Год назад +4

      I don't really care who was in charge. I care how they hauled mega tons of intricately quarried stone and hoisted it up multiple stories with no machinery and mud roads and wooden horse carts.

    • @larrystrick1862
      @larrystrick1862 Год назад +1

      France had the best horse and buggy.

  • @MrFlatstore
    @MrFlatstore 8 месяцев назад

    Great video Sir. Lived here all my 71 years. Not the town it once was sadly. BTW Robidoux is pronouced RU - BE - DO. St Joe is mentioned in a lot of old movies and some were filmed here. One was Paper Moon

  • @jamessharpe6699
    @jamessharpe6699 Год назад +3

    To see how hard people are fighting something so obvious as the Mandela effect which affects us all I can't imagine how people are kicking and screaming when you start talking about things 100 years ago and further

    • @tsijr915
      @tsijr915 Год назад +1

      its breaking someone's reality, the most possibly equivalence if your brother told you "mom and dad killed ur real parents, ate them, and took you in as one of their own" without every knowing, then you find out the entire state knew and just didn't bother to tell you because they didn't care. The level of worlds that get broken in your view, sometimes people go insane , which ironically, there was massive amounts of insane asylum for a very young country that could barely feed it self, even way past World War.

    • @elim7228
      @elim7228 Год назад +2

      Back then it was a ticket to the asylum, probably.

  • @randy7928
    @randy7928 11 месяцев назад +1

    It makes sense that we were so determined to push westward because these cities had been discovered.

  • @mantisgardens1375
    @mantisgardens1375 Год назад +2

    People just need to realize that whenever you have a flood especially over land you will always have sediment left over (Mud)

  • @muneyjodye
    @muneyjodye Год назад +2

    21:33
    Mural of lamassu is a celestial being from ancient Mesopotamian religion bearing a human head, symbolising intelligence, a bull's body, symbolizing strength; and wings an eagle to symbolize freedom. Sometimes it had the horns and the ears of a bull, It appears frequently in Mesopotamian art.
    Why tf was there a mural of that foo in Missouri 1900?
    There’s also ancient Anunaki artifacts in the Kansas City, MO museum
    Interesting

  • @thewanderingwoodsman2654
    @thewanderingwoodsman2654 Год назад +1

    I have family from St Joe, MO. FYI Jesse James house was moved there and wasn't originally built there. Just wanted to clarify that part. Great content though. Totally new perspective!

  • @Sojourner441
    @Sojourner441 Год назад +10

    My old boss used to tell me All the time “Rome wasn’t built in one day Debbie” 😂 if I saw him today I would say “Well according to Wiki, it WAS built in a day, the whole damn world was built in a day Mr Boss Man 😂

  • @BillYoder
    @BillYoder 4 месяца назад

    Do an exploration on Council Bluffs, Iowa and Sioux City Iowa please.

  • @Billygoat710
    @Billygoat710 Год назад

    No doubt, friend, St Joseph is filled with some unique structures at quite the quantity!

  • @mamat5097
    @mamat5097 Год назад +1

    Also, ik n this video you have a building, Letts-,Spencer Grocer. I found the same building on Google, but it was Letts Parker Grocer Co. Do you have any additional information on that building/company?
    Lastly, can you do Chicago?

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад

      I don't have any more info on these locations, just bringing the visuals forward. If you find anything more feel free to email me what you find. Chicago is a monumental task. I've hesitated on it for that reason. One of these days I'll tackle it, it would most likely be a couple hours.

  • @scottbaker-ScottyB
    @scottbaker-ScottyB Год назад +3

    An observation ; seems as though Old World Electric Street Cars was ended for some reason , and coal powered trains Locomotives and eventually Diesel Locomotives pulled these old world street cars or trolleys " Renaming " them railroad cars. Also cannot find any factories building street cars only Tool and Die shop repair electrical DYNO ??? , for timing motor machinery .

