I’m 20 and I absolutely love history and old homes, I run a small antique booth during the summer. I wish more young people my age could see the importance in preserving and documenting our historic architecture that still stands.
There’s smoke damage in that house. The bedroom furniture is called Waterfall. The matching chair and everything. Didn’t get a good look at the bed but my first thought was a waterbed. Would have liked to have known the dates on the newspapers below the jars and the expiration dates on the food. Great find as always!
I was hoping that he would have checked the dates on the newspapers and food too. I find these abandon properties so fascinating and try to imagine the people living there.
I like that you don't move or disturb anything. Too bad others can't control themselves and thoughtlessly destroy things that are not theirs. I don't understand the motivation of people who vandalize these old houses and their contents. It's so much more interesting to just leave things as they are.
I agree. Some explorers mess with too much stuff and especially the people who destroy for no reason. I do get curious about the old newspapers or products left behind. I love the old advertisements and to see what was in the news from whatever era it was abandoned.
It is a sad situation when people see an empty house and decide to go inside and throw everything around like that. Otherwise this was a great design and the furniture was pretty lovely. Thanks for sharing and you have a great day with safe travels
Kappy when you mentioned Round Oak my ears perked up, since they were made n sold from my area. Round Oak was founded in 1871 by Philo Beckwith in Dowagiac, Michigan, his stoves are very collectible.
This house left a very sad feeling with me. Once a nice family home, now forgotten and unwanted. Thank you , as always for taking us along with you on your tour.❤😊
One of the dressers is almost identical to one that I have in my house that was my parents. It was bought in 1948 when they married. Kappy, you are such a special young man to appreciate all of these old homes. Love watching your channel.
That’s very kind of you to say! I’m just glad you enjoy the videos! I would never be able to show these places without you guys watching!! Thank you very much!! :)
Definitely a cool old place. Its amazing how much was left behind in this one. And holding up even with the amount of decay. Thanks for taking me along Mr Kappy! 😊
Poison ivy is happy there! LOL. I see a chimney in the attic but no sign of any fireplaces in the house, nor any remnant of a winter kitchen one in the basement. I was skeptical about the age until I saw the chimney remnant. I'm surprised the house isn't log. That small building just outside was maybe a well pump house? I saw a sewer pipe in the basement, assuming just for the kitchen sink, since no indoor bathroom or water closet. Outhouse was probably all wood and rotted away- or those kids putting the graffiti up stole it as a prank lol. Will never know. I liked the Star Wars cans lol, yes it was 1999. It was probably grandma's place and teen grand kids probably came over, or grandma liked her Mt Dew! I see new houses to explore at the end in the pretty snow. Can't wait to see those!
House felt strange vibes to me , especially up in the attic !!! I felt you couldn’t tell how the house would have been because of so much trash all around !!! Thanks Kappy !!!
Wallpaper, wallpaper, wallpaper!!! So pretty... I once watched someone remodel a chateau and they used remnants of the old wallpaper here and there as decorations. Such beautiful antiques and appliances just left for ruin.
It’s tough to see so much antique furniture rotting away. Sure wish someone could rescue them before it’s too late. Thanks for another great adventure!
That's why I have sometimes hard time to watch these videos with houses full to the brim, I see stuff I'd love to possess and there they are, left to the elements. Such waste =/
All of your videos tug on my heart! Thanks for finding them and sharing with us! I am 66 years old and remember when my grandparents lived in houses like these. Sweet memories.
yup, not sure it ever had a lid to pressurize it, but only to heat up the water to a high temperature (my wife would know how hot) and leave the bottles/jars in there util the lids popped to let you know they were sealed.
A shame vandals got there first.I love the wall papers,and the cook stove.The wood furniture and doors just mostly need cleaned.Love these old houses,so much character.👍🇺🇸❤️
When i was small, my mother had a wringer washer. I was so fascinated by it, and i put a piece of clothing into the wringer to see it go through. Well, it also took my whole arm in with it. It actually didn't hurt that much, but i was glad when i was rescued!! You always give me memories i have long forgotten.
