I once bought a house not that old - built in 1963 - and discovered a big cardboard box in a corner of basement behind the water heater. There were old family photos, an 1880s marriage certificate and items indicating the family name and that they were Jewish. They were not related to the people I bought the house from; so the previous owner had lived for years with that box in the basement undisturbed. The last name was unusual, and I was able to research online and find relatives on the east coast. I contacted them and mailed the big box to them. I was glad to give it back to people who it would mean something to.
I rented a house then went to get my belongings then the owner of the house said it was his stuff and charged my dad $120.00 so I’m glad people like you are around to be honest people
MARYLANDER here! Cat Fan and History Geek! YANKEE here What a wonderful guy! Much RESPECT! I live in an apartment in a house build in 1911! A year before the TITANIC sank! A few years ago the plumbers removed a leaking drain pipe ! They were amazed that it was the original cast iron pipe! Well Corrosion happens but they sure don't build houses like they used to! My Grandfather was born in 1900 so he was 11 years old that year! Retired Teacher here 37 years! History is so interesting ! 🤔🇩🇪🇨🇭🇺🇲💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙
What a beautiful home! He found the heir to the cane and pocket watch and gave it to the family, that’s so thoughtful and kind! He really is a good steward of the home.
My uncle on my dad's side ran away with my dad's inheritance and so did my aunt with my mom's inheritance. It's great that there are still people out there that don't just think about themselves.
Sometimes it feels like the world peaked and has steadily fallen since the Industrial Revolution. What we see as progress could easily be seen as decline from the earth’s perspective perhaps.
He made his community a better place to live. Everyone is happier because of him, and he will have a happier life. This is what happens when people do good things.
My husband is a contractor and one day, he showed me what he left behind the crown molding of every house. N+P in a heart written in pencil. You may change carpet, tile, sinks, lights, but how long is that crown molding going to stay there?? He’s retired now, but his one consistent romantic gesture will be around a looooong time.
I wonder if the foyer’s staircase has a mortgage button. There should be a hole in that prominent place, and the bank gave you a button that looks like a beautiful stopper to show that you paid off your house.
I live in a 1915 shingle style house, not a lot of treasure like coins or anything, but old windows and doors, woodwork and glass. Old houses have a warmth and feeling that's worth a lot of treasure in my book.
My daughter and her fiancé removed an old defunct chimney from an 1800s house to make room for a pantry in their kitchen and found a checkbook from the 1910s, an old sewing pattern, some sewing supplies, old wooden hangers, pieces of clothing, and playing cards from the late 1800s.
What a amazing guy. I was touched by the fact he took the time to find the a previous owner’s family and give them the pocket watch he found above the book shelves. I wish him and his wife many more treasures hidden in this beautiful old home. They are truly wonderful and the fact they give so much, not only of themselves, but to organizations that make a difference. Thank you for sharing this amazing story with us. ❤️
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back from u 😊
The fact that he is hiding current day items for the next owners is a beautiful gesture. I wonder if he needs a roommate? I can be the quiet ghostly tenant in the attic.
It does NOT need to be a mansion for cool old stuff to be found in an old house! Sometimes construction workers will leave things (like, BEER CANS) inside odd places, (informal time capsules?) I owned a house where I removed one of the mantel pieces so I could restore it. Inside a hollow part of the mantel piece was a 1906 calendar from a local farm supply and feed store (The area is FAR FROM "rural" today!). The house was completed in 1907. Not at all a "mansion", just an 800 Sq. Ft. 2-bedroom, wood frame little "worker's house"! That calendar was OBVIOSLY an "Easter Egg" left by whoever installed the mantel piece!
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back fr u 😊
As a serious American Pocket Watch collector, I can relate to this story more than most. What impressed me the most was the fact that he does not consider himself the "owner" but instead the "caretaker" as am I the caretaker of all my watches in the collection. I have hopes that this house and my watches can be passed down to others in the future so that someone else can be the caretaker of them. Get story.
I didnt listen closely enough if they credited him as the actual owner. Caretaker means caretaker…i guess i need to watch the video again. Lol. Beautiful house!!
@@Mister_Listener In this case, he is officially the owner of the house, but at the end of the story he considers himself also the caretaker of the house. I own all of my watches, but am also the caretaker of them, making sure the all perform correctly, and will eventually be ready for the next generation of collector.
@@AmericanPocketWatch wonderful attitude to have. Is your collection large? There have been several films made about houses being haunted and carrying secrets from years past…Burnt Offerings is one of my favorites. I watch a lot of those and i guess thats why this video came up, nice chatting with you. The house needs to be made into a movie, lol!
