Remembering Bon Haven 1884
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 9 ก.พ. 2025
- Bon Haven, also known as The Cleveland House, was an historic house located in South Carolina. It was built about 1884, and was a two-story,
brick Second Empire style dwelling with 1920s Neo-Classical style additions. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.
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Stunning. It breaks my heart to see another magnificent home left to decay. ❤
@@christinehousden7604 thank you for watching.
Sometimes a video is better with no words, just music. You captured it. Beautiful ❤.
Thank you very much. Glad you liked it and thank you for watching.
Beautiful…..so sad it’s falling apart. As I watched this video I was thinking where are the future generations of these people and leave these homes direlect like this?!!!!? If I was part of such a family I would be living in such a home knowing my ancestors were there and take pride in it!❤❤❤❤
There are many reason as to why this happens, the family dies off, It would take to much money to restore and maintain and the property tax would astronomical. A couple tried to buy and restore the house but the owner had it demolished in 2017. Thank you for watching and for your comments.
Places like this should be remembered and restored. It's a part of our history and speaks of a time that was magical and fairytale, the beauty of the Victorian Era, where architecture was king. It took money to build these gorgeous homes and unfortunately money to upkeep and restore them and they get lost in time and left to decay and ruin. Thank you Urban Eye for the stroll down memory lane. It was worth it. Thank you for keeping these houses in the public eye ❤❤❤
Thank you for your comments and for watching.
It broke my heart! ☹
@@rbsmith3365 thank you for watching.
That is heartbreaking, such a beautiful home with so much history 💔
Thank you for watching.
What a lovely home. So sad it's gone. Unique fireplace and mantels. Thank you for showing beauty in this hard world.
@@darlenejohnson8864 glad you liked it and thank you for watching
What a stunning beautiful old house! I wish I could restore every old house, so sad too see these historic homes left to decay! Awesome video 👍👍❤️🤘
@@carlashepherd9362 thank you for watching, glad you liked it.
Another sad tale, but glad the beauty of this home has been documented. The newel post and scenic tiles were stunning. Also loved the unpainted woodwork with the unique carvings. This was definitely a Southern 2nd Empire house, with the double portico. Thanks for sharing this lovely building.
@@SpanishEclectic thank you for watching and for your comments.
How sad😢, another beautiful piece of history bites the dust!
Thank you for watching and for your comments.
Sad, read where 'was built', later at 2:45 saw ceiling starting repair, then later on register, Now the ending explained it all, why I am Sad..
Mansion was Gorgeous, just horrid had been demolished.... Thank you UrbanEye for cherish memory....
This house was south carolina. Thank you for watching.
What a beautiful home. It's to bad that it ended up this way. Some times we just don't see the beauty in theses old homes.
@@SandraOshea-d7o thank you for watching and for your comments.
UrbanEye thanks for sharing this video with me about Remembering Bon Haven 1884 that was a real shame to see the house go the way it did it was totally sad and thanks for sharing iy i gave you a thumbs up and shared you out on my community tab my friend and God Bless.
Thank you for watching and for your comments.
Fantastic work!! Always wished I could have seen this one!! Great video! Thanks for sharing! :)
Thank you for watching and your support, Kappy.
Oh my gosh, just the fireplaces alone……and someone sure loved books.
So sad these gorgeous old homes are being destroyed, they should be fixed and use as museums into our past.
@@nancyweliczko9334 I agree. Thank you for watching.
Another sad story of a beautiful mansion destroyed . Time marches on and cheap apartments will probably occupy this space. Thank you for capturing this lovely home before it was torn down.
@@Sandjan90 thank you for watching and for your comments.
It always amazes me that these homes still have curtains hanging.
Gorgeous
@@MarilyncarolCornell thank you for watching.
What a beautiful place it was
@@user-randi1987 thank you for watching.
Thank you for showcasing all these beautiful old homes !!!
I love and look forward to each and every one !
@@denisegillum9562 glad you like them, thank you for watching.
@@denisegillum9562 thank you for watching, glad you like them.
The "modern age" sadly brought an end to so many things we shoudl never have let go of...😢❤
@@brendadion7868 thank you for your comments and for watching.
Stately imposing and sad .Second Empire is my favorite.If the walls could talk.......
Thank you for watching.
It shouldn't be legal to leave beautiful buildings to rot.