Even in the state is decay I love how the furniture is still holding up. Also, I liked seeing the hardware on the doors. It helps me to date the house.
What a pretty location, especially in the snow. Love all the wallpaper, the original hardware, the woodwork and the beautiful old barn. I can see this house being full of life in the 1920s before the Depression hit and a slow decline after that. No indoor bathroom so that cinderblock building had to be the outhouse or else it's fallen down. Thanks for the explore, Kappy!
Great observations!! Agreed! I was curious what the small cinder block building was as well! Seemed like an outhouse but no toilet! Thanks for the kind words and watching!! :)
@@jwfinley7808 You are almost certainly correct. Now I have that "Movin' On Up' song stuck in my head. Thank you for bumping this comment because I wanted Kappy to know that I bought the Charlie Brown Cyclopedia for my grandkids that he shows @ 7:25 They love it, it is really well done and I never would have found it without this channel.
Wow, Kappy, i am so glad you found this place and got to vedio it for us to see !! This place was amazing to see ! And the house was awsome !! So many antiquities just wasting away with the house... This is so sad !! Thank you again Kappy for another great find !! Take care and stay safe out there !!
Funny fact about Mountain Dew ,My parents had the Amish in Southern Ohio ,put a barn up for them and she supplied them with there favorite drink and they wanted a cooler full of Mountain dew. Thank you for your videos, we enjoy watching them !!
That KeenKo thing in the basement that you commented on saying, "I wonder what that was" was the bottom part of an antique ringer washing machine. So cool! What an interesting place. It's definitely seen better days. Thank you again, Kappy, for this wonderful tour!
Not to get sidetracked, but not Goodwill. It is no longer a charity, but is privately owned for profit. Anything given is just free profit. High prices there now, too.
The house itself doesn't look like it was ever very fancy. But some of the furniture was quite nice in its day. These were hard-working people I'd bet. Thanks Kappy!
Great video! Can you imagine how many more great treasures you would find if you dug through all the layers? It is a shame all that furniture is just rotting away.
The porches! You know me and how I love those. Lol! Such a beautiful place to sit and enjoy the weather/scenery. I love the wallpaper remnants. This one is really a treasure. Thanks so much Kappy! Stay safe and can’t wait for the next one ❤
Interesting design. Entirely above-ground foundation with no basement is pretty unusual for this area (for construction of that time) in my experience, but maybe I just haven't been looking in the right places. I am blown away by what attempts to heat this place must've looked like over the century+ that it was inhabited. The winter elements in upstate NY rarely hold back.
I’ve seen them all over upstate and in western NY though usually backed up to a hill, like some of the dual-level gambrel barns, where you can walk in on bottom level and on first floor level because of the elevation. There were at least two houses like this near where I grew up outside of Leroy
What a beautiful spot 164 years ago! Just imagine that view and the QUIET other than sounds of nature. (No highway sound) As a historian I'll also say what a tumultuous time that ALSO was When this prosperous family really had it going on to the tenth degree. Those people knew how to live off the land. I hope someone has the presence of mind to salvage the posts and beams in that barn! VERY VALUABLE. Not to mention a lot of the antique hardware and furniture in the house. I saw some 19th century latches etc.
Thanks Kappy, your videos never disappoint! I think you are the best old house explorer on youtube!! Are you doing youtube full time, or is it just a weekend thing?
Just as i was thinking "What a shame!" You said it. You're very impressing, I recently went into a hardware store and asked a young man your age where they keep the steel wool. He said "What exactly is that? You recognized cedar when you saw it...... seriously, you're very aware for your generation. Keep up the good work.
I see all that snow, you must be in the East. I live in Knoxville and we got 11 inches in the valley and up to 19 inches in the mountains. The single digit temps kept the snow on the ground for 11 days!
Urban Exploring With kappy thanks for sharing this video with me about Sad Forgotten Farm House Full of Stuff Up North in New York Built in 1860 it was a really good explore i really enjoyed your video and God Bless.
