102 Year Old Lady's Abandoned Home in the USA ~ Power Still ON!

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  • Опубликовано: 21 авг 2024
  • Exploring abandoned places is my hobby and finance it all out of my own pocket and the donations I get from the people who love watching the documentaries we make... A small donation would be greatly appreciated! ► / brosofdecay
    Check out Danny his channel ‪@ES.Forgotten‬
    The abandoned house of the German Focht Family is a place that redefined our definition of what an abandoned home can be, it has been a decade since the last inhabitant Misses Ada passed away and she left all her belongings in doing so. Now 10 years later, everything still remains inside the house and the strangest of all is that the electricity still turns on. Together with her husband Wallace she started living here in the 1930s and over the course of six decades, they raised four beautiful children, got married, and lived a long life with countless memories. Unfortunately, her husband passed away in the 1990’s leaving her to fend for her own. She lived here in relatively good health until the year she turned 102, at this point, she was called to leave planet earth and her beloved house.
    Today we will show you the remains of what once was their everything!
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    Filmed & Edited by ES Forgotten (Danny) ‪@ES.Forgotten‬
    #abandoned #explore #exploring

Комментарии • 1,8 тыс.

  • @-sherrisprague394
    @-sherrisprague394 Год назад +365

    My mom called you her boys . She loved watching your videos . She spent hours watching all your houses. She thought you were so respectful and handsome young men . My mom passed away in December she was 82. We really enjoyed watching your videos together. You helped her pass a lot of enjoyable time. My mom was in quite a bit of pain so all she had to pass her time was tv . You were one of her favorites and I want to thank you so much for posting all these videos. She would of just loved to of known you made it to the United States . She would of loved having you into her little house for tea . It makes me smile to know you made it over here . Enjoy your stay !

    • @pattyfarghaly1821
      @pattyfarghaly1821 Год назад +9

      ☹️☹️🙏🙏🙏🙏

    • @srevero1
      @srevero1 Год назад +20

      God bless her and may she R.I.P.

    • @Mexicobeanpole
      @Mexicobeanpole Год назад +19

      Your mom sounds like she was so lovely.💝

    • @christinaandrews4891
      @christinaandrews4891 Год назад +14

      Deepest sympathy 🙏 may her memory be a blessing

    • @lisalking2476
      @lisalking2476 Год назад +26

      I can relate I feel much the same My Boys lol I call them too My Boys love there explores and how polite and respectful they are I began watching when I was diagnosed in April 2020 with stage 4 lung cancer that had spread into 4 other organs before Ieven got sick and when treatment started it helped me fill alot of time and they truly make you feel like you are right there with them across the waters as they say,lol I'm too so glad they made it to America 🇺🇸 ❤ 💙 I'm deeply sad for you losing your mother. She was blessed with a loving daughter 💕

  • @amrice62
    @amrice62 Год назад +278

    The loneliness of the elderly is so often overlooked. Thank you for acknowledging that

    • @renataostertag6051
      @renataostertag6051 Год назад +13

      It is criminal that elderly people are left to themselves like that!

    • @amberfrazier575
      @amberfrazier575 Год назад +7

      I live to this day with a regret that makes me nauseous to my stomach. Never visiting my divorced grandpa ( living four hours away) as an adult after meeting him only a handful of times growing up. I realized he was getting old at 19 and called him but he puts the phone to the radio if he doesn’t know the number. My dad said you have to e-mail and give him your number but I didn’t have internet at the time. When I was 26 he passed away. Never having called or visiting once. I hate that I let that happen. He passed away off a heart attack with a meals on weals driver there. My dad lives in his house now , his childhood home.

    • @NickLeeds
      @NickLeeds Год назад +8

      @@renataostertag6051 capitalism and money are more important.... Employers don't want to hire people if they take any time off from a career to care for parents.. You are 'supposed' to put them in a nursing home that costs on average $14,000 a month

    • @renataostertag6051
      @renataostertag6051 Год назад +6

      @@NickLeeds Yes, it costs a lot. They should pay to a grandchild only a fraction of this. Thus all would be happy. The elderly person, the children and grandchildren and the wider society.

    • @youarepredictable
      @youarepredictable Год назад +8

      @@NickLeeds Ahem. Money perhaps...capitalism..not so much. Elderly people are isolated and uncared for VASTLY more in socialist contries...every eastern european bloc country was/is much worse.

  • @KEH-jj3hp
    @KEH-jj3hp Год назад +55

    Adda was 102 years old living alone in a very old house, with very old memories. It's hauntingly sad, and bittersweet. If the walls could speak, I can only imagine the stories they would tell.
    RIP Adda..
    Also, I love how sensitive and respectful you are. "Give honor to whom honor is due".

  • @michaelbrigante
    @michaelbrigante Год назад +22

    My grandmother died in 1998. My grandfather lived until he was 99 years old. He passed away in 2009. When my grandmother passed away he dismantled all the tables in the living room where we used to get together with our entire family during the weekend and holidays when she was still alive. It was his own way of mourning the loss of someone he had shared his life with. I do not believe it is sad. It is a quite romantic way of showing respect and love, something that maybe would be considered outrageous in our society. At night, he would sit in front of the fireplace for hours, silent, just staring at the flames. He would not even sleep in their bed anymore. He made his own bed (he was a handyman who fought during WWII and escaped in 1943). When he also passed away, his son decided to rent the house. To me, it was a very sad thing to do. It used to be the place where we shared beautiful moments. So, I understood, that families nowadays have lost all the values their parents tried to pass over. They were part of a long-gone generation, people I will always bring with me, in my heart.

  • @halrichard7518
    @halrichard7518 Год назад +11

    The poem in the kitchen was not making fun of people who had little food. It was a reminder that rather than complain about there always being dirty dishes to wash, you should be thankful that you had food to eat.

  • @delype70
    @delype70 Год назад +194

    The Farmer’s Almanac is still used today. People use it to know when to plant in their backyard gardens and to know the weather for the coming year. It also has useful household tips.

    • @RetroCaptain
      @RetroCaptain Год назад +12

      Also their weather forecast is often quite accurate

    • @Mudjie50
      @Mudjie50 Год назад +12

      @@RetroCaptain They have a formula for predicting the weather and have kept it secret all these years.

    • @robertabessey7990
      @robertabessey7990 Год назад +4

      Exactly

    • @aquatadevore9335
      @aquatadevore9335 Год назад +7

      I've got this year's book on my coffee table 😄

    • @kathryncroul6925
      @kathryncroul6925 Год назад +7

      I'm surprised in the states they left the electricity on nobody's paying it they're quick to shut off the electricity when you're living there and you're not paying it so why shouldn't they be quick to shut it off when you don't live there and you're not paying it makes no sense to me when you think of why or hear of why let us all know and it's interesting that you live there for so long and her family didn't do something with the house like have a demolished or whatever thanks for showing this video I always love the videos you bring us I always love when you discover something new in the states that you don't have and Europe it's refreshing it's like a child in a daycare learning something for the first time the Wonder and excitement on her face I love saying that when you learn something new for the first time you didn't know in Europe please keep coming to the states and exploring we have a lot to show you and we even learn stuff as you show these videos we don't know what all either it's great Sharon together

  • @Mexicobeanpole
    @Mexicobeanpole Год назад +16

    You made me tear up when you said Americans are some of the most patriotic people in the world. It doesn’t feel that way for the last 6 or so years.
    Thank you for reminding me that I am.

