Taskeen Asmal actually, id love to be in the house not just with a story, but an actual history ... but, what id not love, is probably thinking that maybe those who witnessed the history happen was still in the house 😳 (noting the long timeline)
@@BloodClotCryin o yeah but more in depth i meant :) it's always interesting to know more about it. but i understand not all places carry such records or stories in detail.
There is no God but Allah. Holy Quran has been revealed through angel jibreel to prophet Muhammed (PBUH) 1400 years ago as a guidence to all mankind. All the words of the holy Quran are from the Creator.I request everyone to buy the holy Quran with translation and read the entire holy Quran with patience to know about creator and to know why he created us.Pls watch video "The meaning of life muslim spoken word".Also watch famous muslim scholar doctor Zakir Naik lecture Quran and modern science compatible or incompatible.Search on youtube Quran:2 surah Al-Baqara english or native language translation.Read the whole surah with patience to know what Allah has said in the Quran .Surah Al- Baqara is the second Surah of the Quran.This surah is enough to prove that Allah is the only Creator.There are total of 114 suras in the Quran.If you want to know the truth about your Creator read 1 to 114 Surahs. Get to know your Creator, who has spoken to you through the Quran. Listen to the true story of Yusuf Estes,Why and how he became a Muslim from christian. Also listen to famous scholar Ahmed didat lecture who became muslim from Christian. Listen to famous muslim scholar lecture Nouman Ali khan,Mufti Menk,Tarik jameel,Yasmin Mogaheed and Omar Solaiman .Request to all muslims and non-muslims wake up before its too late.May Allah guide all of you on right path.Ameen
@@basilgaizka4672 uh, slaveholders or people who advocated for slavery likely lived in this home. . you probably didn't noticed something about a charleston rice bed and how rice was an important crop. well, how do you think they got that rice? slaves, and slaves also likely worked in this home.
@@orangemoonglows2692 Stop being a whiny SJW. Slavery has been around in most parts of the world. I wonder if arabs or turks in Damascus or Istanbul say "Oh my God, these old houses had slave owners in them!" Get over it.
@@agme8045 I absolutely would love to but this house if I could afford it. Old architecture and style is exactly what I love. Modern style is absolutely disgusting to me.
ngl everyone's talking about ghosts but the true monsters would probably be the slaveowner history of this home........ Edit: Why these white racists r defending themselves on my comment thread? I don't know. I wasn't even saying anything, just pointing out how historical homes can have this kinda history. Hoping all allies and poc r having a nice day. Happy pride 🌈🌈🌈
Everything and everyone has a past ....the slaveowners of the day we’re doing what a lot did at that specific time in history .... I don’t believe they were monsters ....
My boyfriend and I decided to play a drinking game everytime we watch AD together: drink whenever they mention indoor outdoor living, whenever there is a home movie theater, whenever you see a fireplace, etc. This one with 16 fireplaces was a good one
@@anonymousonlineuser6543 How is this giant colonial house not a monument to slavery? It was only able to be built because of the slave trade. Irs still a beautiful house and deserves to be preserved. But there is no point not being honest about its history.
@@Xii371 Who cares? Only incredibly dumb person would look at Egyptian pyramid or Roman villa and think: ''Wonder, how many slaves died building it....''
@@anonymousonlineuser6543 well no one is going to live in the pyramids. Stop getting your knickers in a twist for people pointing out the colonial past of America. Get over it. You're being so sensitive
I feel like if we are going to talk about the history & the context of the architectural features, there needs to be some acknowledgement of slave ownership in that home. Its a gorgeous house and thats a hard topic, but i feel like erasure is not the best approach
Right! They kept saying that this home had “one of the first” or “the only home to have this big of a lot” etc, and I’m like... where do you think they got the money from to build a house of such grandeur and what they did to get this house (slavery)... and the “people” that would have been in the kitchen wouldn’t have been considered “people” during this homes first hundred years or so.
@@anonymousonlineuser6543 The original owner was one of the biggest plantation owners in South Carolina it literally is a monument to slavery you idiot.
@@Alex-lb9xd Only very dumb person looks at Roman villa or Egyptian pyramid and thinks: How many slaves were used to build it. You are one of those people. Congrats.
LOVED this tour. Please do more like it. Seeing modern after modern homes gets a bit tiring. And hats off to these agents - they did a great job relaying details about the property.
So what? Yes, slavery was bad, but it's a part of history, wether you like it or not. Do you want to demolish this and other houses of that era? Or rewrite history books?
