Cape Breton Company Houses Exploration

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  • Опубликовано: 13 апр 2024
  • Uncovering the Sad Remnants of Cape Breton's Industrial Decline - this Emotional Short Documentary Hits a Sad Note as the Happy Homes of Cape Breton Families are Disappearing. Some have stood for over 150 years - how much longer until they are all gone? Did you grow up in one? Let me know in the comments!!
    Sources
    CBC.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/outhouse-property-title-registration-government-land-ownership-1.4069536
    Mininghistory.ns.ca
    Notyourgrandfathersmining.ca
    National Trust for Canada
    archive.nationaltrustcanada.c...
    Music
    'The Things That Keep Us Here' by Scott Buckley - released under CC-BY 4.0. www.scottbuckley.com.au
    'Undertow' by Scott Buckley - released under CC-BY 4.0. www.scottbuckley.com.au
    ‘Creative Motion’ by CO.AG Music • Creative Motion full m...
    'Glow' by Scott Buckley - released under CC-BY 4.0. www.scottbuckley.com.au

Комментарии • 36

  • @AbandonedCapeBreton
    @AbandonedCapeBreton  Месяц назад

    Found out recently that the house explored in this vid belonged to the MacKinnon Family and Angus Young lived in the other side. This house is now an empty lot across the street from Ryan's Dairy and the Ryan's Company house on the middle block of Pellet Ave, New Waterford, circa about 1965ish. I didn't know when the video was made but there you have it.

  • @Ghostvertigo
    @Ghostvertigo Месяц назад

    I grew up & still live in the hub, it was surreal and great too see us & number 2(the neighbourhood beside us) mentioned things were rough, but alot of ppl are moving back, but sadly their is still alot of good company houses wasting away. appreciate it thanks!

  • @marcgatto9675
    @marcgatto9675 26 дней назад

    I live in Dominion. Some company houses are in good shape. But they are slowly disappearing. Thanks b'y.

  • @Chif_aquaw
    @Chif_aquaw Месяц назад +1

    North Sydney local. Appreciate this video completely love this island and don’t know enough of the history. Thank you

  • @doreenblatz2440
    @doreenblatz2440 2 месяца назад +2

    Thank You, that was very interesting Canadian history.

  • @xoxCynnaminkissesxox
    @xoxCynnaminkissesxox 4 дня назад

    Love this. Grew up in #11. My parents still live in a company house. Many in #11 are now rented by people who came here from Ontario. Another one is currently trying to be sold in Sydney for $180,000. I laughed but also scared that the person who buys it will not understand the history of them. You can't insure these any longer, and like you mentioned, drafty abd probably not up to code.
    Cape breton is still very dependent on these houses to live in. They are now cheap housing to get by in.
    The rooms are very tiny, you wondered how a family with 8 children made it work with 1 bathroom.
    I am sure as kids my neighbors hated us, running up and down stairs constantly, you could hear it. You could also hear the music they played, and if someone got in trouble by the parents yelling..lol. But your business was your business.
    There is a few houses in this video I know them. One of those houses just sold last year in #11 for 60k right across from one you were focusing on.
    I believe that, if part of the house was abandoned while you lived in the other, if the abandoned side got torn down and your side was exposed, it was up to you to fix it because the houses are literally attached, from what I heard.
    #11 definitely isn't the #11 I grew up in. They were halloween candy gold mines growing up, now it's all abandoned lots, burnt, or unfortunately crack dens. Not all, but alot.
    Hardly any children playing now. The school in #11 burned years ago (St. Anthonys), the train doesn't go by any more at the trussel. There used to be a park in #11 as well. It's all gone.
    Very sad to see the neighborhoods i grew up in or visited I dire state. There is alot of good people who deserve the world who live in these houses. Would give you the shirt off their backs to help you.

    • @AbandonedCapeBreton
      @AbandonedCapeBreton  4 дня назад

      Yes, I remember a lot of good times in many of these company homes. I'm glad it brought back some memories for you.

  • @gbthecamper458
    @gbthecamper458 2 месяца назад +2

    My grandmother lived in No 11 and ran a corner store there for years. The video brought great memories of my time in Sydney Mines, Sydney and New Waterford. Many of these miners homes who built basements were in order to do their own coal digging for their personal use and selling to locals at cheaper prices. Over the years there have been numerous collapsed properties do to the private mines.

    • @AbandonedCapeBreton
      @AbandonedCapeBreton  2 месяца назад +1

      This is fantastic. I know a lot of relatives, though they won't admit it, were into rum running with their fishman friends. Miners get up to all kinds of trouble. lol Collapsed buildings aren't just from private mines, the legit mines too! MacDonald Highschool sunk into the ground about 20 years ago too. Thanks for sharing.

  • @leeannbailey91
    @leeannbailey91 Месяц назад

    Im so glad i stumbled upon your channel....your videos are Absolutely great...cant wait to see what you put out next. Thank you.

  • @scottstephenson1
    @scottstephenson1 2 месяца назад +1

    Another great one. Keep'em coming!

  • @markstevens1729
    @markstevens1729 2 месяца назад

    Like your channel, I abandoned Cape Breton (New Waterford specifically) over 45 years ago.
    Thanks for the.. memories?

