Cleveland-6th Old-World City
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- Опубликовано: 17 июл 2023
- #oldworld #tartaria #cleveland
An exploration into the city of many anomalies, Cleveland. Ostensibly a Great Lakes port city, this Old-World city has many wonderous examples of Old-World architecture that defy simple explanation and even challenge the theories of the Old-World for explaining some of the details with these incredible edifices. It was called the 6th city because at one time, despite a huge influx of immigrants according to the mainstream account, it was the 6th largest in population. Perhaps it was called the 6th city for another reason.
#oldworld #tartaria #cleveland Развлечения
I'm a medical gas plumber local 55. University hospitals main campus has like 7 floors of basement with windows in em. We were repiping a water main and were down in basement 3 and there it is a window to nowhere.
The old world was built by genius at it's highest level. Self sustaining free energy generating and healing architecture! Some of us are decedents of these people. Seriously glorious!
Can you explain more about this self sustaining free energy?
@@claybailey6527 ruclips.net/video/8Ul0e6lw130/видео.html
@@claybailey6527 The old world structures harnessed energy. This movie may explain it better. Super eye opening and inspiring
Okay- there is a lot for you to learn about Cleveland, my friend. The arcade is the oldest indoor shopping mall in the United States, which is exactly what it was built for. The people of Cleveland raised money to erect the Garfield monument - the interior is far more beautiful than photos can show. The Cleveland libraries have breathtaking interiors. The trust building became a grocery store with a very strange layout. The original intention of the West Side Market was designed in a similar style to a train station - but it's intended purpose was indeed for the market.
There are a lot of beautiful places you missed, but you did a really nice job with this!
May I suggest looking into Franklin Castle, Severance Hall, and Millionaire's Row. Cleveland was home to the first home in the states to have electricity in it. (Charles Brush Mansion)
If you ever come to Cleveland, I would love to show you around and give you every bit of knowledge that I can! 😊
I moved here in 2019 from the west coast and I was blown away by the architecture here and how I never heard about it before moving here. It makes the city so much cooler why keep it secret? You should do a video on the old-world churches here. I mean real-life castles.
I have a Cathedral based video coming up.
Incredible work. I'm French, you can't even start to imagine the amout of things and rabbit holes we have here.
You have a literal giant rabbit hole with the catacombs under Paris! ;) Château de Chambord is one of my favorites.
A serious note, Cleveland has a ton of old world structures. Martin Luther king boulevard all the old bridges on there. Obviously, terminal tower, you've hit a lot of them. But this town is so old and it just incredible.
It is on my little on-site trip planned in August that goes to Philly. The Marble Room has me hooked if you didn't notice. ;)
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214I can see why. Me too…Holy smokes.
Driving down MLK is always a WTF moment.
The Whole Eastside is Ancient!!!
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If you're anywhere near Cleveland, the Westside market is a must go in the summer. Fresh produce stands in the aisles on the North and East sides. The inside is littered with independent produce merchants. Bands play from the balcony on occasion. There are several restaurants within and several worth visiting without.
From the freeway you can see the spirals of the ancient churches. If you drive towards the spires and go inside, the next is more beautiful than the previous. Deer Hunter was taped there. Cleveland began with solid European, heavy Irish and Italian immigrants' masonry skills. When I graduated high school, we were Italian, Irish and European Jews. No one questioned the authenticity of the Cleveland narrative. Cleveland was always just Cleveland, old, magnificent, broke, corrupt and gentrified.
I do question it now.
Thank you, for highlighting my hometown. Oh, the Cleveland Indians two years ago change their name to the Cleveland Guardians because of those two bridge statues. The one is of Hermes. I always thought they were Zeus and Mercury. Either way, they speak of a long instilled pagan belief system. Cleveland is old. Very very old.
I guess they could not make "Major League" now......
Its pretty disturbing how easily some type of evil entity reset the whole world and put amnesia on everyone.
Just look at what’s going on today with technology (AI) and it gets a hell of a lot scarier…
@@pauliedibbs9028 Yes iam aware. This realm seems to be ruled by a Satan archetype imo.
They put a very large number of the population in insane asylums… amnesia by lobotomy!
Kinda reminds me of that movie dark city.
Wow that's my city!
wish I knew you were dropping this video today. I would've sent you some content. there are some whoppers about Terminal Tower which was originally meant to be a mooring station for Zeppelins travelling between NYC and Chicago. Top floors were meant to be charging station and on and off boarding of passengers.
