This one had an eerie feeling to it from the start. Like I could literally almost feel the spirits of the people who lived there in her day. Just makes you wonder the circumstances that lead up to a family just up and leaving everything behind and why nobody,in all the years of some homes being abandoned,comes to check on the property or tend to it. Really sad to see historic places like this left to rot away. I wish I could find out what the ending story to all these old abandoned homes is. Thanks, Kappy. Stay safe!! ❤️❤️❤️
Thanks for sharing with me my friend Kappy this video about 19 Century Abandoned plantation in virginia & 2 old trucks i really enjoyed your video my friend and i am glad you was being very safe with your self while taping these video and i can't wait to see your next and God Bless you my friend.
This is a beautiful house! My 5 year old daughter and I love watching your videos. You always find the best places to explore. Keep up the awesome work!
Please take someone with you when you go to these places! This is lovely. With a ton of money it could still be saved. New roof first! Thanks for taking us with you. Be careful and stay safe.
That white truck is an International. Might be the Scout series. My father had two International Harvester in the 1960s. We traveled the whole United States in these trucks. They were great. Never broke down. Great videos. Keep up the good work.
Thanks for this. Everytime you show these old homes I catch myself looking at the millwork and old original ornate hardware. The framing was cut from old growth forest with tight grained lumber. The old t&g ceilings some having the original "medallion" for ceiling lighting. Like old barns there is a hugh market for these materials and companies that will buy these structures and dismantle them to save what is still usable. It's just a shame to see all this history rust and rot away.
What a wonderful find ! I love old places like that. I read a lot of books from that era, 1700's & 1800's. I grew up in rural Kentucky, born in 1952, on a big farm, I remember wood stoves to heat, in the living room & kitchen. We didn't have a fireplace, but my husband lived in different area in Kentucky & he said a fireplace was all they had/used to heat with. Thanks for sharing this & be careful in your travels.
The trees grown up at the front entrance look like they’re trying to protect the house. Such a shame no one has the money or the interest to save these old beauties.
Super cool house. Still very fixable. Man I wish I was rich. I'd fix up alot of these places you find! Can you imagine lining up all the car seats around the fireplace? Drinking n talking about cars! Love the video Kappy. Stay safe and warm. God bless.
So glad you persevered, think of all the videos we'd be lacking if you had not! New to channel, take a year to catch up, but really love and subscribed
That was a beautiful old place, it must have been really grand back in it's day! Wish some one would have fixed it up so it wouldn't get torn down. Another awesome find! Peace, Kim ~
I love seeing these old houses, and trying to imagine what they would have looked like in the new. Such a shame though to see them just rotting away. And it breaks my heart when I see all the old furniture left behind to rot. Some I would love to have in my home right now. So thanks for sharing your videos with us , I am a big fan.
Another great explore! Judging by the pluming fixtures, the bathroom & kitchen were added in the 1950s.The built in hutch is cool as well. The pickup truck is a Volkswagen Rabbit Pickup that was produced from 1978-1984 and most likely has a diesel engine. The other truck appears to be an International Harvester Company (or International) Travellall.
I love these adventures. Got to hand it to you though, some of the places you check out that are left furnished would be so tempting to just root through all the stuff and take what you want. Especially old paper goods like postcards and advertising items.
I lovvveee your videos and I love the way you talk through them your voice is soothing and you always find such interesting houses full of old stuff ,keep up the great work
I just love this house. Has a lot character. My house also has 2 staircases going upstairs. Love that you feature the doorknobs. Show the light switches too.
Hi Kappy!another great find.I love the old built ins & the architecture around them.plus the old doors with the old knobs & key holes.then the stairs.I have never seen 2 grand stairs.usually there is 1 in the kitchen for the servants.I love it :-)
I was wondering where my vehicles disappeared to. Just looked in my driveway and didn't notice them. But there they are, in front of that house! Lol j/k. Such a cool thing that these houses of yesterday still remain in our modern world of today! It's cool to think about that! Yes quite large molding/trim on bottom of walls. Don't see that too often. Cool house!!!
