Step Inside This Stunning Abandoned Plantation House Older Than The United States

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  • Опубликовано: 6 янв 2025

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  • @rickhager7978
    @rickhager7978 Год назад +815

    A 250 year old house in remarkable condition with that much history needs to be saved. This is truly a historical place.

    • @urbanexploringwithkappy1773
      @urbanexploringwithkappy1773  Год назад +30

      Couldn’t agree more! Would make an awesome museum! Thanks for watching! :)

    • @antoniasantoyo511
      @antoniasantoyo511 Год назад +2

      ❤😢😢😢

    • @Chadrocker53
      @Chadrocker53 Год назад +3

      Definitely!!

    • @kas6583
      @kas6583 Год назад +23

      @@Chadrocker53 This is privately owned. The owner is trying to preserve the property. It is a National Registered Lisiting. It is not open to the public.

    • @lockiemcneish4718
      @lockiemcneish4718 Год назад +4

      New bricks and some panes of glass replaced. A daunting project, but in the end a treasure.

  • @zombiemom6701
    @zombiemom6701 5 месяцев назад +291

    I grew up in a house built in 1792. It had a secret room built into the side of a well in the basement which was a confirmed stop on the underground railroad. Old homes are just so special.

    • @Mindsi
      @Mindsi 4 месяца назад +6

      Follow the drinking gourd, Richie Havens, song about the underground railway🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉A legend of his time🎉🎉🎉

    • @Jacubamustoff
      @Jacubamustoff 3 месяца назад +7

      WOW! THATS AMAZING! How rare to grow up in a home that old. It must have had a special nostalgia to it- the smells...

    • @SharvelFrench
      @SharvelFrench 2 месяца назад

      ❤❤❤❤❤❤

    • @lakesidelaura2088
      @lakesidelaura2088 Месяц назад

      My grandpa had a se return room for his gold and silver;)

    • @StromLxrd6
      @StromLxrd6 24 дня назад +2

      Is it haunted?

  • @jameskulevich8907
    @jameskulevich8907 Год назад +45

    Nice to see it untouched; no broken windows, spray paint, etc.

  • @shaundon1202
    @shaundon1202 4 месяца назад +126

    The fact that it’s still standing is a testament to the builders and materials used!

    • @cheritairby8049
      @cheritairby8049 4 месяца назад +15

      The houses they throw up today could never last this long!

    • @rhonda.gross57
      @rhonda.gross57 2 месяца назад +6

      @@cheritairby8049 and that is too bad! The architects and designers were masters at their crafts and took pride in their work. Even the ones with less education or training took pride in every stone laid, and log sawed. Unfortunately, I'm sure they had slaves do a great deal of heavy labor. But, they also took pride in their work and skills acquired.

  • @debrakennedy7671
    @debrakennedy7671 Год назад +848

    A preservation society needs to restore that and have tours.

    • @JulianaBlewett
      @JulianaBlewett Год назад

      Plantations need to be torn down. They are places filled with the ghosts of the enslaved and abused.

    • @Anonomo-d3d
      @Anonomo-d3d Год назад +105

      A 250 year old house, solid as a rock and not restored and turned into a museum? Shocking and very sad that this amazing old home is left to die! What’s wrong with the people in that town,state????😢

    • @peggys1140
      @peggys1140 Год назад +27

      Agree totally. That house was moved twice! Very solid.

    • @lizlittle1641
      @lizlittle1641 Год назад +28

      I agree. I wonder if American Battlefield Trust can help.

    • @urbanexploringwithkappy1773
      @urbanexploringwithkappy1773  Год назад +47

      Has so much history would make a great place for tours! Reminded me of Drayton hall or something the way it never had power or plumbing installed! Just not quite as grand! Thanks for watching! :)

  • @SamhainBe
    @SamhainBe Год назад +108

    Simple - Solid - Never Up-graded - Original - What a beautiful old place! Speaks well of simple craftsmanship.

  • @peggyharris3301
    @peggyharris3301 Год назад +57

    That beautiful home looks like it hasn't been redone in any way, except chimneys, for 250yrs!! I find that mind boggling!! How??

    • @claregale9011
      @claregale9011 6 месяцев назад +5

      We have homes in the uk still standing after 600 yrs . half timbered houses some are warped but it adds to the charm . 😊

  • @shawnmeyer2788
    @shawnmeyer2788 Год назад +94

    Being in the south it’s probably built from cypress which doesn’t rot and termites won’t eat it. Didn’t seem to have any structural issues. Just minor ones. That first small room looked like a loom set up in there. No modern upgrades, no electricity. Amazing!

  • @DD-th2bd
    @DD-th2bd Год назад +209

    Being that house was built in 1700's I'm surprised there isn't a cemetery nearby and no outbuildings or maybe they just didn't survive like the house did. I try to imagine all the life lived in that house throughout the years. That was an incredible find Kappy! One of my favorites!