I have pics.
also there was an old world gigantic arch adjacent to the location of Terminal Tower that was torn down around 1900.
Millionaires Row on Euclid Ave was the wealthiest street in the world at the time.
when you come to CLE hit me up and we will take you to The Marble Room for dinner! It's amazing
It looks amazing alone and sounds great.
Share share pics and knowledge!!!
I would love to see those photos if you doing mind sharing!!!!!
I would love to see the pics as well. I have access to plat maps and I’m always in awe about seeing old buildings and construction
Mine also. I can see it out my window.
Beautiful city.
I think so too!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 We saw the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame on our way back to WI from Niagara Falls. Didn't get a chance to wander and explore much but yeah its a beautiful city.
I’m so happy you did Cleveland. I’ve lived south of Cleveland for 13 years and I have never explored the city. I know Pittsburgh much better because I grew up there. I was looking to see if you have a Pittsburgh video but I didn’t see one. I would definitely recognize those buildings. I am sure Pittsburgh has many curious old world buildings.
The Cathedral of Learning always blew my mind. The Carnegie museum also. I could go on… I’d love to see a Pittsburgh video if you ever do one! Glad to see you’re still making videos!
Yes, such a name too, "Cathedral of Learning"!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 I had to write a report on the cathedral of learning during undergrad. It was for an art class, and I think we were also studying architecture. I was in there for many hours and I think I’ve visited every floor. That’s been over 20 years though. The cathedral of learning always impressed me more than any other building in Pittsburgh. But there are so many that leave you wondering how they built that!
The usual slew of reasons we are given....they worked harder, no safety standards, infinite money, etc. :)
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 I was always suspicious about those buildings. I remember being in those old buildings, and it was almost like I could feel the past because they felt ancient, out of place, and almost otherworldly. It was not until I came across the study of an alternative look at history that it finally seems to make some sense!
It was the same thing for me being in a state capitol where it all started.
Perhaps Drew Carey was right, Cleveland Rocks. That building in the beginning the train depot was used for the worlds largest baloon release in the mid 80s and it was a debacle, Lake Erie was covered in Baloons.
I think I remember that, it happened shortly after I just happened to see the episode of WKRP where they bombed Cincinatti with live turkeys!
Born and raised in Cleveland, still here. My grandfather was a bricklayer who worked on the Terminal Tower. And those mansions at the beginning went up and down Euclid Avenue in the late 1800s early 1900s. It was known as Millionaires Row at the time.
I grew up in Hudson about a half hour South of Cleveland. My home town was the home of Owen Brown who was John Brown's 3rd son. As a kid I was an electricians helper and rewired many of the extremely old homes. Many of them were part of the Undergroad Railroad and had secret passageways in the basements. I saw more than a few.
From Cleveland and I've always felt like these places are mucn much older. It wasnt until later in life becoming curious and looking at the "history" of these places only to feel immensely as if it didnt add up or make sense.
Thanks for all your dedication to this research!
Thank you very much, looks like I may be hitting Pittsburg a little sooner. ;)
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 that would be awesome! I’d love to see you take us on a tour of Pittsburgh old world buildings! I’ll share it with all my family so they can open their eyes!
@@JuliannaAngelina789 Well it all fits nicely with the city videos and I would like people to see that Cathedral. ;)
ive always had a strange facination with cleveland now i really wanna go
Be Careful, I'm from there. Left and returned multiple times. Not there now. It's hostile in many areas, much like Detroit. Don't get lost in the wrong part of town. Sandusky, Ohio including Cedar Pointe and Put-in-Bay Island are the most impressive features.
3:14, triangulation of towers is needed or ground-based positioning, GPS system. There is no space and there's no satellites, the old world worked off of triangulation of signals, as long as you have a receiver and there's a sender all is good. That's why you need to do the receiver extremely high up in the cityscape
Sat r real they launch them on baloons sometimes the crash and we get to see just how idiotic we r go nasa please go
@@dennisburt4614 umm...yeah
I'm thinking that Garfield Tower is just the tippy top of a massive structure that couldn't be dug out all the way
Thanks for doing Cleveland! I grew up not far from there, and I remember my dad taking us up to the Terminal Tower and riding the elevator. Definitely awe-inspiring!
You bet!
