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An ABANDONED St. Louis Suburban Neighborhood: Carrollton, Bridgeton, Missouri.

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  • Опубликовано: 6 авг 2024
  • Carrollton was a neighborhood in the suburban city of Bridgeton. This neighborhood sits right next to St. Louis Lambert International Airport, and the city of St. Louis bought out this neighborhood in the 1990's due to a noise ambient program as the airport built a new runway that pointed right in the direction of Carrollton. Today, the neighborhood is completely abandoned and it looks more like a national wildlife refuge than a city neighborhood.
    0:00 - 20:40 Carrollton's Empty Streets
    20:40 - 34:25 Populated areas of Bridgeton
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Комментарии • 570

  • @ChrisHarden
    @ChrisHarden  Год назад +11

    St. Louis Suburbs Playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLkAKbwTlGHeI5aIcCV3CrAaJR-ruM5hYR
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    • @paulrichards9400
      @paulrichards9400 Год назад +1

      I used to drive a delivery truck I would eat my lunch there quite often, it was great

    • @j.a.terranson
      @j.a.terranson Год назад

      *I don't recall how dense a U235 or U238 pile has to get in order to start things burning around a pile, but i DO recall that it takes a LOT of the stuff! The "Great Superfund Cleanups" that "were completed" in the mid 1980's (quoting the City Superfund Litigation Team - liars, every one of them) went on to claim that the outdoor amphitheater in Earth City was so radioactive that building it should have been outlawed altogether for at least another 300 years.. This crap REALLY pisses me off...*

    • @human8307
      @human8307 10 месяцев назад

      Not the first time it happened, they tore down holiday hill because of concerns that to many people were in one spot if a plane had a issue. then they built the big hotel in its footprint. In 96- 97 they forced circuit city to move for expansion also. Its now a church of some kind.

  • @DruinStLouis
    @DruinStLouis Год назад +118

    I miss the Lindbergh parking lot at the end of the runway where we used to watch the aircraft landing and taking off.

    • @ashleys9634
      @ashleys9634 Год назад +7

      Me too. Used to love going there as a kid

    • @djlee1977
      @djlee1977 Год назад +6

      I used to take girls there to make out in the car.

    • @stephanietucker2559
      @stephanietucker2559 Год назад +3

      Me too.

    • @timbrown8038
      @timbrown8038 Год назад

      I took mine to abandoned dirt car race track. Very abandoned.

    • @thisisme3238
      @thisisme3238 Год назад +4

      I remember the Lindberg parking lot too. It was good, free entertainment watching the planes taxing in as well as watching the planes take off too

  • @cindyplume5128
    @cindyplume5128 Год назад +69

    I lived in Carrollton Oaks and had great neighbors.. We were bought out and had to fight low-ball offers.. They compared 2000 sq ft houses to 1200 sq ft houses and had I not have seen my own airport buyout appraisal, which they didn't want us to see I would have been screwed but I fought and ended up getting a lot closer to the value than what they were offering.. Buy-outs are not what most people think..

    • @JP-wx6uh
      @JP-wx6uh Год назад +3

      This happens pretty often.

    • @alison5009
      @alison5009 Год назад

      I had heard things like this. I’m sorry they tried to do this to you. Thought is was a cute neighborhood before, but never lived there or knew anyone that lived there. ❤

    • @backwardk
      @backwardk Месяц назад

      There are/were a few instances I have seen something similar, in Louisville 30 years ago, where exactly I do not remember, but I remember a whole neighborhood with red X’s on the houses. We saw a cop nearby and he told us it was for the airport expansion. In Columbus OH. The houses had wood over the windows and doors and the wood was painted to look like windows with partially opened curtains with vases with flowers in the “windows”. Oddly enough years later some of those houses were re-occupied (I believe it was north of the airport). And lastly Burlington KY. The streets for the neighborhood are still there and for a while there were still hold outs. I think only one house is left (and now I work nearby, but have not been back that way to check).

  • @brendaschnettler5183
    @brendaschnettler5183 Год назад +54

    This wonderful subdivision was taken from us. My family was there from 1971-2007

  • @paulcreedon1375
    @paulcreedon1375 Год назад +79

    This is a great video Chris. I used to live across Natural Bridge Rd from Carrollton and had MANY friends who lost their homes due to this expansion. My family had to move due to the first expansion/buyout of Bridgeton Terrace (further east, near the I 70/Hunter Rd/Cypress Rd area). Carrollton was a great place to live and raise a family. VERY safe. It's really sad and frustrating what the city has done. Bridgeton has never been the same.

  • @CornCod1
    @CornCod1 Год назад +61

    I had a friend who lived there. He was one of the last hold-outs. It was bizarre visiting his house on a normal, pleasant suburban street with two-thirds of the houses gone. He has since died.

  • @Steve-nm4dm
    @Steve-nm4dm Год назад +48

    I had a friend who lived in Carrolton and visited many times. It was a beautiful neighborhood with attractive homes.

  • @jimmtech
    @jimmtech Год назад +59

    Would be nice to see pictures when there were homes there, and do a side by side comparison to now.

    • @denverdubois5835
      @denverdubois5835 Год назад +8

      This. Would've made the video much more interesting and effective.

    • @jamie49868
      @jamie49868 Год назад +8

      That probably required more time than he had. But yeah, I remember this very well, yet the details are a little hazy 40+ years later and I would have enjoyed that immensely.

    • @larryyoder4861
      @larryyoder4861 Год назад +6

      Yes was thinking same thing

  • @susanhuguley1743
    @susanhuguley1743 Год назад +28

    I lived there as a child in the 1960's. The pool and the community center was so much fun. It was a shock to find out what happened to our neighborhood since we moved in the 60's out of state.

  • @kathywebb6606
    @kathywebb6606 Год назад +197

    Hate to say it, but it looks pretty without the houses, like a huge park.