I have a great idea! Why don't we all go to Rome and tear down every single solitary statue and piece of architecture? How about tearing down the Colosseo, too? The Romans owned more slaves than the modern world did, put together. You seem to be offended by the fact that, according to you, "they don't want to mention that the guest house is where the slaves lived." Are you aware of the fact that not every wealthy, Southern, family owned slaves? I guess you aren't. Did you know the owners of this property personally? You might want to inform yourself, or... you can just fall for the Globalist racial division agenda. You've been indoctrinated very well and so have the people who've up voted this comment. Congratulations on being a Globalist sheep. 🎊🎉🎊🎉🎊🎉
Wow, made it through the entire house without reference to the history of enslaved people and the way this history effected the architecture and layout of the home 🤔
I was thinking the exact same thing, old charleston is a feast for the eyes but walking through it makes you sick because you know the enormous cost of human dignity involved to create this. I found it a unsettling mix of sensations.
george this is the very first thing that popped in my hed. i visualized pain all over that house. there are at a minimum 2000 ghosts of deceased black people in that yard alone . i'd be guilty
Exactly right. The ballroom and dining room would have been attended to by slaves, and the kitchen and gardens full of slaves cooking, harvesting, etc.
If they didn't have slaves, they would have had hired help who lived onsite or nearby and separate spaces for them, so I don't think that slavery affected the "layout" of the space. Slaves may have built the house if that's what you mean. Any American watching this video about a historic pre-revolutionary war home, would likely know that slaves likely existed in this space at many points in it's history (as they would have in ANY home that existed during the time period of slavery in the U.S.) so that really goes without saying. Also, it's not a video on American History, but on home architecture, and on a multi-million dollar space they're currently trying to sell. I don't think they have to be the History Channel when they are real estate brokers. Selling the home is their job, not teaching history.
It’s pretty remarkable when you look at all of the architectural achievements that should be attributed to enslaved labor. It’s a shame that it’s under-acknowledged in the modern day US.
Beautiful house and job well done by the owners. Usually we see historic house from the outside but the inside is totally different. This house is a vibe. Both the realtors are amazing as well, they know what they are talking about and straight to the point.
It‘s a beautiful property and very thoughtfully restored. I hope the next owners would have as much love and respect for the place as the current ones do.
You know, i hate modern houses with their sterile environments and lifeless black, white and grey blocks. I genuinely prefer traditional and more colorful styles.... But this is just too much.Who would like to live in a house this old? This thing literally had slaves roaming around. It's not worthy at all. It's not that pretty and it's also not practical for modern life . It needs a lot of restoration. And i don't believe in ghosts and the supernatural at all, but that pool looks cursed asf. If ghosts existed, they sure as hell would inhabit this house. Imagine the amount of people who died within those walls. Imagine all the slave labor it saw. Too morbid to me.
100% with you on this. It's a pretty house but it gives me major creeps because of all the horror these walls will have seen. Who wants to live in that and constantly have to renovate it on top of that? No thank you. Couldn't pay me a million dollars to live in there.
Hm... you wouldn’t like in France... if you take a look at the city of Tours, in the historic centre people live in 13th century houses :) it’s not AS practical as some more modern houses, but the history is huge (although the history of this particular house is certainly reaaally not cool)
No one is going to pay 9 million for a house in Charleston with an association that limits renovation to the exterior and interior of the house. I can see why it’s been on the market for so long.
Everyone's talking about how this is worth the price and, true. Except it is actually soooo expensive, I don't think I'll have this money in just a few years.
Set a goal and visualize having that money. Maybe you'll start a company, or sell a craft, or invent something, or innovate something, and become rich. It starts with visualizing and believing it though. Then your mind will start to work to figure out how to make it happen.
still bigger than most mansions they show. 8500 sqft is so freaking much. I found 9.5 milion in this house the biggest steal I have ever seen. That house in Callifornia, especially in Los Angeles County, wouldn't cost less than 25 milion.
The absolute disregard of why this home even exists which is Slavery is disgusting. Slavery is literally the only reason this house was built and why it was able to be kept up almost 300 years later. Also they kept saying that this home had “one of the first” or “the only home to have this big of a lot” etc, and I’m like... where do you think they got the money from to build a house of such grandeur and what they did to get this house... and the “people” that would have been in the kitchen wouldn’t have been considered “people” during this homes first hundred years or so.
“This is the formal dining room, I’m sure there have been amazing dinner parties” yeah...wondering who was serving the food... I find it really interesting how they just don’t talk about the obvious uncomfortable topic in house tours like this
Why should they even mention the slavery? If there should be slavery mentioned with every building ever built then most of Italy, Greece, Egypt and surrounding countries would have slavery writen on every single centimeter.
Historical hullabaloo aside, I still think the art style of the interior looks worlds better than the razor sharp edge nightmares we have in modern houses.
It’s frankly offensive that they expected us to gloss over the fact that there are literal slave quarters in this house. The amount of human suffering that has gone on in this house... just atrocious.