Also, the statues you saw on the pillars were built as the entrance to the the Lorain-Carnegie bridge, now known as the Hope Memorial Bridge (after Bob Hope). The statues are called the Guardians of Transportation and are the source of the MLB Cleveland Indians new name, the Cleveland Guardians.
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It will always be The Indians, The Guardians sound more like panty liners.
@@stoveboltlvr3798 I'd be more okay with the Guardians name, if they had actually incorporated the design from the statues into the logo, instead of that shitty winged G logo that looks like it was drawn on a middle schoolers binder.
@@stoveboltlvr3798well-played, using this at a platform to complain about the baseball club’s new name.
Of note, regardless of your cries that “they’ll always be the Indians” to you, that doesn’t change the fact that they are the Guardians, and no one cares whether you approve or not.
😂
That was amazing. Can’t wait for a Buffalo video. You could almost hit repeat. Stop me if you’ve heard this one before…(great song BTW- got it on vinyl 🤓)…World’s Expo, Tesla, FLW, huge asylum…the usual shtick. Heck, the way you’ve been cranking the content, it won’t be long. Your killing it! ☕️🏛
;)
16:29 Garfield's Memorial is the final resting place of James A Garfield and his wife Lucretia as well as several other family members. President Garfield was born and raised in the Cleveland area and bought his home in Mentor, Ohio about 30 miles or so from the Memorial. Lawnfield is on the register of historic places and is run by the US Park Service as a museum.
That is even better than the wiki summary, more succinct too.
Thank you so much for doing Cleveland! Can’t wait for you to actually visit in person because the pictures just don’t do it justice. The main courthouse (right beside the huge library) is almost identical to the library.
That is a surprise, Marble Room is on my dine list too.
Thank you for these vintage pictures of Cleveland where I was born and still live.
Thanks for covering Cleveland! Lots of gems here and a very special place indeed
It really is!
Salutations, my Friend,
Yet another fine examination....and; Midwest Rules!....Cleveland is no exception; what a truly glorious assemblage of wonderful architecture!
Concerning that early, eye-in-the-sky, "overhead view", and how everything appears to radiate from city center; to me it looks like that general area featuring the point and source, the very juncture of all those spokes of the wheel that are roads....is that several blocks wide vicinity, could it be a depression where some of those oldest downtown structures were made taller by exposure, the removal of earth?....just an initial impression that gave birth to a thought.
I hope whatever was ailing you has satisfactorily passed, and all is happy and well....regardless, I am sending positive vibes and a double portion of good cheer! May you be found abundantly blessed in all your ventures, here on the Tooob and elsewhere, at home and abroad! CIAO!
28:04 Thing one always found fascinating was if those not from the Philadelphia tri-state area described the city as dirty. It’s like they could not see the old world elements!
The giant chimney towers would make sense if it was on top of steam generators. It would make the immediate atmosphere more conductive energy wise. Which, going back to the great John Anthony West rip, was an attempt of high civilizations to stave off the inevitable change to the current muck we find ourselves within the giant rat wheel of this realm.
All I can say is wow. Thank you
My pleasure!
Awesome work Thanks
Thank you very much!
Great video! I love the city explorations. It seems they always try to make these cities seem so awful.
Funny you mention that as it seems on overdrive these days.
Gee, it’s almost like a reset. Huh…imagine that. 🔁
Good work.
Thanks!
When looking at the picture of the arcade in Cleveland I am reminded of other buildings that have similar tops and RF similar height normally with two separate staircases and different tiers and platforms if you go back to the worlds fair and look at these buildings specifically that have the greenhouse roof on them you will see that for the fair they have incorporated different boxes things that were obviously put together quickly to fill in the spaces which are enormous but think again when you look at these buildings and there’s one in England at least that I know of as well that would fit this criteria if you look at the building itself there’s usually an openness on each end sort of like a tube so my conjecture is these were transport stations not train but blimp dirigible which we all knew they had back then I think dirigible would be perfect that word need the different tiers for departing and arriving and then the blimp could just be pulled out of the tube and on it’s Merry way!:))
I agree with your assessment. It seems there were many such possible stations in this city which is why I selected the title shot with an airship. ;)
You got me cracking up with the sarcasm and the Metal Gear Solid reference...u killed it with the Major League opening bro...good stuff
Thank you very much, how else does one respond to a PMC from 1837? ;)
I dunno, one could respond with an understanding of (very) recent modern history and human progress instead of made-up bullshit. Just my take.@@Restitutor_Orbis_214
Wow, excellent investigation once again! I only a bit sad about the fact that I did not come across your page until last week. Just 2 weeks ago, I was in Cleveland working and including the city in my own investigation of the ancient mound site that lay in and under just about every major (and minor) cities in what is now called North America.