    • @ginichase5648
      @ginichase5648 Год назад +25

      I was going to ask where is the family cemetery.. there has to be one.. it's probably unmarked at this place in time.

    • @urbanexploringwithkappy1773
      @urbanexploringwithkappy1773  Год назад +49

      House has been moved a few times over the years so I’m sure there was a cemetery in its original location! Thank you for watching! :)

    • @rockybernard2997
      @rockybernard2997 Год назад +17

      @@urbanexploringwithkappy1773 OH! That would explain why the fireplaces look nearly new! very interesting!

    • @Jennifermcintyre
      @Jennifermcintyre Год назад +12

      @@urbanexploringwithkappy1773that’s wild!! Moving a house that big with today’s equipment would be a feat! I can’t imagine the ingenuity of having to move it back it the day!!

    • @KB-ke3fi
      @KB-ke3fi Год назад +13

      @@ginichase5648 It was relocated. The union soldiers buried bodies wherever they wanted and looted their belongings. Ruthless barbarians.

  • @hollyreinhardt1277
    @hollyreinhardt1277 Год назад +42

    I love these houses, the tree lined driveways, the columns, the porches and old trees and plants. The space and sunlight sweeping through. Private and stately.

    • @judem429
      @judem429 5 месяцев назад

      Yes! With an intact heddle. Beautiful!

  • @debjordan4399
    @debjordan4399 Год назад +79

    Found some more history on this ho use. It was moved from the nearby town to the plantation in the early 1800's and again about 100 feet by the 3rd owner to it's present location. How on earth did they move this house?!

    • @urbanexploringwithkappy1773
      @urbanexploringwithkappy1773  Год назад +7

      I read that too! So fascinating! Thank you for watching! :)

    • @OliveDNorth
      @OliveDNorth Год назад +2

      Moving houses isn't hard. In that era the used logs to move them.

    • @Jakmak1480
      @Jakmak1480 Год назад +2

      Then maybe you can find the cemetery?

    • @missyyouknow6002
      @missyyouknow6002 Год назад +3

      I so wish that places like this could be restored and protected as historical sites.

    • @kas6583
      @kas6583 Год назад

      Thank you for reading this too.

  • @cathyfrederick5073
    @cathyfrederick5073 Год назад +176

    This house was listed under the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. It would be wonderful if the owners would allow preservation and open it up to the public. It is sad that it is just sitting there with no one to admire its beauty.

    • @sshumkaer
      @sshumkaer Год назад +5

      Probably some idiot who's afraid they can't drive their John Deer through the yard to get to their field

    • @sshumkaer
      @sshumkaer Год назад +14

      How do I get a hold of that information? To see if I can purchase it

    • @cathyfrederick5073
      @cathyfrederick5073 Год назад +12

      @@sshumkaer I just googled the house to see if it was listed. I hope you can find it and then purchase it to preserve it.

    • @sshumkaer
      @sshumkaer Год назад +2

      @@cathyfrederick5073 thanks

    • @alisonhoke2484
      @alisonhoke2484 6 месяцев назад +21

      Basically just left to rot. Part of American history. They should be forced to restore it, or forced to sell it. I'm so very sick of all the old plantation homes I see here in my state of VA just left to ROT. Beautiful old abandoned farmhouses. Family inherits the land, and leaves the old family home to fall apart. People suck.

  • @carolreynolds3650
    @carolreynolds3650 Год назад +25

    Wow Kappy, if only wallls could talk!!! What we could learn from this wonderful old house. Nice video on details, thanks for this.

  • @oblivion5562
    @oblivion5562 Год назад +185

    Its amazing how old that house is and what condition it still holds, thats incredible!!!! Someone SAVE HER!!!

    • @goldenlady1213
      @goldenlady1213 Год назад +3

      I agree with you 💯 percent . This place could be a walk through museum even if its unfurnished.

    • @stormysocks
      @stormysocks 8 месяцев назад +3

      You could move in. It's so amazing

    • @winning3329
      @winning3329 7 месяцев назад +2

      ​@stormysocks I would take that house In a heartbeat

    • @claregale9011
      @claregale9011 6 месяцев назад +4

      It should be preserved , in England where I live we are very good at keeping our old buildings in good condition . Lots are from the 12th century and some further back . I hope its looked after as a piece of living history and not left to decay .

    • @Ash-oh6nh
      @Ash-oh6nh 5 месяцев назад +2

      If you had someone breathing over your shoulder with a whip to your back I bet you’d build a great house too.