@@Mister_Listener In this context, my collection is not as large as this house, but I do have watches that go back to the late 1850s on up to 1940s. Every one of the watches is looked after, cleaned oiled and adjusted and I try to keep them looking as well as running as if they were new. Some are easier than others, but I do take extreme pride in the watches that I do take care of. To answer your real question. About 250 to 300 so far.. I keeps growing. Just received a new one today. Most collectors are after quality. I, on the other hand, am after quality and possibly a story behind each watch. Not always possible, but if they could talk, what stories they would tell. If you listen, near the beginning of the story, he says that he went to the top of a large book case and found a pocket watch up there. Oh, what would I have given just to see the watch that he found up there. He stated he returned it to the family. I admire him for that..
I found an old newspaper while remodeling, and in the sports section, the Red Sox coach was talking about a budding prospect. He had a rookie that seemed to show real potential as a slugger. That was Babe Ruth.
Wow, what a find! I recently came across a newspaper with a front page headline about Neil Armstrong walking on the moon, but I’d say yours is much more valuable 😊
After a friend's grandfather passed they found a room behind a bookcase. That room had a plastered over space containing a wall safe. With lawyers, family and a safe cracker present they opened it up. It contained the old large currency bills at face value of thousands. The lawyers placed it into a bank at face value. When the family got their share it was only based on the face value and not the collector's value of gold and silver certificate notes. The bank said those deposited bills were just placed at face value and were long gone. Shyster lawyers and bank.
Why shyster bank? What rules did they break? Sounds like they were going by the book. You have to look after your own interests and check details. Many is the celebrity, for instance, who left it all in the hands of a manager who ran off with everything. It's a big, bad world out there and the wolves will eat you up. You have to be smarter than that and ask a lot of questions.
@@653j521 My comment was based on the family believing the lawyers and likely the bankers knew to exchange the rare bills for modern currency. Then resell them on the collector's market for themselves. Meaning they all belonged to the same tribal cabal.
@@josephbingham1255 why would the family believe the Lawyer and Bank go thru the effort to maximize profit.. It’s not their job to market antiques, money or else wise. Derrrrrr😂
@@mawi1172 It was a former friend's grandfather. The family knew they were valuable. The family believed the lawyers and bankers being of the same tribe conspired. You know. Taught from childhood to "take advantage."
The house we bought 2 years ago built in 1864 and found a penny from 1819. Love the old treasures we keep finding on our old farm. It will be passed down to our daughter in a trust.
a Master Carpenter .. always creating, building, restoring. Something that takes a lifetime to learn and you can't learn it in college. BUT you gotta love it and be an expert
I bought and renovated an old home years ago. It came with a treasure I didn’t want. I discovered a grave about 3 feet from my home. Turns out it was a family cemetery to a nearby historical home, and yes I also heard things in the attic. My 7 year story there would rival any Hollywood movie.
Do tell your story, it is interesting to see so many discoveries in many different homes, some good like from the video and some terrible, like yours. I can only imagine the spooky shit you might've heard at night.
So you never had to pay property taxes I just heard a lawyer say if anybody is buried on your property it’s tax free forever and gov. Can never take it away except for 3 of our states.
@@merlinsowl9458what?! I never heard of that...we been paying taxes on our home all these years....there's a small cemetery on the back side of our pasture where a husband and wife were buried in the early 1900s. 🤔
It's so fun renovating homes. I have found clothes, school books, teachers name from the time period and more in the Ringling brothers birth-site house. They said on TV and the paper that it burned down. It didn't. It was only a porch fire. The house still stands at the end of Walton's hollow in mc Gregor Iowa. I have lived here for over 32 years. I won't give up on the house.
Wow that's awesome!! And I do t blame you a bit I couldn't give up on it either!! I've always loved those old homes and antiques!! I've always been told I was born into.the wring Era lol I turned 44 in February 😊
Wonderful! A writer found those old books!!! People do love them, still!!! What a great treasure to find! Cool home, and I’m so glad he’s taking such wonderful care of it and the donations he’s making are fabulous. 👏👏
I watched videos on hoarder homes and bags of coins were popular things to hide, one assumes like the hidden jewelry, from possible thieves. There was no panic in the Depression that would make people hide coins. The Depression wasn't like that. The only panic was getting money out of banks before they closed to be examined for irregularities, in particular the widespread practice of taking depositors' money to play the stock market, before being reopened, often under new management, and the panic by stock speculators who got caught short. Otherwise, it was just a slow descent into misery.
Those coins are worn smooth. All cull coins. Notice they didn’t say he had any big finds in the coins. Facts are if you have two jars of American coins that were put in a jar a hundred years ago they would not be worn smooth from not being handled the last 100 years. And that would give you a better the average of having high grade coins, which he has none. I call bs. But hey don’t take my word for it, you can pay him to metal detect the same yard he already did. 😂😂😂😂
@@Jack_Russell_Brown interesting. i know its illegal to spend change outside the us even now because the metals are worth more than the currency itself.