They do come up a lot, thank you.
This place a chill down my spine since I've traveled to many of these places before yet remained oblivious how such stunning interior design and architecture were created.
One last comment, as a construction worker... rain can put a damper on things, also snow and it's cold out? Nope I don't believe the narratives that this was built in one year. In Southern Ontario Canada, we have the same climate, you can build that in one year if you have a army at your disposal
An the logistics resources and supply chains needed to keep said army alive and working at peak ability. Also the infrastructure needed to store an remove waste shit and piss. An also the farm's nearby needed to feed them an the support structure staffing. It's a lie which becomes less an less believable every day.
I'm in Toronto north York area
@@long-hair-dont-care88. you would be a general in my Army, to build such a building, the interview process is over your hired
@@gulfy09 I'm in Guelph
@@88Shinto ok nice to know that..
Great work as always brother!
I've been out of town the last couple of weeks doing boots on the ground BadLands explorations ! and i'm just headed out of town to work the shambhala music festival for another week!
I'll be in touch the last few days of July once i'm back home! then we'll schedule a full stream together proper for the first week or so of August if that works for you my friend?
Much Love and Respect Brother!
Sounds great! Enjoy your trip!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Will do brother! keep up the great work and content my friend! and we'll talk as soon as i'm back home! Much Love G
Please do Baltimore! It felt very beautiful even while looking at ugly ,unloved buildings. It was a magical place in my opinion. Thank you for each and every video!
It is on the list!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Ah! You are so much fun! Thank you! Every city you explore is worth it. I appreciate your hard work! Even small central California had many Old World buildings. They have really done their best to eliminate as much as possible. Stay safe! Best wishes
I live south of CLE, lots of old world architecture and also Ancient stuff, literally a giant circle mound site in my town & Indian lore ALL over here..
Yes the skylight to the Arcade did at one time open up. The 4th floor, which I’m currently staying on,has turn valves connected to a rod going straight up to gears near the skylight. About every 4 doors on each side of the 4th floor has this mechanism attached to it. Great video!
That would have been something to see, thanks for sharing!
You can do a video alone on the historic "churches" of cleveland...ive recently read that these old churches were actually schools for atlantis b4 they were repurposed into churches! Anacalipses was the book!!
They have some beauties there for sure.
CLEVELAND ROCKS!!!
I haven't been this early aince the early days. Still gotta catch a live, my signal on Huges net is crud but, I am down if I catch one live finally. This along with Quantum of Conscience, Howdie Mickoski, UBTV, PSR, Styrofoam Bonfire...great fun communities.
Yeah, the settlers also dug out basement levels, because they knew extra parking would be needed soon.
They were told the rest of Europe was following soon. ;)
I'm hopeful I will somehow survive the reset. I'm also terrified I'll somehow survive the reset.
@@long-hair-dont-care88.
I hope to survive it, because I'd like a new castle, or an old one would be fine too, might even be better. Guess I'll have my pick.
An actual Old-Worlder and not one of those MacMansions from now.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214
Oh ya, you're right! Not only that, but I'll need an Old-Worlder that has plenty of Old-World Tech, because it will probably take a while before the new power-grid is up and running.
That picture with looking straight up in a dome looks like a cutaway of CERN.
It will be very interesting to see your interpretation of Budapest. It has really, but REALLY interesting architecture. It's also "funny" how McDonalds and Starbucks bought one the most interesting and beautiful places there. So it's pretty bizarre to eat that McShit in the middle of something so spectacular. I'm so glad I found your channel, you are the gem!
Thanks, I will get around to Budapest in good time.
Please search "Cleveland Old Central Armory". This was another armory that was literally right down the street from the Gray's armory. It was much larger than the Gray's armory, built like a castle and had a taller tower. It was torn down and replaced by a federal building. Peace.
Speaking of armories, look up all the “buried cannons” in places like Ontario and Georgia..
You will hear explanations such as “revolutionary era” or “German WW1 era”… which again, really makes you wonder why… let alone how..
Gray's is really cool, when I was an active MMA fighter, I fought there a couple times & got to warm up down in the actual range, koolest experience that I will always treasure!
@@Takugruber Wow! I didn't even know they did that. One of my guys threw a party there once and that's my main memory of it.