  • @rockfangd
    @rockfangd Год назад +173

    This house tops as the most incredible one you have done yet. Someone please save it. Hundreds of years old but yet straight and sturdy. The shutters were amazing. The woodwork, fireplaces, all of it. This should be a museum. The history, natural disasters, nature. I can only imagine what is throughout the property. Did any of the floors even creak? Thank You for an incredible explore. No idea how you found this one

    • @urbanexploringwithkappy1773
      @urbanexploringwithkappy1773  Год назад +25

      Have too agree! Definitely one of my all time favorites! A real time capsule with no plumbing or electrical ever added! Thanks for the kind words and watching!! :)

    • @HeavilyCensoredKitty
      @HeavilyCensoredKitty Год назад +5

      I would live in it if i could.

    • @donnagagne3813
      @donnagagne3813 Год назад +7

      You said all I was thinking. I thought how we should all pitch in and buy it. What a beauty.

    • @goldenlady1213
      @goldenlady1213 Год назад +1

      ​@@urbanexploringwithkappy1773Great video.Thanks for doing an awesome job with all of your videos.

    • @elsbet1656
      @elsbet1656 Год назад

      Where is this house?​@@urbanexploringwithkappy1773 Where

  • @hitsquad2149
    @hitsquad2149 Год назад +74

    Had a friend who was in the demolition business for his entire career. He always said the absolute best place to look for valuables was on the fireplace mantle, the seam between the mantle and the wall. He had amassed a small fortune in coins dating back hundreds of years. He was also on a job several years ago demolishing a house for the city and punched through the floor. With no known basement or access, they stopped to investigate. In fact, there was a basement entrance that had been floored over. A complete, pristine still operation was found, not seen in decades, complete with bottles of the product ready for sale. The local historical society came out and removed it. It’s now on display at a local museum.

    • @urbanexploringwithkappy1773
      @urbanexploringwithkappy1773  Год назад +2

      Well that’s awesome!! Imagine finding that!! How awesome! Thanks for sharing!!

    • @TEAMWHAT99
      @TEAMWHAT99 Год назад +7

      My son owns The Barn Savers,and youd amazed the cool things hes found in and around old barns,cabins and other structures. He enjoys donating most of items to their local Hustorical Society,Libraries or tracking down the people whom he can,to bring them a plank tgat they carved their name in with a parent or sibling,sometimes decades later. Very cool stories behind these old Oak boards!

    • @theotheralan5511
      @theotheralan5511 4 месяца назад +5

      The area I live in has tons of prohibition era built property with huge sealed off basements. I have asked about it because there is basically a whole city underground here but the property owners are very hush shush about anything underground. Very peculiar how they react when asked about it.

  • @ml1049
    @ml1049 Год назад +65

    Yes, that is part of our national history and needs to be protected. There aren't many buildings that old still standing and in such good shape. Thanks for the video.

  • @900108Chale
    @900108Chale 6 месяцев назад +57

    *A 250 y.o. abandoned house stands strong in the middle of humid country.*
    _Modern high tech xtra expensive home, rots in 5 years if unattended..._
    Way to go!

  • @jamessparks2691
    @jamessparks2691 Год назад +234

    Also, so nice to not see graffiti everywhere.

    • @rhonda.gross57
      @rhonda.gross57 4 месяца назад +1

      ❤ I totally agree! Makes me sick to see wonderful places destroyed by people who just don't care. Sad.

    • @gledmonson2243
      @gledmonson2243 2 месяца назад +3

      Yes, I agree. This house needs protection. One will hope it can be restored and enjoyed for many years to come.

  • @clairefunnell8481
    @clairefunnell8481 Год назад +22

    Definitely needs to be restored. Im glad there is no vandalism here. Its incredible that this old beauty is still standing. People back the sure knew how to build houses. I heard that newspaper was used for insulation to help heat the houses in the winter. Great explore guys. Hi Ruby.❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @MsDawggysLuckyLife
    @MsDawggysLuckyLife Год назад +42

    Can I just add that the subscribers here are ALL top notch too! I always appreciate the respectful comments and conversations here. Hats off to you all and of course our Kappy n Ruby. ❤✊🏻✊🏻✊🏻✊🏻🙏

  • @melodyjordan6052
    @melodyjordan6052 Год назад +5

    Amazing home. Built to last. Thank you.

  • @tishmusso3949
    @tishmusso3949 Год назад +12

    What the house needs is really good dusting! Remarkably well preserved. A bit of rehab and bet it could be brought to life again.

  • @EdmundCastle-nc7nd
    @EdmundCastle-nc7nd 6 месяцев назад +4

    How much crying and how much laughter happened in that place.? Wow. Thank you for sharing. Just amazing.