This one seems like it could be renovated as of now, except for the back half, it would take a massive amount of work it seems. This is yet another beautiful find Kappy! Please remember to be careful when preserving these amazing homes, you’re health and well-being always comes first. Happy Saturday!!😊
@@gregleonard7391 same here, standard cost w/o custom add ons would be around 100-125$ per s/f on that same land. The add ons like trying to replicate the millwork and mantles would be quite high. That's where the use of the old house would play in. With a bit of care a lot of the old materials could be salvaged and be reused. Probably a lot of heart pine and poplar cut to actual size like a 2x4 would really be 2" x 4" and 20p nails not 16p
That was great! Push button light's and the built-in and not really vandalized just a dump of tires and car seats. Such a shame to be left in this state although it does look repairable I'm sure there is wood rot and damage throughout! It shows the period throughout the home, unusual for two wide staircases and no trans across the top of the main door! Thanks Kappy a great start to 2020!
@ 5:14 Whenever I see a bricked up fireplace in an old home (abandoned or otherwise), it almost gives me the sense that the intended purpose was to either keep the cold out or... to conceal something inside.
Really like the five panel doors, they have a layout you don't see often. Very odd the two main staircases for a house this size. Keep up the good work, fellow explorer.
The 1st fireplace & that old bathtub I particularly like...don't know why. Years back I had a tub like that in an old hotel which was made into apartments.
Wow tire collection !! Wonder if there was an existing junkyard at one time around the outside of the house. SWEET old stair case !! That main door is so 😎 ! Such neat a old fireplace !!
Another great find Kappy Thanks 4 letting us go along 2 Virginia w/ u never been there but my parents were married in Winchester VA. Maybe u will find an abandoned 🏠 house in that area sometime ok God b u n keep u safe on traveling n exploring
I saw that string too..I had to rewatch a few times to figure out if the window was broken to let in a stiff breeze but nothing else by the window was moving..freaky!! What the heck with that doll upstairs, too!!!
Awsome old house👍having 2 stair cases like that is a little strange. The one old vehicle is a early model chevy blazer i believe. They are worth a lot of money in good condition. Great video as always👍
Would have been nice if somebody . Could of kept the house. In good condition. The key to all the doors. Was a skeleton key. Thanks for sharing your find. Have a wonderful day.
Must have been a VW fan judging from the smushed rabbit caddy and all the parts. Looked like a bunch of those wheels were early rabbit/Jetta with a few Bus rims mixed in. Spotted a nice set of early Scirocco rims too. A few of the seats were rabbit BUT the orange seats with the detachable headrest are from a quite rare special Champagne Edition VW bus from 1978. Such a cool find!
It's funny how things change, people used to like closed individual defined rooms in their houses, nowadays most prefer more open communal areas, at least here they do. I find those old style places a bit claustrophobic but still very interesting.
Cool house and explore Kappy! Well preserved except that back corner. So many of these abandoned homes are on family property and they don’t want to tear down their family’s old homestead. Probably goes back to their 3x great grandparents. So they do end up just using them as storage sheds. That’s exactly what happened in my stepdad’s family. Is there a reason why you don’t open cabinet doors, closet doors, or pull open drawers and such? Or look at stuff, like the books on the floor, old bottles, ect.? I Love your videos, don’t get me wrong, I’ve just always wondered. Anyway, awesome explore!! Stay safe out there!! 😊
i'd venture to say it's not worth saving, it's likely just too far gone, and that's not even looking at the foundation, septic system, water and power lines... you'd practically be rebuilding the entire thing. tear it down and sell the reclaimed wood.
Those wooden things stacked inside the main forier, were they old file cabinets? I'm surprised at the condition of the inside. It's all intack. For the most part. Very interesting. Thanks.