This house, and the other buildings very much my style and decor and color schemes, I love this house etc. I hope that it gets new owners who will love it, take care of it, and respect its history and architectural design features! Well done indeed!
Ghosts can't hurt you, might have fun scaring you a little bit though. I'd be more worried about the illegal immigrants and gangs moving in just a few blocks away placed there on purpose by Biden to stir things up.
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ironic they called it the "primary" bedroom instead of the master bedroom but completely glossed over the history of enslaved people who likely built that house and where the original owner's wealth came from
Well they stopped using the term master because of you sensitive wokes. Now you complain that they did. Always trying to stay relevant and important. Your opinion is just that.
Great example of a lovely Georgian House! Kudos for the sympathetic restoration 👏 It would be great to *learn* more of the *history* of the US & the Americas before the US was formed. *This planet has existed for millions of years and humanity has been here for 40,000 years!* History, both pleasant and horrible is something we must learn to *acknowledge & accept* (not try to get rid of it, pretend it didn't happen or get really upset or angry about it) because it is still part of our Energy field as *energy is timeless: it can only be transformed into different vibrations, it can never die.* We need to *heal,* but first we must *learn* and then we can *grow* and do it *together* as *One Family,* one Consciousness, One Love ❤️
Notwithstanding how magnificent the home is, and the presentation is, the blonde woman lost me at the whatever mention of '69 Church'. Okay, Okay, we got it.
The Georgian-style Charleston mansion with the square design and all the windows makes it look like a modern mansion. I like the inside folding window shutters.
@@theopinionisthighqualityopinio In 2021: while they are still being socio-economically and politically oppressed; they are not technically slaves (someone's literal property) anymore -which is the people, the OP was likely referring to.
Jacob motte’s son married a woman who was the sister of Miles Brewton, a wealthy slave trader. So yeah.. based upon the family history of some of the past owners of this house, I would definitely not be surprised if there was many, many, slaves kept in this home. It really shouldn’t be on the market for someone to buy and call a home, and they also shouldn’t be advertising it without disclosing the full history .
@@migueltucabron because they’re not disclosing the true history and past of this home. Imagine moving in here thinking nothing of it because the owners didn’t tell you what happened here, then after you already bought it and spent time in this house found out the true history behind it? Not everyone is okay with living in a home innocent people were abused, killed, or passed away in. For a house that cost this much money they should be upfront about the history behind it, instead of trying to keep it a secret in hopes it will sell better
2:55 Talks about original shutters while showing clearly cheap later replacements. Original shutters all had beautiful medallions these flat boards with agricultural hooks do not belong in this house.
@@graylonwashington2714 I wonder how old you are Sure there was slavery back then There was all kinds of bad things back then It’s called history whether you like it or not Did you know it was black tribes selling other black people into slavery Learn history don’t be ignorant
@@theopinionisthighqualityopinio Ok wow someone is a little too passionate about slavery. I was responding to the person that said 'wow I love the history of this house'. Saying they love the history romanticizes everything that probably went on there. It is not an agenda to acknowledge the entire history of the house. You're putting words in my mouth saying I want this house demolished along with Rome and Giza. It's like those plantations in the southern united states that white people visit to have their weddings or tour the opulent mansions and they just brush over the horrors that went on there. No one is saying you must tear down Rome or these houses but acknowledge what happened there and stop the ignorance.
@@theopinionisthighqualityopinio Not to mention, this house was owned by owners who happened to own the Fairfield Plantation in Charleston county so there was definitely slavery going on here
First and foremost someone who lives in the area need to be able to put down 9.5M (maybe a little bit less) and still have money to further work on the building. That's the main hurdle i'd say. Charleston isn't exactly known to be the city or area with high salaries or lots of big business. And then the buyer has to also like the style of the building which is pretty specific i'd say. So no, not really. I think a owner that respects the history of whatever heritage or skin color would be fine.
I was admiring that dress also, the cut is really nice, and I was wondering if she had possibly made the dress herself. Some folks are still very handy cutting patterns and using a sewing machine.
@@loisaustin6200 yeeees I was wondering if it was handmade as well and honestly I want to try making it myself if I can get some good screenshots of it.
Torn between really loving this timeless-beauty historic house, to, overthinking the number of ghosts id be with
!!!!! Literally same I’ve been thinking this throughout the video; it’s hard to appreciate knowing the historic events that probably took place
The ghost hunter ppl should come stay the night here, id wanna see that. Makes me wonder why they are selling it to begin with.
I'd have to sage the HELL out of that mansion lol!
Taskeen Asmal actually, id love to be in the house not just with a story, but an actual history ... but, what id not love, is probably thinking that maybe those who witnessed the history happen was still in the house 😳 (noting the long timeline)
If that prospect bothers you, get a priest to exorcise the place before moving into it.