When you first entered you said ( I wonder what that is ) referring to the galvanized metal wash pot. I believe that would be your inexpensive clothes wash pot. Those old blue Mason jars are worth a few dollars each and the right ones will bring $100's each
This place is a mess, but it's full of antique furniture and there are people who want antiques. I like them. Such beautiful real wood details throughout this home. Houses in the U.S. are not built like this anymore, I think this building "art form" is lost unfortunately.
Did I miss it?! No bathrooms?!? A beautiful old home! Something about wallpaper falling from the walls that makes an abandoned home that much more dramatic! I love the beautiful location as well!!
@@user-zb6ke7gy7e yes I do remember that! Anything built before 1930-1920 had to have plumbing retrofitted since it wasn’t a thing before that (unless you were incredibly wealthy). Plus this place definitely didn’t have access to public water/ sewer systems since it appears to be very remote. If that one building wasn’t an outhouse.. there probably was one somewhere and it fell apart and is under the snow.
Mountain Dew - "It will tickle your innards!" Yes, I remember that then well-used MD saying - it used to be on the bottles and advertising signs back in the day!
The house itself was a very interesting layout as you exclaimed . I noticed the switches to turn the lights on and off and I remember those from when I was in high school looking after an older woman in her 90’s who lived in a home that was in her family for at least 100 years and lived in the same house with her husband and they had no children of their own but she had the same switches in her house and I remember her telling me that those very same switches were put in the house in the early 1900’s .
Let me guess, a new housing development is going in. I bet they demolish the home with the antiques inside. Horrible! Thanks for sharing, you appreciate old places like the rest of us.
Even back in the day, like some people say, we didn't use the blue Ball mason jars to can our food. We might have had one or two, but that was it. I always enjoy seeing home canned food. I guess it comes from all the hard work we did each summer with my mother to make sure our cellar was stuffed with not one space left for another jar of food.
GOODNESS!!!!! You're younger than my grandchildren!!!!!! I'm happy such a young man is so interested in the history of old homes!!!!!
It might be Haunted with all them noises. I would not be anywhere close to that place at night.
He's a special guy
I Agree
Thank you!! 😅 I really appreciate the kind words!! Glad you enjoy seeing these old places too!! :)
I’m 20 and I absolutely love history and old homes, I run a small antique booth during the summer. I wish more young people my age could see the importance in preserving and documenting our historic architecture that still stands.
It was probably so haunted they left in the middle of the night without a thing. The house is built different than any I ever saw!
There’s smoke damage in that house.
The bedroom furniture is called Waterfall. The matching chair and everything. Didn’t get a good look at the bed but my first thought was a waterbed.
Would have liked to have known the dates on the newspapers below the jars and the expiration dates on the food.
Great find as always!
I was hoping that he would have checked the dates on the newspapers and food too. I find these abandon properties so fascinating and try to imagine the people living there.
Probably a beautiful place back in the day peaceful so sad
I like that you don't move or disturb anything. Too bad others can't control themselves and thoughtlessly destroy things that are not theirs. I don't understand the motivation of people who vandalize these old houses and their contents. It's so much more interesting to just leave things as they are.
I’m really glad you enjoy! Could never explore these places and get out if it wasn’t for you guys so thanks for watching!! :)
I agree. Some explorers mess with too much stuff and especially the people who destroy for no reason. I do get curious about the old newspapers or products left behind. I love the old advertisements and to see what was in the news from whatever era it was abandoned.
It is a sad situation when people see an empty house and decide to go inside and throw everything around like that. Otherwise this was a great design and the furniture was pretty lovely. Thanks for sharing and you have a great day with safe travels
Kappy when you mentioned Round Oak my ears perked up, since they were made n sold from my area. Round Oak was founded in 1871 by Philo Beckwith in Dowagiac, Michigan, his stoves are very collectible.
How cool! Honestly never heard of that brand! Very neat! Thanks for watching!! :)
I should of mentioned Round Oak is mainly known for there wood stoves that are very decorative.
Any old stove is collectable. And so are the parts!
