One of the most common reasons these places end up abandoned is because of will disputes between the surviving children after the owners pass away. Belongings leave a nice picture but people rarely hang up their personal issues on the walls
Yeah, tell me about it. I was left to clean up my grandparents' and Uncles house all by myself, and I had a very young child. The others refused to help me.
Hiii just want to throw my 2 cents in. As someone who had to abandon family property, my grandmothers house was seized due to taxes after she passed, part of the deal was, we couldnt remove anything. Everything in the home was considered state property till the taxes where paid. Home stayed abandoned till it burnt down with everything in it. Another house was abandoned due to legal issues that between the widow and my siblings as my oldest brother was living there for years rent free but when his father passed the widow wouldnt sign it over and it ended up sitting there and he couldnt get any of his things after the fact by law. So sometimes you dont have a choice unless you want to risk jail 😅 as for the prepping questions most of be things save looked like it was to repair things if they broke after prolonged times. So if end of the world happened and the survivors needed something to replace something that broke they had spare parts. Or things to trade. Hope it helps a little on why things may have been left and or collected...also side note from all the sticky notes and labeling it looks like someone may have lived there with dementia/Alzheimer's towards the end of their life. OH and also circling back to abandoning, if they ended up in nursing home or some sort of care sometimes the house may have been put up as collateral and a lien put on it so they cant sell it.just some theories😅
I agree, and just because a property has sat inhabited doesn't mean it's fair game to 'explorers'; I can't help feeling that it's an ethical violation.
I am an electronics engineer (ret) and I believe that those metal boxes with the switches were some type of EMP generating device, but they would need a power source like a battery,
Thank you. This is a great discovery. And so much mystery, what with the bombs, and the creepy leather face. etc. (Why did you assume the woman who went to medical school is a nurse, and not a doctor)?
The times..women were not considered to be smart enough or . And it was a ..man's job.. I myself tried to go to college in the late 70s and wasn't considered even though I had the smarts.❤❤
The only real oddity I see here is the fact that the children have not removed things from the house, locked the house up, or even made an attempt to sell the property. This is all very strange yes, but mostly it’s just very sad.
This is a beautiful house. We have an estate here called Parkwood. It has a huge organ in it, and the pipes are built into the walls. The Lady Slipper is a flowering plant. It makes you wonder why they all left. Have a great day ❤️🙂⚘️.
1. The medieval metal thing is actually the family coat of arms. 2. Grandfather clock probably still works...the need wound and I noticed that one hasn't been wound for a very long time. 3. The letters on the piano keys are the notes of those middle keys.
That wall phone in the kitchen did not turn that color…..it was that color originally. We have one that used to hang on the wall in our last house…..1983 to 1988 when we bought our present house that was built in 1912. The little calculator was called A Little Professor…..used either AA or AAA batteries. I think they were made by Texas Instruments.
A lot of people were prepping for Y2K, like it was the end of the world. On the floor, I did see a letter from a collection agency. Lets hope that they remembered to take their cat with them, when they left
As fans of classical organ, we know it is not that unusual for gifted musicians to have their own pipe organ. But it is expensive, and you need a big house.
Exactly ! When they said “who in their right mind would have a pipe organ in the house!?” Well sir, I would have one if I could since being a church organist that would be a dream to have that in my personal collection !
Oh wow Rick, this had to have been an explore!!! It looks comfortable but yet creepy! The “bombs” he was building to the leaves hanging up were very creepy! It’s nice that he was preparing to save his family if anything were to happen! Thank you for taking us along!❤
I love this house! I saw it on another bando video but I like the way you dig in and explore a little deeper to understand the personalities that occupied the space. ❤
One thing i find really hard to believe is that those glasses still have that much wine in them after 4 years. I don't think its been abandoned for that long.
This is the best explore I've ever seen on youtube & the way you narrate is 👌🏼👌🏼 bc it's real & not scripted or anything. Very very cool thank you. 😎🆒😎
It's sad to see that gorgeous house just left to rot. I totally get that the family may not be able to face the memories and the loss. Also all the post it notes might suggest there was someone with dementia living there too.
The best house explore I ever saw. I too love old pictures. They tell a story. I never can understand why the family did not take the photos. Why? And what did the parents do for a living?