Yes, I was wondering what they were too. Maybe next time Kappy can get a closeup of something like that or pull it out to see what it is. Thanks again for this explore, I really enjoyed seeing it! ☺
Guys I wanna let you in on a little secret. There are stories behind those walls that tell of a people that hid their stuff underneath the house or a secreted place on their land soo it wouldn't get stolen by thieves before the law of the land was established. There are stories of coinage of 1737 and 1739 that were found in secreted places on these plantations and we all know how rare those coins are.
Nice house in it’s day. Hated to see the holes in the roof. What was that stack of stuff in the lower hallway. Some kind of boxes? Sadly, Virginia has a lot of these old houses. Every so often our county will make the effort to have residents clean up abandoned buildings and junk. Sometimes if these old houses are in really bad shape and can be deemed dangerous they are torn down. It’s sad to see them go. Fortunately the county is pretty into saving historical buildings so most are left alone. But like this one, an open roof is their silent killer. Thanks for sharing ❤️ Super job as always.
@Urban Exploring With Kappy Stroh’s was a popular and cheaper beer to drink in the 70’s! My dad drank it. Lol. I thought you said “strobe light” in the video. That would have been a cool find! 🍺
Wow, kitchen full of tires and a lawnmower! And what was all that storage and drawers with numbers on them? Seems it might have been half home and half business. So one could keep their personal separate?
The two staircases could mean 2 families lived in the house. It wasn’t uncommon for separate families or relatives to share homes. I lived in a home once that had two separate entrances. The two sides held two bedrooms for each family the kitchen was shared as was the middle room I assumed was a living room. So this house could have housed 2 families.
I get old man vibe from this house that is a lot of spare tires kept indoors the main doorway also had a lot of wooden slots shelf wonder if it was some kinda business at some point or hotel or brothel
Generally speaking, back in my racing days and the years of being around cars, we kept car parts in the garage (or in my racing days, in a horse barn), along with the car seats (sometimes bench seats were used for couches) and the tires either inside or in _back_ of the garage/barn, not devote two rooms to tires and one to car seats _in the house._ Call me conventional... I had to smile when I saw all the different boxes bearing labels of several breweries. The guys on my team had decided that if we had to change car numbers for one reason or another, we should put "88" in block numerals in the white "backballs," to make them easier to change using black or white tape. Someone pointed out that the famous Bob Tullius, who raced various makes, particularly the Triumphs, called his "scuderia" Group 44 "--so maybe we should call ourselves Group 88." "Why?" one of the younger guys asked. "Because he scored high in forty-four races," someone else said. "So, what would our '88' stand for?" the kid asked. I've never been a beer fancier and liked to poke fun at them, so I suggested "Because it takes 88 cases of beer to get you through the season." This must've been nice "back in the day," particularly when updated a little; nice sized rooms.
SHE WAS A GRAND LADY IN HER DAY AND STILL IS KAPPY. THANK YOU. I LIVE IN VA...BENT MT ABOVE ROANOKE. THANK YOU FOR TAKING US ALONG.BE BLESSED AND SAFE ALWAYS.🙏👍😘🐱🐨🐺
It's sad the home will not last. But you have preserved it's memory with your video. Thank You.
This one had an eerie feeling to it from the start. Like I could literally almost feel the spirits of the people who lived there in her day. Just makes you wonder the circumstances that lead up to a family just up and leaving everything behind and why nobody,in all the years of some homes being abandoned,comes to check on the property or tend to it. Really sad to see historic places like this left to rot away. I wish I could find out what the ending story to all these old abandoned homes is. Thanks, Kappy. Stay safe!! ❤️❤️❤️
Actually seemed like they were using it to store car parts, seats, tires, and may live in another house on the farm.
The original owners of these houses are dead sweet heart now as for as their children and grandchildren I don't know .
I love built ins in these old houses, the ceiling to floor windows and second staircases♥️
This is a beautiful house and a good thing you found it when you did because it won't be around much longer. Stay safe and have fun.
I would love to look thru those old books!
Thanks for sharing with me my friend Kappy this video about 19 Century Abandoned plantation in virginia & 2 old trucks i really enjoyed your video my friend and i am glad you was being very safe with your self while taping these video and i can't wait to see your next and God Bless you my friend.