    • @ChrisHarden
      @ChrisHarden  Год назад +13

      It’s for the better.

    • @stoveboltlvr3798
      @stoveboltlvr3798 Год назад +16

      I hope every city does this with it's old, dilapidated buildings. Give it back to nature.

    • @heard3879
      @heard3879 Год назад +11

      This appears to be a place where the grass is being mowed, and the leaves are being cleaned up. Not appearing to be given back to nature.

    • @benjaminwallace4626
      @benjaminwallace4626 Год назад +16

      @@ChrisHarden
      Trust me. It’s not for the better
      Coming from a former resident.

    • @TB-zj4sp
      @TB-zj4sp Год назад +8

      I wish the states would put limitations on how large a city can become . You ever notice how people keep building and building and expanding the cities . Are wildlife population isn't going to have a place to exist except in a backyard near you. It's true but also I made a pun. Lol !

  • @devildart
    @devildart Год назад +25

    You can still see the streets from the air when you fly in to Lambert approaching from the north. Another St Louis area ghost town that is interesting is Times Beach.

    • @Cat15210
      @Cat15210 Год назад +2

      I lived in Eureka and remember seeing the incinerator burning 24/7 when I was a kid.

  • @anitachiquita70
    @anitachiquita70 Год назад +21

    I worked at DePaul Hospital when it first opened up in 1977. Many people lived in Carrollton who worked at the hospital. My boss had a house there and I remember it being very nice. I would call it an upper middle class area. Lot's of people who worked at McDonnel Douglas, now Boeing, lived there.

    • @jamie49868
      @jamie49868 Год назад +2

      It was a great neighborhood for sure.

    • @robertc4826
      @robertc4826 Год назад +2

      I worked @ DP too

  • @laurafoote214
    @laurafoote214 Год назад +32

    Hard to believe this was a neighborhood once, it almost looks like an arboretum now,wow.

  • @strngenchantedgirl
    @strngenchantedgirl Год назад +10

    The demise of Lambert and its growth is due to the buy out and death of TWA. When AA bought them they promised not to take away the hub in St. Louis but quickly reneged. The story at the time was there were hearings on the buy out and AA was able to successfully keep out Missouri’s Senators from the hearing. St. Louis has been destroyed by the lack of enforcement of monopoly laws. So many Fortune 500 businesses that were based in St. Louis were bought out and moved. The jobs that existed in the Midwest have all been moved to the coasts, diminishing the economic strength of the interior of the nation while making the big coastal cities unlivable with outrageous real estate prices.

  • @jimwalsh5638
    @jimwalsh5638 Год назад +9

    I lived there from 1960 to 1969 on the corner of Lonsdale and Celburne. Went to school at St Lawrence the Martyr and worked at the pool in the later years. It was a great place to grow up. Our house was it the path of one of the runways and when a 707 was coming over the house at around 200 ft you had to scream to be heard but they weren't as bad as the F4 phantoms coming from McDonnell Douglas. One thing the video doesn't convey is that a lot of those streets are not flat but rather hilly. Thanks for the video.

    • @joeegan9062
      @joeegan9062 Год назад +1

      My older brother went to St. Lawrence the Martyr school. (Whole family went there for Mass.) I think he went to school there from 65-73. His name is Richard but he went by Ricky back then. I wonder if you knew him.

  • @D-Fens_1632
    @D-Fens_1632 Год назад +22

    I live right by here and remember when the homes were there. I used to ride my bike around there a lot after they weren't anymore. Lots of deer in the area. It's kind of neat having a ghost town nearby.

  • @lisalewis5664
    @lisalewis5664 Год назад +17

    My husband and I wanted to buy a house in that neighborhood right as the buy-outs began. So there were still a lot of people there when we started looking. But there were also a lot of abandoned homes and we didn't know what was up with that. Then we learned about the airport buyouts and realized we werent goint to get to live in that neighborhood.

  • @Tblazer42
    @Tblazer42 Год назад +3

    This video made me cry 😭 so many memories came flooding in

  • @donwillman4587
    @donwillman4587 Год назад +6

    My wife grew up in Carrolton subdivision and she lived there while we were dating. We still live in the neighboring Maryland Heights area as I have most of my life. Our two boys went to Pattonville School District which is considered one of the best in all of Missouri (which is why we moved back here after my time in the military).
    The strip mall you talked about being a grocery store was not the grocer. The BAPS temple was a Schnucks (a big chain in the StL county area) back before the destruction of Bridgeton. That strip mall had a Telscher hardware that dated back to the 1860s (not the same building of course) before the Chinese restaurant next door caught fire and destroyed it. Also, caddy-corner from the Fee Fee Baptist Church - the newer one- is Branneky Hardware- which dates back to the 1850s. My Go-To for most my hardware needs.
    You keep bringing up the Superfund Sites. Yes, the landfill had been an issue but it's been contained for years now. Cold water creek isn't a problem for the area as it flows north and away. I really doubt anyone considers that when looking at moving to the area. Last year Maryland Heights was voted the best city in Missouri to live- by resident satisfaction.

    • @gabriellen.2886
      @gabriellen.2886 Год назад

      Across the way from Schnucks, in that strip mall, is Gene Love TV. I keep getting flyers here in Hazelwood that say it's going out of business soon. It's been there like forever:-(

    • @lm1314
      @lm1314 Год назад

      I am sorry Pattonville is good district but is 8th in metro St. Louis area.