  • @lisarobertson7011
    @lisarobertson7011 2 месяца назад

    very interesting - thank you!

  • @josephthibeault9919
    @josephthibeault9919 2 месяца назад

    Liked and shared, thank you. ❤

  • @barrysmith1162
    @barrysmith1162 Месяц назад

    Hi I grew up in a duplex company house, also worked on restoring 1/2 of a house in Glace Bay for habit for humanity, have stories and picturs.

  • @john1701q
    @john1701q Месяц назад

    The one at 3:22 confuses me, the neglected side would be a threat to the side that is lived in. Could collapse and pull the entire structure down, and attracts vermin. I know the area is hard up economically. But why not try to buy out the other side and just remove it?

    • @AbandonedCapeBreton
      @AbandonedCapeBreton  Месяц назад

      Yup. They really are built like two houses touching each other. Sometimes one side only would burn down. Some people have joined them and made one larger house out of both sides. A vacant side of your house fallen into disrepair does tend to attract vermin and undesirable things. I would venture to guess no one can afford to buy the other side if vacant and fix it up and just do the best they can with the side they live in. People that do usually just tear it down. Pretty sad to look at.

  • @HighWealder
    @HighWealder 2 месяца назад

    Interesting to me, from the other side of the pond.
    Would like more background information.

  • @cumberlandite7953
    @cumberlandite7953 2 месяца назад

    great video! i think theres a typo in the title :)

    • @AbandonedCapeBreton
      @AbandonedCapeBreton  2 месяца назад

      There was. Was half asleep when I uploaded. Thanks for the catch!

  • @jeepmedic2126
    @jeepmedic2126 2 месяца назад

    Inverness has some company houses too

    • @AbandonedCapeBreton
      @AbandonedCapeBreton  2 месяца назад

      Yes indeed. Many places do still have a few. Inverness is a great location for it. The day I had planned to go film there was done in by hail and rain, unfortunately so I didn't get to film there. It was a part of the script originally. Maybe another time. Any other interesting finds out there that you know of?

  • @donaldfrancissays4911
    @donaldfrancissays4911 Месяц назад

    My wife grew up in number 2. The community next to the hub is number 2 not number 11. Number 11 is on the other side of Glace Bay.

    • @AbandonedCapeBreton
      @AbandonedCapeBreton  Месяц назад

      Yes, no.2, no, 20 and the hub are basically the same place. I thought that was clear in the video. Maybe it needed a map.

    • @donaldfrancissays4911
      @donaldfrancissays4911 Месяц назад +1

      @@AbandonedCapeBreton my wife says, "don't tell a person from number 2 that the hub is the same place"

    • @AbandonedCapeBreton
      @AbandonedCapeBreton  Месяц назад +1

      @@donaldfrancissays4911 hahaha

  • @russellcollins6718
    @russellcollins6718 2 месяца назад

    Fricking depressive

    • @AbandonedCapeBreton
      @AbandonedCapeBreton  2 месяца назад

      It is to look at now, for sure. I have lots of happy times in those old homes.

  • @dlaitch
    @dlaitch Месяц назад

    As recent as 1963 some Capers were still digging coal illegally from holes in their back yards as well as in their basements.
    The product was called bootlegged coal. An interesting video . The honey lane story was new to me but made perfect sense as a way to organize waste disposal prior to public sewer systems. Sad to see buildings decay regardless of the quality of original construction methods. Brings back memories of working in Glace Bay in early '60s and commuting from Sydney. At days end my white car was covered with black soot from the coal fired Steel Mill. Capers were great people . Always asked newbies " What's your father's name?"
    to determine lineage. ( Music around 1/2 way point is very annoying! )👍👍👍🏆

    • @AbandonedCapeBreton
      @AbandonedCapeBreton  Месяц назад

      Thanks for the feedback and the comment. Did you work in the mines or the steel plant? What was your father's name?

    • @dlaitch
      @dlaitch Месяц назад

      @@AbandonedCapeBreton Neither . Worked at an office job there for about a year and was not a Caper. Also recall the widely used "nick names" so locals could distinguish one John MacDonald, in the community from maybe a hundred others with the same given name.. A rich culture.

  • @ricksmith7631
    @ricksmith7631 2 месяца назад

    referring to the houses. my dad is from the east coast and we travelled there many times. mom made a comment about they painted the houses with whatever color they had and they were painted may different colors. truth be known from my dad. these houses were navigational aids to the local fishermen. they didnt have fancy radar and loran but they knew where they were from the colors of the houses and could always find thier home port. ive been to Cape Breton many times and its true, homes are abandoned and left to rot. many people have just left and to the banks the houses and property might be worth 5000.00 given the market. its sad and a loss. government regulations on fishing havent helped and decimated the industry, that and the changes in industry demands. the expenses simply outweigh the profits and industry is no longer a lucrative endurance. in this area there really isnt any benefit to setting up industry in the area, the mines are gone, fishing is gone, tourism has moved on to bettter places. pei had a good tourism market but it became faded and has all but gone extinct. its sad to see how the east coast has fallen in all provinces, nova scotia is no longer a hot bed to visit. newfoundland is just exisiting but they are ok with that and always have been, they get by and remain strong amongst themselves. just speaking what ive seen, someone who spent a big part of his life at north rustico and cavendish.