    • @erikalulea3608
      @erikalulea3608 Год назад +2

      Sadly many that are patriotic also have a tendency to be very narrow minded. Proud yes, Patriotism--- we can live without.

    • @brandywineblue
      @brandywineblue 3 месяца назад +1

      Oh the irony

  • @youarepredictable
    @youarepredictable Год назад +117

    That was really well done. I think you did a great job paying homage to this woman and her family. It reminded me of when my wife and I bought our most recent home in 2012. An older Japanese woman had been living there, but she was now 97 and had to go to a care home. Her son , who was himself about 70, was cleaning the house up preparing to put it on the market when we found it. We told him don't do anything else and we'll be back that day with an offer. And we did come back and shook hands on a price and bought that house without it ever going on the market. When we got the keys and started to move in, we noticed little things like magnet hooks for dish towels, and a little row of coat /jacket hooks shaped like apples that she no doubt put up when she was a young woman just first making her home for her family decades before. It really made my wife and I stop and think, we were parents with 2 young children moving into that house, and she probably felt just like we did when she moved in. It told us to appreciate your life as it happens. We kept all her little knick knacks as a tribute to her and still have them to this day.

    • @gloriahanes5338
      @gloriahanes5338 Год назад +15

      So nice to read how young people appreciate the little things in life others cherished for years. We live in a "throw away" society where only the new is acquired and the old is discarded. Now, with the department stores closing perhaps people will have a renewed appreciation for "new to you" used items.

    • @mercedesadler9386
      @mercedesadler9386 Год назад +2

      Very 👍🙂 nice

    • @sheenaatchley8168
      @sheenaatchley8168 Год назад +1

      This is amazing!!!💗

    • @mesiasjesus9193
      @mesiasjesus9193 Год назад +3

      Nice videos and all but do me a favor pleaaaaseeee! STOP TOUCHING THINGS AND STAGING THINGS FOR PICTURES AND VIDEOS. ITS very des respectfull.

  • @marciawilwerding4984
    @marciawilwerding4984 Год назад +99

    Beware turning on electricity in these old houses. If there are compromised electrical wires and mice have nested around them, it could start a fire. I speak from experience.

    • @doloresprichard5088
      @doloresprichard5088 Год назад +10

      Also rats habitually chew electric wires causing many fires.

    • @CannabrannaLammer
      @CannabrannaLammer Год назад

      @@doloresprichard5088 wee shytes

    • @lisalking2476
      @lisalking2476 Год назад +3

      Especially those in country with old well pumps my parents bought an old farm house fixed up a bit and used it for there summer home and would winter in Florida yes (Snowbirds) my daughter stayed there the first winter and every time they turned the water on the fuse box would shut trip n shut off the power turned out it was the old well pump wires chewed up good thing the house had a updated fuse box with safety breakers saved them from a fire 🔥 Thank God 😊

    • @mariaperpetuadeguzman2314
      @mariaperpetuadeguzman2314 Год назад

      They have not unplugged the cord. The man is careless in handling the electricals.

  • @karenniehues4786
    @karenniehues4786 Год назад +57

    Another fun fact: in the late 1800’s & early 1900’s, you could order a whole house from Sears!

    • @vickirhoades9655
      @vickirhoades9655 Год назад +6

      In Salem Oregon there are still a couple of the Sears homes still standing.

    • @oldschoolboxing6048
      @oldschoolboxing6048 Год назад +4

      @@vickirhoades9655 do you know where? I’m 30 mins from Salem and curious to see them if I’m ever in the area.

    • @vickirhoades9655
      @vickirhoades9655 Год назад +2

      I'm sorry I don't, I was taking my father to a medical appt. He pointed them out. I would ask but unfortunately he passed away in March.

    • @vickirhoades9655
      @vickirhoades9655 Год назад

      @old school boxing see comment above

    • @andrecampbell4154
      @andrecampbell4154 Год назад +6

      My house came from Montgomery ward catalog around 1930s and standing strong. The house was remodeled back in 2017 but still has a lot of the old fixtures. If you are ever in San Francisco go to sac fifth avenue store and go to top floor and towards macys roof. There is a house on on it because macys use to sell home kits back in 50 and 60’s.

  • @reneyoung2395
    @reneyoung2395 Год назад +7

    My aunt is 102 now. She keeps an immaculate house. She and my uncle never had children. If Ada was a 102 when she died, that picture of a wedding wasn't theirs. That's a 1950s type wedding. The electrolux was probable '30s or '40s. We had one. They were great. I still have my ceramic tree. That is what she probably used as she aged. The room where those pictures were is a sun room. Her children are either very old now or could be gone. My grandmother lost 3 of hers, before she died. Thank you for this.

  • @kountryedge
    @kountryedge Год назад +6

    Also, when it comes to living alone, living alone does not mean the person is lonely, as Im 49 yrs old and I have lived alone for over 15 yrs now.
    A lot of people like myself are the happiest when at home and alone. But I do have 3 dogs and 3 chickens 😄🥰
    Alone but not lonely. 🤗

    • @kathyrobertson4493
      @kathyrobertson4493 Год назад

      Living alone but not being lonely is a testament to being happy within one’s self. Some of our best times are when living alone.

  • @maryshevlin7667
    @maryshevlin7667 Год назад +49

    Published every September, The Old Farmer's Almanac has been published continuously since 1792, making it the oldest continuously published periodical in North America.
    Everyone, farmer or not used to purchase one. They are not as popular since all the information can be found on the internet, but I used to purchase one every year in the 70s & 80s.

    • @andychris7647
      @andychris7647 Год назад +1

      That sound interesting, hi Mary how are you doing with your family I do hope you’re safe from the virus?

    • @Trainasaurus
      @Trainasaurus Год назад +2

      You can still get a monthly Kindle subscription to the Farmer’s Almanac online.

    • @andychris7647
      @andychris7647 Год назад

      @Sandy McDonald hi

  • @wendylynn7605
    @wendylynn7605 Год назад +110

    What a wonderful place. Seeing all those photos left behind broke my heart, too. I'm the genealogist in my family and every photograph is a treasure.

    • @BrosOfDecay
      @BrosOfDecay  Год назад +12

      Great to hear that you cherish the history of your family! You are a great person...

    • @julierice100
      @julierice100 Год назад +5

      Focht/ Fogt is my gg paternal grandmother's maiden name
      I live in Sydney Australia
      They emigrated in the late 1800s to northern NSW

    • @agenciainmobiliariacostabl8742
      @agenciainmobiliariacostabl8742 Год назад

      and this is our old villa! look ruclips.net/video/cAbaru-diBA/видео.html

    • @helenamolnar6825
      @helenamolnar6825 Год назад +3

      Iam sorry for the children How they cane left the house when they was living End left the picture memory.? That the time vas everything very good kvality. sorry for my incorect english gramer

    • @gloriahanes5338
      @gloriahanes5338 Год назад +5

      I feel the same as you and I am the keeper of old photographs going back three generations. I also, cherish "instant ancestors" I have one photograph of an employee from the Titanic which sunk in 1912, as the son never married and had no children to leave the photograph to so he sold it to me. Later, I found out his father was a hero on the Titanic and responsible for saving hundreds of lives. Photographs are memories and memories are worth cherishing for a lifetime and beyond.

  • @patrickcannady493
    @patrickcannady493 Год назад +23

    It's so funny to hear you guys as foreigners trying to figure out items from our culture like transistor radios! You're too young to know what you're seeing sometimes. I like your videos very much! I can feel the love you have for the value of things, not just material but the sadness that comes from a family not taking care of their past.