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back fr u 😊
I absolutely love old houses like that one and it looks like it was well taken care of over the years. My only issue is electricals, plumbing, A/C, Heat. these great older homes just don't have all the comfort stuff and when a historical society gets involved the suddenly you can't do anything without a ton of paperwork and approvals from people you never even met or have seen the house in question.
My friends grandparents left him a home built in 1916. One day he was remodeling the walls and in one of the walls he found a map from the 1800s. The map led all the way to Mexico and the missions that were built by the Spaniards to convert to catholisism. On the back of the map it stated the reason for the map. He has the map in a glass case and its so brittle.
We have similar homes here in New Hampshire that much people don't know but were part of the under ground railroad, crawl space he found looks like hiding quarters like ones we discovered here at relatives home when they were renovating. Actually in Portsmouth they give a tour of the homes they found similar tunnels or tunnels tooms that would connect to other homes or roads. This place is so beautiful I am glad he is trying to preserve the history!
We used to own a painted lady Victorian home in Michigan build in 1890. We had a lady ghost living with us. I traveled a great deal at the time and when I was gone she would sing and scared my wife who would sleep in a couch downstairs. We decided to restore the first floor main rooms and my wife and daughter picked out the wallpaper for the front parlor. After we removed 6 or 7 payers of paper we discovered the first wall paper and it was almost an exact match to what they hand bought 3 months before. I took a roll up to where the ghost lived and showed it to her and told her we were restoring her beautiful home and to leave my wife alone. She stopped the singing immediately. We didn’t find any treasures.
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back fr u 😊
Way too cool! It's not often we hear stories like this and we were over due for one. Being born and raised on Galveston Island, I absolutely appreciate the uniqueness and special qualities of older victorian homes. Quite stunning and the past owners left some neat stuff!
My grans house was like a time capsule. She never changed anything from when her parents owned it. As soon as you went inside you were Transported to the 40s. It was my favourite place.
Amazing he gave those Civil War items to the family heir. Not everyone is that honest. Can only imagine what's behind the walls/under the floors of older houses.
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back from u 😊
Is that the railroad they used to send freed slaves to the northern cities where they weren't allowed to work or vote for the next 100 years? Some freedom that was.
bet you didn't find any old railroad ties or stations down there. Some people are dumb enough to think the "Underground Railroad" was a REAL coal fired RR built by slaves, complete with stations from Georgia to Canada .... at least that was how it was depicted on an Amazon movie. Totally bizarre
In a small town in IL, a man opened up the top of the bottom post of his staircase and it was filled with gold coins. It was held there with a cut nail and no one bothered to look for years. He also searched where the hitching rail was and found many coins. The sad part is when younger his father hired a man to metal detect around the house. The man said he did not find anything other than a few coins and left. Weeks later they came home to a big hole in the yard. They will never know what was there.
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back fr u 😊
It nice to read about a magnificent old home like this that has been bought by someone who truly appreciates its history and wants to pass it along, along with today's history in the making, for future generations to enjoy and learn from. Cool story. Cool (and impressive) mansion.
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back from u 😊
I worked at a thrift store and a lady came to my register,she had some picture frames with pictures still in them ,when i looked at them i realized one wad a picture of my grandmother from the 1920s,she let me have the pics but i have never found out who the other people were,my dad died in 2018 so i couldn't ask him
I love this old home and how it is being renovated/ restored. So many amazing things to be found and yet to be found. Thanknyou for sharing this online.
The new owner opened-up the crawl space in his new house and found a huge sealed barrel. He knew he had stumbled onto something interesting, because it was tucked deep in the back. When he got it opened and looked inside, he found the body of a young pregnant woman dead for 50 years. The original elderly owner was still alive living in Florida in retirement. Authorities questioned him; he said he knew nothing about it, but they already knew that he had worked at a barrel company for many years. They told him they would run DNA tests on the victims and get back to him. DNA results indicated that THE OLD MAN was the father of the baby, and the mother was identified as an Argentinian who had come to the States in the 1960s. Her family reported that she had gone missing back in the '60s, but her parents now deceased, never found-out what happened to her. When the FBI went back to arrest the original owner, he had committed suicide (True story)
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back fr u 😊
WHAT A FABULOUS HOME AND IN VERY GOOD CONDITION FOR 142 YEARS OLD. ❤❤❤. THEY SHOULD NEVER TEAR DOWN HOMES LIKE THIS IF THEY JUST NEED MINOR WORK. THEY WORK THAT WENT INTO BUILDING THESE HOMES WOULD TAKE YEARS.