This is a beautiful house! My 5 year old daughter and I love watching your videos. You always find the best places to explore. Keep up the awesome work!
Please take someone with you when you go to these places!
This is lovely. With a ton of money it could still be saved. New roof first!
Thanks for taking us with you. Be careful and stay safe.
That white truck is an International. Might be the Scout series. My father had two International Harvester in the 1960s. We traveled the whole United States in these trucks. They were great. Never broke down. Great videos. Keep up the good work.
The second floor baseboards are huge! Love it! Thanks for sharing
So sad how these old house just crumble down, when no one lives in them for years. Beautiful old house live it.❤️
These old houses and furniture take me back to my youth.Thank You
The Krueger Beer box is really cool & apparently really old seeing as Krueger Beer hasn't been made since 1961when the brewery closed.
Thanks for this. Everytime you show these old homes I catch myself looking at the millwork and old original ornate hardware. The framing was cut from old growth forest with tight grained lumber. The old t&g ceilings some having the original "medallion" for ceiling lighting.
Like old barns there is a hugh market for these materials and companies that will buy these structures and dismantle them to save what is still usable.
It's just a shame to see all this history rust and rot away.
there's a large consignment store where i live, in the back there's a warehouse of reclaimed wood. pretty pricey, though.
What a wonderful find ! I love old places like that. I read a lot of books from that era, 1700's & 1800's.
I grew up in rural Kentucky, born in 1952, on a big farm, I remember wood stoves to heat, in the living room & kitchen. We didn't have a fireplace, but my husband lived in different area in Kentucky & he said a fireplace was all they had/used to heat with.
Thanks for sharing this & be careful in your travels.
The trees grown up at the front entrance look like they’re trying to protect the house. Such a shame no one has the money or the interest to save these old beauties.
Super cool house. Still very fixable. Man I wish I was rich. I'd fix up alot of these places you find! Can you imagine lining up all the car seats around the fireplace? Drinking n talking about cars! Love the video Kappy. Stay safe and warm. God bless.
So glad you persevered, think of all the videos we'd be lacking if you had not! New to channel, take a year to catch up, but really love and subscribed
That was a beautiful old place, it must have been really grand back in it's day! Wish some one would have fixed it up so it wouldn't get torn down. Another awesome find! Peace, Kim ~
This place had a happy serene feel to it for me. once again great find Kappy!
I love seeing these old houses, and trying to imagine what they would have looked like in the new. Such a shame though to see them just rotting away. And it breaks my heart when I see all the old furniture left behind to rot. Some I would love to have in my home right now. So thanks for sharing your videos with us , I am a big fan.
Another awesome find, kappy! 👍
❤Love the old houses...I hope someday I get the chance to own and be able to afford to renovate ,one or more , back to its original beauty.
Love the round newel posts and staircases. Cool house!
Another great explore! Judging by the pluming fixtures, the bathroom & kitchen were added in the 1950s.The built in hutch is cool as well. The pickup truck is a Volkswagen Rabbit Pickup that was produced from 1978-1984 and most likely has a diesel engine. The other truck appears to be an International Harvester Company (or International) Travellall.
It's a lovely place and I'm glad you were able to save it too! Thanks so much Kappy.
Awesome! Lots of old wooden hangers in the close pile! Bet it was a beauty in it’s day!
This house is old and very cool. Part of my house was built in the 1870's. A lot of architecture changed between this house and mine. Thank you Kappy!
You find the best places to explore
Sigh......once upon a time, a beautiful home. Breaks my heart. Thank you for taking us with you@
I love these adventures. Got to hand it to you though, some of the places you check out that are left furnished would be so tempting to just root through all the stuff and take what you want. Especially old paper goods like postcards and advertising items.
Must of been a beautiful house in it's day.
Thank you for sharing your videos.🎶🐦🌼🌼
I lovvveee your videos and I love the way you talk through them your voice is soothing and you always find such interesting houses full of old stuff ,keep up the great work
I just love this house. Has a lot character. My house also has 2 staircases going upstairs. Love that you feature the doorknobs. Show the light switches too.