For historical houses like this it would also be cool to share the history of the house and previous owners.
@4:40. There have only been 3 owners in 150 years, one was state treasurer, the house underwent a 3 year restoration... I think it's all there lol
You could communicate with the previous owners via ouija board
@@BloodClotCryin o yeah but more in depth i meant :) it's always interesting to know more about it. but i understand not all places carry such records or stories in detail.
slave traders in one of the most active slave trade hubs in the world at the time
There is no God but Allah. Holy Quran has been revealed through angel jibreel to prophet Muhammed (PBUH) 1400 years ago as a guidence to all mankind. All the words of the holy Quran are from the Creator.I request everyone to buy the holy Quran with translation and read the entire holy Quran with patience to know about creator and to know why he created us.Pls watch video "The meaning of life muslim spoken word".Also watch famous muslim scholar doctor Zakir Naik lecture Quran and modern science compatible or incompatible.Search on youtube Quran:2 surah Al-Baqara english or native language translation.Read the whole surah with patience to know what Allah has said in the Quran .Surah Al- Baqara is the second Surah of the Quran.This surah is enough to prove that Allah is the only Creator.There are total of 114 suras in the Quran.If you want to know the truth about your Creator read 1 to 114 Surahs. Get to know your Creator, who has spoken to you through the Quran. Listen to the true story of Yusuf Estes,Why and how he became a Muslim from christian. Also listen to famous scholar Ahmed didat lecture who became muslim from Christian. Listen to famous muslim scholar lecture Nouman Ali khan,Mufti Menk,Tarik jameel,Yasmin Mogaheed and Omar Solaiman .Request to all muslims and non-muslims wake up before its too late.May Allah guide all of you on right path.Ameen
Me in the beginning: omg breathtaking
👁👄👁
10:43: “Ight imma head out” 💀
Oh my! I didn’t even notice the tombstones until seeing your comment. Wow! I’d be running outta there lol 😂
@@spiritabundance222 Run for the hills... lol.
wow im only 1:39 in an im already ready to leave lol
Are we all going to casually ignore the mini graveyard at 10:41 and the construction going on around it? Did we learn NOTHING from poltergeist!?!
Yup! It’s haunted lol
OMG
@@Pearlpiy Yep and it’s on church street and it’s during pre- revolutionary times, need I say more?
You do know Poltergeist wasn't a documentary, right? :)
Didn't notice that until you pointed it out.
Let me guess, it's on sale because the previous owners mysteriously died. And the owners before them, and before them.
lmao there’s only been 3 owners but sounds about right
Eventually we all die
American Horror Story
👻👻👻👻👻👻👻👻👻
@@ihateyouNY Murder House.
"If these walls could talk"
Me: Yeah they'd need a freaking therapist for the horrors they've seen
well mostly from the 1740's till the 1860's
@@michaelbcohen that's a while!
Just rich people living in them. There ain't going to be much bad inside the home. Well unless today's rich people are anything to go by.
@@basilgaizka4672 uh, slaveholders or people who advocated for slavery likely lived in this home. . you probably didn't noticed something about a charleston rice bed and how rice was an important crop. well, how do you think they got that rice? slaves, and slaves also likely worked in this home.
@@orangemoonglows2692 Stop being a whiny SJW. Slavery has been around in most parts of the world. I wonder if arabs or turks in Damascus or Istanbul say "Oh my God, these old houses had slave owners in them!"
Get over it.
See, this is how you respect a historical house, not by letting the old facade be and modernizing the interior. Huge respect for the property owners.
Good luck selling it to anyone who actually wants to live in it tho lol
10.41 time stamp....good luck
@@ammikendegwa hey ghosts add to the charm XD
@@agme8045 I absolutely would love to but this house if I could afford it.
Old architecture and style is exactly what I love. Modern style is absolutely disgusting to me.
@@coe8159 Same! I don't like modern homes!
ngl everyone's talking about ghosts but the true monsters would probably be the slaveowner history of this home........
Edit: Why these white racists r defending themselves on my comment thread? I don't know. I wasn't even saying anything, just pointing out how historical homes can have this kinda history.
Hoping all allies and poc r having a nice day. Happy pride 🌈🌈🌈
exactly what i was thinking
cry about it
@@gmanvazgen3665 very funny 😐
Everything and everyone has a past ....the slaveowners of the day we’re doing what a lot did at that specific time in history ....
I don’t believe they were monsters ....
@@kikihowe4799 fam do you hear yourself? legality does not mean morality, my good lad.
It’s wild how mildly historical building are so rare in the states! Come to Europe and we’ll give u a medieval house for nothing 😂
We're so new, that we didn't have very many high-quality buildings built, and retained, until we got firmly established a couple hundred years ago.