  • @janeodee1677
    @janeodee1677 Год назад +8

    The poem on the kitchen wall was about being thankful that you have enough to eat. That sort of sentiment was very ingrained in the people who went through the great depression and was a reminder for them to be humble in prosperous times.

  • @Marycedarcreek
    @Marycedarcreek Год назад +30

    You could see she was a simple woman. She loved the Lord and her children. And apparantly loved to sew. I believe her children took a few momentos and their probably pretty old themselves. And the house needed so much work I think they abandoned because not worth paying the taxes sometimes. Thanks for the nice tour. 😊

  • @lissanne9769
    @lissanne9769 Год назад +57

    Even though there is a lot of dust and spiderwebs, this remarkable lady kept a very clean home. The kitchen is adorable. She did a lot of food "canning" during her lifetime. All of the jars are very old. There were some interesting finds in this home. All of the photographs were beautiful and obviously treasured, along with her cards. She loved her home and took good care of it. Thank you for this wonderful tour.

    • @BrosOfDecay
      @BrosOfDecay  Год назад +7

      Absolutely Lissanne! Lovely to hear that you enjoyed the video!

    • @lissanne9769
      @lissanne9769 Год назад +1

      @@BrosOfDecay
      Oh, you're welcome.

    • @vickycotham6937
      @vickycotham6937 Год назад +1

      Yes, several Vaccum cleaners

  • @janinesenatore3870
    @janinesenatore3870 Год назад +26

    Root beer is a type of soda, like coka cola but with a different flavor. "Bicentennial" refers to the 200th anniversary of America's independence. This lady most likely knew how to preserve vegetables...this would explain the jars that would contain the vegetables. There are very old appliances in this home.
    Thank you for your tender appreciation and respect you pay to this lady and the life she lived. That you recognize the loneliness that many older people endure is very moving to me.

  • @1JDS4U
    @1JDS4U Год назад +34

    It's sad to think that this grandma spent her final years alone. No children or grandchildren around to help. Even looking at all the items left in the house and the fact that the power is still on, testifies to the fact that things were not properly, respectfully or lovingly taken care of by anyone. Sad. 😢

    • @deanpd3402
      @deanpd3402 Год назад +9

      I'd love to know the backstory...what happened to the family?

    • @mp4C
      @mp4C Год назад +4

      This is my first time watching your channel. I found it fascinating, albeit, rather sad. I would love to know her real story. Did you look up the person’s history beforehand (I’m curious as to how you knew her name, her husband’s name, and that they had four children)? As interesting as this was, combining it with well-sleuthed facts would give her more honor. My grandmother’s sister lived to be almost 100, and she outlived her children, so one of her grandchildren took care of her until the end. She really was deeply loved. So we really don’t know what happened, or if this woman was taken care of by someone who truly loved her but left immediately following her death (and didn’t care much about her material things - although the antique photos were amazing). At a practical level, do you get permission to go in? If not, would breaking and entering laws apply in cases like these? Thank you.

  • @traynada5755
    @traynada5755 Год назад +19

    My 19 yr old son asked me the other day if his grandma had a mom, I died. My ancestors were German, Danish and Irish mostly so a lot of my dad's side came from the Netherlands.

  • @barbkeil-burton6894
    @barbkeil-burton6894 Год назад +5

    Hi Leslie & Danny, that was a cut ceiling not decay! 10 yrs abandoned in Pennsylvania, some things were 1950`s & others 1970`s! Last Sears building was 2021 in Illinois USA! Yes usually kitchen cabinets were metal in the 1970`s & covered inside & outside with colorful sticky paper! Silver aluminum coffee & sugar containers., starting 1950`s! Non Alcohol is Root Beer a soda! Where you saw the blue violin glass container...is a crystal dish I still own! Bi Centennial license plate was a Big Thing in USA 1976 & special Quarters were made that year! Was 1926 then 1976 next is 2026, on behalf of the British people the Queen gifted to the United States the Bi Centennial Bell a Replica of the Liberty Bell that hangs at Independence Hall in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania! Jars in her basement were made yes for vegetables & fruits..we call that Canning & it is still done today in 2022! New Furnace for heat to house was in basement! Carpets yes are still popular in houses mostly now only bedrooms & the kitchen & bathrooms is tile floor & the rest of rooms is laminated or hardwood floors! RCA Victor back in 1950`s was a radio handheld but all thru the 1960` -1970`s other handheld radio`swere popular! Now in Ice Skating... Men`s Ice skates were Black & women`s were White still the same today! In the attic you call chest , we call trunks! Very good video, thanks so much for sharing & hope my info helps you! Take care you 2 & stay safe, Love from Central Illinois USA😊🤩

  • @Mexicobeanpole
    @Mexicobeanpole Год назад +24

    Your reverence for her home and her things is heart warming. I still have that ceramic Christmas tree that I made with my grandma when I was a child.
    I have my mom with me in my home.
    I’m 60. She’s 80 and she’s a widow.
    I don’t want her to ever be lonely if I can help it.

    • @lorrie5881
      @lorrie5881 Год назад +1

      I'm 62 and my Mom is 86.. we've been living together the last 10 years

    • @winstec1900
      @winstec1900 Год назад

      👏👏👏❤

  • @aliciamarie9704
    @aliciamarie9704 Год назад +13

    Farmers Almanacs are useful and fun to read. My mom had an Electrolux from the 70’s that she passed onto me, lol. They are probably the best vacuum ever made and if you look on EBay, parts still sell for a lot!
    We had well water too, as well as our own source of natural gas to heat our homes on our farm. My dad could fix computers, heating units, cars, he was a farmer & worked building roads and keeping snowy roads safe.
    Our family farms supplied pigs & cows. My papaw bush hogged the land until he died. We had gardens all over the place. Out in the countryside, when I was a child…everyone had gardens.
    I guess we are fairly independent and naturally off grid in some parts of the US even still

    • @aliciamarie9704
      @aliciamarie9704 Год назад +2

      The gas stoves like what you saw can be lit even without power.
      SOS pads are very abrasive scrubbing pads with the soap already inside them.
      The poem has strong religious context. They are implying that you won’t go hungry if you have God.

    • @aliciamarie9704
      @aliciamarie9704 Год назад +1

      Root beers are very sweet, I’d suggest going all out and having a root beer float!

  • @lisaknell1809
    @lisaknell1809 Год назад +90

    It’s sad that this home has been left to decay. Perhaps she outlived her children or perhaps the children could not come to an agreement about the house. My parents had an Electrolux like the one you showed, it was a workhorse. I used it up until the 2000’s until I sucked something up in it and burned the motor up!
    My Mom and I made a ceramic Christmas tree together and I treasure it as she’s been gone for almost six years now.

    • @sharong8511
      @sharong8511 Год назад +11

      We had an Electrolux too until my Dad installed a system that collected the dust in a large canister in the basement. The Electrolux never died. My mom gave it away when she got the new one. Same with the old Kelvinator refrigerator. I remember her defrosting the freezer compartment regularly, down on her knees sopping up the melting ice. She was thrilled when she got a frost free refrigerator. She gave the old fridge away to a friend. My parents set the example to share what they could with others. Blessings to you.

    • @shawshankredemption29
      @shawshankredemption29 Год назад +11

      Those ceramic trees are collectibles now. I'm amazed that one still lit up or that it was even still there!

