Old World Columbus, Recycled Bricks, Capital, Mound Builders, City of Arches, Ohio State, Buggies

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • Let’s talk about Ohio. Today we will dive back into the Old World Series with a focus on Columbus, Ohio. What began as a forest land, full of ancient Native American mounds, has grown into the second largest city in the Midwest of America.
    Today we will look at some really amazing old world photographs of Columbus, Ohio. When I went looking for images I was really taken back by what I found. The amount of spectacular, and immense, buildings constructed in Columbus throughout the 1800’s is breathtaking, so today I would like to share these images with you, along with a brief history (according to the current narrative) of this beautiful land.
    Sit back, relax, grab your White Castle, and enjoy the show!
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Комментарии • 250

  • @stevenconte4714
    @stevenconte4714 3 года назад +55

    For a not too sizeable population they sure had a lot of blind, deaf, insane, feeble minded people. I mean come on it just doesn't make sense. And these buildings were so beautiful they couldn't have been built for the purposes stated on a lot if not all of them. Awesome stuff.

    • @johnwebster3072
      @johnwebster3072 3 года назад +3

      It's the capital city so they were sent here from all over.

    • @fishfire_2999
      @fishfire_2999 3 года назад +16

      They were the intelligent folks that did not go along with narrative , similar to folks not getting jab today JMO

    • @thadnapora3123
      @thadnapora3123 3 года назад +7

      Yes and the bigger problem is there are huge buildings in every city for the "blind, deaf, and insane" Built again in the 1800s by horse and buggy.

    • @matthewhines9787
      @matthewhines9787 3 года назад +2

      Or the people of the city just really dug the teachings of Jesus.

    • @yubasunproductions2494
      @yubasunproductions2494 3 года назад

      Seriously tho. And its all over

  • @richardhanes7370
    @richardhanes7370 3 года назад +12

    I'm in Columbus Ohio right now. Moving away in about a month. This state is full of strange stuff and something's seem like they're older than we're told

  • @TheNLArthur
    @TheNLArthur 3 года назад +26

    Whenever I see old photos I think what a mess we've made of what was once so beautiful.

    • @junqalope
      @junqalope 3 года назад +3

      "You Maniacs! You blew it up! Ah, damn you! God damn you all to hell!"

    • @burtbenz9964
      @burtbenz9964 3 года назад +3

      Process of progress is regress

    • @chumpobumpo
      @chumpobumpo 3 года назад +1

      I’m sure people will say the same thing about our modern structures though. There’s beauty in history but we are quick to forget we are part of it as well.

    • @TheNLArthur
      @TheNLArthur 3 года назад +4

      @@chumpobumpo true but still the cardboard boxes today are less beautiful then the logical semetrical sustainable buildings from the past imo.

    • @nonfiction7819
      @nonfiction7819 3 года назад +1

      "We" didn't do that.... You're still asleep

  • @kathleenaltherr6836
    @kathleenaltherr6836 3 года назад +42

    This was amazing. I was born in Columbus, OH in 1951 and lived most of my life there. I remember the old buildings that appeared ancient and were dirty looking. There are villages remaining where people keep up the old brick homes, ie, German Village and Italian Village. We lived in the newly booming suburbs in a stick and sheetrock rancher. I went downtown on electric buses that used the wiring formerly used by the trolly cars. What I see of the old world Columbus is blatantly obviously inherited buildings. Why would they be so huge? We are supposed to believe they were built from bricks from Indian mounds? With horses and buggies? There must have been thousands of blind, deaf, and insane people coming to Columbus from around the world. lol. I did have a quarter of nursing classes at the old Hilltop insane asylum and it was creepy as heck. That was right as they were emptying out places like that and putting those people onto the streets and a few in halfway housing. They created a large homeless population, I believe, on purpose. It's all part of the reset scenarios that go on and on and on. Thank you so very much for this report. Fascinating. Also, there is a mound in Highbanks Park on US 23 between Worthington and Delaware, OH. Also and really great in Newark, OH.

    • @jonathonderrico4894
      @jonathonderrico4894 3 года назад +1

      .....I live near Delaware and was just on 23 looking at the old world buildings ... where is the mound?? And let's get in contact!! Lol

    • @burtbenz9964
      @burtbenz9964 3 года назад +1

      Thank 4 life experience in Ohio i grew up surfing in oc didn't know much about northeast until I visited pitt. Where my family from been 2 Cleveland 2 awesumm. Grew up in stick housing 2

    • @mattstrause1492
      @mattstrause1492 3 года назад +2

      Great comment. I’m north central Ohio but know Columbus well.