So much time and care was put into those photograph albums and slides to remember good times. You wonder why the 2 sons do not wish to keep any of those momentos for posterity or for future generations to see, but just leave them to rot.
I've inherited my father's house, the house I grew up in. He saved everything but thankfully there are no explosive devices. I share an affection for photos and I've kept all the photos I've found, but the amount of photos can be overwhelming. I suspect the sons took the photos they really wanted and left the rest. (I have boxes of slides but I can't imagine spending hours assembling a slide show and watching them when there's already plenty of other photos that aren't as time consuming to look at.)
RR, you crack me up! A Gen-Xer could fill you in on much of what you question including what you don’t question. Our parents (well mothers) loved photos. Cameras evolved heavily in the 70’s. Small and affordable. In the early 80’s film development/picture printing was big business. Because of competition your local photo hut started offering an extra set of prints for a penny. The duplicate prints were shared. I bought the house I grew up in and I can assure you, that is about the average amount of pictures from the era. Before you picked up the wedding album, I knew exactly what it was. I have my parents. It’s stored within one of FIVE largest plastic storage containers available. I can not lift them. I could tell you so much about what you saw. From the half door leading to the master bedroom to the gravel in the milk cartons. I’m going to go pull the chimes on my grandfather clock that looks like the one here because I miss the melody every fifteen minutes. Reminds me of my childhood. Thanks for sharing. Love that you chat us up during your explorations. Makes me feel like I know you LOL
Considering the location of this home, the age and basement(s), the father’s career is abundantly clear. I also keep in mind that his parents were adults during the depression. Did you notice the toothpaste did not have a barcode on it? Little stuff adds up to the big picture for sure. He even had one of those bars you could lock over your steering wheel to prevent it from getting stolen. The Christmas tree was inside of a playpen from the 70’s. My parents had the same bedroom set as upstairs. They even had the octagon table. I could go on and on….
From the man's obituary (I've left out last names and location): "Visitors will recall the many treasures and oddities on Lowell’s estate, including a steam engine, industrial chemistry set, and double basement. He installed a pipe organ for Martha in the living room of the passive solar house he designed and built himself in the 1970s, where he resided for over forty years. Lowell never wore jeans, always wore black leather army shoes, and smelled of dusty paper and oil. He believed that there was always a simpler and less conventional way to do anything, which worked to his benefit most of the time. He trusted all people and distrusted all organizations; spoke to anyone; and worked with dangerous things without ever coming to harm." The man died in 2020, and his wife passed in 2022. They had two sons and several grandchildren.
I wonder why they haven't taken out all of the photos or personal things if they are trying to sell it. I'd never leave my family history to rot away like that!
I was raised in the 70's and I remember things like what you are finding. This brings back memories, I have a lot of family photos but they are in a storage unit right now. I could remember the mobile home my grandparents lived in when I was just growing up and now all of my family is past away 💔 😢!!
Det här övergivna huset var ju det bästa jag nånsin har sett, lite mera sådana hus vore ju hur kul som helst, och speciellt dubbla källare, det var förvånande hur stort det egentligen var, det trodde nog inte du heller för den delen, lycka till med nästa hus,....
It’s funny but somewhat obvious that you Ranger Rick are younger than me and raised in a time where technology was a bit more advanced than what I grew up in. We took picture with film camera then made slides that goes into a round carousel. You had to put them in upside down & we did family slide shows every one and awhile to reminisce. They obviously were CATHOLIC based on the pictures you showed of them in church. The older generation born in the 1920s/30s went through the whole Cold War era where nuclear missiles were pointed from Russia at many ground zeros across the USA. It was a big BIG concern & at any moment the button could be pushed ending civilization as we know it. Who knows but this family as to why the father/husband built a bomb shelter. Maybe he is ex military or knew something more than the rest of us.
There is a guy really close to the water on the caloosahatchee river in Fort Myers Florida he is a master pianist.. they had him on the news a while back a church was going to be demolished and so he paid for their organ and set it up in his home well since the hurricane I know his house had to have been flooded totally but I haven't heard of anything but he just likes to play the piano music Centric some people are like that and I suppose if you have beloved to play piano and the money to afford something so great I say go for it
Watching this it makes me somewhat sad for children today have their own home filled with furniture and possessions that they have chosen to make it homey. My mother is 88 and still lives in a house that I grew up in from age 18 to my age now of 57. It’s chock full of things that me & my siblings just do not want or need. When parents die & move on to ‘the next place’, all their shit just rots away… and it’s somewhat sad if I must say.