  • @BendviewFarm-dq4sp
    @BendviewFarm-dq4sp Год назад +140

    I feel shame for our generation that we as a society don’t protect / maintain historic buildings like this.
    Thank you for documenting it & telling us the history of it Kappy & Ruby! ❤

    • @sshumkaer
      @sshumkaer Год назад +6

      We're like the only country in the world who doesn't

    • @FallenAngelBrass
      @FallenAngelBrass Год назад +5

      The USA has 2500 official national historic landmarks. Each state has its own, as well. Counties and local municipalities also preserve historical buildings.

    • @smelltheglove2038
      @smelltheglove2038 Год назад

      Ever since the civil war, the south has been neglected and demonized. It’s heritage erased. It’s actually pretty gross.

    • @telaine7266
      @telaine7266 Год назад

      This isn’t history America is interested in preserving. Teaching it has even become an issue.

    • @burosangi3855
      @burosangi3855 26 дней назад

      We do. Go check the hundreds of ancient infrastructures thatve been restored. Just cuz this one hasn't doesnt negate the lots that have

  • @lisskreutz2051
    @lisskreutz2051 Год назад +6

    I love old houses.

  • @richardprofit6363
    @richardprofit6363 Год назад +108

    Very cool!..this house shows how better old growth lumber was compared to modern lumber..those wall panels could be 250 years old...and the whole house is still standing straight..that's when wood was WOOD..

    • @zcam1969
      @zcam1969 Год назад +3

      oak lasts

    • @TEAMWHAT99
      @TEAMWHAT99 Год назад +7

      My son owns a company called "The Barn Savers". He reclaims ( salvages) the hardwoods,tin,rock and other materials from barns,cabins,and other structures,and attempts to find great new " homes" for these beams,sleepers,flooring,etc...often combining two or more log cabins for a future cabin,like a work of art,piecing it together with the age ,area and species of local trees,in mind. It breaks our hearts seeing these old structures falling down.

    • @tamscorner67
      @tamscorner67 7 месяцев назад +3

      Cyprus

    • @michaelk4295
      @michaelk4295 6 месяцев назад +5

      But most of it just burned or was misused over the years anyways, leaving us with very little lasting value for the cost that was taken from nature. Almost all of the old growth forests are gone, all but a few tiny, isolated pockets. Life goes on and new forests have grown, but they aren’t the same things, especially the little copses and those planted by people. It’s not just the trees being younger, it’s the balance of trees at all stages of their life cycle, and the diversity of plant, animal, and fungal species occupying all the different tiny niches that a mature forest contains. It would have been nice if our ancestors had developing lumber and pulp plantations before almost entirely cutting down the convenient, valuable old growth.

  • @RJcoolray
    @RJcoolray 5 месяцев назад +9

    I love the old houses. It's a shame no one restores them to live in

  • @user-randi1987
    @user-randi1987 Год назад +80

    What an amazing house! So impressed the roof is still holding up well. That second story porch was beautiful. The original builders must have been so proud of thier beautiful, well built home. Thanks, Kappy and Ruby. This place was a real treat

    • @jadesilk
      @jadesilk Год назад +17

      That's the OLD GROWTH wood... it's nothing like the sponge-like wood harvested from managed forests today. Old growth wood which was used for now-historic houses is rock-hard, durable and worth its weight in gold, which you see here in how well it holds up with no maintenance, out in the elements... won't see its like again.

    • @justtalldave
      @justtalldave Год назад +15

      @@jadesilk so true. I live in an 1800's house. The 2x4 is actually 2x4, and the growth rings are so dense compared to today's "2x4s".

    • @urbanexploringwithkappy1773
      @urbanexploringwithkappy1773  Год назад +7

      Well said! Thank you for the kind words and watching! :)

    • @winthrop2005
      @winthrop2005 Год назад +4

      I lived in the Anthony White House in Georgetown, the floors were pine, spanning from one side of the house to the other and were solid like a rock! The home is registered 1737, and a memorable place to live.

    • @russell2910
      @russell2910 6 месяцев назад +4

      It has been said that my ancestors built this house. I think I should be able to live in it.

  • @windyjarrett5793
    @windyjarrett5793 Год назад +10

    It is so sad that those homes are not cared for. I would love to be able to buy an old homestead like that and restore it and live in it.

  • @pamelasinclair-karney8856
    @pamelasinclair-karney8856 Год назад +22

    Amazing find,solid wood house and still standing for many years.

  • @tale6643
    @tale6643 Год назад +3

    I was born and raised in the Southeast. I'm have been away for several years. I can't express how much I enjoy the areas you cover. Thank you so much for ending your videos with general icons of the South.

  • @colleenholbrook2234
    @colleenholbrook2234 4 месяца назад +6

    That’s how good houses were made! Solid!