True :D
Our land is just as old as your Europe
@@dondressel452 Nobody is speaking about the land.
Feels like a logical fallacy how you're discrediting the age and beauty of this hosue just because there happen to be older ones elsewhere
My boyfriend and I decided to play a drinking game everytime we watch AD together: drink whenever they mention indoor outdoor living, whenever there is a home movie theater, whenever you see a fireplace, etc. This one with 16 fireplaces was a good one
"if these walls could talk..." they'd tell you the horrors of slavery. This is very tone death.
Stop spewing woke garbage. This is a beautiful house not a monument of slavery.
@@anonymousonlineuser6543 How is this giant colonial house not a monument to slavery? It was only able to be built because of the slave trade.
Irs still a beautiful house and deserves to be preserved. But there is no point not being honest about its history.
@@Xii371 Who cares? Only incredibly dumb person would look at Egyptian pyramid or Roman villa and think: ''Wonder, how many slaves died building it....''
@@anonymousonlineuser6543 well no one is going to live in the pyramids. Stop getting your knickers in a twist for people pointing out the colonial past of America. Get over it. You're being so sensitive
@@Xii371 I know you are trying, but you have failed. It is called projection in psychiatric practice. I am not a girl like you, it's not gonna stick.
The number of ghosts there must be in this house !
Even I thinking the sameee!!!
Yes. The ghosts of slaves.
@@simplynellstinystudio kinky
The ghost of slaves.
@@katherines6322 .
I feel like if we are going to talk about the history & the context of the architectural features, there needs to be some acknowledgement of slave ownership in that home. Its a gorgeous house and thats a hard topic, but i feel like erasure is not the best approach
sounds about white
Right! They kept saying that this home had “one of the first” or “the only home to have this big of a lot” etc, and I’m like... where do you think they got the money from to build a house of such grandeur and what they did to get this house (slavery)... and the “people” that would have been in the kitchen wouldn’t have been considered “people” during this homes first hundred years or so.
Stop spewing woke garbage. This is a beautiful house not a monument to slavery. You triggered morons are such a kill joy.
@@anonymousonlineuser6543 The original owner was one of the biggest plantation owners in South Carolina it literally is a monument to slavery you idiot.
@@Alex-lb9xd Only very dumb person looks at Roman villa or Egyptian pyramid and thinks: How many slaves were used to build it. You are one of those people. Congrats.
LOVED this tour. Please do more like it. Seeing modern after modern homes gets a bit tiring. And hats off to these agents - they did a great job relaying details about the property.
This house is giving me nothing but slave owner vibes
Yeah, very dark gives me a weird vibe
That's because it was!
as it should.
Lets tear it down and replace it with a George Floyd statue, amirite?
Stop whining.
@@christianwestling2019 Misdirected hate? You could use a shrink.
The kitchen where "people would have cooked or boiled water."
This place screams slavery :S
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Exactly! The verbal gymnastics that had to go into this script to avoid mentioning slavery or slave quarters was pretty breathtaking.
So what? Yes, slavery was bad, but it's a part of history, wether you like it or not. Do you want to demolish this and other houses of that era? Or rewrite history books?
I guess they don’t want to mention how the guest house was actually where the slaves lived…
I have a great idea! Why don't we all go to Rome and tear down every single solitary statue and piece of architecture? How about tearing down the Colosseo, too?
The Romans owned more slaves than the modern world did, put together.
You seem to be offended by the fact that, according to you, "they don't want to mention that the guest house is where the slaves lived." Are you aware of the fact that not every wealthy, Southern, family owned slaves? I guess you aren't. Did you know the owners of this property personally?
You might want to inform yourself, or... you can just fall for the Globalist racial division agenda. You've been indoctrinated very well and so have the people who've up voted this comment. Congratulations on being a Globalist sheep. 🎊🎉🎊🎉🎊🎉
You think the slaves lived in the guest house? Slaves lived in shacks far away from the masters house.
HoHoHopium lol shut up
@NakedAndLaughing I had a feeling my comment would really piss off the conservatives lol
@@hohohopium honestly love seeing the conservatives get fired up over the notion that slaves existed.
Wow, made it through the entire house without reference to the history of enslaved people and the way this history effected the architecture and layout of the home 🤔
I was thinking the exact same thing, old charleston is a feast for the eyes but walking through it makes you sick because you know the enormous cost of human dignity involved to create this. I found it a unsettling mix of sensations.
george this is the very first thing that popped in my hed. i visualized pain all over that house. there are at a minimum 2000 ghosts of deceased black people in that yard alone . i'd be guilty
Exactly right. The ballroom and dining room would have been attended to by slaves, and the kitchen and gardens full of slaves cooking, harvesting, etc.