    • @BrosOfDecay
      @BrosOfDecay  Год назад +6

      Hey Lisa, wonderful to hear that the video brings back memories for you :)

    • @lisaknell1809
      @lisaknell1809 Год назад +2

      @@shawshankredemption29 I know!!

    • @tracyfinch918
      @tracyfinch918 Год назад +3

      My late gma had an Electrolux , too. It quit working back in the 90s one day as I was cleaning up my dad's house. We had to get a new vacuum.

  • @squirrlee6463
    @squirrlee6463 Год назад +30

    Mrs Focht may have been 102 but she kept her rather large house very tidy.
    I love that you take care to not disturb things in these places. Your respect and enthusiasm for people’s past lives is charming. Would love to hear more about your overall impression of your trip to the US.

    • @gracechilders4655
      @gracechilders4655 Год назад

      Good morning 🌞! Am so glad to find you.Would love to go with you guys & explore these homes They are huge,lots of room & space for children at play,a garden,milk cow & hogs etc.All pitch in daily activities( kids too),families as it is in those days gone by.Happiness abound in those days in my run- away imagination Nostalgic,thank you & keep on sharing please.Appreciate you leave everything in place & as is Sadly, most of these lovely homes with thousands of memories in their time are demolished.

  • @theseamstress6315
    @theseamstress6315 Год назад +52

    Leslie you remember she was 102 years old the poem meant to her be glad for dirty dishes for she had food for her family to eat. She came from a time when food had to be grown and meat was scarce. She was not making fun of people who had no food, she probably once had not much food to eat. Good explore. Reminds me of my grandmother’s home. Lots antiques.

    • @sueregan2782
      @sueregan2782 Год назад +5

      She also lived through the Great Depression.

    • @theseamstress6315
      @theseamstress6315 Год назад +4

      @@sueregan2782 My grandmother had ration stamps for sugar, flour and shoes etc…she was so frugal she didn’t spend them all once the Great Depression was over, I now posses them as my mother has passed and I inherited those stamps.

    • @tammykenton1188
      @tammykenton1188 Год назад +6

      A kitchen prayer of thanks because they did have food.

    • @naja7010
      @naja7010 Год назад +4

      Yes, you find many kitchen prayers of gratitude like those in the USA. So, lovely!

    • @tonyaduvall49
      @tonyaduvall49 Год назад +2

      Correct the saying is just reminding you not to be bothered by the mess of dirty dishes because you were graced with food while others may still be hungry. It's not to be offensive to those who go hungry at all. It's a reminder that you have more than others so be grateful for it.

  • @patriciastordahl1220
    @patriciastordahl1220 Год назад +11

    Oh my Goodness. That was the first Washing machine I had to wash simple clothes in I was 4 years old. Take the items out of the tub of water and place them through the rollers to squeeze the water out. Then to the basket and out on the line. Always had to use a step stool.

  • @hamiltonmt
    @hamiltonmt Год назад +77

    I admire the care and respect you show for the property and the people of the abandoned places you visit.

    • @BrosOfDecay
      @BrosOfDecay  Год назад +3

      Always Christine :)

    • @paulj0557tonehead
      @paulj0557tonehead Год назад +4

      I notice this too. He loves his work and shows such dignity regardless of the home.

  • @nattyophelia7879
    @nattyophelia7879 Год назад +5

    When he picks up the bottle of a Murphy’s oil soap and says stepping back in time it made me giggle a little, their bottle hasn’t changed a bit. Really cool house tour, you guys are very respectful of the space. Also the chair toilet is called a camode lol

    • @brandywineblue
      @brandywineblue 3 месяца назад

      Thank you, yes that's right, commode was the word I couldn't remember. It comes from the French word for "convenient." True story. Probably the same French word "accomodate" comes from

  • @naughtynanuk
    @naughtynanuk Год назад +22

    This house is amazing. Very little decay, to the roof is intact, no water damage, most things are still functioning. Just amazing I was dumbstruck from the moment the television was turned on. I can tell you I have a tv from the early 2000, and it won't even come on. This was a beautiful adventure. Thanks guys.

  • @Yvell
    @Yvell Год назад +14

    The ceramic Christmas tree is valuable and the Sears catalog. The potato chips tin is valuable. The stove is Kenmore brand from Sears. The child high chair is valuable. The kitchen buffet furniture looks of antique solid wood. Many valuable antiques.

    • @brushcreek42
      @brushcreek42 Год назад +1

      How about that camel back trunk?

    • @Yvell
      @Yvell Год назад +2

      @@brushcreek42 very valuable

    • @kelvinsurname7051
      @kelvinsurname7051 Год назад

      @@Yvell is there literally no way to safe these antiques?

    • @Yvell
      @Yvell Год назад

      @@kelvinsurname7051 must ask am antique dealer. I'm sure that location is very important for the wood items.

  • @Mudjie50
    @Mudjie50 Год назад +40

    Love going through abandoned places. I find the histories interesting. Also find myself sitting here trying to tell you what you are looking at. LOL But I do find it heartbreaking when no one wants the photo's or the stuff in the houses. She was 102 when she passed which means her children were probably in their 70's & 80's. Thank you for sharing.

    • @MigsDances
      @MigsDances Год назад +8

      She may have outlived her children as well. She might have been lonely but she kept so many memories and photographs. Her grand children, or even great-grandchildren, should take interest in them. These days many Americans are interested in their family geneology.

    • @MK-eu3qe
      @MK-eu3qe Год назад +2

      Her children may have passed on before her n maybe that's why they were left

    • @JW-AR54
      @JW-AR54 Год назад +3

      What about grandchildren

  • @susanwilson2248
    @susanwilson2248 Год назад +4

    Hello from Ohio, USA. Thanks for the interesting tour. You’re so funny with your fascination of vacuume cleaners 😂. The machine on the second level of the home was a carpet, or rug shampooer. The small radio in one of the rooms was called a transistor radio. It was battery operated. The SOS boxes were a famous brand on steel wool cleaning / scrubbing pads. My favorite things you found were the old photographs. Safe travels to you!

  • @veronacooper4249
    @veronacooper4249 Год назад +28

    Hi from Jamaica. I am totally fascinated with this home. Such a pity the children do not understand the value of what they have abondoned. A museum of their home with these ethnographic pieces would have served well in this community. Hope someone will try and reach out to them. The value of what some deem as nothing is treasure to others.

    • @user-dm5nc9sf2n
      @user-dm5nc9sf2n 11 месяцев назад

      I thought Your Name was Veronica.

  • @denisesmith2745
    @denisesmith2745 Год назад +42

    Wonderful , Lesley and Danny! SOS you found in the kitchen sink is a scouring pad for pots and pans. I have them and they are still hugely popular. All the cleaning products you saw are currently used here. Built in closets are the norm here. Fabulous. So much better than a wardrobe furniture unit. I love you both ! Thank you from Ft Worth

    • @BrosOfDecay
      @BrosOfDecay  Год назад +8

      Thank you so much Denise for the great information, very helpful!

    • @agenciainmobiliariacostabl8742
      @agenciainmobiliariacostabl8742 Год назад

      and this is our old villa! look ruclips.net/video/cAbaru-diBA/видео.html

  • @elizabethjohnston3264
    @elizabethjohnston3264 Год назад +31

    I've watched your European explores and this is so fun seeing this American one through your eyes!!