    • @larrystrick1862
      @larrystrick1862 Год назад

      Jesse James was jacking streetcars in his teens.

    • @elim7228
      @elim7228 Год назад +1

      An LRT makes no economic sense in a city less than 300 thousands inhabitants.
      There lies the answer to both questions: who built it and when.

  • @pmg8822
    @pmg8822 Год назад +1

    Also, supposedly, there were many bootleggers in the 20s that parked antique vehicles in there

  • @matthewpohlman
    @matthewpohlman Год назад +2

    South Bend street cars? No wonder 'mayor Pete' is transportation secretary. Now it all makes sense.

  • @Seriouslyserialbehaviors
    @Seriouslyserialbehaviors 10 месяцев назад +1

    I have lived here my whole life. There is so much more but good job. And it’s joseph Roo-bi-doo

  • @CuriosityTheorist
    @CuriosityTheorist 8 месяцев назад

    This music is too much 😂 I'm stressed out, then your voice brings me back down

  • @steveodonnell6533
    @steveodonnell6533 Год назад +1

    Good content brother 👍

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +1

      Thank you it means a lot..

  • @scottbaker-ScottyB
    @scottbaker-ScottyB Год назад +3

    A good topic to research Electric Street Cars VS. The Electric Automobiles or for that matter the first Automobiles .

  • @Tiffany-mu6br
    @Tiffany-mu6br Год назад +3

    33:04 "mudflood" was Armageddon

    • @Kat.Evangeline14
      @Kat.Evangeline14 Год назад

      Probably

    • @Tiffany-mu6br
      @Tiffany-mu6br 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@Kat.Evangeline14 I feel the end is near... So glad to see more and more people waking up to this deception and learning we are at the end

  • @BoxerBruce
    @BoxerBruce 8 месяцев назад

    What is the significance of the griffon in the old world?

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  8 месяцев назад +3

      It was one of the symbols on the Tartarian flag.

  • @Sunnie6868
    @Sunnie6868 Год назад

    Wow on awesome AGAIN!! 💚

  • @lookn4heal
    @lookn4heal Год назад

    Much of Missouri is like that. Jefferson City is a good example.

  • @freebird1292
    @freebird1292 11 месяцев назад

    Love the content buddy!!

  • @scottpike9009
    @scottpike9009 7 месяцев назад

    Wow, to many buildings for so few people.

  • @pcguy4648
    @pcguy4648 Год назад +1

    At 21:30 wondering how old that photo is... that's 100% a Lamassu on the wall... I believe books state Assyrian Lamassu discovered mid 19th century (believed to be from late 800's BC, quick goodle search). Such contrast to today, we are trying to build style "of the day" or even "futurist modern", where as these past buildings incorporated ancient art and style if we are to believe they were constructed when said.

  • @mitchdowning8188
    @mitchdowning8188 Год назад

    If the narrative we are given is to be believed, the immigrants to the original 13 colonies of the U.S. were a mix of small numbers of landed gentry who were probably sponsored/bankrolled by the colonizers, (these inherited the lands with the most beautiful & functional infrastructure and wielded political power in the New World), and large numbers of religious outcasts (pilgrims) , indentured servants, and those without means in the Old World.
    In the Civil War the Union army hired around 200,000 mercenary soldiers ( most from Germany). Many entire companies in the Union Army were German speaking soldier. Many of these ex-soldiers remained in the U.S. and called for their family and friends to join them in the "land of opportunity". So it came to be that German, Swiss, Scandinavian, and many eastern European country immigrants came to settle primarily in the mid-western and frontier areas of the U.S. in the post Civil War era. Hence the name "Germantown" for many cities in these regions.

  • @nocensors
    @nocensors Год назад +1

    yeah, still with you. it's fascinating.

  • @official_hnasty
    @official_hnasty 6 месяцев назад +1

    So, St. Joseph was originally supposed to be what Kansas City became. Hence the Union Station and Stockyards. During Pony Express times, it was the more active/booming city.. There's also lots of stories of mentally ill people being released after the original state asylum closed, reproducing and continuing to populate the area, hence the mental health and addiction issues in the area. I'd love to see what you could dig up on "Roseport,Kansas (Elwood,currently) during these times. Thank you for your video!