Yeah they stopped having events there probably like 2011 or so I fought in the building twice in 2010, such an old, historic place & a Kool venue to trade leather in IMO...
Just got back from a road trip in Cleveland. I have never seen a city that is more old-world in the North East other than Quebec City. We're standing waiting for the car at the Holiday Inn Express in the 1845 National Bank building basically across the street from the Rotunda. Cleveland does a really great job with plagues all over depicting the heritage and even the construction but... there are so many holes in the narrative even on the plaques. The Rotunda is a grocery story so I had to go it. Our hotel was nuts too - 12 foot ceilings in the rooms.
we have these building with the columns at every corner of the city ranging from smaller to larger. im in my 50s and i have been in these buildings since the 70s. these are so many of these gems that go well out of downtown. if your in town and want to see what you wont see on here(yet) i will take you to some spaces and let you see the interiors. this goes well away from downtown.
Really interesting video, i ve been in Cleveland for 2 months and explored downtown and university circle a bit. I was really intrigued by how most of the buildings in downtown are from the early 1900s and late 1800s
It is quite a repeating pattern as well.
13:58 “they were just ball busters back then” LOL it literally looks like another planet what da fauk? Definitely my favorite picture this video. Wow.
They say it was completed in one year, may as well say it was one month or week.....
@2:38, you see the gables with rods on thr top. Those are mercury energy structures that gave free energy drawn from the atmosphere. We need that again. Prosperity for all.
At 6:25 those “statues” are at the Hope Memorial (Lorain-Carnegie) bridge, which is apparently under construction. They are the Guardians of Transportation, which is where the Guardians baseball team got their name. Progressive Field would be behind and to the right of the person taking this photo. The block structure on the left was Cleveland Fire Dept station 28, which also houses the alarm and dispatch center. When someone pulled the lever on a fire alarm box it rang inside there with a complicated system of wires and bells. It is now the Western Reserve Fire museum.
I guess I need to make another trip to Cleveland!!!
Born and raised w 17th and abby right underneath Carnegie bridge!!!
Cleveland had some of the wealthiest people in america living there in the 1800s. People were not taxed to death like they are now. People had tons and tons of money to make things beautiful!!! Those extremely wealthly people were hemorrhageing money trying to out do each other with their buildings.
Strange, we have many accounts in history and fiction that people were taxed heavily in the 1800s:
littlehouse.fandom.com/wiki/Episode_220:_Centennial
They also inform us that during the US Civil War was the first imposition of income taxes along with conscription. They also tell us there were always property taxes even before the American Revolution and continued after the Constitution.
Looking at old photos we don't see any sewers or drainage for rain usually they have man holes in the middle of the street. Strange indeed. Id love to see the basement of these buildings
It seems to be a recurring theme with many of them too or just about all.
Yes, manholes. That's how water drains into municipal sewer systems. I really hope you're not registered to vote.
having lived here 32 years some of these photos really help me see what it was originally.
That monument Garfield memorial looks like it's at least 500 years old
I love how they use the rustication technique to try explaining it all away even though of course we don't use such a technique today or even build with masonry.
They call you crazy for noticing things. They call you crazy for asking questions. Why does the military guard antarctica? Why does every country have a non exploration treaty with america in regards to antarctica?
Wonder wonder, did you watch the Operation Highjump Saga video?
@Restitutor_Orbis_214 yes. It's my opinion that he went through a hole in the ice wall. Only he knew for sure. But they killed him really quick.
Thank you for showing me this side of Cleveland. I grew up there in the 1980s, and even though I've been in and recognize a lot of these buildings and structures, I've always thought of my hometown as remarkably ugly. I may write more later to try to fill in at least some of your questions.
Seeing nobody at construction sites is a very Cleveland thing.
And woah terminal tower was 1 year total length of construction? Dood we build apartment buildings that take more than a year that are 1/4 the size!
I’m from Cleveland as well and have been doing SOOOOOO much research on the city!! Tower City is waaaay older than they are saying! A lot of photos are older than they are dating them as well!!! I can show you a lot of the evidence I have gathered on Cleveland also!!
So when there is an old world building that is huge with limited design in architecture it is attributed to an architecture firm, but one huge old world building with amazing intricate architecture is attributed to a 23 year old?
That seems to be the pattern, I will keep observing!