The thing with the green handle looked like a little tool that you use in sewing to transfer sewing directions onto fabric. I have one in my sewing tools.
The metal boxes have a transformer in them can be used for low voltage ⚡ electric project boxes. The balls are ballbearings used in All kinds of things. Machinery automotives etc. i went straight to google and they sell the on Amazon. They are for welding or anything you wish. My late father in law had some of the boxes and after he passed we had to get rid of all his old belongings. He waa an electrician from sixty's till he passed and worked at L&N railroad and then it went to CSX. Its amazing how much odd stuff was used in machinery etc..Really upsetting his kids didn't care enough to take care of this home.
the kitchen counters and sink look like a material that was popular at the time. it was marketed under the trade name "Corian" and it was practically indestructable under normal use.
The basement looks like nuclear war preparations. Growing up in the 60’s this was common. We even had nuclear defense school supplies of water, batteries, canned food etc. We had nuclear defense drills that included evacuation or stay in place. Very scary time. Starting to look a lot like the past. Anyone who lived through this time should recognize the dangers of today.
Hi Ranger Rick, just a shout out to say that this is a beautiful home, and the organ was awesome. It's amazing how many homes are left to just rot. Maybe the family members are out of the Country. Who knows why this is happening so often to homes. The abandoned homes that are being demolished are all empty. I just don't understand why the family didn't claim any of the pictures or even tried selling the home. I'm just completely stumped!!! 🤔🤔🤔
Ya i think this house and the people that used to live there. Were on the TV show Doom's day prepers. So check it out . Good video. God bless. From Glenn CATT. In Massachusetts.
The little green thing under the bed is a tracing wheel used in sewing. I'm also intrigued by every drawer in every room is open. Who was looking for what?
I could see leaving the house abandoned to rot. But why would they let all the old family photos be lost and left behind? So Sad. What happened to the people who lived here. Did they just disappear or do they just don't care about their family history? So Tragic 😥
With all those comfy looking chairs in the organ room, I'm wondering if they played for friends. Those little dishes might be for pats of butter. Who & why would someone leave this home & in this cond?? Great video Rick
I am surprised you keep referencing how old everything is. 2020 was just a few years ago. The vitamins in the cabinet are a current brand.. the house is of the 70's. But much of the contents is just a few years old. Starbucks cold drink bottle. I've listed houses as a realtor and believe it or not some people live like this. It's not unusual to live in disarray. But it a shame the house was let to deteriorate.
That house is a booby trap that could go off easily. That needs to be reported. Even if they came in there to wreck it to use it for a new housing can you imagine what would happen if they started to tear it down with heavy equipment?
Those pictures of Sarah Palin are about 15 years old but that wine in the glasses would have evaporated in 15 years and the glass would have been just sticky from the sugar in the wine
IVE SEEEN THIS PLACE BEFORE IN ANOTHER explorers channel i ferget it was creepy downstairs and the underground bunker was scaryit was a coool place to explore
Thanks!
Thank you Marjorie 😌
The DE GAB marked on the piano are notes of a musical scale. What an interesting and dynamic family they were. Thanks so much for sharing!
Thanks!
One of the most common reasons these places end up abandoned is because of will disputes between the surviving children after the owners pass away. Belongings leave a nice picture but people rarely hang up their personal issues on the walls
Yeah, tell me about it. I was left to clean up my grandparents' and Uncles house all by myself, and I had a very young child. The others refused to help me.