  • @pmg8822
    @pmg8822 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for doing st jo! It's pronounced " roobidoo"

  • @brandichristopher8521
    @brandichristopher8521 7 месяцев назад

    30:14 The high school you can't find anything about was the first Benton High School. I graduated from the second location. I believe there was a fire at the first one.

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  7 месяцев назад

      fire is a likely story..

    • @official_hnasty
      @official_hnasty 6 месяцев назад

      @@oldworldex the pic labeled "high school" was the 1st Benton

  • @lookn4heal
    @lookn4heal Год назад

    Technically, calling it a “mud flood” would also be a mislabel. When our eather generation system collapsed it would have caused a massive earthquake. Powerful enough to liquidate soil. Same reason we have earth quakes now, our generator is not distributing properly.

  • @scottbaker-ScottyB
    @scottbaker-ScottyB Год назад

    Time stamp 57 : 51 - Shakespeare design interior , seems to be created for the normal human person's mind as to trigger or drift into some sort of cognitive perception if one were to gaze into the detail art work it seems to me.

  • @coldsteelrail1123
    @coldsteelrail1123 5 месяцев назад

    There is an old prison in St. Jo.... I know many that have been thru it. I thought the old lunatic asylum was it, that same complex....turned into a 'modern' prison in MO.

  • @scottbaker-ScottyB
    @scottbaker-ScottyB Год назад

    Ha ! , Got to see " Photos of street car Intersection Roanoke Va. "!

  • @larrystrick1862
    @larrystrick1862 Год назад

    This metropolis may be the founding city of the world, mammoth relics knows.

  • @CH-so8tn
    @CH-so8tn Год назад

    What I'm curious about this mud flood event is where did all the material come from that covers up parts of these buildings?

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +1

      Have you looked into the 'melted buildings' theory?

    • @MrBlueSky1978
      @MrBlueSky1978 Год назад +2

      The information I have is that a frequency weapon turned the ground into a quagmire worldwide which meant the buildings sank by an average of 15 feet. Even if people didn't drown in the mud the water and food supply would be compromised so surviving this event was unlikely unless you were on a boat on a body of water 🤔

    • @CH-so8tn
      @CH-so8tn Год назад +3

      @@oldworldex I've seen videos on this. Could be some sort of plasma event maybe? Who knows for sure. One thing for sure is that our history is not what we've been told.

    • @mitchdowning8188
      @mitchdowning8188 Год назад +1

      it is interesting that most of the "inherited" ornate buildings remained relatively level (unlike the famous leaning tower of Pisa in Italy). Yes, the mud covering is not uniform, but the buildings themselves remained stable and upright. So the mud accumulated in a less physically destructive
      way in some "tartarian" style buildings in America than it did in the melted buildings found in some areas of the middle east. Were particle beam type weapons used in an earlier era, or only in specific locations in the same era? Hell should freeze over before I repeat that same old ice comet theory comment again.

    • @CH-so8tn
      @CH-so8tn Год назад

      @@MrBlueSky1978 That's an interesting theory but the likelihood of all the buildings staying intake is not very likely. Just think about how when a house settles just a little bit the cracks that form in various places. Now try to imagine a whole building "settling" 15". Maybe if the building was built on a slab, but still then I'd think the building would suffer catastrophic damage.

  • @tashalafond6798
    @tashalafond6798 9 месяцев назад

    on the time 3040 that is Lafyette high school... north joe town

    • @AndyPrawitz
      @AndyPrawitz 8 месяцев назад +1

      Old Central High School in mid-town

  • @mantisgardens1375
    @mantisgardens1375 Год назад +1

    For recent mud flood demonstrations look at Saudi Arabia desert flood aftermath 3 ft of sand in houses

  • @irisgreene4175
    @irisgreene4175 Год назад +1

    I need to look into the history of Presbyterians more… you seem to have a lot of pics of Presbyterian churches. Curious to know what gives re the seeming predominance of that branch, if anything at all.
    Great vid, thank you!