This house left a very sad feeling with me. Once a nice family home, now forgotten and unwanted. Thank you , as always for taking us along with you on your tour.❤😊
One of the dressers is almost identical to one that I have in my house that was my parents. It was bought in 1948 when they married. Kappy, you are such a special young man to appreciate all of these old homes. Love watching your channel.
That’s very kind of you to say! I’m just glad you enjoy the videos! I would never be able to show these places without you guys watching!! Thank you very much!! :)
Definitely a cool old place. Its amazing how much was left behind in this one. And holding up even with the amount of decay. Thanks for taking me along Mr Kappy! 😊
We love when you drop 2 vids a week 😊
Glad to hear that!! Trying to make RUclips happy and keep the lights on lol! Thank you very much for watching!! :)
Poison ivy is happy there! LOL. I see a chimney in the attic but no sign of any fireplaces in the house, nor any remnant of a winter kitchen one in the basement. I was skeptical about the age until I saw the chimney remnant. I'm surprised the house isn't log. That small building just outside was maybe a well pump house? I saw a sewer pipe in the basement, assuming just for the kitchen sink, since no indoor bathroom or water closet. Outhouse was probably all wood and rotted away- or those kids putting the graffiti up stole it as a prank lol. Will never know. I liked the Star Wars cans lol, yes it was 1999. It was probably grandma's place and teen grand kids probably came over, or grandma liked her Mt Dew! I see new houses to explore at the end in the pretty snow. Can't wait to see those!
House felt strange vibes to me , especially up in the attic !!! I felt you couldn’t tell how the house would have been because of so much trash all around !!! Thanks Kappy !!!
That's funny, I felt that when he went into the kitchen. Bad vibes.
We need not to only stop to smell the 🌹🥀🌹🥀🌺🌸💮🌷🏵️🌻🌼, but, every 🏚️ 🏠 along the way.👍
Thanks for always showing us the old barns that are still standing. Those are so interesting!
Glad you enjoyed! Always love when the old barns left! Thanks for watching!! :)
Wallpaper, wallpaper, wallpaper!!! So pretty... I once watched someone remodel a chateau and they used remnants of the old wallpaper here and there as decorations. Such beautiful antiques and appliances just left for ruin.
Did you watch RETURN TO THE CHATEAU? The British series?
Yes!! Escape to the Chateau with Angel and Dick Strawbridge. I loved it! There are several channels with people remodeling places like that.
Yea. I had the wrong name but I loved that series!
Neat home in It's day! I think that "tub thing" you asked about was part an old washtub (washing machine). Thanks for sharing!😊
@@karenbly3829 the frenchies that bought the nunnery and found a secret room was Fun
It’s tough to see so much antique furniture rotting away. Sure wish someone could rescue them before it’s too late.
Thanks for another great adventure!
Someone needs to call Goodwill. So much left behind.
That's why I have sometimes hard time to watch these videos with houses full to the brim, I see stuff I'd love to possess and there they are, left to the elements. Such waste =/
All of your videos tug on my heart! Thanks for finding them and sharing with us! I am 66 years old and remember when my grandparents lived in houses like these. Sweet memories.
That tub by the ball mason jars looks like a canning steamer thingy , you put the jars in to pressurize
yup, not sure it ever had a lid to pressurize it, but only to heat up the water to a high temperature (my wife would know how hot) and leave the bottles/jars in there util the lids popped to let you know they were sealed.
@@MikeEgypte thank you, yeah , that’s what I was trying to say🤗
Pressure cooker?
1999 now I feel old!
lol me too!! Thanks for watching! :)
I turned 48 how do you think I feel?
At 72 I'm positively ancient!
Well I got sidetracked,my son came by and had to pause ,thank you for bringing us these wonderful old houses
It’s a shame beautiful homes are just abandoned 😢
Really is! Old homes definitely have a certain character not found in new houses! In my opinion! Thanks for watching!! :)
I always want the backstory of these homes. They just keep your mind wondering. Great job!
Yes. They do. Who. Looked threw that window all the time appreciating the surondings. If these walls could talk?
Kids with no paint! Amazing!