    • @grahamdugan
      @grahamdugan Год назад

      Thanks for the info, I’m born and raised in Toledo and I’ve only been to Columbus a few times, but there’s def something really sketchy about the history of Columbus, Athens, Cleveland, Toledo, hell all of Ohio is so weird… Toledo was supposed to be in a swamp while they were building these massive wagon works companies and mansions… just makes no sense

    • @jimhurlbut3649
      @jimhurlbut3649 Год назад +1

      What a great city. Lived there 10 years doing construction and cooking in the Short North. Great memories!

  • @lizmcnay9947
    @lizmcnay9947 3 года назад +34

    I think the admission that bricks, which are hard to recycle due to removing mortar, is very important. It seems much more likely that the buildings were already present.

    • @markemery6104
      @markemery6104 3 года назад +6

      Yes exactly and obviously built by a highly advanced civilization

    • @burtbenz9964
      @burtbenz9964 3 года назад

      Not code 4 earth quakes in so cal. Brick has 2 b veneered 2 block out here. Used brick valuable 2

    • @invincibel4007
      @invincibel4007 3 года назад +5

      Exactly. They layer lies upon lies but we're beginning to see the truth.

    • @lizmcnay9947
      @lizmcnay9947 3 года назад +2

      @@invincibel4007 I see what you did there. 😀

    • @Nate_tureboy
      @Nate_tureboy 3 года назад +4

      But this means if they "dismantled a mound" to use the bricks elsewhere, regardless of where or for what, that the mound builders were masons

  • @WisdomKeeper11
    @WisdomKeeper11 3 года назад +14

    So, around 1837 Columbus had a population of 3,500 and yet they needed massive buildings for the blind, the deaf and the penitentiary as well as the university and other huge buildings...... Did this warrant a small population of just 3,500 people?

    • @fishfire_2999
      @fishfire_2999 3 года назад +5

      Course not none of this makes any sense people are still digging thr conclusion at this point far to many massive buildings for such few people lies lies and more lies welcome to earth 2021 🙃

  • @dennismitchelljr
    @dennismitchelljr 3 года назад +17

    How many deaf, dumb and blind people could there have been to need these large buildings.

    • @rci385
      @rci385 3 года назад +1

      Yes... and imbecile, feeble minded youth and lunatics. Pretty big buildings for those too...

    • @1-daydecorating8
      @1-daydecorating8 3 года назад +1

      @@rci385 Anyone that didn't agree to the narrative went into the insane asylums.

    • @rci385
      @rci385 3 года назад

      @@1-daydecorating8 How do you know? What narrative? What did they do there?

  • @awakenasleepsheep2861
    @awakenasleepsheep2861 3 года назад +10

    Being from Ohio but now living in Florida. I lived in Columbus right before I moved back down here. The ancient mound builders were GIANTS! The Native Americans will tell you the mounds were here when they got here. The Red Haired Giants built the mounds!!!

  • @rickscott8091
    @rickscott8091 3 года назад +3

    It's amazing what men in suits & driving a horse and buggy, can do with a few old buried bricks he digs up with a spade .
    Marvel of the New age ha ha

  • @jonathonderrico4894
    @jonathonderrico4894 3 года назад +5

    .... I live near Columbus.. but almost all of Ohio is a gold mine...I mean... Dayton, cinci, small outside cities... I've been waiting for someone to cover Ohio.. I know of so many places to hit.. and for someone to brainstorm with. and I'm a truck driver..I travel Indians, Ohio, Kentucky, and Pennsylvania...I have many photos to share and videos on this topic I'd love to share with you

    • @jonathonderrico4894
      @jonathonderrico4894 3 года назад +2

      I mean for starters... you didn't mention anything about the ol clippers.... pretty sure the Santa Maria was here.. they took it down like 15 years ago... wonder if that ties into the naming of Columbus lol.... then you have high point.... it's a trade school that used to be a military silo at the highest point in Ohio lol... that and so much more

    • @jonathonderrico4894
      @jonathonderrico4894 3 года назад +3

      The masonic home in Springfield. . The masonic temple in Dayton..