  • @michaelchappell902
    @michaelchappell902 Год назад +17

    Thank you for this video. I use to live and work around this area. I started working at Northwest Plaza for JCPenney in 1978 and lived in Normandy and Florissant until we moved in 1982. I drove by that area every day and past the airport going to work. Brought back some good memories. Things have changed a lot Northwest Plaza shopping mall is gone. I have not been back in that area for over 30 years now. Again thank you

    • @mattconley541
      @mattconley541 Год назад +1

      A big chunk of the old Northwest is still there. The Office Tower, old Famous, now a Spectrum Cable Mega Call Center is still there. The old JC Penny is now the HQ for a grocer store chain. The Sears and Dillards was torn down and I’d now a Menards Home Improvement, Bob’s Furniture.

    • @gabriellen.2886
      @gabriellen.2886 Год назад +2

      I and many other regulars used to mall-walk in NW Plaza in the mornings before the stores opened for business. So convenient and pleasant to get your exercise there.

    • @michaelchappell902
      @michaelchappell902 Год назад +1

      It was also a pleasant place to work

  • @galaxyrider1391
    @galaxyrider1391 Год назад +5

    I lived there from 1977 to 1979. I loved that place. We had everything, including a community pool. It was wonderful.

  • @Maisygirl1974
    @Maisygirl1974 Год назад +7

    My friend lived there and was bought out. She wasn’t too happy to learn that nothing was done with the area other than knocking down all the houses. She loved that neighborhood!

    • @tammybrown4901
      @tammybrown4901 Год назад +1

      Exactly to buy them out an nothing is so sad

  • @optomix3988
    @optomix3988 9 месяцев назад +2

    My Aunt and Uncle used to live in this neighborhood when I was a kid. I remember visiting for holidays and having so much fun because there were so many kids that lived there at the time.

  • @louGriggs1944
    @louGriggs1944 Год назад +23

    Great video. I had two friends who had beautiful homes in Carrollton that were "bought out". Neither one got enough out of the buy out to buy a comparable house elsewhere and both took a loss. I lived in Bridgeton too at the time but not in the area of the buy out. You drove past the home of another old friend on Old St. Charles Road, although he has long since moved. But good memories from Bridgton back in the day. Been making new memories for about 20 years now in St. Charles County. Thanks for a great video.

    • @D-Fens_1632
      @D-Fens_1632 Год назад +7

      One of my biggest regrets was not following you guys out to St Charles and St Peters. My family just didn't have the means when everyone else left in the 90s, and I'm not in a position to currently. North County is just terrible now. Every day on the roads I'm surrounded by speeding criminals who obey zero traffic laws with either temporary license plates from 2019 or no plates at all. Watched so many original owners in my area move out and undesirables with unkempt yards and loud domestic disputes in the middle of the night moved in. It's sad and frustrating. And the stuff I hear about the schools... It's not an entirely unsafe place, it's just dirty and not friendly. That's the start.

    • @D-Fens_1632
      @D-Fens_1632 Год назад +5

      I've also been seeing homeless begging for money at one or two of the places seen here. For a while many of them were posting up at stoplights in Hazelwood near the airport but they seem to have been run off. Saw one Sunday begging at the McDonnell/270 exit he drove past here, they tend to hang around the apartment complex nearby known for drug activity and vehicle break ins and such. Had a friend in there get broken into 3 times. There are still nice homes and good people but they used to be 100%, feels like a lot less these days.

    • @kylemuldrow4652
      @kylemuldrow4652 Год назад

      @@D-Fens_1632 Would that apartment complex be The Finn?

  • @auggiedoggiesmommy1734
    @auggiedoggiesmommy1734 Год назад +10

    What a pretty neighborhood. Beautiful trees.

  • @vihtoripuurola3775
    @vihtoripuurola3775 Год назад +68

    St Louis is a great example of the city government turning its back on the residence to favor special interests. My parents fled in the 60s due to that madness. Even today Kim Gardner puts the city second to her own biases.

    • @krystaldispatchbetttymcgin7702
      @krystaldispatchbetttymcgin7702 Год назад +8

      ....the residents of Carrollton were paid handsomely for their homes. No one was forced out. They were paid as much as 3 times the value of their homes and all associated moving costs, including professional packers and movers were also paid for in addition to closing and escrow costs for their new home. They knew this was coming for years and it was voted on.

    • @ronaldtaylor8901
      @ronaldtaylor8901 Год назад +3

      Yeah I guess slay had stlouis' best interest at heart when he was in

    • @malcolmbliss777
      @malcolmbliss777 Год назад

      Happens every time one party control an entire geographical area. Doesn’t matter which party: Republicans and Democrats are both totally corrupt.

    • @ElizabethSmith-kd4du
      @ElizabethSmith-kd4du Год назад +5

      Not true, most people were screwed.

    • @JapanSpr94
      @JapanSpr94 Год назад +11

      Kim Gardner had nothing to do with this post but your comment is an example of the ignorance that she faces in performing her official duties. St. Louis’ problems are deeply rooted and cannot be blamed on one person. In fact, the decline is parallel to the decline to other Midwestern cities.

  • @charleykeenan6171
    @charleykeenan6171 Год назад +20

    So, many years ago we almost took a job in Bridgeton. In the end there wasn't a relocation package so we ended up passing. In the end, we made the right move.. Great episode as always Chris!

    • @jameskeefe1761
      @jameskeefe1761 Год назад +2

      Avoiding radioactive waste is always a good thing

  • @glenndasutton3958
    @glenndasutton3958 Год назад +6

    Many parts of Berkeley, MO looked like this back in the 70s and 80s after they removed all of the homes in neighborhoods surrounding Boeing due to "airport expansion." Those places are still just undeveloped land now. The decline of these areas is not surprising given the many superfund sites and clearing of homes for airports and interestates.

  • @andyjulia
    @andyjulia Год назад +9

    I appreciate this video. I grew up in Carrollton and my parents were bought out around 2003. This was such a wonderful neighborhood to grow up in. The pool had an attached banquet hall next to it with a bar in the lower level. I had last driven through here about a year ago and you dodge potholes and fallen trees. It really looks apocalyptic now.