  • @stevefarms7494
    @stevefarms7494 Год назад +78

    I hope someone saves that house because that is definitely a treasure . A house that stood a testament of time it out lasted everything that was thrown at it over the years and it is as strong as the day it was built... A brand new house will never last as long as this house did

  • @loucilehall9281
    @loucilehall9281 4 месяца назад +8

    I’m amazed it’s still standing. Good workmanship. It makes me sick to see all these beautiful houses left to just sit and rot

  • @debrademedici864
    @debrademedici864 Год назад +34

    This is my favorite house !!! Please someone save this home !!!! The history in what it has one through is so so worth saving !!!! Thank you Ruby and Kappy for finding this amazing house ❤

  • @MsDawggysLuckyLife
    @MsDawggysLuckyLife Год назад +11

    Wowwww…still structurally standing proud too! Amazing find Kappy! ❤

  • @christianwolf68
    @christianwolf68 5 месяцев назад +17

    places like this should be on the national registry of historical places, and it fully restored.

  • @tigerann4941
    @tigerann4941 Год назад +162

    This home is a testament to true craftsmanship and good materials. A house built today won't last 25 years.

    • @MrPlatinum2323
      @MrPlatinum2323 5 месяцев назад +9

      And they're half a million dollars😂😂😂smh

    • @nooneyouknow5516
      @nooneyouknow5516 5 месяцев назад +1

      Truth.

    • @nooneyouknow5516
      @nooneyouknow5516 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@MrPlatinum2323more truth.

    • @Rick-ko9bx
      @Rick-ko9bx 5 месяцев назад +1

      Ya, but it's not up to code

    •  5 месяцев назад +1

      I bet there are ghost there that other ghost are scared of!!

  • @ubroberts5541
    @ubroberts5541 Год назад +15

    Looks pretty well preserved. No major water damage. No kitchen or bathrooms were built into houses this old. The roof has been maintained. That’s the reason the house still exists in this condition.

  • @MsSurigirl
    @MsSurigirl Год назад +54

    Oh my gosh. If walls could talk. Such a vibrant and varied history. A magnificent and largely untouched/unaltered piece of American history. I love the 'plain', simple lines of the woodwork here. A great treasure. Thanks for filming it!

  • @s.h.8228
    @s.h.8228 Год назад +6

    So much character and style each one of these homes have. They need to be preserved. Thank you for sharing their beauty with us. While they yet stand. ❤❤❤

  • @hopalstudiosjuliehattis
    @hopalstudiosjuliehattis Год назад +24

    And the blue porch ceiling brought good luck to the home and helped ward away evil spirits as three lost souls are unable to cross water.
    Thought I'd throw that in there😊

    • @cristywyndham-shaw5111
      @cristywyndham-shaw5111 Год назад +4

      Carolina blue.

    • @daniel_sc1024
      @daniel_sc1024 Год назад

      Porch ceilings were painted "haint blue" (not a specific color, but a range) not just to ward off evil spirits (not everyone believed in that superstition) but also because they believed it mimicked the sky and repelled wasps and spiders. The color actually does not repel wasps and spiders, but the original milk paint containing lye that was used did act as a bug repellant.

    • @cyndiwilliams4177
      @cyndiwilliams4177 4 месяца назад

      Haint blue

    • @hopalstudiosjuliehattis
      @hopalstudiosjuliehattis 4 месяца назад +1

      Blue Grey lol

    • @cgogetit
      @cgogetit 4 дня назад

      So, if you know that much you definitely know that this house was built by enslaved people and that would be a Hoo doo tradition?

  • @carolineloeser3071
    @carolineloeser3071 Год назад +8

    That house is in incredible shape. Especially for it's age. Thank you for sharing 😊

    • @claregale9011
      @claregale9011 6 месяцев назад

      250yrs is not that old maybe to Americans , I see buildings dating back to the 12th century here in England where I live . 😊

  • @Cueman222
    @Cueman222 Год назад +29

    Whoop-whoop, Ruby in the house! This place is amazing and in good shape for being built in 1770. Should be sanction as a museum. Great find Kappy!👍

  • @kristineguetschow9134
    @kristineguetschow9134 Год назад +17

    The kitchen in these old colonials was almost always in a separate building. After cooked, the food was brought to the house by the servants.

    • @susie6315
      @susie6315 2 месяца назад +1

      Wow I didn't know this, that would explain no kitchen 😮

    • @yasasrathnayake
      @yasasrathnayake 17 дней назад

      Oh ya thinking of plantation Bungalows built during the British colonial era in Sri Lanka has the same thing and some of the plantation steel keeps the tradition the same way.

  • @jenniferdeleon8954
    @jenniferdeleon8954 Год назад +36

    I can’t believe this place has not been preserved. It’s beautiful and such a part of history. Hope it never gets torn down. Thank you Kappy and Ruby!!