    • @burtbenz9964
      @burtbenz9964 3 года назад

      The buildings details in brick. Stunning Ohio trademark i trucked. Brick n tile 2 pools in oc so I could tile them. Cousins in the burgh are truckers flatbed. 10yrs ago retired now

    • @starboy8426
      @starboy8426 3 года назад

      I'm a cdl driver I live in Ohio hit me up man lol

  • @teresaadams825
    @teresaadams825 3 года назад +7

    Fascinating find, brick used from burial mounds 🤯. A key to the puzzle!

  • @edgewyze7352
    @edgewyze7352 3 года назад +5

    The rabbit holes that led me this "old world" discussion cost me some friends and family members along way. It was well worth it. This is incredible, I'm in St Paul...same type of architecture and mounds of the natives.
    There was an intricate cave system my dad used to take us through back in the 80s (that are now blocked off) man, my imagination went wild then and now I'm even more enthralled to learn. Our courthouse is immaculate.

  • @gregdigio8318
    @gregdigio8318 2 года назад +2

    Dayton Ohio also has some very interesting old world buildings.

  • @nickicouture7297
    @nickicouture7297 2 года назад +2

    Yay!!! I’m excited to hear about my home state.
    There’s something very special about Ohio. ♥️

  • @Matt.325
    @Matt.325 3 года назад +5

    I've lived here all my life and I'm almost 50. This is a great city. There were some recognizable scenes in some of these photos, but obviously most of these buildings are from well before my time. It's too bad so few of these structures are still around since they were so amazing. I didn't know anything about the history of the mounds in the Columbus area. Great video. Thanks.

  • @RootzRockBand
    @RootzRockBand 3 года назад +14

    8:14 That is a perfect example of a mudflooded building. Nobody builds a brand new building with half of its first floor covered by a diagonal slope of dirt. That building was also most likely inherited or conquered and repurposed after the mudflood, and given a false historical narrative like most of the buildings from that time period.

  • @marypotts9831
    @marypotts9831 2 года назад +3

    Great video brother, I've been trying to find the oldest buildings in Columbus just recently and I couldn't find much, most of them are gone, but in regards to the serpent mound and many mounds all over the USA it's been quoted that the Indians themselves say they didn't build these mounds , they were already there, Chief Joseph Riverwind did a great many pieces on this fact , they're believe to be built by the former giants, rephiam , the indigenous people just took over them, they didn't build them

  • @Mirandas_learning_land
    @Mirandas_learning_land 3 года назад +3

    Was watching from my apt and recognized some of the buildings I can see from my window very cool video

  • @djbrushie
    @djbrushie 3 года назад +5

    I'm really liking this old world series on America 😁

  • @allenhargis4317
    @allenhargis4317 3 года назад +19

    someone threw a lot of money to repopulate north america and give it a new history. unimaginable amounts of money.

    • @gottaproxy8826
      @gottaproxy8826 3 года назад

      money is just ink on paper, be more specific,

    • @taylormoss6021
      @taylormoss6021 3 года назад

      Not money. Free labor.

    • @1625GEE
      @1625GEE 3 года назад

      @@gottaproxy8826 money as well...to feed the propaganda as well as miseducation and hiding lies.

    • @johnh23z
      @johnh23z 3 года назад +1

      Stuff happened back then
      The Comet of 1811
      New Madrid Events 1812 13
      Year without Summer 1814
      all on Wiki
      I watch Jon Levi and Martin Liedke

  • @spiritlove2
    @spiritlove2 3 года назад +5

    I have lived in columbus my whole life (40yrs) and never knew that the mound was used for buildings, but it makes sense. I have always felt like Columbus has a certain negative energy to it n now I get it.

  • @mikelander1454
    @mikelander1454 3 года назад +5

    FOUNDED means exactly what it means!!!

  • @lizmcnay9947
    @lizmcnay9947 3 года назад +28

    The first bricklayers union was established in 1865. It seems odd that there are so many historical buildings that far predate 1865.

    • @jeffhubbard5660
      @jeffhubbard5660 3 года назад +10

      The mid 1800s always seem to be missing for some strange reason... Something huge happened and its kept bloody quiet.....

    • @lizmcnay9947
      @lizmcnay9947 3 года назад +7

      @@jeffhubbard5660 I think the civil war was clean up duty for whatever it was.

    • @jeffhubbard5660
      @jeffhubbard5660 3 года назад +2

      @@lizmcnay9947 .That never occurred to me. Makes complete sense and I thank you for your wisdom.......