    • @katthrog72
      @katthrog72 Год назад +4

      My parents were bought out in 2002. I grew up on DuPage across from St. Lawrence's ball field. Spent my summers at the pool. It was an awesome neighborhood to grow up in. No other neighborhoids out there like it

    • @andyjulia
      @andyjulia Год назад +3

      @@katthrog72 I went to St. Lawrence and grew up on Woodford Way across the bridge. Good memories.

    • @langs26
      @langs26 6 месяцев назад

      St Lawrence fair was always fun.

  • @floydthompson8668
    @floydthompson8668 Год назад +4

    This video is an excellent balance of relaxing and educational. Very nice job!

  • @hedgiegal3340
    @hedgiegal3340 Год назад +3

    My husband lived in Bridgeton in the 1970s, graduated high school from Hazlewood West. Never knew about the radioactive dumping.

  • @pageturningpriestess2859
    @pageturningpriestess2859 Год назад +2

    We lived in Kinloch and moved to Ferguson after the Airport bought up the remaining parts of the neighborhood. They tore down my great-grandmother's house. However, they never built anything over there either, last time I checked.

    • @ChrisHarden
      @ChrisHarden  Год назад +2

      Just went through there this past weekend. I’ve never seen anything like Kinloch. So much trash everywhere!

    • @pageturningpriestess2859
      @pageturningpriestess2859 Год назад +1

      @@ChrisHarden that is true. People used to joke you would go there to either do something shady or hide a body. Some parts of the city I just don't go to that much either due to danger (bullets, vicious dogs, etc) or it is just depressing. Downtown looks gloomy too. They are trying to fix it but more needs to be done. I think bringing more nature into this town would be helpful, not in certain parts but all parts. Just gloomy in general 😂 lol

  • @louisecouch2127
    @louisecouch2127 Год назад +5

    I had a great aunt and uncle who had a home there. When I would visit them as a kid in the 70's I seem to remember a lot of airplanes flying overhead. They lived at 12745 Gist Road.

  • @dgolfer2
    @dgolfer2 Год назад +4

    The airport expansion also took the small town of Bridgeton Terrance. You mentioned Kinloch but there several areas to the east of the airport that were impacted by buyouts as well. My late wife grew up in an area just off of Hanley road that was taken for abatement in the late 80's and early 90's. The housing in and around the area that you drove in was part of the post world war 2 expansion of suburbs. Subdivisions were built to lure factory workers for jobs that existed as plants like Ford Motor Company and McDonnell Douglas were moving in the area or expanding their campuses. Oh, I will make note that St. Charles county also had a history with storage of munitions waste as well.

  • @jamesdellaneve9005
    @jamesdellaneve9005 Год назад +7

    St Louis shrunk 60% in a 20 year period. Detroit shrunk the same amount in a 20 year period but was much larger. I travel to STL frequently. There’s a lot of unrestored and abandoned homes. It has a great art gallery and philharmonic. There’s a great documentary called the Pruitt-Igoe Myth about a segregated housing project that quickly decayed and was demolished shortly later.

    • @alison5009
      @alison5009 Год назад +3

      That is a good doc.

    • @optomix3988
      @optomix3988 9 месяцев назад

      That was a good documentary. Its a shame. that the city is just falling apart from all the crime and neglect. It used to be a very vibrant place in its hayday. My grandfather grew up in North St. Louis and would tell me about all the factories making cars. My great uncle and him ran a tool and die shop that made parts for the cars long time ago.

  • @palletwizard
    @palletwizard Год назад +13

    They did exactly the same thing in Sea Tac in the 1970’s with a expansion of the airport. They also built a killer 27 hole disc golf course. I played it on Saturday. I would love to play the course that this is filmed on. Hopefully someday you can visit the North Sea Tac park!

    • @palletwizard
      @palletwizard Год назад +3

      @@drh3b thanks for the reply! Appreciate it tons! They actually tore down the Alaskan way Viaduct. I think there’s a tunnel now.

    • @LilyGazou
      @LilyGazou Год назад +1

      Seattle is a pit now.

  • @scottguthrie8074
    @scottguthrie8074 Год назад +4

    It was a great and vibrant community! Many of my friends lived in here and I ran the streets all the time to visit great families and a safe neighborhood!

  • @braddschiffman9834
    @braddschiffman9834 Год назад +4

    Good job Chris, always look forward to your uploads.

  • @ericallen4052
    @ericallen4052 Год назад +7

    I'd say about 25yrs ago my friends and I used to explore the buildings that were still standing in the area. The trailer park was surreal. It felt like walking through a zombie film. There was also a huge church with what we thought was a nursing home but I suppose it could have been a living space for children , convent or something like that. We also came across a chop shop. . . We were adventurous. I got a lotta stories 😂 I'm glad we were aware of the possibility of asbestos and wore masks. Didnt always make the best decisions but that was a good one and we had a hell of a lot of fun. Found tons of awesome stuff people left behind like books, antiques, military medals. . . I wonder if any of those buildings are still standing. We'd walk the whole neighborhood at night so those areas are probably what's behind the gates. . . Awesome video. Watching it was almost like walking through a memory.

  • @bmcewen65
    @bmcewen65 Год назад +7

    Hey Chris, as someone that lives in Bridgeton and even went to grade school on Celburne, I love that you finally posted the video, do the streets still register in the GPS? I think it's funny to see all of the street names come back to life, sort of.

    • @ChrisHarden
      @ChrisHarden  Год назад +4

      Yup, google maps and most other navigation apps/systems still have the streets on their grid. Crazy.

  • @mattbosley3531
    @mattbosley3531 Год назад +22

    I remember flying Ozark and TWA into and out of Lambert back in the day. It was a very busy airport. They probably had reason to believe that traffic would increase. It wasn't until American bought TWA in 2001 and the September 11 attacks that Lambert lost its major source of air traffic.