It is always sad to see jars of canned food left behind, especially considering the amount of work and dedication canning took.
Oh and Kappy, your the greatest!!!❤😊
A shame vandals got there first.I love the wall papers,and the cook stove.The wood furniture and doors just mostly need cleaned.Love these old houses,so much character.👍🇺🇸❤️
When i was small, my mother had a wringer washer. I was so fascinated by it, and i put a piece of clothing into the wringer to see it go through. Well, it also took my whole arm in with it. It actually didn't hurt that much, but i was glad when i was rescued!! You always give me memories i have long forgotten.
That round thing by the canned veggies-it's an old washing machine minus the rollers, Neat!
A different kind of farmhouse. Didn't see a fireplace which is unusual. That one wooden old bed was to die for!
Even in the state is decay I love how the furniture is still holding up. Also, I liked seeing the hardware on the doors. It helps me to date the house.
Someone needs to call Goodwill. So much left behind.
What a pretty location, especially in the snow. Love all the wallpaper, the original hardware, the woodwork and the beautiful old barn. I can see this house being full of life in the 1920s before the Depression hit and a slow decline after that. No indoor bathroom so that cinderblock building had to be the outhouse or else it's fallen down. Thanks for the explore, Kappy!
Great observations!! Agreed! I was curious what the small cinder block building was as well! Seemed like an outhouse but no toilet! Thanks for the kind words and watching!! :)
I bet when they got the new indoor toilet they lived uptown
@@jwfinley7808 You are almost certainly correct. Now I have that "Movin' On Up' song stuck in my head. Thank you for bumping this comment because I wanted Kappy to know that I bought the Charlie Brown Cyclopedia for my grandkids that he shows @ 7:25 They love it, it is really well done and I never would have found it without this channel.
Wow, Kappy, i am so glad you found this place and got to vedio it for us to see !! This place was amazing to see ! And the house was awsome !! So many antiquities just wasting away with the house... This is so sad !! Thank you again Kappy for another great find !! Take care and stay safe out there !!
Love this old house 🏚. I especially liked all of the antiques. What a grand old house 🏚. Thanks for sharing this video.
Someone needs to call Goodwill. So much left behind.
This house is beautiful. So much interesting furniture. Always sad to see them rotting like this. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Agreed! Thank you very much for watching!! :)
Funny fact about Mountain Dew
,My parents had the Amish in
Southern Ohio ,put a barn up for them and she supplied them with there favorite drink and they wanted a cooler full of Mountain dew. Thank you for your videos, we enjoy watching them !!
This buffet is Wicked ♥️ 8:27
Agreed! Didn’t know that’s what it was called! Thank you! Much appreciated for watching! :)
Thanks for sharing. There's still some beautiful antiques in that house.
I have quite a few of Charlie browns encyclopedias.
Once upon a time...a small, sturdy, tastefully decorated house. 😬😢
That KeenKo thing in the basement that you commented on saying, "I wonder what that was" was the bottom part of an antique ringer washing machine. So cool! What an interesting place. It's definitely seen better days. Thank you again, Kappy, for this wonderful tour!
Was that the wringer top in the little shed at the end? When i saw it, i wondered if it was maybe a wringer. Then i saw your comment!
Another awesome 😎👍 explore kappy glad you got to it when you did
Another awesome gem! I wish I could buy & restore everyone of these old homes! Love video Kappy thanks for sharing! ❤️💪👍🤘
Me too! So many houses I’ve filmed that I wish I was a millionaire! I’d save them all if I could!Thanks for watching!! :)
@@urbanexploringwithkappy1773 your welcome! ❤️👍🤘
Hi Kappy, I will watch later, but I see that you’re back in my home state. Can’t wait! (Hi Chrisss2112)
Someone needs to call Goodwill. So much left behind.
Not to get sidetracked, but not Goodwill. It is no longer a charity, but is privately owned for profit. Anything given is just free profit. High prices there now, too.
The house itself doesn't look like it was ever very fancy. But some of the furniture was quite nice in its day. These were hard-working people I'd bet. Thanks Kappy!