8:12 If this is the same section of the building as 12:08 That means either this photo is completely fake or those 2 guys are 30 feet tall! And honestly, 30 foot tall people building this makes more sense than the photo being fake
Scale, scale, scale and powers of observation are incredible abilities to have. :)
Now it's all barber shops, cell phone shops and bars.
I'm from Cleveland. No hills. It's very flat here. NE Ohio was ground flat by glaciers.
A little research would’ve went a long way. Being from here and seeing hundreds of years worth of buildings and industries and learning about the the city for 30 years, all of this is consistent.
You are referring to recitation or repeating something instead of research. You even show this tendency in this comment by repeating the word "the".
It took 3 years to redo the ceilings a few years ago
Great summary of Cleveland/Ohio. Well, I`ve got a strange question. You sometimes say in this video "I can`t believe that this building was built in 18.. e.g. etc. etc.; Do you think that this so called history our great rulers gave to us is a giant fabrication or lie sir? Greetings from Augsburg/Bavaria
I know for certain there are tremendous lies I witnessed firsthand in the last 12 years alone. Something tells me they were much better at it in the past.
It's hard to wrap your mind around how many people would have to help construct these buildings and this is after the "civil war" I would think our population would be somewhat diminished.
No, it's not hard at all. Why has the world gone stupid?
The elevator doors are actually made out of brass, inside the Terminal Tower.
the dates on the Tower City photos do not add up with the construction going on in the photos. that alone is a dead giveaway!!!
At 6:23 the photo shows 2 statues on the "Hope Memorial Bridge"...it is what the Cleveland Guardian's are named after....
That is original.
Yes, those statues are maybe 50 feet or more tall and are on each side of a huge bridge called the Carnegie Bridge( at least that’s what it was called throughout most of my life unless they changed it). I believe there are 6 such statues, 3 on each side. Each Guardian is holding a vehicle for transportation, car, bus truck, wagon, etc. there might be 4 on each side, I forget?
@@sarisigmund2115 The Hope Memorial Bridge was dedicated to Bob Hope awhile back...I am pretty sure that the Lorain Carnegie Bridge is not the same bridge...I think there are a total of 8 statues...all of which are holding some form of transportation in their hands...
@@PipeChoirthe Lorain-Carnegie Bridge is the Hope Memorial Bridge, connecting Lorain Road on the West and Carnegie Blvd on the east. Yes, there are eight “Guardians,” two pylons on each end of the bridge, each double sided.
The word "founded" is very telling. It essentially means "FOUND". They literally say they found the cities! People dont realize the weight of the very words we use. Believe its a coincidence if you want.
I’m south of Cleveland!
Cleveland in the 1880s had the highest concentration of millionaires in the world. It was a place where invention, innovation, money and ambition met. We have 4 US Presidents buried in Northern Ohio. It was the place to be.
George Keller now plays the life of Benedict Cumberbatch:)
Ha!
At 6:16 that is the Hope Memorial Bridge which connects Lorain to Carnegie Avenue. The statues still stand and apparently it is where Cleveland got the name the Guardians
It is a much better name than "Commanders" or simply the "Cleveland team".
I'm from Connecticut, one town over from Canterbury Connecticut where Moses Cleveland was from. I believe he said that he hoped that Cleveland Ohio would one day be as beautiful as his hometown Canterbury Connecticut. Lol Cleveland definitely surpassed Canterbury
That is interesting, did you view the exploration of the CT state capitol?
I've actually been lucky enough to visit the capital building when I was a teenager
I really need to go take a tour of the capital again because I have a different perspective from when I first visited
The interior of the capitol building is so magnificent so much marble
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 in Connecticut it feels like there are different stages of architecture. Capital building is magnificent full of marble and opulence. But then you go to other towns and the houses look like a tinderbox. But for some reason they were built supposedly at the same time. It puzzles me in that respect
As far as clock towers are concerned I'm not sure why they would be clock towers, but I know there was a lot of compition to build the tallest buildings in these early years. Maybe that could be why a lot of citys had tall towers.
terminal tower, interesting name...as in a closing of an electrical circuit?
the statue, was it inside memorial building?... doesn`t fit the pattern of the floor
the librabry wedding pic, was that skeleton key design on the windows?
@32:14 I don't know much about the grays, my guess is they served a similar function as the Pinkerton men, protecting capital (of the oligarchs) at all costs, hired thugs (as well as spies and infiltrators) brought in to intimidate and suppress workers and civilians, mostly in mine and mill towns, as well as securing property and resources that couldn't be acquired by legal means.