    • @Cookie-ri9pz
      @Cookie-ri9pz Год назад +1

      They had Eastern Airlines too.

    • @twistoffate4791
      @twistoffate4791 Год назад +1

      Off-topic, but I liked TWA's commercials & magazine ads. Hard to believe TWA is no more.

    • @musicartlover963
      @musicartlover963 8 месяцев назад

      ​@twistoffate4791 I agree with you. It's hard 2 believe that so much has changed since 2001.. and Sept 11th regarding air flight travel

  • @brianbanks4093
    @brianbanks4093 Год назад +4

    It’s the same thing that happened to the Manchester Square neighborhood near LAX. It was like a ghost town for years. They are building a new rental car facility there now.

  • @craiggillett5985
    @craiggillett5985 Год назад

    HEY! great to see you up front hosting.
    EXCELLENT!

  • @stevenkaskus6173
    @stevenkaskus6173 Год назад +5

    The Carrollton neighborhood looks beautiful actually as is, like a road through the country.

  • @donnajeffreys7452
    @donnajeffreys7452 Год назад +6

    A number of us who lived in Carrollton started out in the smaller home area. The subdivision was built in 3 stages. When they outgrew the first house the would either move to a the next stage, etc. We had a great hardware store, Telshers Hardware. They bought out the leftover windows, doors, etc. from Fisher & Fritchel so if a window or door got broken, you would just take it out and go to Telshers and they would give you a new one. You did in some cases have to tell them which style home you had to get the right window or door or whatever. They would fix it and then put the newly fixed one back in stock for the next person. We had to do that with a window and a patio door. It's a shame so many people who loved living there had to forced out for nothing! We had our own elementary school in there as well as a Catholic School and a Church. I wish Fisher and Fritchel would build another subdivision exactly the same, maybe they will be given the same award as they did with Carrollton. Carrollton West and Carrollton Oaks.

    • @alison5009
      @alison5009 Год назад

      Hi! Do you know of a place I could find out the builders of older neighborhoods, like F & F? Checked out their site, but not a ton of detail.

    • @susanmorgan5591
      @susanmorgan5591 Год назад +2

      RIP Telscher Hardware. What a great neighborhood asset it was!

  • @cems.3144
    @cems.3144 Год назад +5

    Beautiful trees in fall all yellow I love it

  • @dylwes
    @dylwes Год назад +3

    I lived off selwyn ave. Which backed up to 270. The neighborhood slowly disappeared moving westward throughout the late 80s and mid nineties. My thinking was that this area was taken more because of the nuclear waste nearby at west lake. Luckily we did not live there my whole life and my dad sold sometime in the mid nineties.

  • @pmdmmarsden
    @pmdmmarsden Год назад +7

    I taught my sons how to drive on these streets!

    • @ChrisHarden
      @ChrisHarden  Год назад +1

      Nice

    • @milliedragon4418
      @milliedragon4418 Год назад +1

      Yeah these sounds like awesome places to drive in, especially for learning

  • @calvinvandegrift3812
    @calvinvandegrift3812 Год назад

    This is fascinating; thanks for posting!

  • @Biggins111207
    @Biggins111207 Год назад +3

    I grew up in one of the last homes that was destroyed; my parents fought them until the very end. The company that built the airport expansion dumped the wrong chemicals in the ground, not sure what the chemicals were for exactly, and to get some of the wasted money back they low balled the residents on the value for their houses. At the time, my parents' house was worth around $200-250K but they offered around $110K. The airport expansion got approved because they were going to use the unused surrounding land to turn it into a state park but that never happened as you can see. To this day, there are still some people fighting because what they did and the way they went about doing it with eminent domain was absolutely wrong. Also, the runway shown in the video closest to the old neighborhood is exclusively used for Air Force 1 so it was not something needed now or at the time.
    The crime rate is probably accurate due to the increase of St. Louis City residents coming up here to break into cars and steal catalytic converters from vehicles over the last 5-6 years.

  • @PrecisionClays
    @PrecisionClays Год назад +5

    It looks like a cemetery. Not for people but rather their hopes and dreams...

  • @erikmcc804
    @erikmcc804 Год назад +1

    wow Chris thank you I remember when St Louis City was going to buy the land it was a uproar thanks for memories Chris

  • @maryaltshuller885
    @maryaltshuller885 27 дней назад +1

    So I grew up in South County and never heard of Carrollton. I had heard of Bridgeton and I recall hearing a news item (I think 1990s) that Bridgeton residence griped about hearing air traffic all the time. But I remember thinking which came first - Lambert field (which was originally a cow pasture) or the city of Bridgeton?
    Another abandoned St. Louis community is Times Beach, but abandoned for a totally different reason. So sad. ☹

  • @rozalindcoleman2457
    @rozalindcoleman2457 Год назад +1

    OMG! I’m a retired UPS driver & that was part of my route. Did know it looked that bad now.

  • @bobchannell3553
    @bobchannell3553 Год назад +4

    I'll bet the neighborhood was beautiful. It looks beautiful now. The streets even look like they are in pretty good shape.

  • @colnagocowboy
    @colnagocowboy Год назад +4

    This happened to my city. They eminent domains homes businesses all to allow expansion of the airport. Then, the bond measures got shot down. And the vacant lots sat empty for 30 years

  • @jamie49868
    @jamie49868 Год назад +1

    Pattonville 81" I roamed all over that area, worked at Famous in NW Plazza. I knew so many people in Carrollton back then. I haven't been by that way since I left in 84. Sad to see but it brought back many happy memories.