    • @urbanexploringwithkappy1773
      @urbanexploringwithkappy1773  Год назад +6

      Thank you for watching! :)

    • @kas6583
      @kas6583 Год назад +1

      This is privately owned. The owner is trying to preserve the property. It is structurally sound but needs alot of care. They are also trying to figure out the names of slaves that worked there. It is a national registered listing. It is not open to the public.

  • @donnagagne3813
    @donnagagne3813 Год назад +1

    I was without internet for two weeks and missed this one. Glad I caught up. I know I have quite a few favorites but this one is the top of the list. BY FAR. Thank you Kappy and Ruby. I think there are spirits there.

  • @NativeNYer
    @NativeNYer Год назад +8

    Oh wow I knew this was gonna b good! Amazing house. So much history! Thanx Kappy and Ruby! Stay safe out there. I'm glad there were no bats in this house either!!

  • @sleepinglioness5754
    @sleepinglioness5754 Год назад +15

    This house is spectacular and is in terrific shape. The mystery house...not even a clue or a sign where the kitchen was!! It's completely heartbreaking to see such absolutely beautiful houses abandoned and all the incredible history.
    Too bad these house couldn't be declared as some form of heritage properties without all the refurbishing restrictions.
    Thank you so much. This was wonderful. I'd like to live in them all.

    • @watcher6555
      @watcher6555 Год назад +4

      They cooked in the fireplace at that time. Those bricks are not original.

    • @sleepinglioness5754
      @sleepinglioness5754 Год назад +3

      @@watcher6555 I later read in another comment he made that the house had been moved a couple of times, So the kitchen cupboards etc. were obviously removed.
      Did you know that the Franklin wood stove was designed by Benjamin Franklin (thus the name)? I used to have one in my cottage...a modern one, that is. Cheerio
      (ps: you have a great name)

    • @watcher6555
      @watcher6555 Год назад +2

      @@sleepinglioness5754 yes I did. I also had a Franklin stove at one time.

  • @krisdonner8961
    @krisdonner8961 Год назад +8

    Just beautiful, I hope someone will save this home.

  • @tammyasbury6517
    @tammyasbury6517 Год назад +5

    This is a rea.lly in great shape to be do old ,it was built to last ,had such big rooms ,loved the second story porch,yeah try to imagine how it sounded before the busy road you can hear,this os a great one Kappy,thanks for finding it and sharing with everyone

  • @lisabek72
    @lisabek72 Месяц назад +3

    I cant believe a wood built house is still standing after over 250 years! Incredible!!

  • @rubberbiscuit99
    @rubberbiscuit99 Год назад +9

    What an amazing building! Thank you for sharing it.

  • @carlfogle
    @carlfogle 5 месяцев назад +3

    I was always fascinated by this house as a child. Happy that I got to see the inside and saddened that it has not been saved for future generations

  • @Broadway789
    @Broadway789 Год назад +7

    One of my favorite homes you found!

  • @barbaralovenvirth8726
    @barbaralovenvirth8726 Год назад +7

    This is a tragedy.... I hope some organization saves this beautiful, historic home. We need to respect our history and landmarks.

  • @tammybaker6635
    @tammybaker6635 Год назад +15

    I can hear the echoes of time in this place. Amazingly preserved for all its been through and seen! I love it when you can get history on the places you visit. I also love when Mz Ruby is able to join you. 2 sets of eyes allows for a little different viewpoint. Ill bet there is an outhouse site that the glass hunters would find some absolutely perfect items. Also there very well could be a graveyard somewhere close. Absolutely stunning place Mr Kappy! Goes to show how crappy things are built today. I'll see you next time! Thanks for taking me along!

  • @MrEric2cu
    @MrEric2cu Год назад +5

    Wow. I absolutely loved watching this video. Can you imagine a house built today lasting 250 years? Thank you so much for sharing.

  • @anitamueller3358
    @anitamueller3358 6 месяцев назад +3

    You have my daughters FULL attention with the shots at the end.
    She was very interested, amazed and wants to buy the house in the video. She’s 4.
    Off to watch more-great work.
    Love the old mill

  • @revelationakagoldeneagle8045
    @revelationakagoldeneagle8045 2 дня назад

    It's amazing that Sherman spared this beautiful place.
    Thanks for sharing!
    Blessings from Georgia USA 🪶✨

  • @ridgemeadowhobbyfarm8658
    @ridgemeadowhobbyfarm8658 Год назад +14

    Kappy,
    Do you feel the history in these homes when you walk them? I mean, really feel it? I feel like I can just watching! This place is amazing! There's no shortage of work that would need to be done, but I don't think it's out of reach to save it. I can't believe this place isn't saved under the national register of historical places. This is true American History! Thanks for another amazing tour!