    • @lizmcnay9947
      @lizmcnay9947 3 года назад +3

      @@jeffhubbard5660 to be honest, it came from other mudflood presenters.
      I wish I had come up with it by myself.

    • @jeffhubbard5660
      @jeffhubbard5660 3 года назад +2

      @@lizmcnay9947 Everyday is a school day.......

  • @awakenasleepsheep2861
    @awakenasleepsheep2861 3 года назад +3

    My dad was raised on the Hilltop. Now learning Mound St was part of a mound makes perfect since.

    • @oliviabb73849
      @oliviabb73849 3 года назад +1

      Omg. Never got it. I’m astounded! Used to work on Mound Street!

  • @danielr5637
    @danielr5637 2 года назад +5

    I'm quite sure there are other continents that are populated, beyond the 60 degree south latitude Or is it 80? Anyway, we can't travel beyond any of these areas. As private citizens. Being a contractor for over 40 years I can tell you they didn't build these structures, with no equipment, limited population, horse and buggy. The sheer magnitude of the architecture is breathtaking, when most were supposedly living in log cabins.....something fishy here, and not just America

  • @thebes50
    @thebes50 3 года назад +3

    A lot of mounds in America before the Europeans came. Shows the remains of much older civilizations. Some believe the American Indians built some mounds. But other mounds were probably much older and built by unknown people. With that being said, I love your videos. The historical research that you do is excellent. When I travel, I often seek out the oldest buildings in town just to get a sense at how things use to be.

  • @ireen1962
    @ireen1962 2 года назад +3

    Is there a known history of ; how many architects, brick factories, good clay for bricks, masons, sculptors etc. were there in 1830? How were these massive buildings heated?

  • @factsnothingbut.thefacts7700
    @factsnothingbut.thefacts7700 3 года назад +3

    U THE MAN THANK U 4 THE KNOWLEDGE

  • @venessastabile3153
    @venessastabile3153 3 года назад +5

    Zanesville was the capital before Columbus. And yes, the adena and Hopewell tribes are found all over Ohio. Sorry, I just love my home state.

  • @justBEingjada
    @justBEingjada 3 года назад +3

    WOW WOW WOW i was born or atleast dropped off (adopted) in Ohio and lived out my first 30 yrs i might go back and explore more now that i see with different eyes but it was very common for me to find arrowheads and all kinds of things playing outside

  • @joeconrad8295
    @joeconrad8295 3 года назад +5

    Seems like fire has destroyed much of the buildings of the past, yet you don't see any fire escapes on these stone buildings... wooden telephone poles are certainly out of place

  • @alanriley9754
    @alanriley9754 2 года назад +1

    Another fine video Jarid.
    You are a great narrator.
    Most educational overall.
    👏

  • @sierrashere8197
    @sierrashere8197 3 года назад +13

    Not true . ..these buildings were there way before native Indians arrived

    • @marcduchamp5512
      @marcduchamp5512 3 года назад

      Wonder why those natives didn’t occupy them

    • @sierrashere8197
      @sierrashere8197 3 года назад +1

      @@marcduchamp5512 can you say, giants ? IDK, one day we'll know what really happened.

  • @Theupsidedownofthings
    @Theupsidedownofthings 3 года назад +3

    Hey thanks for the great video I am Resident. Didn’t know if you were aware that the first capital of Ohio was Chillicothe. Might be interesting to look into Greenfield as well

  • @1206chaos
    @1206chaos 3 года назад +6

    The native Americans in that area in Ohio where the mounds are have said they didn’t build those mounds. They were there already they had said numerous times because the main stream keeps saying it was the Indians. They say it’s a lie and shows how they manipulate the history

  • @stephentruthershields3615
    @stephentruthershields3615 3 года назад +4

    Beautiful but the $ Trillion questions are who actually built them?
    When were they built ?
    How ?

  • @johnnyelectric4844
    @johnnyelectric4844 3 года назад +4

    ya the nut house would have fit the whole city

  • @dennismitchelljr
    @dennismitchelljr 3 года назад +10

    who made all the glass for the windows?

  • @williamhannah8498
    @williamhannah8498 2 года назад +1

    I grew up just a few miles from this mound and visited many time as a child. As you stand on top of this mound and look a the rock quarry directly behind, you can see an island in the middle of the quarry, which is actually another mound. Central Ohio is littered with nephilim mounds, and old world architecture. I wish I would have known what I was looking at decades ago. Regarding the Ohio Insane Asylum, when constructed was the largest building in the US until the Pentagon was built… why the need for building of that size with a population of 40k? The Erie Canals, both/each spanning the state from Lake Erie to the Ohio River is another interesting topic altogether.