  • @Christopher-h6w
    @Christopher-h6w 7 месяцев назад +1

    Here , something to ponder 🤔🧐, what if what caused the Mud Floods Etc Resets, Liquefaction and Subverted Subversion, not all of it wasn't destroyed thankfully, we have beautiful Glorious Remnants. Capital's Etc Cathedrals Gothic Architecture, Domes Octagons Etc. but what if the Original Previously History inhabitants originators civilization, had weapons, energy free energy and, some of the buildings too. When trying to defeat the invaders, intruder's, somehow , the enemy, rebound or bounce back the intended energy back onto the Original Previously History inhabitants originators civilization, and destroyed. Now the weapons weren't nefarious or evil. But the enemy, did something, interjection subversion,?? Who knows. It must a been so desperate horrific events, for a civilization, to go though that Trickery, they never new what hit 🎯 them. Now some people escape , and a good portion survived. But the numbers were far less than previously, remember they were given this Eden. They balanced it with Spiritual existence and Technology existence. The enemy was dwarfed by the Size and Scope of Glorious Humans.

  • @billywhite1362
    @billywhite1362 Год назад +2

    Yes I’m still with you on the video.
    And no it’s not making any sense as usual.
    But hey, I love the warm thrill of confusion.

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +1

      Well I appreciate you being here....

  • @BoxerBruce
    @BoxerBruce 8 месяцев назад

    There’s mud flood evidence all over St Joseph. I see it daily

  • @shawnybee
    @shawnybee 9 месяцев назад

    Founded=Found Dead... I'm pretty sure that's how they found everything

  • @PremiumToyCollect
    @PremiumToyCollect Год назад +3

    Fur trade le France 🇫🇷

  • @mantisgardens1375
    @mantisgardens1375 Год назад

    I think people just get confused with the term mud flood and they think that there is flowing mud flooding towns...

    • @MrBlueSky1978
      @MrBlueSky1978 Год назад +1

      Liquefaction is a better and more accurate term 🙂

  • @AndyPrawitz
    @AndyPrawitz 8 месяцев назад +2

    If you have a couple of DAYS I could refute a good deal of your suppositions. Most of the "Sheer volume" of magnificent architecture you say can't exist is still here, come and see it some time. So many times you say you couldn't find any further information, you are NOT a researcher! For example our first Central High School. Stating that we just could not have so many high rise manufacturing plants when you start off the video with "jumping off point for the west"? Just for example research Wyeth Manufacturing. Grocers were NOT grocery stores they were grocery suppliers for the entire area and for those heading west. The "mystery" of the street levels? Elevation starts at 801 ft and goes up to 1113 ft. we were built on HILLS. My great great Grandfather arrived in St Joseph just before the Civil War, I know a bit about the REAL history of our town.

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  8 месяцев назад +1

      I'm not saying the architecture can't exist..I'm saying it can't exist with the given historical narrative. I'm saying history is a lie...the timeline has been distorted. You're obviously emotionally attached to the story you've been told..it's bigger than you could possibly imagine.

    • @AndyPrawitz
      @AndyPrawitz 8 месяцев назад

      Wear your tinfoil well@@oldworldex

  • @dougrennpferd904
    @dougrennpferd904 Год назад +2

    at 21:40 , isn't there a big griffin bas relief on the inside wall of the theatre ? the griffin , early american mascot ... apparently

    • @Christopher-h6w
      @Christopher-h6w 7 месяцев назад +1

      No that's Tartaria, The Griffin nothing, from His Storyline , is accurate. This land of North America, was Grand Tartaria and The original Jerusalem Salem Promise Land Utah is Judah Hmm Egypt here also The Original Previously History inhabitants originators civilization. You say Garden of Eden Mother land's Atlantis Mayan Olmec and Etc and Lumurean and The Original Orient East everything else came from the Original Primordial, the America's aren't some damn, excuse me New World. This is the Original Primordial Old World. You say Africa, Which One, this is the Original. You say India, not Hindustan, how about Cathay or China Grand Tartaria. Call it what it's supposed to be. The Screwball So call Founders, give me a break. 🛑 The tiring confusion interjection subversion lying 🤥, thanks for channels like this for lifting the veil.