  • @impressiveprogressive7343
    @impressiveprogressive7343 Год назад +2

    these old clap board structures are so intriguing. Just stand in side and imagine the bygone world and how it used to be in it's day. These homes were built to last. I live in one of the oldest parts of the united states and there are literally thousands of these grand old homes. Most in historic districts that are regulated. Owners have to maintain the homes in period correct conditions with the exception of some update code requirements for safe occupancy.
    Sometime these repairs on these babies can be really expensive because period correct craftsmen and trade workers are getting harder to find. I would like the see more of these saved for educational purposes.
    Wouldn't it be interesting to have elementary schoolers experience what learning was like in long ago history?

  • @rhonda.gross57
    @rhonda.gross57 4 месяца назад +5

    I know this is not a recent video, but it popped up on my RUclips page, and , of course, I had to watch it. I was totally absorbed and fascinated! This is my favorite video of yours that kept me enthralled. To step back in time and almost feel the many things that took place here, especially at the very beginning of our nation! I love y'all and look forward to more exploring with you. I wonder if the kitchen was separate from the main house? Thanks again for making my day!

  • @kirstinwhite1850
    @kirstinwhite1850 Год назад +15

    What an awesome place! I love the arched gate as you enter the property. No graffiti and it is still in pretty good shape.
    I like history and gosh, if this place could talk! Thanks Kappy and Ruby!

  • @wandawilson1406
    @wandawilson1406 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you for showing these treasure to us

  • @kathykolhoff5350
    @kathykolhoff5350 Год назад +21

    This house is in astonishing condition for its age! Definitely well built. How awesome if someone could renovate it. Love the brick archway out front too. Thanks for sharing this!

  • @carolwilder2289
    @carolwilder2289 Год назад +2

    Beautiful home to be 250 years old! Needs to be restored to its glory! The things that happens within that home; I bet it has amazing stories❤
    Very well built, lots of beautiful lumber that would be great refinished.

  • @susanrice3166
    @susanrice3166 Год назад +34

    In fabulous condition despite its age. The old lady needs to be preserved ❤

  • @mommybear2
    @mommybear2 5 месяцев назад +2

    I found an article about the house that said it was built in 1735 of pine. You can definitely see pine boards in some of the video. The brick structures were built in the 1930's.

    • @standingstone4455
      @standingstone4455 5 часов назад

      Where did you find an article on it? I’d love to read more about it!

  • @burningsandsexploration3711
    @burningsandsexploration3711 Год назад +31

    I would love to be able to restore this place and live there. It's gorgeous! A lot of people hid their valuables. My great grandparents buried a lot of valuables. They took their livestock high up into the mountains along with 2 of my great uncles to watch over them until the war was over. My great grandmother and the younger children went to stay with relatives way up north for some time until it was safe to come home.

    • @theotheralan5511
      @theotheralan5511 4 месяца назад

      People have forgotten that the federal government outlawed unregistered people, untaxed property including land all metal especially precious metals like gold and silver, all firearms livestock, commodities, all firearms and achohol WW1 started in the United States and spread to Europe. In the United States the war was to put a government document attached to everything in existence, millions of people were gunned down in cold blood. All covered up and forgotten.

  • @IanV10
    @IanV10 10 месяцев назад

    I love how this whole house looks original, not all upgraded with modern bullcrap, all original wood, doors, floors, fire places, just awesome

  • @sirdookiestainstha5fth842
    @sirdookiestainstha5fth842 5 месяцев назад +8

    Once he enters the house there’s orbs flying around everywhere, and around 5:00 mark there’s a light of some sort that’s actually in front of him that almost looks like something is standing in front of him

  • @trudirrinhard508
    @trudirrinhard508 Год назад +9

    I loved this house it looked scrubbed clean! I wondered about the kitchen and bath. It is almost like no one lived in it for hundreds of years!! Thank you for showing the beautiful simplicity of the old structure. Thanks Kappy and Ruby!!!

  • @TM-rv5ke
    @TM-rv5ke Год назад +2

    This house is in amazing shape inside, no real sign of roof leaking water/water damage inside. Fascinating for sure, I would love to tour and feel of the history in old houses.

  • @fredwood1490
    @fredwood1490 Год назад +5

    That house is still alive! Looks like somebody is restoring it, slowly. It's really clean and in good shape.

  • @joacatmcd
    @joacatmcd Год назад +1

    Ordinary peeps documenting history, the vast and the vague. 1760's to 1960's. So overlooked, so hidden in shame. Thank you very much for all you have done.

  • @ASpiro-c4l
    @ASpiro-c4l Год назад +4

    W O W...another favorite. I really hope this place is saved!