    • @BrosOfDecay
      @BrosOfDecay  Год назад +8

      Thank you so much Elizabeth, I was a bit hesitant at first but I am glad my American fans like what we are making :)

    • @lisalking2476
      @lisalking2476 Год назад

      I love it ! I had hoped one days these respectful young men would make it to America 🇺🇸 Welcome boys !

  • @samanthafitzgerel4460
    @samanthafitzgerel4460 Год назад +2

    I always feel a sense of melancholy after I watch your videos, especially ones where family photos, letters, and heirlooms have been left behind. I attended an estate sale one time and there sat the old family Bible. It had notes, letters, dates and all kinds of info on the family. I thought, “surely, this must be a mistake!” I approached the family member about it and he said, “no, everything is for sale.” It just made me so sad. Thank you, young men, for being so very respectful, and thank you for coming to our young country. ❤🇺🇸

  • @dianalynnelizabeth780
    @dianalynnelizabeth780 Год назад +6

    Hey guys! The photo you two found that was on metal…… it’s called a tintype. A tintype, also known as melainotype or ferrotype, is an old style of photograph that creates a photographic image on a thin sheet of metal or iron that has been first coated with a dark lacquer or enamel.
    The tintype photo was introduced in 1856 and popular until about 1867. But tintype photo studios were still around into the early 1900s as a novelty.
    So there ya go! 👍🏻
    And oh my gosh my grandparents had a ceramic Christmas tree exactly like the one in this house, actually we had one too for a while, also, exactly like that one. Lol lights up just the same & everything! 🎄☺️
    my paternal grandmother actually made ours in a ceramics class & gave it to us as a gift. She was very crafty.
    Great episode! This place is so adorable. The way you guys tucked away that beautiful antique/vintage photo album in the drawer with the Bible was so sweet. You’re so right about photos like that, they are memories and history etc. I feel like they’re so beautiful that they should be preserved by a local historical society or something.

  • @clarissaarchuleta2874
    @clarissaarchuleta2874 Год назад +25

    You guys are so cute 🥰 Root beer is a frothy soda pop. I can never get a enough of you guys. Always positive the best attitude's, 💕 Love that.

    • @gregGould
      @gregGould Год назад +1

      It's called root beer because the flavoring is from the roots of the sassafras plant and is used to make the soda pop, the British call all soda pop a "fizzy drink".

  • @kellykeller5741
    @kellykeller5741 Год назад +11

    What a rare find to see the American flag that has 48 stars on it just lying across the sofa... The whole house is a rare find in itself.. She mustt had had credit on her power bill because you don't see that here in the states...

    • @RetroCaptain
      @RetroCaptain Год назад +1

      What if the grandkids are keeping insurance up to date. They often insist that the electricity remain intact. They I think are hoping to keep some usability or value as most times once the power is cut next thing the roof falls in and it's a big pile of trash to pay to get rid of instead of a fixer upper heritage home.

  • @tammyshirks6948
    @tammyshirks6948 Год назад +5

    I think this is amazing home of 102 year's old elderly woman.. Thank you for sharing this.. No cussing or no bad language.. Bless you both.. It is called beside toilet or a potty chair.

  • @Pissjuggernaut
    @Pissjuggernaut Год назад +1

    Love you and miss you grandma. Thank you for our family

  • @GingerGrutzius
    @GingerGrutzius Год назад +9

    A kitchen table is the heart of the home, so a blessing plaque above the breakfast table is still very common in a country home. Rootbeer is soda water like Coca-Cola. Murphy Oil is still used today on wood furniture and wood flooring. The typewriter is from the 50s or 60s. Pennsylvania has many Germans who have lived there for hundreds of years. Lancaster, Pennsylvania, has many Amish residents. This charming old German Christian home was once full of love and lots of activity through the generations. Thank you for sharing. Northern homes weren't so different from our Southern homes. GG from Texas.

    • @andychris7647
      @andychris7647 Год назад +1

      I love the kitchen alots, hi ginger how are you doing with your family I do hope you’re safe from the virus?

    • @GingerGrutzius
      @GingerGrutzius Год назад +1

      @@andychris7647 All is well and very good. Thank you, Andy. Ditto!

    • @andychris7647
      @andychris7647 Год назад

      @@GingerGrutzius sounds good,you’re welcome, would be preferable we talk much better on via email so we can get to know each other’s and share up some common interest as friends Ginger?

  • @beverleyonajide4523
    @beverleyonajide4523 Год назад +16

    Hi Lesley and Danny…
    I never understand how people leave pictures behind…especially of your parents…it makes me sad…it’s depressing to see…a choice between furniture and clothing…I’d pack the pictures to take with me.
    Love seeing Danny and You exploring together…this was a great find.
    TFS!

    • @artemisiana
      @artemisiana Год назад +2

      I feel the same... Its so sad to see this memories left behind.

    • @beverleyonajide4523
      @beverleyonajide4523 Год назад +3

      @@artemisiana especially pics of the parents…I don’t get it🤦🏽‍♀️

    • @sarahkelly9664
      @sarahkelly9664 Год назад +2

      I purchase old photos and research them to find relatives to return them to. I was dying seeing all those family photo albums. Breaks my heart that no one wanted them.

    • @beverleyonajide4523
      @beverleyonajide4523 Год назад

      @@sarahkelly9664what a great idea…I❤️love it.

    • @6248cjl
      @6248cjl Год назад +2

      I have absolutely ZERO family left. I am the end of my line, no children or nieces/nephews so all my family photos will end up either in an antique shop or in the garbage.

  • @heidigordon1868
    @heidigordon1868 Год назад +6

    I love your tour of this home and how respectful you are of Ada when you lovingly tell her story. I think she would be pleased with the tribute you gave her. I jumped when I saw that Life Magazine with Edmund Muskie on the cover. He was a US Senator from my home state of Maine for many years before becoming Jimmy Carter's Secretary of State. Regarding the poem on the kitchen wall: Americans who lived through The Great Depression were always reminded never to take having food on the table for granted. Even when I was growing up in the 1970's, being raised by people who remember the Depression, I would be told to clean my plate (finish my meal) because there were children in Africa who were starving who would be happy to have it. It's just an American thing at that time to be grateful for having food so the poem means not to look at dirty dishes as a mess to clean up, but as a symbol that they were blessed to have food to eat.

  • @ivelissecartagena5345
    @ivelissecartagena5345 Год назад +18

    It breaks my heart to see children abandon their parents. My father is 90 and his health is declining my mom is 85 and forgets everything but we as their children are here for them every step of the way.

  • @DollzDolly
    @DollzDolly Год назад +8

    Lesley @ 15:18 that Christmas tree is awesome. To find one that works like that is even better! They do go for good money, if no chips, no missing lights, and it all works. Love seeing some of the artifacts left behind by the previous owners

  • @user-bs5ys4vo7e
    @user-bs5ys4vo7e Год назад +62

    Lesley and Danny take us to an American ordinary abandoned house and the family´s story in a unique way!!!! How wonderful it is. Living again special moments of the family!!! Wow!!! There is no way to feel bored!!! Always expecting for the next surprise!!!

    • @sallymay3643
      @sallymay3643 Год назад +2

      ✌🇺🇲

    • @BrosOfDecay
      @BrosOfDecay  Год назад +2

      Thank you so much :D We really appreciate it!

    • @jab2780
      @jab2780 Год назад

      So where did they read this lovely family story?

    • @user-bs5ys4vo7e
      @user-bs5ys4vo7e Год назад +2

      @@jab2780 , you can say a lot of things about people when you see what they have built for their lives, what has been left behind. It is just a matter of going deep into blank pages. Lesley and Danny are incredibly creating possible stories about the inhabitants of these long time gone homes.