    • @Christopher-h6w
      @Christopher-h6w 7 месяцев назад

      Don't hold back about the Asylums. They put the Original Previously inhabitants originators civilization there, the other ones, they put underground catacombs tombs, hell yeah no pun intended. They weren't insane 😧😭. Do you believe that in your mindset, heart of hearts. For as the Cataclysmic Events Mud Floods Etc Resets. Some of that was ancient technology, by the previously civilization, used against them Confusion Double Cross and Trickery, they brought the Original Previously and Ancient, Civilization, to it's knee's. They fought back, ie Civil War's, etc. but dealing with a Clever Crafty Subtile Controllers, Confusion Enemy very rubbery, wiley and distortion. The Original Previously created Civilization, used everything in there arsenal, but it was to no avail. They were overwhelmed. Sad, bastards and demons, the controllers are, took a Spiritual existence and Technology existence, Civilization and turned invented. Confusion Double Talking Back and Forth Windshield Wipers Washery Kabookery, Hypnosis Trickery and Chicanery, Misdirection.

  • @axiomobliviontruthhurts4767
    @axiomobliviontruthhurts4767 Год назад +2

    Can't hide the flood with good basements. 😂

  • @scottbaker-ScottyB
    @scottbaker-ScottyB Год назад +1

    Gentle Liquid- fication seems to have taken place as to not destroy completely buildings possible ?
    ly ?

    • @MrBlueSky1978
      @MrBlueSky1978 Год назад +1

      The information I have is that the original intention was to sink all the buildings completely worldwide and start again from scratch but their frequency weapon didn't work nearly as well as intended 🤔

    • @shazoz77
      @shazoz77 Год назад

      The old frequency of the reset was hijacked by the corrupters we are entering a new frequency that they are trying to corrupt as well but it’s not gonna happen is this new consciousness is going to be harmonious

    • @shazoz77
      @shazoz77 Год назад

      Is is 🙄

  • @randibabb8559
    @randibabb8559 10 месяцев назад

    But I urge everyone to come decide for yourselves

  • @shirtenvy8870
    @shirtenvy8870 Год назад +1

    I find your content interesting -- but start watching this but I have a "correction" the first electric street car was supposed to have been in Scranton Pennsylvania in 1886- it's nicknamed the electric city partly for that reason -electric lights in 1880

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад +3

      I guess the story changes depending on where you look. Interesting..

  • @ReformedPatriot-gw5ni
    @ReformedPatriot-gw5ni 2 месяца назад

    fyi
    northwestern mo state is in st joe
    mascot is a griffon

  • @scottbaker-ScottyB
    @scottbaker-ScottyB Год назад

    Time stamp 50:10 shows the difference of a non- caring sub-intelligence poorly built vehicle compared to a near perfect bricked laid building with embossed grandiose stone carving designs . I would grade the Buildings and road construction an A + and the Vehicle mfg. of course a D or F for failure !

  • @SGDeGalvez
    @SGDeGalvez Год назад

    st louis is no slouch when it comes to old world buildings.

    • @oldworldex
      @oldworldex  Год назад

      That's for sure. I did a short video on St Louis early on but did not do it justice. I'll have to do another..

    • @SGDeGalvez
      @SGDeGalvez Год назад

      @@oldworldex The city is loaded with this stuff.

  • @johnnymnemonic69
    @johnnymnemonic69 6 месяцев назад +2

    Lol it's pronounced ruby-do I live here