  • @mike34smike
    @mike34smike 3 года назад +3

    sir the first capitol of ohio in 1803 to 1804 was Zanesville ohio. thats why you see certain similarities when you look at Zanesville ohio and columbus ohio. in 1804 the capital was moved to Chillicothe ohio where it bounced back and forth between chillicothe and columbus before it came to stay in columbus as the capitol.

  • @lizmcnay9947
    @lizmcnay9947 3 года назад +3

    Love your work.
    Thanks for another great video.

  • @jeffhubbard5660
    @jeffhubbard5660 3 года назад +4

    Nearly at 10k. And well deserved mate. Awesome channel with content to be proud of..........

  • @spiritlove2
    @spiritlove2 3 года назад +4

    Thank u for teaching me some things I didn't know about my hometown. I wish we would preserve our good historic buildings and stories more often n use that to help teach the younger generations. We still have German village n it's not the best of neighborhoods. Columbus should post little plaques to help tell the story. We still have earthworks in black lick woods park and a few other places but there not commonly known

  • @daktamorganerkhagen5891
    @daktamorganerkhagen5891 3 года назад +2

    Thanks for a great presentation! Graham Hancock - America Before, a good read. Peace

  • @djbrushie
    @djbrushie 3 года назад +3

    12:58 the pen looks like luxury housing

  • @DavidMacLuna
    @DavidMacLuna 6 месяцев назад +1

    Great vid - just a note on the bricks used to build downtown and the mound they came from:
    The mound was on the downtown side, not the Hilltop side - right where theyd determined to build city hall and the other various coty offices.
    They had to level it in order to put up the buildings, so thet used the clay and bones (!) from it to make bricks.
    The City buildings built with those bricks had all become obsolete by the beginnong of the 20th century, the last - City Hall itself - being demolished im 1921.
    Well, almost all.
    On High Street, at Mound, is a brick 1870'a building that houses the Jury Room bar.
    It has the last of those bricks.
    I dont believe in ghosts but, that said, its haunted af.

  • @johndaugherty4127
    @johndaugherty4127 3 года назад +6

    You have discovered the secret to the rapid building that went on in all of these cities. The use of bricks from mounds.

    • @fishfire_2999
      @fishfire_2999 3 года назад +1

      The mounds were all red clay ?

  • @etell4673
    @etell4673 3 года назад +5

    Well if you believe this I have beach property in Arizona. Why would a population of 3500 build these elaborate buildings? Actually how could 3500 build these massive massive buildings. Wake up people. Our past is not what they said.

  • @dj_dinner_plates7429
    @dj_dinner_plates7429 2 года назад

    The back half's music . had me .. Well i wanted to head west and found me something. . cheers friend

  • @RootzRockBand
    @RootzRockBand 3 года назад +6

    The narrative that they took bricks from burial mounds to build the capitol buildings is not adding up. That makes very little sense, more than likely those buildings were there already built and they occupied and repurposed them.

    • @darapgoat
      @darapgoat 3 года назад

      Yup and there is a lot underground imagine that

  • @pagerhoads1531
    @pagerhoads1531 2 года назад +2

    They want us to think towns popped up when people started moving in but really the towns were already there and the people popped up

  • @88Shinto
    @88Shinto 3 года назад +2

    Hey Jarid... have you done a video on North American breweries? Early settlers of Upper Canada and Lower Canada plus the United States Eastern board, seemed to like their beer...

  • @glendaanderson4969
    @glendaanderson4969 2 года назад +3

    Surprised you haven't fit Cincinnati in the mix. They have more old structures still standing than any other city.

  • @marcduchamp5512
    @marcduchamp5512 3 года назад +4

    Strange we don’t see the construction pictures for any of the historical buildings

  • @gafengla
    @gafengla 3 года назад +2

    More high quality work from Jarid - superb to watch!!

  • @JumexPalmas
    @JumexPalmas 3 года назад +7

    They say mounds are the graves of giants

    • @jonathonderrico4894
      @jonathonderrico4894 3 года назад +1

      Ohio is a mecca for giants found, etc....I am about to go dig in a spot near me that I have this funny funny feeling may be an un explored one... that's why there's so many rock quarries here.. you've got serpent mound here as well... so much..I mean so freaking much...