    • @jab2780
      @jab2780 Год назад

      @@user-bs5ys4vo7e I would like to start hearing the truth instead of conjecture. How does he know the children "don't care". And I've heard him say the same damn thing video after video. It's like. Look around for some names and dates and paste a story together. He loves to use emotional words and tell us too how he is very respectful. In the end, we know nothing.

  • @CherylSimser
    @CherylSimser Год назад +22

    The kitchen poem about not apologizing for dirty dishes is meant to show gratefulness for having food and saying thanks to the greater power for such. There is no intent in it to offend those who are not so fortunate. Thank you for your explores, it is always fascinating and I love your accents from the Netherlands. Oh, do you speak Friesian? Just curious as I am a fan of Follow the Herd Friesian Horses which I love.

    • @RetroCaptain
      @RetroCaptain Год назад +7

      The couple lived through "The Dirty 30s" "The Great Depression" era and no doubt saw a lot of poverty so they remained thankful for each day they had food and shelter

    • @sasapoo3
      @sasapoo3 Год назад +6

      Most definitely, they were showing how thankful they were!

  • @aliciagomez9636
    @aliciagomez9636 Год назад +4

    Prity!! Me encantó tu vídeo,es una pasada esa casa abandonada, muchísimas gracias!
    T saludamos desde mi bello país PANAMÁ 😘😘❤️ bendiciones, bendiciones.

  • @pizzathefox8809
    @pizzathefox8809 Год назад +32

    Absolutely beautiful! Also, I don't think any of the missing items were stolen. I think maybe the family, friends and grandchildren took the valuables after her death. Which is why there's no clothes, jewelry, or food. Maybe someone is also keeping an eye on the property which is why the power is still on. Someone is paying the bill.

    • @Ellenslife851
      @Ellenslife851 Год назад +2

      I totally agree with you I think that’s what actually happened

    • @Jcandy20012
      @Jcandy20012 Год назад +2

      But i wonder why they did not take the pictures

    • @Ellenslife851
      @Ellenslife851 Год назад +1

      @@Jcandy20012 I agree

    • @Jcandy20012
      @Jcandy20012 Год назад

      @@Ellenslife851 He did say in the video the family stopped going around to the house how sad if that was my mothers house I would go clean it up and make it a memory house of hers and lock the doors so no one could get in there. Make it like a museum and paint the walls

    • @Jcandy20012
      @Jcandy20012 Год назад +1

      @@Ellenslife851 Especially if i grew up in that house I would also put a song Lyric on the wall that said I thought if I could touch this place or feel it
      This brokenness inside me might start healing
      Out here, it's like I'm someone else
      I thought that maybe I could find myself
      If I could just come in, I swear I'll leave
      Won't take nothin' but a memory
      From the house that built me.... That song is from by Miranda Lambert The House That Built Me i love that song

  • @patriciastordahl1220
    @patriciastordahl1220 Год назад +17

    That tiny side room with the tennis rackets was the telephone room. Pretty common. The chair and table combo was what was the phone chair

    • @juliehare3403
      @juliehare3403 Год назад +4

      Yes that chair and table is a telephone table or also called a gossip bench. But the room itself is a sun porch.

  • @mindiscott9749
    @mindiscott9749 Год назад +5

    My grandmother had that poem above her sink. I have it now that she's passed. That generation went hungry lived during the great depression. That poem was very popular among that generation. The meaning is when you want to complain about the dirty dishes, don't, be grateful you have food to dirty them with.

  • @godisgreatjesusislord2278
    @godisgreatjesusislord2278 Год назад +10

    I love seeing stuff like that, she lived our whole life in that place with all the antique furniture and TVs they just made things to last back then, thanks for showing that it's very warming!

  • @lyncooper-reagan5874
    @lyncooper-reagan5874 Год назад +6

    The Christmas tree is likely from the 60s or so. They are quite collectible and now sell for hundreds of dollars! I’m lucky enough to have one of them with over one hundred “lights” on it.Mines from 1983 and it was made for a friend of mine and given to me by her daughter after she passed.

    • @reneerenzi1240
      @reneerenzi1240 Год назад +1

      I have one that I made in the 70’s. My mom, grandmom and I would go to ceramic class every week. They are so collectible I didn’t realize until I seen them on eBay and in some antique shops in Lancaster PA. My mom is so mad because she hated hers and threw it away years ago.

  • @bowenfamilyfarm9776
    @bowenfamilyfarm9776 Год назад +39

    What wonderful find. The poem on the wall just meant to say how blessed they were as a family and that they were thankful. It wasn't meant to be disrespected to others. I'm from the states and we see many homes like this abandoned. So sad that someone didn't come for the picture. That's for being so respectful to people's homes. God's speed.

    • @allenburris3740
      @allenburris3740 Год назад

      I don't think it has been any years because there is zero spider webs

    • @SnuffyAdm
      @SnuffyAdm Год назад +2

      @@allenburris3740 It depends on what was used as an insecticide. I visited homes that the families had used things from the farm that are now illegal. Old folk felt that the government was making their lives harder by outlawing "The Good stuff" (strong insecticides as well as other products) by saying they could cause cancer. These folk would buy the products in bulk when they received word of such laws being made and would continue to use the products. I've seen it too many times. I recall entering my great-grandmother's home after she had left it 10 years and there were very few spiderwebs. I on the other hand try to use natural stuff to keep my spiders down and if I've been gone a few weeks they look like they have had a party on my ceiling. 🥳🙄

  • @doloresprichard5088
    @doloresprichard5088 Год назад +4

    Loved it!! Your toilet chair is a bedside commode. ;)
    Hello from a 74 yr old in Denver Co. You make me so happy with your videos! Thank you!!!!!!

  • @ittybittykittymama7582
    @ittybittykittymama7582 Год назад +2

    It almost seems like this lady will walk in the back door and say "What are you boys doing in my house? Just looking around? Well, as long as you're here, you may as well stay to supper."

  • @zeldavanniekerk226
    @zeldavanniekerk226 Год назад +2

    Danny camera skills are amazing. Lesley beautiful like always. And this home is so beautiful and Very sad for the loneliness. Amazing video thanks!

  • @kaycooper8196
    @kaycooper8196 Год назад +15

    Thank you for your sweet and lovely words about our country. You made me smile. Loved seeing this house. Loved so much of the furniture! I'd love to have several pieces, like the rocking chair. By the way, we still have Sears but on a much smaller scale. Mostly appliances and lawn care machines.Also the Almanac is still very popular, but more than farmers keep them handy for weather info and planting of many different plants Thank you for your videos. You are always so very respectful of every property. God bless you!

  • @tracyfinch918
    @tracyfinch918 Год назад +3

    I remember my mom having an analog tv with no remote in the 80s and it caught on fire one day! It was only smoking and no flames, luckily. It was worn out.

  • @mariaquintul2029
    @mariaquintul2029 Год назад +2

    Gracias por el bello gesto,de guardar la máquina singer en su compartimento, me hubiese gustado que mostraras con más detención,los objetos de la cocina ( ollas,cubiertos, vajillas,etc.) Como dueña de casa ,me interesa.me gusta tu alegría y respeto al mostrarnos todo... Saludos desde Temuco, Chile.