Basically the served the same function and people that the U.S. military, private military contractors, the FBI, and the CIA serve now.
* Pinkerton men were in East Palestine, within hours of the derailment, closing public roads and removing anyone in proximity to the derailment or railroad property (I live 58 miles away), and from the handful of locals I've spoken with, they were running the show.
I believe the five minute 50 second Mark is the Hope memorial bridge with the two guardians of traffic statues.
There are eight Guardians of Traffic. Four columns with two sides each.
In my opinion the only thing they could possibly build in that time was wooden Shantytown Shacks and saloons!! Those pesky "FREE" mAsOnS
They were very shacky shacks at that too!
The tower you're so focused on was built by the Swearingen brother. The even brought in stone workers from the Isle of Man. The brothers build a new suburb for Cleveland and needed a way to get people from there to the city.
They commissioned it, they didn't build it according to the historical account, or do you know otherwise Mr. Swearingen? If so, I would be delighted to hear it.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 They didn't build it but helped push for it development. The station it replaced was in need of major repair and enlargement.
That corresponds to the official account. Incredible achievement in a year.
Im pretty sure all that was already here before any of them
@@DrewSwearingen Brother, I don't have all the answers, but what I can for sure without a doubt tell you is whatever narrative that is ((( official ))) history presented to us is most likely fake or a half truth.
Very strange to build a bank building of that size when the town barely had 10,000 inhabitants in 1845. "It was the first bank opened under the Ohio Bank Act of 1845 in a small town with no gas, electricity, public waterworks, or railroad."
It is even more hilarious when you consider the supposed nature of currency in that timeframe too.
I love all of the old buildings and you're right they are hiding something.. I love your sarcasm is well....
Thank you much!
Terminal Tower, sounds like a destination for travel. Bus/Train terminal? Perhaps was only tower available for airships in Cleveland?
It IS a train and rapid transit terminal. Tracks run underneath it.
I REALLY need a context statement for this video! lol!
sweet
Great video but I’m super bummed that you didn’t include the old courthouse, which absolutely blows all of the other spots you showed away other than maybe the arcade. The scale and size of the courthouse with all of the pillars, antiquitech looking lights, mile high ceilings, and mind blowing carved stairs and balusters of pure marble … you honestly would do this video justice by remaking it and including the courthouse. Akron Ohio also has a lot of great buildings, Carnegie library, art museum, etc all still standing and same questionable history. Contact me if you’d like info on Akron. Firestone high school is a good one.
At 2:51 you show a pic. that you say is from 1890's. I think that's from 1918-20 with those cars, they appear to be from at least 1920's maybe 1910's at most. But in the 1890's car's were just beginning and very few people had them. Some of these look like the model-T and to have that many it must have much later that 1890's although The Model T started in 1908 witch is still fairly early.
Find Facts ... not speculation... they did know how to build quite well back then , they were not in the stone age
So, you are indicating they could build better at that time than we can now?
I swear a couple of those first pics looked like little fake models of the city
That seems to be a recurring theme with some of these images doesn't it? It is almost as though they'd be better off sticking with the paintings and sketches.
There is nothing art deco about terminal tower.
Just gorgeous arch art. These do leave me questioning who all was involved in the building of such sites
I know you dont cover balbek the 1,200,000 lb monolithic obelisk Or other ancient ancient sites. But the story I was taught doesnt add up. Seriously reed boats carying a single rock that big? Brien foerrester has a lot of great work on this. Also the parracas skulls. Kinda like cone heads the movie. 😂
Balbek is likely a 2nd Era site, discussing earlier eras can be challenging.
Brien Forester seems like a gatekeeper. ( Wether he knows it or not ) he never gets to the core about the much more recent resets and their insidious cover up. All HIStory is a lie.
@@aegisreflector1239 He does a lot of laps that is for certain.
The base blocks on the Cleveland Grey's.. cyclopean masonry..interesting..and why put a specific period of time on a structure with no other written data to back it like establishment or commemorative plates that we see on cornerstones etc?..very odd. The Market building definitely looks like it was originally designed as a station/port..
Many anomalies in this city. The account of a "Private Military Company-Cleveland Grays" to guard the city in the age of state militias is truly bizarre as if the building isn't bizarre enough. It is also another example of a military unit in a Northern state during the U.S. Civil War wearing gray uniforms in addition to Iowa and the U.S. Military Academy.