  • @djbrushie
    @djbrushie 3 года назад +2

    Crazy people back in the day lived in luxury buildings

  • @littleozarksfarmstead
    @littleozarksfarmstead 3 года назад +5

    When I was a child, I thought as a child. Nowadays, when I hear or read the given narratives my mind begins with "once upon a time..." And then I wonder who wrote these fairy tales because the mathemagicals (math+magic) isn't working anymore.

  • @brittanyashley6136
    @brittanyashley6136 3 года назад +2

    This is great work. I really enjoyed your video.

  • @healthhealingandhappinessw6060
    @healthhealingandhappinessw6060 2 года назад

    Flavor Town!!

  • @natalyaannenkova411
    @natalyaannenkova411 3 года назад

    I like this music for guitar....thanks...

  • @Fossilsunleashed
    @Fossilsunleashed 3 года назад +2

    any place that has the giant doors was inhabited by giants at one point .most of the old huge churches with giant doors were the homes of the giants

  • @Am-dh9gq
    @Am-dh9gq 2 года назад +1

    The Indians don't even know where the mounds came from . My uncle was talking to someone about it and that's what they were told. I'm from Ohio too

  • @pagerhoads1531
    @pagerhoads1531 2 года назад +2

    I live in Ohio on the tri-state border and there's a burial mound 300 feet from my door

  • @jayare5483
    @jayare5483 3 года назад +3

    It sucks that they tore down the mounds. Wonder if they found any remains of giants....

  • @wyodino6245
    @wyodino6245 3 года назад +1

    This was so through and and really enjoyed by us

  • @RootzRockBand
    @RootzRockBand 3 года назад +8

    9:29 another mudflooded building with the first level half covered by earth. Plus who would put that much detail into making a penitentiary so elegant, looking like a palace. That building was mudflooded, inherited, and repurposed by the false narrative crew.

    • @Kimosabe-
      @Kimosabe- 3 года назад

      @Stonebreakers: Check out Anamosa State Penitentiary. Ludicrous narrative.

  • @georgeprokopenko3044
    @georgeprokopenko3044 3 года назад +2

    very good.

  • @grahamdugan
    @grahamdugan Год назад

    I golf and go for walks at Fallen Timbers outside of Toledo all the time, it’s a really strange story

  • @johnsword4978
    @johnsword4978 Год назад

    I absolutely love the content you share with us. I too, believe in an alternative history other than that one we've been forced to believe. Coming from a fan living along the Ohio River in the Wheeling,WV area. Keep up the excellent work, Jared.

  • @ireen1962
    @ireen1962 3 года назад +2

    But still thanks for this great video Jarid 👍

  • @88Shinto
    @88Shinto 3 года назад +1

    1:07 reminds me of giants tomb Island in Georgian Bay Canada

  • @Ratnoseterry
    @Ratnoseterry 3 года назад +2

    Wait wait wait... They had an actual stone pyramid

  • @blackbolt2661
    @blackbolt2661 2 года назад +1

    Tribes from all over would come to bury the dead

  • @junqalope
    @junqalope 3 года назад +2

    All throughout college, we were told to worship the modern bastardization of the former armory.

  • @djbrushie
    @djbrushie 3 года назад +6

    23:20 is a strange pic. There's no scaffolding or wood, so not building, but buildings look empty and ... unfinished? You can see straight through the building on the right through the third window along. The road, or lack of, and the ground leading up to the 'houses' is unfinished... its almost like they're digging them out 🤔 strange

  • @venessastabile3153
    @venessastabile3153 3 года назад +2

    I'm am part of the wyandotte tribe and live near a town called Mingo.

  • @dennisstone1207
    @dennisstone1207 Год назад

    I live in Ohio you should do one on Cincinnati amazing history and architecture

  • @drinkingpoolwater
    @drinkingpoolwater 3 года назад +4

    funny how you never see a sunny picture of the old world. ohio is sunny all summer, no way it was gray and dirty all the time like we see in old pictures.

  • @zakthelonerstoner3552
    @zakthelonerstoner3552 3 года назад +1

    Please please please , do my home town of Tacoma Washington !!!!!!!

  • @victoriakennedy4811
    @victoriakennedy4811 Год назад

    I thought that the windows in the side of the ground was interesting - showing that it went underground

  • @Nate_tureboy
    @Nate_tureboy 3 года назад +2

    Some of those mounds are like 11k yrs old

  • @earthbender79
    @earthbender79 10 месяцев назад

    It should be noted that the Hopewell people got their name from a Confederate war soldier who bought that but of land in Ohio after the war. His last name was Hopewell.