  • @Porfgirl
    @Porfgirl Год назад +13

    Haven’t heard the sound of that vacuum since my grandma’s house. Great find and awesome story…thank you. Welcome, travel safely and enjoy the US🇺🇸

  • @jomish8719
    @jomish8719 Год назад +13

    MUST HAVE BEEN A BEAUTIFUL HOUSE BACK IN THE DAYS! JUST SAD THE CHILDREN DID NOT BOTHER TO LOOK AFTER THE OLD WOMAN & THE HOUSE THEY ALL USED TO LIVE IN !!

    • @angelaclements1244
      @angelaclements1244 Год назад +7

      The children are likely in their eighties so we shouldn't judge what we don't know

    • @gloriahofner124
      @gloriahofner124 Год назад +3

      It's heartbreaking to see this once beautiful in this condition!

    • @tammyblankenship8742
      @tammyblankenship8742 Год назад

      @@angelaclements1244 I was a grandchild that wanted my grandparents' house after they passed. My grandmother actually had it willed to me (I saw the will), but my aunts coerced her into changing it right before hospice was called in. It's a shame none of the grandchildren wanted to preserve it.

  • @regmcg4171
    @regmcg4171 Год назад +5

    You show such respect and reverence for this dear departed lady and her home.

  • @rosalindamoreno7076
    @rosalindamoreno7076 Год назад +7

    Oh qué tremendo, cuanta cosa, hay personas sin casa sin nada y ahí una casa vacía, sin embargo me entristece pensar en que estaba sola al final de su vida, todo queda en la casa, nada nos llevamos al final de nuestros días, gracias por andar curioseando.

  • @willyegger4488
    @willyegger4488 Год назад +22

    Wonderful picture showing a very cozy home with some beautiful pieces of furniture. Dear Lesley, I am already very excited
    to see and hear you taking us viewers on tour through this house of a 102 year old lady. That is so amazing!
    Wishing you all the best, peace and kindest regards.

  • @lailahammes4964
    @lailahammes4964 Год назад +9

    Leslie and Danny, you are so funny with the vacuum! 102 years old, she was a very strong woman. I still get the Farmers Almanac every year! It has the planting, animal rearing schedule, the tides, the Zodiac, the weather, recipes, and interesting articles and short stories. Be safe in your travels!

    • @andychris7647
      @andychris7647 Год назад +1

      Same here they are absolutely amazing, hi Laila how are you doing with your family I do hope you’re safe from the virus?

    • @williampat4438
      @williampat4438 Год назад

      Haha I bet the old lady must be so lonely though. Hi Laila how are you doing with your family I do hope you’re safe from the virus?

  • @sudbury9
    @sudbury9 Год назад +4

    You guys are great. You both are so very respectful of the property of others. I am very impressed by your professionalism. I've watch others touring abandoned property and leave doors, drawers, etc opened but you guys always make sure you leave things exactly as you find it. Thank you guys for restoring my faith in humanity. God Bless you both. Be safe in your travels & adventures. ♥

  • @joliesock2654
    @joliesock2654 Год назад +3

    I am from Pennsylvania and my grandparents were farmers. My Grandfather was of German descent and spoke Pennsylvania Dutch. Their farm house wasn't left abandoned because my Grandmother moved out and sold it years ago. It now has a "new" farmer's family living in it.
    This brought back memories of my heritage

  • @dniko4
    @dniko4 Год назад +14

    Thank you for the house tour Lesley. Although it’s interesting going back in time, it’s also kind of sad seeing someone’s precious belongings just rotting away. I can’t understand why family or relatives didn’t take the old pictures. BTW, small fire extinguishers are still being sold. When my husband purchased our house, I found one in the master bedroom closet. An updated one of course. Old homes are absolutely fascinating. I enjoy watching your videos. Always interesting things inside these abandoned homes. 👍🏼

  • @user-em3fm8li5c
    @user-em3fm8li5c Год назад +17

    Удивительное место. Дом давно брошен и много пыли, но видно, что здесь всегда был порядок и все вещи на своих местах. Поразительно, что есть электричество.💯👍

  • @NN-ui8ie
    @NN-ui8ie Год назад +9

    Absolutely amazing, I love how you have such respect for Ada's home and things left behind!

  • @debralight2145
    @debralight2145 Год назад +4

    That home is straight out of the fifties. She kept a neat home! The last radio you showed was from the forties. I remember contact paper was popular those days, I think that is on the kitchen cabinets. Contact paper was like a sticky sheet of a coated paper that women would put on the bottom inside the cabinets. It lasted for years and was wipeable.

  • @MobMarked
    @MobMarked Год назад +35

    Great video guys! The pictures you found in her forgotten home, look like they're from around the Civil War era. I'll bet some of those very old pictures show some famous people in her family and from our nation's history. Someone should save all those for posterity. I hate seeing our collective history being allowed to disappear like this. We're losing our history every day. Hey, Lesley. That first Singer sewing machine worked! You just had the lever on the side of the machine set to its slowest speed. If you would have moved that lever, and then pressed the pedal, it would have worked. Strange her power is still on though. In the US, if you don't pay your bill, they shut you off! Someone probably made sure the poor old lady had power for as long as she needed and didn't disconnect her line Thats what I hope anyway.😊

    • @MichelleJohnson-tg5lx
      @MichelleJohnson-tg5lx Год назад +5

      Family still has this house. . Or it would have been turned off. It is very unusual . I think this house is in limbo as to what the family wants to do with it. perplexed 🤔

    • @Cheryl_Haydon
      @Cheryl_Haydon Год назад +6

      @@MichelleJohnson-tg5lx And in the meantime, if her family is deciding what to do, all those old photographs and things are rotting away. So sad...

    • @iiatargetanalyst3046
      @iiatargetanalyst3046 Год назад +3

      You have the most thought provoking post 👍

    • @MobMarked
      @MobMarked Год назад +7

      @@iiatargetanalyst3046 Thank you. I love to think that there must be someone, somewhere who loved that person and would treasure their memories. We're all here for such a short time, then poof! Never to be seen again. And yet, we can't take one single thing with us.! An old man told me that the only thing you can bring with you, are your good deeds". So true. peace

    • @carolynl4553
      @carolynl4553 Год назад +6

      @@MichelleJohnson-tg5lx I live in rural Central Ohio. There is a house 'in limbo' because one of the four children refuse to sell. So, it just sits there decaying with stuff in it. It is really sad and such a waste. I wonder if that is what is going on with this property.

  • @deangray1823
    @deangray1823 Год назад +8

    I love the respect you show to these places and honoring the previous occupants.

  • @pennyconnell69
    @pennyconnell69 Год назад +5

    I love the way you so carefully handled her home and the items in it.

    • @mariaperpetuadeguzman2314
      @mariaperpetuadeguzman2314 Год назад

      No, in fact, the man was careless. Plugging the cord and not removing the plug from the socket. Very careless man.

  • @moonlightwendy
    @moonlightwendy Год назад +4

    Ik vond het enorm interessant en deel jullie liefde voor oude , antieke plekken. En mijn complimenten voor de respectvolle manier waarmee jullie Ada's eigendommen hebben behandelt. Ga zo door!

  • @vivian4949
    @vivian4949 Год назад +8

    I love how you make the smallest and most simple of household objects sound so endearing.

  • @celiareginarogero8815
    @celiareginarogero8815 Год назад +24

    Hey Lesley! I love your channel! The house of a 102 year old lady must have a lot of cute things and with the electricity working it gets more exciting. I'm looking forward to watching the video and knowing this lady's story. Lesley you always bring a lot of emotion in your videos and what is best always with important information for our knowledge. Congratulations!! Kisses from Brazil!