If they didn't have slaves, they would have had hired help who lived onsite or nearby and separate spaces for them, so I don't think that slavery affected the "layout" of the space. Slaves may have built the house if that's what you mean. Any American watching this video about a historic pre-revolutionary war home, would likely know that slaves likely existed in this space at many points in it's history (as they would have in ANY home that existed during the time period of slavery in the U.S.) so that really goes without saying. Also, it's not a video on American History, but on home architecture, and on a multi-million dollar space they're currently trying to sell. I don't think they have to be the History Channel when they are real estate brokers. Selling the home is their job, not teaching history.
Say it loud say it proud! Not a mention of all the bones buried there!
The amount of slaves that have been rotated through that property is probably ridiculous 😐
The slave labor to build that mansion. That's probably why it's on the market now haha.
What I thought😔
Sad to think about but most likely very true :/ hope black people buy it then!
@@becksdre3294 ? Hope black people buy it? That doesn’t even make sense- like why does it matter lmao
It’s pretty remarkable when you look at all of the architectural achievements that should be attributed to enslaved labor. It’s a shame that it’s under-acknowledged in the modern day US.
Finally, a traditional mansion.
I'm so tired of huge houses with minimalist aesthetic.
Beautiful house and job well done by the owners. Usually we see historic house from the outside but the inside is totally different. This house is a vibe. Both the realtors are amazing as well, they know what they are talking about and straight to the point.
The charm of this house is so timeless and impeccable. I am in love!
Beautifully and tastefully restored. I love how modern conveniences have been bought in without taking away from the charm of the original details.
It‘s a beautiful property and very thoughtfully restored. I hope the next owners would have as much love and respect for the place as the current ones do.
One of the most beautiful historical houses I've ever seen.
You know, i hate modern houses with their sterile environments and lifeless black, white and grey blocks. I genuinely prefer traditional and more colorful styles.... But this is just too much.Who would like to live in a house this old? This thing literally had slaves roaming around. It's not worthy at all. It's not that pretty and it's also not practical for modern life . It needs a lot of restoration. And i don't believe in ghosts and the supernatural at all, but that pool looks cursed asf. If ghosts existed, they sure as hell would inhabit this house. Imagine the amount of people who died within those walls. Imagine all the slave labor it saw. Too morbid to me.
100% with you on this. It's a pretty house but it gives me major creeps because of all the horror these walls will have seen. Who wants to live in that and constantly have to renovate it on top of that? No thank you. Couldn't pay me a million dollars to live in there.
10000% this
my first thought were the ghosts that has to inhabit this place
Never go live in old European houses then if you think there are ghosts in these houses 😂
Hm... you wouldn’t like in France... if you take a look at the city of Tours, in the historic centre people live in 13th century houses :) it’s not AS practical as some more modern houses, but the history is huge (although the history of this particular house is certainly reaaally not cool)
No one is going to pay 9 million for a house in Charleston with an association that limits renovation to the exterior and interior of the house. I can see why it’s been on the market for so long.
Everyone's talking about how this is worth the price and, true. Except it is actually soooo expensive, I don't think I'll have this money in just a few years.
buy the doge to MOON
in all your life, more likely.
@@030992amagadi nice projection there bud
@@r.c.6940 ok, tell him to come back to me once he's become rich to the point of being able to buy 10 million dollar houses lol
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This is the best house I’ve ever seen featured on AD. I’m not into mansions, and while this is def over the top, the home and property are gorgeous.
still bigger than most mansions they show. 8500 sqft is so freaking much. I found 9.5 milion in this house the biggest steal I have ever seen. That house in Callifornia, especially in Los Angeles County, wouldn't cost less than 25 milion.
The absolute disregard of why this home even exists which is Slavery is disgusting. Slavery is literally the only reason this house was built and why it was able to be kept up almost 300 years later. Also they kept saying that this home had “one of the first” or “the only home to have this big of a lot” etc, and I’m like... where do you think they got the money from to build a house of such grandeur and what they did to get this house... and the “people” that would have been in the kitchen wouldn’t have been considered “people” during this homes first hundred years or so.
Why would they mention that when the house is in the process of being sold?
@@brandoniswhoiam Yeah it not a documentum film about the house. And its not the house’s fault that the original owners were bad people.
“This is the formal dining room, I’m sure there have been amazing dinner parties” yeah...wondering who was serving the food... I find it really interesting how they just don’t talk about the obvious uncomfortable topic in house tours like this
Yea sure I get it but they're trying to sell the house not mention all the bad things that happened in there
Why should they even mention the slavery? If there should be slavery mentioned with every building ever built then most of Italy, Greece, Egypt and surrounding countries would have slavery writen on every single centimeter.