You realize that you have to pull the chains on a grandfather clock to "wind it up"?! They don't just run for years 😅
Hiii just want to throw my 2 cents in. As someone who had to abandon family property, my grandmothers house was seized due to taxes after she passed, part of the deal was, we couldnt remove anything. Everything in the home was considered state property till the taxes where paid. Home stayed abandoned till it burnt down with everything in it. Another house was abandoned due to legal issues that between the widow and my siblings as my oldest brother was living there for years rent free but when his father passed the widow wouldnt sign it over and it ended up sitting there and he couldnt get any of his things after the fact by law. So sometimes you dont have a choice unless you want to risk jail 😅 as for the prepping questions most of be things save looked like it was to repair things if they broke after prolonged times. So if end of the world happened and the survivors needed something to replace something that broke they had spare parts. Or things to trade. Hope it helps a little on why things may have been left and or collected...also side note from all the sticky notes and labeling it looks like someone may have lived there with dementia/Alzheimer's towards the end of their life. OH and also circling back to abandoning, if they ended up in nursing home or some sort of care sometimes the house may have been put up as collateral and a lien put on it so they cant sell it.just some theories😅
I agree, and just because a property has sat inhabited doesn't mean it's fair game to 'explorers'; I can't help feeling that it's an ethical violation.
I’m not gonna lie I was kind of freaking out when you were opening those weird bomb boxes and messing with the switches 💥 😂😂
I am an electronics engineer (ret) and I believe that those metal boxes with the switches were some type of EMP generating device, but they would need a power source like a battery,
I hate to see all of those abandoned photo's. I hope the family returns and saves them for future generations.
Thank you. This is a great discovery. And so much mystery, what with the bombs, and the creepy leather face. etc. (Why did you assume the woman who went to medical school is a nurse, and not a doctor)?
The times..women were not considered to be smart enough or . And it was a ..man's job.. I myself tried to go to college in the late 70s and wasn't considered even though I had the smarts.❤❤
The only real oddity I see here is the fact that the children have not removed things from the house, locked the house up, or even made an attempt to sell the property. This is all very strange yes, but mostly it’s just very sad.
They could have died young or left everything for a cult, or have bad memories of their abusive family! 😮😮😖😖
This is a beautiful house. We have an estate here called Parkwood. It has a huge organ in it, and the pipes are built into the walls. The Lady Slipper is a flowering plant. It makes you wonder why they all left. Have a great day ❤️🙂⚘️.
you got lots of courage to go downstairs with only a flashlight,I am very surprised not to see any animals or graffitis
1. The medieval metal thing is actually the family coat of arms. 2. Grandfather clock probably still works...the need wound and I noticed that one hasn't been wound for a very long time. 3. The letters on the piano keys are the notes of those middle keys.
That wall phone in the kitchen did not turn that color…..it was that color originally. We have one that used to hang on the wall in our last house…..1983 to 1988 when we bought our present house that was built in 1912. The little calculator was called A Little Professor…..used either AA or AAA batteries. I think they were made by Texas Instruments.
Harvest gold I think the color was named. Fridge and stove that color in our house growing up.
A lot of people were prepping for Y2K, like it was the end of the world. On the floor, I did see a letter from a collection agency. Lets hope that they remembered to take their cat with them, when they left
What a messy basement now I know the kids don’t want to clean it out. It’s too much junk. I love when you tell us the history of the house.
The green handle thing under the bed in the master bedroom is used to mark darts on fabric when sewing. 🙂
It's so sad that a beautiful home is left to rot. The owl you found was a calculator not a game
As fans of classical organ, we know it is not that unusual for gifted musicians to have their own pipe organ. But it is expensive, and you need a big house.
Exactly ! When they said “who in their right mind would have a pipe organ in the house!?” Well sir, I would have one if I could since being a church organist that would be a dream to have that in my personal collection !
That was sad. The home was beautiful at one time. So much in there could have been and still can be saved
Oh wow Rick, this had to have been an explore!!! It looks comfortable but yet creepy! The “bombs” he was building to the leaves hanging up were very creepy! It’s nice that he was preparing to save his family if anything were to happen! Thank you for taking us along!❤
What beautiful House, sad it’s going into ruins, family should of care for it and not let it go abandoned.
I love this house! I saw it on another bando video but I like the way you dig in and explore a little deeper to understand the personalities that occupied the space. ❤
One thing i find really hard to believe is that those glasses still have that much wine in them after 4 years. I don't think its been abandoned for that long.
Lol the Sarah palin pictures all over lolol. Had me dyin!