Hi Kappy!another great find.I love the old built ins & the architecture around them.plus the old doors with the old knobs & key holes.then the stairs.I have never seen 2 grand stairs.usually there is 1 in the kitchen for the servants.I love it :-)
Avery cool old place! Thanks Kappy 👍🙋🌟🕊️
I was wondering where my vehicles disappeared to. Just looked in my driveway and didn't notice them. But there they are, in front of that house! Lol j/k. Such a cool thing that these houses of yesterday still remain in our modern world of today! It's cool to think about that! Yes quite large molding/trim on bottom of walls. Don't see that too often. Cool house!!!
Excellent video, thank you!
You really find some really great places to explore; very interesting
Just sad it was left to fall apart must of been grand in its day..love your videos! FROM Olive Branch Mississippi
This one seems like it could be renovated as of now, except for the back half, it would take a massive amount of work it seems. This is yet another beautiful find Kappy! Please remember to be careful when preserving these amazing homes, you’re health and well-being always comes first. Happy Saturday!!😊
I've worked construction and it would cost way more than that house is worth to fix it. Much cheaper to rebuild from start using same floor plan.
@@gregleonard7391 same here, standard cost w/o custom add ons would be around 100-125$ per s/f on that same land. The add ons like trying to replicate the millwork and mantles would be quite high. That's where the use of the old house would play in. With a bit of care a lot of the old materials could be salvaged and be reused. Probably a lot of heart pine and poplar cut to actual size like a 2x4 would really be 2" x 4" and 20p nails not 16p
Another great find kappy
*sigh" nice place until half of it fell in. Good size rooms, great fireplaces, cool staircases. Thanks,Kappy
Beautiful Staircases
Another good one. Thank you Kappy♡
A cool location, I love seeing these old places as once long ago those boards outside would have been shiny new. Thanks for sharing. x
That was great! Push button light's and the built-in and not really vandalized just a dump of tires and car seats.
Such a shame to be left in this state although it does look repairable I'm sure there is wood rot and damage throughout!
It shows the period throughout the home, unusual for two wide staircases and no trans across the top of the main door!
Thanks Kappy a great start to 2020!
@ 5:14 Whenever I see a bricked up fireplace in an old home (abandoned or otherwise), it almost gives me the sense that the intended purpose was to either keep the cold out or... to conceal something inside.
Really like the five panel doors, they have a layout you don't see often. Very odd the two main staircases for a house this size. Keep up the good work, fellow explorer.
The 1st fireplace & that old bathtub I particularly like...don't know why. Years back I had a tub like that in an old hotel which was made into apartments.
All the tires are still in the kitchen! It’s like they just left yesterday!
Wow tire collection !! Wonder if there was an existing junkyard at one time around the outside of the house. SWEET old stair case !! That main door is so 😎 ! Such neat a old fireplace !!
Great video as always. Thanks
Its still beautiful..perhaps the historical society would take an interest in restoring this beautiful historical home.
Another great find Kappy Thanks 4 letting us go along 2 Virginia w/ u never been there but my parents were married in Winchester VA. Maybe u will find an abandoned 🏠 house in that area sometime ok God b u n keep u safe on traveling n exploring
w/
Have filmed a few houses around Winchester, it’s a beautiful old town thanks for watching!
I love your videos. This was an awesome find.
3:52 string swinging but you look through window and the leaves are not even blowing.
😳 very weird
Me too. It freaked me out.
Kappy never seems to mention ghosts.
I saw that string too..I had to rewatch a few times to figure out if the window was broken to let in a stiff breeze but nothing else by the window was moving..freaky!! What the heck with that doll upstairs, too!!!
Awsome old house👍having 2 stair cases like that is a little strange. The one old vehicle is a early model chevy blazer i believe. They are worth a lot of money in good condition. Great video as always👍
Great video! Thanks for sharing!
The white truck looks like an international Scout from the sixties or an old AMC Comanche!
Great job, thanks!!