  • @jeffwebb2966
    @jeffwebb2966 Год назад +2

    I am sure it was nice, but we decided to keep the airport in town so you dont want to have planes flying over your house all the time. We proposed moving the airport over to Illinois but that did not work out. Since STL city was restricted to 64 sq miles, the growth was mostly in the suburbs so STL city is now only 300k people. The TWA decline and eventual collapse made the hub obsolete

  • @phillhuddleston9445
    @phillhuddleston9445 Год назад +8

    I grew up in a neighborhood near there and had friends who lived there so I've seen it many times before and after the buy-out. It's crazy how fast nature took back the land after the houses were bulldozed and basements filled in, you can't even tell where the driveways were. It seems like everything St. Louis City touches goes to shit fast, Bridgeton fought them tooth and nail to stop the airport expansion which cost around two billion dollars to complete and the whole project was never even finished. There was supposed to be another terminal built next to the new runway but after the 9-11 attacks TWA which was supposed to build a hub there went out of business and the new runway was never really needed after that. I still have relatives living there close enough to see all the airport traffic on the west side where the new runway is so I know the new runway being used very infrequently. Bridgeton used to be a very nice city but the plague of St. Louis just keeps spreading to the west and it started going down hill about twenty years ago, it's still not that bad in the neighborhoods but the stores, shopping and commercial areas have pretty much fallen to thuggery already.

    • @katthrog72
      @katthrog72 Год назад

      Hi Phil!!

    • @alison5009
      @alison5009 Год назад

      Agreed. I am really sad for these families living in this neighborhood, trying to be bought out for way too little, and then poof! The runway is rarely used. Sad for the city of Bridgeton as well. Such a nice park and swimming pool for the residents to enjoy.

  • @D-Fens_1632
    @D-Fens_1632 Год назад +24

    Also worth noting this area sits just above the Missouri River bottoms area near many forested areas protected from development. It's also next to the toxic waste of course, but there are plenty of docs about that (like Atomic Homefront). The historic Katy Trail is just across the river, which used to be accessible via this neighborhood and the old Rock Road Bridge, long demolished. But the nearby highways 370 and 70 bridges take you right there, you can follow the trail all the way to Kansas City. It was the last civilized American outpost where Louis and Clark camped before beginning their legendary expedition.
    And yeah, don't move here. It used to be a really nice area but it's getting run down and crime ridden. The Ferguson riots were less than 10 miles from this area.

    • @D-Fens_1632
      @D-Fens_1632 Год назад +3

      @@drh3b I was there the first night right after the Quiktrip was set on fire. Cops were guarding the Walmart while I filmed people breaking into ToysRUs. Then the wagons rolled in and a machine gun was pointed at me and I was told to go home, so I did. I probably should have left when someone said "you better get yo ass outta here, white boy," but i wasn't very bright back then.

    • @D-Fens_1632
      @D-Fens_1632 Год назад +4

      @@drh3b And extra traffic is a generous description, when I was there it was people speeding through traffic signals with no headlights on, I saw about 10 near collisions as the thugs were running off with their ill gotten booty. It was quite dangerous and scary. They call them "peaceful protests" now I believe.

    • @hon.mr.ronburgundyiiiesq.2096
      @hon.mr.ronburgundyiiiesq.2096 Год назад +2

      I'll never understand why people are so obsessed with making excuses for Florissant. You want to see what you are now and where you will be in a couple years? Go to Jennings.

    • @rosemarierubano5894
      @rosemarierubano5894 Год назад

      Ironically , 10 miles from where the riots started.... because this whole world was affected by Hands up , don't shoot era. The end result? Meh.

    • @hon.mr.ronburgundyiiiesq.2096
      @hon.mr.ronburgundyiiiesq.2096 Год назад +1

      It is already a failure. I'm not angry, just sad to see people clinging to a delusion as a "teen" kicks their head in and steals their car.

  • @barrygrant2907
    @barrygrant2907 Год назад +17

    I can so identify with this video. I grew up near the Charlotte, NC, airport in a very "Beaver Cleaver" neighborhood. All the men were recent WWII or Korean war vets who only wanted to enjoy life and raise their families. The airport built two new runways running right over the neighborhood. Jets would fly over at treetop levels. The residents sued the city and won, so the city had to buy out all the neighborhood residents. The neighborhood is now literally a huge asphalt parking lot for Hertz rental cars.

    • @ChrisHarden
      @ChrisHarden  Год назад +7

      Wow. 😯 This kind of stuff is so interesting to me… obviously. While making this video I searched on google maps for other similar neighborhoods and realized how many Carrolltons there are everywhere.

    • @maxbrandt6
      @maxbrandt6 Год назад +6

      It seems *corporate greed squashes the American dream,* that's very sad because I'd love to live in a neighborhood that looks like it's right out of classic America, like something from "Leave It To Beaver" or "Ozzie and Harriet", I guess I'll have to keep dreaming.

  • @gabriellen.2886
    @gabriellen.2886 Год назад +1

    That's my old stomping grounds, and I still do errands there. When the expansion began, we lost the Henry 8th hotel (where they had a really fun Star Trek convention once, among other events) and a tunnel was added that snakes around and doubles back on itself right by where the hotel was. There also used to be an informal plane-watching spot across the road from the airport that all of us locals knew about and could park and watch planes take off and land just above our heads. I remember there would sometimes come a large Amish, or maybe Mennonite, family that I saw there more than once park and enjoy the "free entertainment" with everyone else. All of that's gone now due to the Natural Bridge/Lindbergh remodeling.

  • @daryl252000ify
    @daryl252000ify Год назад +1

    Thanks for deciding to do a video on Kinloch! I have family members who used to live there. Maybe you could do that one like a feature length film. Like the movie Spanish Lake! Just a thought. Either way, great work!

  • @brotherted9212
    @brotherted9212 Год назад +5

    Interesting video. My two cents: those shopping centers aren’t *that* rundown, depending on your definitions. All the parking lots had cars, and there are many open businesses. And while there are also closed stores, you have to assume some percentage of those closures were lockdown-related.