  • @thehonorablejiveturkeyspoo6370
    @thehonorablejiveturkeyspoo6370 Год назад +5

    Not only has it lived thru a few wars but certainly a lot of weather related issues. Amazing construction

  • @user-iamRobinV68
    @user-iamRobinV68 Год назад +5

    Wow imagine all the history that this house saw. Sooo cool. Love it 🥰🥰🥰

  • @kathyritchie4261
    @kathyritchie4261 Год назад +1

    Outstanding thank you for sharing with us

  • @kathygoetzinger
    @kathygoetzinger Год назад +9

    The red paint in the front room is probably the original oxblood paint. My sister's house was built in 1810, and the red paint on the trimwork inside was made with oxblood. It was tested when she took some of the original trim in to have the paint matched. Evidence that all of the bricks were made on site was also discovered .

  • @ThomasKnight-g2r
    @ThomasKnight-g2r 11 дней назад +2

    You want live in the whole state of Alabama and see an older or old house they,d tare them down and build new ones.you might still see 10 old houses left out of all the houses that were built out of all the years houses were built. Wow thanks for posting this great old peace of history

  • @denisewatson5295
    @denisewatson5295 Год назад +5

    What a beautiful old house 🏚. I wish that someone would restore this place. It is amazing that it is still standing. This place is worth restoring. ❤❤❤❤

  • @carolineleavitt4363
    @carolineleavitt4363 Год назад +2

    We are restoring the "Parker Place" in skaneateles NY ! Built in 1847 and they owned the mills in town ! It has beautiful fancy trim and the inside is beautiful with 4 huge French windows in the front an beautifully ornate bay windows at each end of the house! It's a piece of art!

  • @audranezami4308
    @audranezami4308 Год назад +5

    What a wonderful film. I can remember Being in North Carolina back at the seventies I was still just a kid and I could see all old houses like them. I always thought it was fantastic. I'm glad to see some people still filming these places which Needs to be saved it's our heritage our past. However it does give me a ghostly feeling to See these Magnificent places like this

  • @glenngamst61
    @glenngamst61 6 месяцев назад +5

    Rebuild this house and open to the public! The house history should be preserved.

  • @normanfletcher8332
    @normanfletcher8332 Год назад +4

    What a beauty, solid, so hope No developer spots it, See you Kappy & Ruby, commented no kitchen or bath, right.. For some reason I can picture Scarlet ( Gone with the Wind ) standing on that upstairs porch..

  • @heygirl2
    @heygirl2 Год назад +4

    In it's day I can imagine the simple beauty of this house and surrounding property who knows the joy and life it held in its walls! Great find 👍

  • @juliacockroft8745
    @juliacockroft8745 Год назад +9

    Very interesting old home. Would have liked to have seen more of the back.

  • @kathymawer9295
    @kathymawer9295 4 дня назад +1

    The outside looks like an old Audrey Hepburn movie the Children's Hour where it was used as a school filmed in 1961. It is very cool.

  • @pben4218
    @pben4218 Год назад +5

    Really neat old place. Looks like an iron fence & gate was once around the yard. Thanks for sharing.

  • @figgy7099
    @figgy7099 8 месяцев назад +3

    The craftmanship! No power tools, made out of necessity, still standing beautiful.

    • @claregale9011
      @claregale9011 6 месяцев назад

      Hi , look at some of the uks cathedrals built with no power tools etc some date back to the 13th century , they are pretty amazing 😊

  • @rondathiesen9317
    @rondathiesen9317 Год назад +24

    This house definately should be preserved and in the history of that town.👍

    • @nelliesfarm8473
      @nelliesfarm8473 Год назад +1

      Where is it ?? Trying to figure it out

    • @caiojunior9123
      @caiojunior9123 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@nelliesfarm8473 The house is located in South Carolina, near Orangeburg, in Orangeburg County. Its name is Donald Bruce House, but it is also known as Middlepen Plantation.

  • @donaldteal6315
    @donaldteal6315 8 месяцев назад +4

    Amazing home apart of America 🇺🇸 needs to be saved for the history of our great country 🇺🇸

  • @tjnucnuc
    @tjnucnuc 6 месяцев назад +11

    It’s crazy to think about; every single nail used for all that lumbar was hand wrought. SC should be doing more to protect this property

  • @mrs.childers8333
    @mrs.childers8333 5 месяцев назад +1

    The articles I read said the owner does what he can to keep the property up, but has had several bouts of vandalism. I doubt they had a full kitchen indoors, I know in My state all the older pine homes had kitchens separate from the home, several feet away. Maybe a wood burning stove was there. I couldn't find anything about the floor plan that ever mentions a kitchen.

  • @stevejenkins6924
    @stevejenkins6924 Год назад +2

    needs preserved.

  • @veronicamorgan8103
    @veronicamorgan8103 Год назад +9

    Not only was there not a kitchen or bathroom, there was no electricity used either. Awesome place Kappy.

  • @Big_Abomination
    @Big_Abomination 6 месяцев назад +2

    someone in that region should preserve that building. It deserves it!