Would have been nice if somebody . Could of kept the house. In good condition. The key to all the doors. Was a skeleton key. Thanks for sharing your find. Have a wonderful day.
Must have been a VW fan judging from the smushed rabbit caddy and all the parts. Looked like a bunch of those wheels were early rabbit/Jetta with a few Bus rims mixed in. Spotted a nice set of early Scirocco rims too. A few of the seats were rabbit BUT the orange seats with the detachable headrest are from a quite rare special Champagne Edition VW bus from 1978. Such a cool find!
Another excellent video kappy!
Thank you for the kind words & thanks for watching! (:
Cool old house. Wonder of it and the land is claimable?
It's funny how things change, people used to like closed individual defined rooms in their houses, nowadays most prefer more open communal areas, at least here they do. I find those old style places a bit claustrophobic but still very interesting.
Thanks Kappy
The other truck was an International Scout. My parents owned one when I was a kid. Good for living in rough area.
Thankyou for sharing your explore of this spacious property. Maybe it had two stair cases so thzt it could be divided in two if wished?
Cool house and explore Kappy! Well preserved except that back corner. So many of these abandoned homes are on family property and they don’t want to tear down their family’s old homestead. Probably goes back to their 3x great grandparents. So they do end up just using them as storage sheds. That’s exactly what happened in my stepdad’s family.
Is there a reason why you don’t open cabinet doors, closet doors, or pull open drawers and such? Or look at stuff, like the books on the floor, old bottles, ect.? I Love your videos, don’t get me wrong, I’ve just always wondered. Anyway, awesome explore!! Stay safe out there!! 😊
Yes Kappy, I would love to see inside closet, cabinets, drawers & etc too. If you got the time, Thanks ! I Love your videos! 😄
It’s such a shame that they junked this house. Left car parts all over the place. Then leaving it to fall apart. Nice find, thank you for sharing.
I love it thank you just be careful that one was very rotten but at one time a premo house. But one question WHY IS THERE ALWAYS A CREEPY DOLL 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Very nice house. Too bad about the roof leaking.
Beautiful!
Another great video bud 👍🏼
Thank you!! Much appreciated for watching!
Looking in these old places I just want to start cleaning them up.
Looks like something in Gone with the wind.
I wonder if this place could be saved. May have to replace the one side of the place where it has caved in but I liked it
i'd venture to say it's not worth saving, it's likely just too far gone, and that's not even looking at the foundation, septic system, water and power lines... you'd practically be rebuilding the entire thing. tear it down and sell the reclaimed wood.
Those wooden things stacked inside the main forier, were they old file cabinets?
I'm surprised at the condition of the inside. It's all intack. For the most part.
Very interesting. Thanks.
Yes, I was wondering what they were too. Maybe next time Kappy can get a closeup of something like that or pull it out to see what it is. Thanks again for this explore, I really enjoyed seeing it! ☺
I looked up the name and it was a beer called Stroh's Light from the Pabst Brewing Company.
Guys I wanna let you in on a little secret. There are stories behind those walls that tell of a people that hid their stuff underneath the house or a secreted place on their land soo it wouldn't get stolen by thieves before the law of the land was established. There are stories of coinage of 1737 and 1739 that were found in secreted places on these plantations and we all know how rare those coins are.
Nice house in it’s day. Hated to see the holes in the roof. What was that stack of stuff in the lower hallway. Some kind of boxes? Sadly, Virginia has a lot of these old houses. Every so often our county will make the effort to have residents clean up abandoned buildings and junk. Sometimes if these old houses are in really bad shape and can be deemed dangerous they are torn down. It’s sad to see them go. Fortunately the county is pretty into saving historical buildings so most are left alone. But like this one, an open roof is their silent killer. Thanks for sharing ❤️ Super job as always.
yes I am super curious what those boxes were and what they said.
The boxes in the hallway said strohlight. Was some type of beer, thanks for watching!
@@urbanexploringwithkappy1773 thanks! love your videos. your voice is very calming and as an insomniac, I enjoy watching when trying to fall asleep.