This is the best explore I've ever seen on youtube & the way you narrate is 👌🏼👌🏼 bc it's real & not scripted or anything. Very very cool thank you. 😎🆒😎
Sold to a " developer" ... **
@@garyhuffford6085 😔💔
@Thediscohkidd78
Sadly you are as deficient in brain cells as the fool blathering incoherently on this channel. 🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮🤮
12:38 DE GAB are the names of the piano keys....they correspond to the notes on a musical scale.
It's sad to see that gorgeous house just left to rot. I totally get that the family may not be able to face the memories and the loss. Also all the post it notes might suggest there was someone with dementia living there too.
The best house explore I ever saw. I too love old pictures. They tell a story. I never can understand why the family did not take the photos. Why? And what did the parents do for a living?
So much time and care was put into those photograph albums and slides to remember good times. You wonder why the 2 sons do not wish to keep any of those momentos for posterity or for future generations to see, but just leave them to rot.
Probably don't believe in the past relatives beliefs.
Ya really.
I've inherited my father's house, the house I grew up in. He saved everything but thankfully there are no explosive devices. I share an affection for photos and I've kept all the photos I've found, but the amount of photos can be overwhelming. I suspect the sons took the photos they really wanted and left the rest. (I have boxes of slides but I can't imagine spending hours assembling a slide show and watching them when there's already plenty of other photos that aren't as time consuming to look at.)
Maybe they were abused so they don't want anything to do with them. For me, I definitely take the belonging and sell them
They probably had a dog they didn't want going in the hallway and that part of the house
Excellent👏 Thank you for sharing.
RR, you crack me up! A Gen-Xer could fill you in on much of what you question including what you don’t question. Our parents (well mothers) loved photos. Cameras evolved heavily in the 70’s. Small and affordable. In the early 80’s film development/picture printing was big business. Because of competition your local photo hut started offering an extra set of prints for a penny. The duplicate prints were shared.
I bought the house I grew up in and I can assure you, that is about the average amount of pictures from the era. Before you picked up the wedding album, I knew exactly what it was. I have my parents. It’s stored within one of FIVE largest plastic storage containers available. I can not lift them.
I could tell you so much about what you saw. From the half door leading to the master bedroom to the gravel in the milk cartons.
I’m going to go pull the chimes on my grandfather clock that looks like the one here because I miss the melody every fifteen minutes. Reminds me of my childhood.
Thanks for sharing. Love that you chat us up during your explorations. Makes me feel like I know you LOL
Considering the location of this home, the age and basement(s), the father’s career is abundantly clear. I also keep in mind that his parents were adults during the depression. Did you notice the toothpaste did not have a barcode on it? Little stuff adds up to the big picture for sure. He even had one of those bars you could lock over your steering wheel to prevent it from getting stolen. The Christmas tree was inside of a playpen from the 70’s. My parents had the same bedroom set as upstairs. They even had the octagon table. I could go on and on….
I love seeing pictures of the house, inside the house!
What a basement . now I know why the kids don’t wanna empty out that house. What a mess. I love when you tell us the history of the house
From the man's obituary (I've left out last names and location):
"Visitors will recall the many treasures and oddities on Lowell’s estate, including
a steam engine, industrial chemistry set, and double basement. He installed a
pipe organ for Martha in the living room of the passive solar house he
designed and built himself in the 1970s, where he resided for over forty years.
Lowell never wore jeans, always wore black leather army shoes, and smelled of dusty paper and oil. He believed that there was always a simpler and less conventional way to do anything, which worked to his benefit most of the
time. He trusted all people and distrusted all organizations; spoke to anyone;
and worked with dangerous things without ever coming to harm."
The man died in 2020, and his wife passed in 2022. They had two sons and several grandchildren.
Wonder why they let the house deteriorate. Sad because it looks pretty amazing
@@JenniferGarcia-rb3cy The two sons are trying to sell the land to a developer. Sad to see the house rotting.
@@DustyKnowledge This place is outside of Columbia, South Carolina.
Wonder why they have not removed the bomb making materials?
I wonder why they haven't taken out all of the photos or personal things if they are trying to sell it. I'd never leave my family history to rot away like that!
😢 So sad the parents work for everything the children have left it to rot
you have this lovely place to see and you spent so much time looking at pictures.