  • @Fossilsunleashed
    @Fossilsunleashed 3 года назад +1

    thats crazy the giants had there own power in the basements no .i think they had free energy on the tops of the buildings to gather and send it through the air like tesla figured out wireless electric

  • @SLQQPY88
    @SLQQPY88 Год назад

    The photo of St. Francis Hospital says it was repurposed from an older building, but that is not true. St. Francis and Starling Medical College were established in 1847 in Columbus with an endowment from Lynn Starling, one of the city's founders. It was the first combined hospital and medical school in America. In 1907, Starling Medical College merged with Ohio Medical University, established 1890, to create Starling Ohio Medical College, and in 1914 SOMC merged with Ohio State University to create the OSU College of Medicine. All physicians who gradated from SMC, OMU and SOMC received Ohio State University diplomas with their and year, and were considered alumni of OSU.

  • @catchafire9107
    @catchafire9107 3 года назад +4

    Soo... Columbus pretty much single handedly started fast food?!? 😂

  • @allenschmitz9644
    @allenschmitz9644 9 месяцев назад

    Im still bummed out they tore down the OSU gymnasium ten years before I moved to Columbus in 1969.

  • @Fossilsunleashed
    @Fossilsunleashed 3 года назад +1

    before brick was stone mega stone its usually on the bottoms and reused on windows and doors

  • @victoriakennedy4811
    @victoriakennedy4811 Год назад

    it would be good to know which buildings still remain today - maybe another video

  • @blackbolt2661
    @blackbolt2661 2 года назад +3

    America is a cemetery,a haunted house

  • @McMaster1258
    @McMaster1258 2 года назад

    19:18 those men building those buildings got to be at leat 80 of them. They definitely knew what they were doing. Wish there lifts were still up to see how they got those stone up there. Probably a crane wheel. but nice to see an actual construction photo

  • @kimberleywilliams5228
    @kimberleywilliams5228 3 года назад +2

    Impressive buildings for small population -who paid lol

  • @bryanwaddell1530
    @bryanwaddell1530 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for telling us the name of the mound builders. Most people just call them mound builders. I think it is very disrespectful to just call them mound builders. Have a good week brother.

    • @johndaugherty4127
      @johndaugherty4127 3 года назад +1

      Actually, all of the native Americans admit that the mounds were not built by them.

    • @johndaugherty4127
      @johndaugherty4127 3 года назад

      Just last week there was an article in the local paper about a mound here in Monterey, Kentucky, called "Poito ck Its an old fort and a mound said to have been built by the people before the "Indians"."

  • @ireen1962
    @ireen1962 3 года назад +2

    Amsterdam was founded 1275. Maybe 3 or 4 buildings like these Columbus buildings were built in Amsterdam. In Amerika they can built 100 of these buildings within 100 years with some poor kolonists ? Haha

  • @A_Realist
    @A_Realist 2 года назад +1

    I always felt like Ohio stadium was an old world structure, now they put a facade on it and it looks cheap. Also my old middle school Barrett looked old world to me as well but I could be wrong

  • @robie1445
    @robie1445 3 года назад +1

    Worcester, Massachusetts town hall has very similar architecture matching some of these buildings..:

  • @cjstarmonkey73
    @cjstarmonkey73 3 года назад +1

    WC sliders! Back when they were probably good and didn't cause internal destruction

  • @tball3198
    @tball3198 3 года назад +3

    Most if not all...inherited from the ole country.

    • @FRESHboosters
      @FRESHboosters  3 года назад +2

      Greatly agreed. The narrative is full of so many holes. A population of 3500 in 1834 built over 10 massive buildings... most of which like castles... to house the mentally ill and unstable? Like that was the first thing EVERY person in the city did for work... by 1850 we have the massive state capital, and the rest of the buildings in this video. 3,500-18,000 people built out an entire city in less than 20 years, while at the same time, deconstructing the massive Native mounds and repurposing them. That’s why I made this video, and I’m glad you saw the angle I was trying to present.

  • @leightonfarms4962
    @leightonfarms4962 3 года назад

    👍👍👍

  • @turbostatic1
    @turbostatic1 2 года назад +1

    How many Mounds are covered Cathedral type buildings????