    • @andyjulia
      @andyjulia Год назад +2

      I live nearby. It’s pretty run down and many store fronts sit for years with a for lease sign posted.

  • @wisediamond830
    @wisediamond830 Год назад

    Great video...fascinating and sad at the same time.

  • @shaunmckenzie5509
    @shaunmckenzie5509 Год назад +14

    Nice to see nature reclaiming it

  • @zalmaflash
    @zalmaflash Год назад +5

    I graduated from Pattonville High School in 1962 and probably 1/4th of the students were from Carrollton. Nice homes. I lived in St. Ann which was (is) about 3 miles from there. I really enjoyed this video~riding around what used to be.

  • @dodgermartin4895
    @dodgermartin4895 Год назад +7

    I just moved to Missouri and interested in what goes on in my new state.... but I live about 100 miles away in what I call "flyover country." 6 acres of land an a new house.... I love it where I live! Don't wanna live anywhere close to St. Louis.

    • @dougoverhoff7568
      @dougoverhoff7568 Год назад

      Yes, St Louis proper has declined steadily over the past few decades, unfortunately. The heyday for the City and the downtown area was many decades ago. Anyone remember, for example, Gaslight Square? But, having grown up in the 'County', (Webster Groves), I can attest that it was an ideal place to live and grow up in my day. Now days, many areas outside of the City are still quite nice, but most are not anywhere near downtown.

    • @bradcrosier1332
      @bradcrosier1332 Год назад +1

      @@dougoverhoff7568 - I spent a fair amount of time in the area in the late 90s; it was hanging on then, as St. Louis proper was imploding. Now pretty much the entire area is collapsing on itself. It's a shame that what was once such a thriving metropolis is now pretty much a wasteland, but unfortunately that has been the trajectory for several of our major cities (such as Detroit).

    • @dougoverhoff7568
      @dougoverhoff7568 Год назад

      @@bradcrosier1332 The trajectory for the general area has been on the downward trend for years, true. But, there are some areas that are still very nice, just not anywhere near downtown, and especially near the North side. Ladue, Clayton, Chesterfield, Frontenac, Webster, Kirkwood, Creve Coeur and some other parts in the County are still pretty nice, even if they're a bit pricey. Of course, the City of St Louis is under Democrat control, and has been for years and years, so......Also, St Louis and St Louis County are governed separately, as the City is not an actual part of the County, which, as far as I know, is a unique situation to anywhere else in the country. It's no secret that the city government is thoroughly corrupt, and has been for ages.

    • @bradcrosier1332
      @bradcrosier1332 Год назад +1

      @@dougoverhoff7568 - Agreed, but I think overall the entire regions trajectory is downward - though some areas manage to hang on. I stayed for an extended period of time a few years back with friends in Chesterfield and Town and Country, which were certainly both nice areas - but the business/industrial base which fueled the area continues to shrink/die off, so one wonders how long that can last. I really wish the city/country could turn things around (the same for our other blighted cities), but I just can't see how at this point. Also you are not wrong about the impact of the philosophical bent of the leaders of the city upon its fortunes.

    • @dougoverhoff7568
      @dougoverhoff7568 Год назад

      @@bradcrosier1332 Hang in there, Brad, the cavalry is on its way. If you haven't heard of NESARA yet, then you soon will. The economic boon years are just around the corner, and great things are ahead for us all.
      I'm living in CA now, and have for the last 42 years, but my 98 year old mother still lives in Chesterfield. And though it's changed since I left, the area is still a nice place to live. Peace!

  • @couchfighter
    @couchfighter Год назад +1

    i go there every Saturday and Sunday w the dog! very interesting place. good vid

  • @alexandemilyreyes7937
    @alexandemilyreyes7937 Год назад

    We like the Fall colors. Thank you for sharing!

  • @v1-vr-rotatev2-vy_vx31
    @v1-vr-rotatev2-vy_vx31 Год назад +2

    The cement roads look like their lasting much longer than asphalt. Looks similar to an area under the landing flight path into LAX, we're all the homeowners were paid off on the value of their homes because of the noise of the Jets landing and all the homes were torn down leaving the city streets and landscape.

  • @jamie49868
    @jamie49868 Год назад +1

    My question is since it not going to be expanded upon, what are the plans? If nothing is planned, why not turn it into a big, beautiful park...funded by the airport? And if there are plans, what are they?

  • @richardboll8763
    @richardboll8763 Год назад +1

    At 26:03, you past the former “Northwest Plaza Shopping Center”, which in it’s heyday in the 1980s was the largest shopping center in the US.

  • @deanbarcelona1427
    @deanbarcelona1427 Год назад +3

    My barber lived there he really missed his old house when he got bought out, talked about it often.

  • @otaku1524
    @otaku1524 Год назад +1

    I grew up in Hannibal and went to college in KIrksville at Truman State University. One of my college friends lived off the Rock Road stone's throw from I-70. Their house's driveway was next to the Rock Road. Noisy even back then. LIndbergh changed a heck of a lot. Lived for a year in Ferguson up off West Florissant Ave. in '86, when wheels came off marriage #1. Joined Navy. Left StL and never looked back.

  • @soularddave2
    @soularddave2 Год назад +1

    Several trivial facts wrong, but a very pleasing narration. Many important facts noted well. I've watched this area grow & collapse over the years.

  • @philpots48
    @philpots48 Год назад +1

    Nice landscape of hilly terrain and mature trees.

  • @craigkimble1467
    @craigkimble1467 Год назад +13

    What a shame, and such criminal mismanagement, looks like it was once a wonderful neighborhood, ironically a very healthy design, in an unhealthy place.