Somebody been there maybe in the last year to 3 months you can see the dust, things have been moved
I enjoy your expore vdieos, Rick. You narrative at rhe beginning of each bideo isbdone well.
I was raised in the 70's and I remember things like what you are finding. This brings back memories, I have a lot of family photos but they are in a storage unit right now. I could remember the mobile home my grandparents lived in when I was just growing up and now all of my family is past away 💔 😢!!
This is so very sad. Where are the children? Why would they leave everything like this? Heartbreaking.
I'm pretty sure one of his sons is a lawyer.
@@conleykatbut why leave all the family belongings and heritage behind?
@@Bullybugger I honestly don't know. I never could do that.
Great video!
If that was My parents or grandparents house I'd be happy to live in it even with the pipe organ
Det här övergivna huset var ju det bästa jag nånsin har sett, lite mera sådana hus vore ju hur kul som helst, och speciellt dubbla källare, det var förvånande hur stort det egentligen var, det trodde nog inte du heller för den delen, lycka till med nästa hus,....
That's a beautiful house
That phone was Harvest Gold. It matched the wallpaper. Looked like a JennAir cook top and the sink and counter in the kitchen were probably Swanstone.
Enjoyed the video,😢love the house
Glad you enjoyed
It’s funny but somewhat obvious that you Ranger Rick are younger than me and raised in a time where technology was a bit more advanced than what I grew up in. We took picture with film camera then made slides that goes into a round carousel. You had to put them in upside down & we did family slide shows every one and awhile to reminisce. They obviously were CATHOLIC based on the pictures you showed of them in church. The older generation born in the 1920s/30s went through the whole Cold War era where nuclear missiles were pointed from Russia at many ground zeros across the USA. It was a big BIG concern & at any moment the button could be pushed ending civilization as we know it. Who knows but this family as to why the father/husband built a bomb shelter. Maybe he is ex military or knew something more than the rest of us.
There is a guy really close to the water on the caloosahatchee river in Fort Myers Florida he is a master pianist.. they had him on the news a while back a church was going to be demolished and so he paid for their organ and set it up in his home well since the hurricane I know his house had to have been flooded totally but I haven't heard of anything but he just likes to play the piano music Centric some people are like that and I suppose if you have beloved to play piano and the money to afford something so great I say go for it
Omg the wedding pictures
tbh, out of the past few uploads you've posted. This one takes my number one spot for exploring. So wild yet so interesting.
It was crazy in there.
The thing you called ash trays are wash dishes to wash your finger tips. The thing on the wall looked like a coat of arms.
Good job
Quite a presentation. Such a sad thing all those pictures left. Shows our children don't care about the things we love. They just want MONEY.
I didn't want money from my relatives. I took all their photos and good things. I have their items in my home for myself and my daughter.
I've seen this home before, yes it seems the people was preparing for doomsday. Good to see the home again.✅
Just found your channel,what a different place iv never seen anything like it ,makes you wonder what went on their Ann uk 👋👋👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Welcome aboard!
Watching this it makes me somewhat sad for children today have their own home filled with furniture and possessions that they have chosen to make it homey. My mother is 88 and still lives in a house that I grew up in from age 18 to my age now of 57. It’s chock full of things that me & my siblings just do not want or need. When parents die & move on to ‘the next place’, all their shit just rots away… and it’s somewhat sad if I must say.
The thing with the green handle looked like a little tool that you use in sewing to transfer sewing directions onto fabric. I have one in my sewing tools.
The metal boxes have a transformer in them can be used for low voltage ⚡ electric project boxes. The balls are ballbearings used in All kinds of things. Machinery automotives etc. i went straight to google and they sell the on Amazon. They are for welding or anything you wish. My late father in law had some of the boxes and after he passed we had to get rid of all his old belongings. He waa an electrician from sixty's till he passed and worked at L&N railroad and then it went to CSX. Its amazing how much odd stuff was used in machinery etc..Really upsetting his kids didn't care enough to take care of this home.
the kitchen counters and sink look like a material that was popular at the time. it was marketed under the trade name "Corian" and it was practically indestructable under normal use.
Mind blown at this🤯🤯🤯 so cool!!! Thx ✌🏼🌞
Nice ❤
Great find!
Boy those are slides and I remember watching those growing up.