Historical hullabaloo aside, I still think the art style of the interior looks worlds better than the razor sharp edge nightmares we have in modern houses.
I am a big modern house fan, but I appreciate this house a lot, this is a really cozy house
I pray a BIPOC family buys this. (Who is knowledgeable of the spirit realm and the history of the land)
7:37 😗 right..
“Guest house” 🙂
Spirit realm lol
It was all fun and games till the graveyard showed up 💀😭
I'm pretty sure those are tombstones at 10:42 that are still part of the mansion
YUP. No thanks on that.
On the neighboring properties.
Those belong to the church next to the house
We're all going to die. 🤷🏻♀️ Such is life.〜
@@X3000Chan in this life.
It’s frankly offensive that they expected us to gloss over the fact that there are literal slave quarters in this house. The amount of human suffering that has gone on in this house... just atrocious.
This house has a *lovely* style… ✨slave-owner✨
Dang, that was beautiful. I didn't think I'd ever see something that would make me say "Yeah, I'd like to live in South Carolina", but here we are.
What a gem of a home! It’s a good thing to see that kind of craftsmanship !
69 Church Street, nice
Nice
After watching this, I want a tiny home.
This house, and the other buildings very much my style and decor and color schemes, I love this house etc. I hope that it gets new owners who will love it, take care of it, and respect its history and architectural design features! Well done indeed!
Imagine having your midnight snack in that kitchen only to realize you’re not eating alone 👀
Ghosts can't hurt you, might have fun scaring you a little bit though. I'd be more worried about the illegal immigrants and gangs moving in just a few blocks away placed there on purpose by Biden to stir things up.
Looks like I'd walk into the living room and see John Marston cleaning his rifle.
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I lived in Charleston and been in this house before. My father did some of the furnishing.
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ironic they called it the "primary" bedroom instead of the master bedroom but completely glossed over the history of enslaved people who likely built that house and where the original owner's wealth came from
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Well they stopped using the term master because of you sensitive wokes. Now you complain that they did. Always trying to stay relevant and important. Your opinion is just that.
this is exactly what I was thinking!! plus only 3 owners over all of these years,,,,, generational trauma much?
we understand that slaves existed. Just like they likely built the pyramids. Time to move on and stop making everything about skin colour
*Wow what an amazing and beautiful home.*
Probably cost $1000 to build back in 1745... what a return on investment over 275 years!
Haha
Only if the owner was a vampire.
it was cheap and all with all of that free labor.
9.5M for a historical property? tell me the house is haunted without telling me the house is haunted 👀
Great example of a lovely Georgian House! Kudos for the sympathetic restoration 👏 It would be great to *learn* more of the *history* of the US & the Americas before the US was formed. *This planet has existed for millions of years and humanity has been here for 40,000 years!* History, both pleasant and horrible is something we must learn to *acknowledge & accept* (not try to get rid of it, pretend it didn't happen or get really upset or angry about it) because it is still part of our Energy field as *energy is timeless: it can only be transformed into different vibrations, it can never die.* We need to *heal,* but first we must *learn* and then we can *grow* and do it *together* as *One Family,* one Consciousness, One Love ❤️
I'm here now. Most homes downtown are historic and beautiful
Notwithstanding how magnificent the home is, and the presentation is, the blonde woman lost me at the whatever mention of '69 Church'. Okay, Okay, we got it.
The Georgian-style Charleston mansion with the square design and all the windows makes it look like a modern mansion. I like the inside folding window shutters.
Older than the U.S. in South Carolina...Alright I’ll be the one to ask: what is the home’s connection to slavery?
I love the concept of garden rooms
My heart... I need this home.
a perfect place for filming a horror movie.
Not at all, nothing spooky about this house, loads of windows and sunlight beaming in, beautiful inside and out.
Why? ...Oh... because it's old?...🙄. I guess no one dies in modern times, huh?
@@X3000Chan 300 years arent even that old, a lot of buildings were built in that era and a lot of people still living in these buildings today.
"Older than the United States" isn't particularly impressive, go to Europe and every other building is older than the US.
True, in europe i had dinner in a Restaurant thats running since 851 years!
Sure but we are talking about the states here not the other places in the world.
It is for the United States...
Cool. Nobody cares. Europeans stay comparing United States to their boring country
@@theopinionisthighqualityopinio ^THIS
Lol, not even 30 seconds in and I was wondering how many black people worked in that house back in the day.
I was wondering what the property taxes are on this property.
@@theopinionisthighqualityopinio
In 2021: while they are still being socio-economically and politically oppressed; they are not technically slaves (someone's literal property) anymore -which is the people, the OP was likely referring to.
Exactly.