  • @pattlemarie1662
    @pattlemarie1662 6 месяцев назад

    My family lived on a deadend street, Byram Dr off Manteca. I believe you pass by it in the video. We were there from 62 to 68. We loved it as did most residents.
    I lived at the pool in summer. I learned to drive on those streets. We skateboarded, biked, and walked to friends houses, the bowling alley.
    I lived in the Hazelwood school district. Pattonville was most of the subdivision and then St Thomas Aquinas. It was fun to have friends from all three schools.
    The planes were loud, but you got used to it. Most residents lived their homes which were really nice for the price pt. I last saw it in 88. It has its own facebk page where former residents reminisce. Thank you for a great trip down memory lane.

  • @MileyonDisney
    @MileyonDisney 26 дней назад +1

    My mom owned a couple of the motels on Lindbergh that got bought for the airport expansion. She did very well with that deal... she didn't accept their original offer.

  • @pizzafrenzyman
    @pizzafrenzyman Год назад +3

    I was just thinking it would make a great disc golf course, just as you said it. hahaha

  • @Tblazer42
    @Tblazer42 Год назад +1

    Wow I grew up here. We were "bought out" by the "airport" I miss that place....

  • @patriciasmith7074
    @patriciasmith7074 Год назад +2

    This is a shame that they destroyed that lovely neighborhood. I can’t believe they tore all of those houses down.

  • @gilbja01
    @gilbja01 Год назад +3

    Nice video. Are there no plans to re-develope the area? Even just as a massive park and recreation area. Hiking trails , RV park, an actual Nature Reserve, something that would be of benifit rather than a dumping ground of abandonded streets.

    • @beckywebb1916
      @beckywebb1916 Год назад

      With the poisons buried there? No way!

  • @mlowder06
    @mlowder06 Год назад +2

    At about the 11:40 mark you make it sound like the underground fire at the Westlake landfill was caused by the radioactive material...that's really the cause of it, although the underground smoldering fire is very concerning because it is approaching the known area where the radioactive material is, and if it reaches it, could cause a lot of environmental damage.

  • @CP-Hammer
    @CP-Hammer 9 месяцев назад +1

    It's crazy to see the remaining property....and how it's been maintained. It's just missing houses and a community.

  • @F4URGranted
    @F4URGranted Год назад +3

    You LOVE to see a disc golf course there. At least they had priorities when they created this park

  • @jimstcin1981
    @jimstcin1981 Год назад +5

    I just turned 60 years old. I lived in Bridgeton Missouri from 1970 to 1974 I lived in a place called cricklewood it was a small subdivision with duplexes and my stepfather's brother-in-law owns a duplex there I went to Bridgeton Elementary on on Natural Bridge. I was one of the children playing in the field when the fighter jet crashed while making a landing a tent and crashed in a fog. I remember a lot from my short time living in Bridgeton as a child.

  • @Tblazer42
    @Tblazer42 Год назад +2

    I used to live in Bridgeton. We got bought out by the airport "buy out" I miss that part of my life sooo much. 😢

  • @kurtledesma5993
    @kurtledesma5993 Год назад

    Boy this brings back some memories! Such a shame, used to ride my bike out there from Overland almost daily in the 70's

  • @user-qs7rm6kt7m
    @user-qs7rm6kt7m 10 месяцев назад +1

    Never lived in Carrollton but lived in St.Louis when I was a very young boy. It's sad to see it now. Was born there in 1957 moved to O'Fallon in 1965 grew up there just outside of the city. As an old man I live in AR. now far from there but it still makes me sad.

  • @RosebudBB
    @RosebudBB Год назад +1

    Sad to see all the garbage dumped and no one cleaning it up! The city should be ashamed of themselves for not keeping it neat and clean

  • @davidgates1122
    @davidgates1122 Год назад

    Some parts of the area look like they are maintained. The grass appears to be occasionally mowed and brush is not overgrowing the roads like it is other parts of the area.

  • @kenotube3160
    @kenotube3160 Год назад

    Wow, that’s a pretty area. Looks like a nice place for a housing development.

  • @GoodatNaps
    @GoodatNaps Год назад

    @ 7:56 the lot on the right on the corner of Woodford way and celburne. That was my childhood home. My husband planted the tree for my mom when we were dating.

  • @YearOfJubilee
    @YearOfJubilee 4 месяца назад

    I grew up on Celburne Ln until 2003 when we were bought out. Such a great place to be a kid. We never felt unsafe and all the neighbors knew each other. I remember the St Lawrence fair, and racing our bikes down Manteca Hill, and walking to the corner drug store by Schnucks to buy candy and to O’Connor park and the Carrollton Club to go swimming in the summer. After the buyouts started, we’d play baseball and build bike ramps in the empty fields where the houses used to be and go exploring around in the abandoned ones that hadn’t been demolished yet. I’ve been gone from St Louis for over a decade now and it was right before I left that I last ventured into the old neighborhood to see what’s become of it. A ghost town that holds captive all my childhood memories.

  • @QuaaludeCharlie
    @QuaaludeCharlie Год назад +1

    Dirty business down in cold creek this morning . I Suffer from a Tumor above my left ear on my Head . It Hurts , They can never clean this up , it came from the Manhattan Project , Now I live in St . Louis Mo. Home of K SHE 95 FM Stereo that went 0n Air in Aug of 1967 , that's when I was born , I live in a 1903 Duplex , please Pray that my Head returns to Normal . St . Louis is an Amazing City . Thank you for the Video :) QC

  • @waites4nada
    @waites4nada Год назад

    Looks like it’s getting better use as a park and disc golf course then just some abandoned place. When I go to St. Louis I almost always go to this park.

  • @benpeyton4379
    @benpeyton4379 Год назад +1

    here in louisville ky they did the same thing to highland park ppl didnt want to sell but where forced out

  • @benzielke7149
    @benzielke7149 Год назад +2

    Those were really good houses.