I have a dresser with the big mirror like that. My grandmother gave it to me. Those antiques are beautiful.Thanks Kappy!
That little building-maybe a well house that had a windmill above it once? Not feeling well, so will just say thanks, Kappy! Hi, Ruby! 🙂
How cool! I saw the old stove hole in the living room!!
Hey Kappy! Pretty cool house. Too bad folks trash things for no good reason. The old barn was awesome too. Thanks for the explore. Be safe. ✌️
Thank you!! Glad you enjoyed it! I loved the barn as well! Much appreciated for the kind words and watching!! :)
Sweet old house with fun wallpaper! But that barn! I love that barn and all the different levels of hay and all the wood it took to make it!
Truly a house of treasures, thanks for sharing.
I wonder how many people that old girl has sheltered from the weather?❤
Great video! Can you imagine how many more great treasures you would find if you dug through all the layers? It is a shame all that furniture is just rotting away.
Beautiful setting but the house is too far gone. Hope they get all of the antiques out before they tear it down. Thanks Kappy.
The porches! You know me and how I love those. Lol! Such a beautiful place to sit and enjoy the weather/scenery. I love the wallpaper remnants. This one is really a treasure. Thanks so much Kappy! Stay safe and can’t wait for the next one ❤
I’m glad you enjoyed!! I love the way it looks in the snow! Couldn’t show these places without you guys watching and I really appreciate it!! :)
Interesting design. Entirely above-ground foundation with no basement is pretty unusual for this area (for construction of that time) in my experience, but maybe I just haven't been looking in the right places. I am blown away by what attempts to heat this place must've looked like over the century+ that it was inhabited. The winter elements in upstate NY rarely hold back.
I’ve seen them all over upstate and in western NY though usually backed up to a hill, like some of the dual-level gambrel barns, where you can walk in on bottom level and on first floor level because of the elevation. There were at least two houses like this near where I grew up outside of Leroy
What a beautiful spot 164 years ago! Just imagine that view and the QUIET other than sounds of nature. (No highway sound) As a historian I'll also say what a tumultuous time that ALSO was When this prosperous family really had it going on to the tenth degree. Those people knew how to live off the land. I hope someone has the presence of mind to salvage the posts and beams in that barn! VERY VALUABLE. Not to mention a lot of the antique hardware and furniture in the house. I saw some 19th century latches etc.
Thanks! I do enjoy your videos. Be safe !
I’m happy to hear that! Thank you very much for watching!! :)
Love that you do these videos! You take us to places I wouldn't ever get to see! I so look forward to watching! Thank you ! 😊
Hey Kappy thanks for showing the creepy cool old farm house. Stay safe and warm out there. Hope you are having a good new year.
I’m glad you enjoyed!! Thank you! Hope your new year is going great as well! Much appreciated for watching!! :)
great blast from the past thank you kappy
That sounded like a coooooold wind blowing 🥶
Love all that old timey wall paper!!
Me too! Was layers of it in this one! Thanks for watching!! :)
Porches, porches wish we still have those beautiful porches😊
I was 48 those a=e new soda cans
Everything looks lovely with a lite covering of snow.
Interesting place. I bet it was a nice home in its day. Thanks, Kappy
Thanks Kappy, your videos never disappoint! I think you are the best old house explorer on youtube!! Are you doing youtube full time, or is it just a weekend thing?
Just as i was thinking "What a shame!" You said it. You're very impressing, I recently went into a hardware store and asked a young man your age where they keep the steel wool. He said "What exactly is that? You recognized cedar when you saw it...... seriously, you're very aware for your generation. Keep up the good work.
I wish some of the old furniture could be taken out and restored. Love the buffalo with the mirror on it. What a waste 😔
I live in upstate new york and we have wonderful 18th and 19th century homes up here. Too bad no one kept this one up. Makes me sad.
Agreed thank you for watching! :)
I see all that snow, you must be in the East. I live in Knoxville and we got 11 inches in the valley and up to 19 inches in the mountains. The single digit temps kept the snow on the ground for 11 days!