    • @sallymay3643
      @sallymay3643 Год назад +1

      ✌🇺🇲

    • @andychris7647
      @andychris7647 Год назад

      The channel is so nice to watch, hi Celia how are you doing with your family I hope you’re safe from the virus?

    • @celiareginarogero55
      @celiareginarogero55 Год назад

      @@andychris7647 Hi. Thank God I'm vírus free. I also love this channel so much that I became a Patreon! 😍

    • @petrabaptiste5468
      @petrabaptiste5468 Год назад

      Free energie #tartaria

  • @judygale3624
    @judygale3624 Год назад +3

    That is the most beautiful home I've seen in a long time I'm 62 years old and I would love to buy that house she must have been a very beautiful lady God bless her and God bless her home it is very unique and very beautiful thank you very much for bringing it to the internet and RUclips to where people can see how people lived and how beautiful they kept everything thank you

  • @Kate11.11
    @Kate11.11 Год назад +6

    New subscriber here..I love your channel. I like that you pay so much attention to detail. Beautiful story of 102 year old Anna, thank you!!! That tiny radio in her room is called a transistor radio. I still have mine from my childhood 🙂 thank you and God Bless!

  • @shawshankredemption29
    @shawshankredemption29 Год назад +10

    I love the respect you have for the people who once lived in these abandoned homes. The care you take with each item they once owned. You bring us viewers into the lives they must have lived, not just walk us through a lifeless home. I was especially happy watching this visit to Pennsylvania. An honor to have you visit the USA! Love you guys!

  • @philliphurley5341
    @philliphurley5341 Год назад +5

    Very interesting video. There were three vacuum cleaners downstairs, the Hoover Convertible upright, a Hoover Constellation next to the chair you sat in Lesley and the Electrolux cylinder.
    The other appliances you look at Lesley is a Shampoo polisher.

  • @ramonar594
    @ramonar594 Год назад +1

    I was born in 1947, a few years after Ana. This home tour brings back my early years. The one thing I remember is all the brand names they used. Sears, Philco, Electrolux, Farmers Almanac, RCA Victor, Singer Sewing Machine, just a few. I have my Grandma’s treadle sewing machine. Loved this tour.

  • @christinebova2326
    @christinebova2326 Год назад +2

    Love the antiques, a modest yet loving home, I am from NY we had the same sign in our kitchen about dirty dishes, never meant to be offensive about those who go without, our family welcomed strangers to the table even during our own hard times, it's about gratitude to God for being able to put food on the table, and looking at chores in a more positive way. we trusted we'd always have enough and when we were down to our last can of food, someone generously and anonymously dropped off a box of food at our door. We appreciated it that much more when we almost had to go without.

  • @Canuck13
    @Canuck13 Год назад +8

    Fantastic. Love you guys. Like my sons! You guys are just super. This was a nice change from the castles, it I love the castles too. Thank you. 😊

  • @PioneerCity1767
    @PioneerCity1767 Год назад +4

    So, who's been dusting the place? How long has it been abandoned? Even after a few months there would be enough dust build up if not a lot as old as the place is and it looks too dust clean. Weird. For an abandoned place after 10 YEARS and there is not a thick layer of dust. Alot of the stuff has a shine to it and no dust. ?????

  • @JaKaiMS
    @JaKaiMS Год назад +3

    As someone who grew up with an older mother in the country, things in this vid reminded me so much of my home it made me tear up a little. There's such a beauty to time capsules like this. I love seeing them unharmed and with in tact memories.

  • @CannabrannaLammer
    @CannabrannaLammer Год назад +3

    The ASMR when you were showing the pics was amazing. You're so respectful of everything. Such well mannered young men ❤️

  • @v.babcock5941
    @v.babcock5941 Год назад +8

    Hi Leslie and Danny. Love your channel. The picture on metal is called a "tin plate". Popular during the mid 19th century. In the United States, many soldiers who were going to war during the American Civil War, would have one taken before they left to give to their families and sweethearts to remember them by. Unfortunately, most didn't make it back to them.

  • @XNA2NW3
    @XNA2NW3 Год назад +4

    Omg the vacuum cleaner! That was epic! Y’all are amazing to watch, and the respect you show these homes is quite admirable.

  • @Daiska_Plays
    @Daiska_Plays Год назад +7

    I hope her grandchildren will one day will find the pictures. Her children are likely no longer with us, and I can't begin to guess who might have inherited this home. But surely one day they will come and preserve the memories and the history. I feel like that's really important, something beyond the house itself and the objects in it. It's really mystifying to me how this can be like this. Obviously someone is paying the bills, so it's not a forgotten property.

  • @laughing-cat
    @laughing-cat Год назад +3

    The look on Leslie's face when he discovers the typewriter is so cute! He's so happy! 🤩

  • @vivianamansillavivar7217
    @vivianamansillavivar7217 Год назад +13

    Gracias Lesley y Danny, fue una exploración adorable que casa tan bonita llena de recuerdos antiguos y valiosas además mágica todo funcionando tan real saludos y manténganse sanos y salvos.

  • @careyh38
    @careyh38 Год назад +6

    Looks amazing and the power is still on. Can't wait to see it!🎉

    • @andychris7647
      @andychris7647 Год назад

      It’s so amazing, hi Carey how are you doing with your family I do hope you’re safe from the virus?

  • @jerilantz8077
    @jerilantz8077 Год назад +14

    I love seeing old houses and everything in this house is a treasure. It shows that a couple who loved Jesus lived there as you found the calendar from 1965. It was probably given to them at church or by a business owned by a Christian in December of the previous year. I also remember you saying that people over here in America tend to be more religious than what people are in Europe. And that really broke my heart. To hear you say it quickened me to want to tell you that it's not about religion, it's about a relationship. It's a Relationship with Jesus. And those who don't have a relationship with Jesus, in other words, have not asked him to forgive their sins and turned from their wicked ways and Trust in Him will not enter the gates of Heaven! That's the loss of the most precious treasure I can think of - a person's soul! Each person's spirit lives on and I beg of you to get your life right with Jesus, to follow him and his commandments. It's very simple and you will be able to truly enjoy life in Him and for eternity, otherwise the eternity of your living spirit will be spent in Hell and that breaks my heart. 💔 We are all sinners who have fallen short of the Glory of God. The Bible says, Today is the day of salvation! Jesus went to the cross and took all the sins of the world on to himself, died, and rose again to rule over His kingdom for eternity. He offers us free salvation through Him. It's a gift of grace - no works are involved. But Jesus is the bridge from earth to heaven.. Please please ask Him to be the Lord and Savior of your life today! You won't regret it!

  • @Mommles
    @Mommles Год назад +5

    I just love Bros. Of Decay! You've always given us info on each site but also quite a detailed view of each exploration! I've watched y'all grow into men and I continue to enjoy every video y'all make! Good travels, good times, God's blessings, stay safe and healthy guys!

  • @heddybell
    @heddybell Год назад +4

    In Scotland UK we would pronounce her name as in Aid-a. As pronounced in the word laid; paid; spade etc - although spelled Ada. Thank you for this

    • @ritasmith9553
      @ritasmith9553 Год назад +1

      Also pronounced like this in the US.

    • @carolbabb7875
      @carolbabb7875 Год назад

      My grandmothers name was Ada Mackinnon. She named a daughter Ada too. Great Grampie was from Scotland. It was nice to hear the name Ada.