Lol "worked" 😏
I was really scared I was gonna be the only one in these comments to mention slavery, but this is good to see
This is my kind of history. Thx ladies for the tour
And the real estate agents were dressed very appropriately for the kind of house they were marketing. Beautiful!
Absolutely beautiful. Gotta love Charleston
This is amazing! I love how well preserved it is.
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This house has so much character 😍
I'm getting a strong sense of an unknown entity within the walls of this home.
Still can't believe this house is still standing!
So cool!
I’m taking a sip of my wine every time I hear “69 Church” 🍷Cheers!
tell me your house is haunted without telling me your house is haunted
I’m so happy that they use many ancient carpets. Now people like to have very modern house:((
so much history in that house
between the Steinway baby grand, and that main kitchen? yes, please. sign me up. i love tuning pianos and polishing copper...
Jacob motte’s son married a woman who was the sister of Miles Brewton, a wealthy slave trader.
So yeah.. based upon the family history of some of the past owners of this house, I would definitely not be surprised if there was many, many, slaves kept in this home.
It really shouldn’t be on the market for someone to buy and call a home, and they also shouldn’t be advertising it without disclosing the full history .
Why shouldn't it be on the market? The owners want to sell it and it's their good right to sell their own property.
@@migueltucabron because they’re not disclosing the true history and past of this home. Imagine moving in here thinking nothing of it because the owners didn’t tell you what happened here, then after you already bought it and spent time in this house found out the true history behind it? Not everyone is okay with living in a home innocent people were abused, killed, or passed away in.
For a house that cost this much money they should be upfront about the history behind it, instead of trying to keep it a secret in hopes it will sell better
At the end: “this also where there used to be...a carriage house” nice save for slave quarters.
2:55 Talks about original shutters while showing clearly cheap later replacements. Original shutters all had beautiful medallions these flat boards with agricultural hooks do not belong in this house.
Wow this is incredible
I love the history behind this house
As in the slaves?
There’s no good history behind the house besides it’s architecture... the rest is Slavery and evilness
@@graylonwashington2714 I wonder how old you are
Sure there was slavery back then
There was all kinds of bad things back then
It’s called history whether you like it or not
Did you know it was black tribes selling other black people into slavery
Learn history don’t be ignorant
@@theopinionisthighqualityopinio Ok wow someone is a little too passionate about slavery. I was responding to the person that said 'wow I love the history of this house'. Saying they love the history romanticizes everything that probably went on there. It is not an agenda to acknowledge the entire history of the house. You're putting words in my mouth saying I want this house demolished along with Rome and Giza. It's like those plantations in the southern united states that white people visit to have their weddings or tour the opulent mansions and they just brush over the horrors that went on there. No one is saying you must tear down Rome or these houses but acknowledge what happened there and stop the ignorance.
@@theopinionisthighqualityopinio Not to mention, this house was owned by owners who happened to own the Fairfield Plantation in Charleston county so there was definitely slavery going on here
Mind you, Delft tiles are still for sale. I'm Dutch, there everywhere here in the Netherlands, old and new ones!
The story the walls could tell. It is a beautiful house
Buncha slavery. :(
That’s a really beautiful and historic property ❤️❤️❤️
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A black person needs to purchase this and remodel that house filled with beautiful African art and furniture. I wish I could do it.
First black people need figure out there original name 😂 just joking
First and foremost someone who lives in the area need to be able to put down 9.5M (maybe a little bit less) and still have money to further work on the building. That's the main hurdle i'd say. Charleston isn't exactly known to be the city or area with high salaries or lots of big business. And then the buyer has to also like the style of the building which is pretty specific i'd say.
So no, not really. I think a owner that respects the history of whatever heritage or skin color would be fine.
Very nice
Loved thr historical stuff
It is an absolutely gorgeous piece of property. If I was wealthy, I'd love to own it.
The guest room is soo much better than mine
Looks uncomfortable to live in, but perhaps a good investment in history
the garden is amazing
wowww this is amazing!!!
Besides the house, I love this lady's dress. Does anyone know where I can get that dress?
I was admiring that dress also, the cut is really nice, and I was wondering if she had possibly made the dress herself. Some folks are still very handy cutting patterns and using a sewing machine.
@@loisaustin6200 yeeees I was wondering if it was handmade as well and honestly I want to try making it myself if I can get some good screenshots of it.
As a Brit, it’s mad to think how young the United States is.
The garden is my favorite
It's wonderful
Love it 😊❤🌻
Lars stuttgart , you are a delicate dude
Beautiful property ... at a super reasonable price!
Does anyone know why some paintings are blurred?
i can already feel the spirit in this house.
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does all of the furniture, accessories, and decorations come with it?
Does the building come with Anabelle or 1800's Victorian ghosts? If not, I'm not interested.
why are the painting on the walls blurred?