Oh yeah lots of snow! Thank you for watching!! :)
Facinating place, w.all that stuff too!
Thank you for watching!! :)
Such a shame to see all that cool old stuff just rotting away.
Someone owns the property, I'll never understand it.
Great video. Thanks.
Urban Exploring With kappy thanks for sharing this video with me about Sad Forgotten Farm House Full of Stuff Up North in New York Built in 1860 it was a really good explore i really enjoyed your video and God Bless.
Thank you for the kind words and watching!! :)
A lot of stuff 😮
Hey cool house
I’m always stunned as to the amount of crap dumped in these old homes. Just heaps of trash & junk.
Love the Old Furniture❤
Another great one Kappy! Thank you!!
Thank you so much for watching!! :)
Great video Kappy!
When you first entered you said ( I wonder what that is ) referring to the galvanized metal wash pot. I believe that would be your inexpensive clothes wash pot. Those old blue Mason jars are worth a few dollars each and the right ones will bring $100's each
This place is a mess, but it's full of antique furniture and there are people who want antiques. I like them. Such beautiful real wood details throughout this home. Houses in the U.S. are not built like this anymore, I think this building "art form" is lost unfortunately.
Good video, very interesting to watch so much to see..🙂
Thank you for watching!! :)
Love the Style of the house❤
Me too! Thank you for watching! :)
Did I miss it?! No bathrooms?!? A beautiful old home! Something about wallpaper falling from the walls that makes an abandoned home that much more dramatic! I love the beautiful location as well!!
I was thinking the same thing, no bathroom???
look again at the first minute, there is an outhouse
I thought Kappy said there wasn't anything in that cement-brick building. I thought that was the outhouse. Am I wrong?
@@user-zb6ke7gy7e yes I do remember that! Anything built before 1930-1920 had to have plumbing retrofitted since it wasn’t a thing before that (unless you were incredibly wealthy). Plus this place definitely didn’t have access to public water/ sewer systems since it appears to be very remote. If that one building wasn’t an outhouse.. there probably was one somewhere and it fell apart and is under the snow.
@@susanbissell6319 someone else said that was a milk processing building since that place was a dairy… but I don’t know how they knew that.
Good find ❤
Mountain Dew - "It will tickle your innards!" Yes, I remember that then well-used MD saying - it used to be on the bottles and advertising signs back in the day!
Broken up anti-Qs too. Shameful vandals!
lol what an interesting saying!😅 thanks for watching!! :)
The house itself was a very interesting layout as you exclaimed . I noticed the switches to turn the lights on and off and I remember those from when I was in high school looking after an older woman in her 90’s who lived in a home that was in her family for at least 100 years and lived in the same house with her husband and they had no children of their own but she had the same switches in her house and I remember her telling me that those very same switches were put in the house in the early 1900’s .
this is a great find
Thanks great 👍 video
Thank you for watching!! :)
In that little outbuilding was the top part of that old washing machine..maybe it was a pump house for well?
Thank you again! Great tour!!!
Good thinking! I’d definitely believe it could’ve been a pump house for a well at one time! Thanks for watching!! :)
Let me guess, a new housing development is going in. I bet they demolish the home with the antiques inside. Horrible! Thanks for sharing, you appreciate old places like the rest of us.
I like alot of the old things in there. Its so sad, but most of the time,they had to leave and that's even more sad.
Oh goody!!!! I’m so excited for this one!!! Cool!!!
My grandpa had a small family dairy!
Interesting place
Great house. The roof held, and no decay. The barn was something, spoke of days gone by. Ty Kappy.
Your channel is the only one I watch. Keep up the great work!
I’m really glad you enjoy!! Couldn’t show these old Forgotten places without yalls help watching them! Thank you very much!! :)
Rare that this has an outside porch on all three levels. I've never seen that.
Even back in the day, like some people say, we didn't use the blue Ball mason jars to can our food. We might have had one or two, but that was it. I always enjoy seeing home canned food. I guess it comes from all the hard work we did each summer with my mother to make sure our cellar was stuffed with not one space left for another jar of food.