The basement looks like nuclear war preparations. Growing up in the 60’s this was common. We even had nuclear defense school supplies of water, batteries, canned food etc. We had nuclear defense drills that included evacuation or stay in place. Very scary time. Starting to look a lot like the past. Anyone who lived through this time should recognize the dangers of today.
Boy I can remember those good Ole days!!!
The acid in the photo albums is eating the images. That's why they are turning yellow in those particular albums
Degas is the painter, he painted ballet dancers and people playing piano.
yes he was correct on the prep
Hi Ranger Rick, just a shout out to say that this is a beautiful home, and the organ was awesome. It's amazing how many homes are left to just rot. Maybe the family members are out of the Country. Who knows why this is happening so often to homes. The abandoned homes that are being demolished are all empty. I just don't understand why the family didn't claim any of the pictures or even tried selling the home. I'm just completely stumped!!! 🤔🤔🤔
14:57 It looks like a scene from the Bayeaux Tapestry.
Ya i think this house and the people that used to live there. Were on the TV show Doom's day prepers. So check it out . Good video. God bless. From Glenn CATT. In Massachusetts.
That basement is DOPE! I could spend days exploring that place!
All I can think of with the pipe organ is Iron Butterfly - In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida.
The little green thing under the bed is a tracing wheel used in sewing. I'm also intrigued by every drawer in every room is open. Who was looking for what?
This is my 3rd post! Lol the wedding pics look like a Christian wedding but they drank Jewish wine?
That phone is in “Harvest Gold”, probably matched their “Harvest Gold “appliances…. Popular in the 70’s….
Beyond so sad
I kept thinking someone was going to pop out at you. Have you ever come face to face with an unexpected guest on any of your explores??
there is some manual or book in that basement to explain those has to be
I could see leaving the house abandoned to rot. But why would they let all the old family photos be lost and left behind? So Sad. What happened to the people who lived here. Did they just disappear or do they just don't care about their family history?
So Tragic
😥
Thats exactly what I'm trying to figure out.
OMG!! Folks from this couples era kept EVERYTHING!! Doesnt whatsoever mean they were preparing for doomsday.
loved this now a new.subscriber from the uk :)
Welcome aboard!
COAT OF ARMS ON THE WALL IN THE DINING ROOM. THE THING UNDER THE BED IS NOT A CAN OPENER. IT IS A TRACING WHEEL AND IS A SEWING IMPLEMENT.
So sad to see all the photos left behind.
With all those comfy looking chairs in the organ room, I'm wondering if they played for friends. Those little dishes might be for pats of butter. Who & why would someone leave this home & in this cond?? Great video Rick
With what you found in the basement, and the mess, it looks like they were raided and searched.
I am surprised you keep referencing how old everything is. 2020 was just a few years ago. The vitamins in the cabinet are a current brand.. the house is of the 70's. But much of the contents is just a few years old. Starbucks cold drink bottle. I've listed houses as a realtor and believe it or not some people live like this. It's not unusual to live in disarray. But it a shame the house was let to deteriorate.
Ahhh good catch!
That house is a booby trap that could go off easily. That needs to be reported. Even if they came in there to wreck it to use it for a new housing can you imagine what would happen if they started to tear it down with heavy equipment?
Or if the chemicals got in the water supply?
Those pictures of Sarah Palin are about 15 years old but that wine in the glasses would have evaporated in 15 years and the glass would have been just sticky from the sugar in the wine
That thing on the wall is a Family Coat of Arms.
IVE SEEEN THIS PLACE BEFORE IN ANOTHER explorers channel i ferget it was creepy downstairs and the underground bunker was scaryit was a coool place to explore
Good luck 👍
Close the door ALL THE WAY!
How did you find this house? Why did you decide to go inside of their house?😮
I would say that it was vandalized. Its sad that people don't have respect for others. 😢
Not an ashtray. It holds your tea bag.
You said as ugly as the home is, you like it😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
I can't believe the family left the nice wedding pictures 😢
That green rotary uner the bed was used for tracing a sewing pattern
The family should just sell it
That so called " hideous" 70's wallpaper is making a comeback 😂😂 n it was the in thing back then
Could he have been taking wheels apart to get bearings out of them to use as shrapnel?
Possibly
Thanks!