@Urban Exploring With Kappy
Stroh’s was a popular and cheaper beer to drink in the 70’s! My dad drank it. Lol. I thought you said “strobe light” in the video. That would have been a cool find! 🍺
Stroh's was good beer in the early 80's before they bought Schlitz out and quit fire brewing their beer.
Love your videos ❤️
be careful In that one kappy thank you 👍👍.
Thank you! Always try to be! Only fallen thru a few floors for as many houses as I’ve been to haha! Thank you for watching !
Wooden boxes in hallway. Looks like a store display for something sold separately.
The other truck is an International Harvistor. ...Newk from Kentucky
Thought it was a scout for a second. Those are cool trucks.
@@ls6-ss413 It is an International Scout. The older company name was International Harvistor. Guess I'm old...lol
Wow, kitchen full of tires and a lawnmower! And what was all that storage and drawers with numbers on them? Seems it might have been half home and half business. So one could keep their personal separate?
The white one is an International “Travel All”
@comfortableman12 thought the Volkswagen was the caddy
I learned how to drive a stick shift in my family's old International Travel-All in the 70's. What a bucket of bolts that thing was!
This is one house that looks better inside, than out.
The two staircases could mean 2 families lived in the house. It wasn’t uncommon for separate families or relatives to share homes. I lived in a home once that had two separate entrances. The two sides held two bedrooms for each family the kitchen was shared as was the middle room I assumed was a living room.
So this house could have housed 2 families.
What would it cost to build that then and what it would cost now!
the cost now, including demolition costs? lol.
Thanks!👍😊
I get old man vibe from this house that is a lot of spare tires kept indoors the main doorway also had a lot of wooden slots shelf wonder if it was some kinda business at some point or hotel or brothel
I believe those slots were cases for Stroh's Light Beer.
Where in the world do you find these houses? Absolutely awesome and so so creepy.
" What a beautiful house. We should fix it up before it decays." " Nah. Lets just throw these random car parts in there". Smh..
Generally speaking, back in my racing days and the years of being around cars, we kept car parts in the garage (or in my racing days, in a horse barn), along with the car seats (sometimes bench seats were used for couches) and the tires either inside or in _back_ of the garage/barn, not devote two rooms to tires and one to car seats _in the house._ Call me conventional... I had to smile when I saw all the different boxes bearing labels of several breweries. The guys on my team had decided that if we had to change car numbers for one reason or another, we should put "88" in block numerals in the white "backballs," to make them easier to change using black or white tape. Someone pointed out that the famous Bob Tullius, who raced various makes, particularly the Triumphs, called his "scuderia" Group 44 "--so maybe we should call ourselves Group 88." "Why?" one of the younger guys asked. "Because he scored high in forty-four races," someone else said. "So, what would our '88' stand for?" the kid asked. I've never been a beer fancier and liked to poke fun at them, so I suggested "Because it takes 88 cases of beer to get you through the season." This must've been nice "back in the day," particularly when updated a little; nice sized rooms.
Easy come, easy go, it was probably an inheritance.
You must pray a lot because I always hear you saying amen
This house must have been beautiful in its day
I believe that white vehicle next to the VW is a mid 70's International Scout
Awesome! I had no clue! I Don’t know much about cars haha thank you for watching!
I had a 1976 International Scout and that looks more like a 50s station wagon
@@ellenherstead1343 50's era station wagons didn't have side marker lights
SHE WAS A GRAND LADY IN HER DAY AND STILL IS KAPPY. THANK YOU. I LIVE IN VA...BENT MT ABOVE ROANOKE. THANK YOU FOR TAKING US ALONG.BE BLESSED AND SAFE ALWAYS.🙏👍😘🐱🐨🐺
That's a scout on the cars there . I think thats what it is
I second that
It's a Harvester (travelall)
You should get a small drone for the areas too dangerous to go. Like the atic or areas the floor is unsafe.
It would be interesting who this property belonged to. It is absolutely gorgeous. Is it for sale?