@@kellyjacob-ii4oy thank you for watching and for your comments.
It was a Beautiful old place
Thank you for watching.
I used to think that being on the National Register of Historic Places afforded a house or other building some kind of protection. I can see from watching your videos that that isn't true. So sad that this once proud home is no more.
The National Register is only a recognition of a historic place. Thank you for watching and for your comments.
Kappy sent me... Subbed.
@@georgeelder8415 thank you and welcome.
From what I understood about the national register of historic places it should have protected the property from ever being tore down sold or destroyed! And for the owner to let this place fall into disrepair like that makes one extremely angry 😡. Love old places such as this one. I used to be a tour guide for a home that is in a little town and the home is one that was almost ready to be tore down. National Register of Historic Places saved it and with alot of love it was brought back to what it looked like then. They were still doing work on the home when I left Oregon in 2012…..the towns name is Brownsville, Oregon and the home is the Moyer House.
I just looked this up. What a beautiful place. I'm so glad it was saved and restored.
@@rosiemcnaughton9933 same here ❤️ . The latest they had done with the house was the walls in the music room and found the original wallpaper and the crew did some research and found that the company was still in business! The paper was absolutely beautiful in maroon green and white flowers I believe. They were about to put that up when I left….i miss the old home.
@@MargaretFranklin-jy9wi I can sure see why.
Thank you for watching and for your comments.
2nd Empire. Call it what it is. VICTORIAN.
@@dcole9589 thanks for watching.
Why 😢am I crying 😢?
Thank you for watching.
Epic Loss , there needs to be a national effort, like President Roosevelt’s work programs of America, to restore, & preserve America’s landmarks , and Architectural treasures.
@@WaKincaid thank you for watching and for your comments.
Thank you for awakening our country to what might have been. I believe a country that doesn’t remember it’s past is doomed to repeat its mistakes . Restoration would teach skills to craftsmen, give second lives to landmarks in a variety of purposes , give place, and pride to communities, and recycle ♻️ in the most profound way I can think of. Thank you for shinning a light on our sadly disposable culture.
@WaKincaid I agree, thank you for watching.
This is very sad. I wonder why they didn't sell it? My mother has a civil style house from 1896. It takes her, my sister and myself to keep it going. It seems like there is something wrong all the time. My mother loves the house and we are fortunate we can help her with it.
A couple was trying to buy it and restore it but the owner had it destroyed, very sad. Thank you for watching and for your comments.
@@UrbanEyeAbandoned your welcome!
It's destruction is criminal especially since an offer was made to purchase and restore it.
My thoughts also. Thank you for watching.
😢
Thank you for watching.
Prettiest home in Spartanburg ,SC destroyed now apartments.
@@prestonellison6512 thank you for watching.
Well, that one hurt. I noticed at the beginning that you referred to it in the past tense, so I was kind of braced for a sucker punch. One less tangible link to the past.
@@beiderbecke1927 sorry, I promise the next one will be a keeper. Thank you for watching.
The National Historic Registry is sometimes the reason old houses/bldgs like this never get preserved. They have no skin in the game, yet they can be very difficult to work with and get approval from for restoration projects. Once placed on the registry, any changes, improvements, restoration, alteration even down to paint colors must be approved. If a house is already in great condition this can protect it going forward from an owner who might want not have the best taste or intentions. But, when a place is already in terrible condition, or even just not updated well enough to be comfortable, the hoops that one must jump through, not to mention the money they’re spending, make it not worth it.
@@ShadeIsLikely thank you for watching and for your comments.
Gorgeous house. Those craftsmen knew how to build homes back then. Today, house are made like paper. Worthless and its like living in a ghetto. Infact the whole world is a ghetto.
@@pumpupjam9648 very true, thank you for watching and for commenting.
I trust as much as possible was salvaged from the interior at least.
I don't know about that but we can hope. Thank you for watching and for your comments.
So many treasures left behind
A pox on who bought her with no plan and then slowly left her to decay.
@@marlaandrews8344 a couple was ready to buy it and make it a bed and breakfast but it was still destroyed. Thank you for watching.
When were the last occupants?
Thank you for watching. That I don't know.
I looked it up, last occupant died in 1995.
Sad
@@nancyyoungs933 thank you for watching
I want it !
@@JonnyTheLeprechaun glad you liked it, thanks for watching.