Love the house. We have found quite a few items in our old house also, including a hammer inside one wall. I would not want the heating bill for that place.
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear bck fr u 😊
So glad to see so many loving old houses. So many contractors try to modernize my 120 yo house and last did huge amount of damage e plater telling it has to in favor of drywall.. he won't come near my house again or I may bite
There are some salty people in this comment section. Not all rich people are bad. Like are supposed to stay poor and not work for a better life. My family was poor, almost broke, and now we're upper middle class.
My family owns a 1904 historic mansion. The utilities are so high and it’s in an old coal town, so no one wants it. We rent it out to somewhat offset the taxes and maintenance but it falls further and further into disrepair. If it were in a city it would be worth millions but in this little town we can’t give it away. We keep it going because of memories and history, but it’s not sustainable for much longer.
I can tell you exactly why you're finding things. His daughter believed the house was occupied by her father's spirit. She hid things within its structure as a way to communicate with him and to bequeath his spirit with wealth and abundance. These were very, very common practices in the late 19th century.
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back fr u 😊
My brother (a carpenter) knew about the tradition of putting the plans of the house in the newel post of a house.. so he opened Or Mother’s and Fathers after they past in there 1890 house and sure enough the plans of the family house was inside…, VERY COOL
How marvelous!!!! I wonder if the 3 hidden books were a young teen's secret stash (novels were often considered unwholesome😢). I enjoyed all three in JrHi.....
I inherited my grandparents farm house that built in the early 1920's. They left me nothing but used tissues and illegible news paper that they put in the seems of the plaster to fill the gaps :o(
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear fr you 😊
My house was built in 1922. Under the floor boards in my office which I accessed from the old pantry in the basement I found several books on german and how to speak it, write it ect. They were ww2 Era and we suspect someone in the family was learning german probably in secret as the Germans weren't popular at the time lol. Found some other cool stuff, small stash of coins, a bag of about 300 dimes all from the 50's. Found out my back porch used to be a cistern, it's a giant empty concrete box with a manhole cover. I'm going to seal it and use it.
I once bought a house not that old - built in 1963 - and discovered a big cardboard box in a corner of basement behind the water heater. There were old family photos, an 1880s marriage certificate and items indicating the family name and that they were Jewish. They were not related to the people I bought the house from; so the previous owner had lived for years with that box in the basement undisturbed. The last name was unusual, and I was able to research online and find relatives on the east coast. I contacted them and mailed the big box to them. I was glad to give it back to people who it would mean something to.
I rented a house then went to get my belongings then the owner of the house said it was his stuff and charged my dad $120.00 so I’m glad people like you are around to be honest people
You are a treasure yourself ❤️
May your good deed be rewarded tenfold. It’s heartwarming to hear there are still good people in this world. ❤️
great sir
@@anadumuakr4054 I’m actually a ma’am. 🤭
This guy is great!!!!! Restoring an old property, donating to the historic society and donating to animal shelters. This guy is a renovation hero.
I don't know about being a hero, but he certainly is a rose among thorns.
And gave the civil war treasures to the descendants of the soldier
@@marcyking461
Or a thorn among roses!☠️
MARYLANDER here! Cat Fan and History Geek! YANKEE here What a wonderful guy! Much RESPECT! I live in an apartment in a house build in 1911! A year before the TITANIC sank! A few years ago the plumbers removed a leaking drain pipe ! They were amazed that it was the original cast iron pipe! Well Corrosion happens but they sure don't build houses like they used to! My Grandfather was born in 1900 so he was 11 years old that year! Retired Teacher here 37 years! History is so interesting ! 🤔🇩🇪🇨🇭🇺🇲💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙💙
@@marcyking461😂😂😂5th 5th u😂😊😊😂
What a beautiful home! He found the heir to the cane and pocket watch and gave it to the family, that’s so thoughtful and kind! He really is a good steward of the home.
It's a shame he ddnt also give the coins
@@4rmAshesHmm 🤔
My uncle on my dad's side ran away with my dad's inheritance and so did my aunt with my mom's inheritance. It's great that there are still people out there that don't just think about themselves.
I have great curiosity about why that pocket watch and cane were hidden on top of the bookcase. 🤔
@@4rmAshesMaybe he will give the coins. How many different owners did the home house?
"He found the owner's heir, and passed it on."
What an absolute king.
But he didn't pass-on the pure silver coins, did you notice that?
@@BORN-to-Run He could have done so at a later time.
He’s really a great guy!
@@BORN-to-RunLets be fair... he didn't have to pass on anything!!!
@@BORN-to-Run Because money doesn't have sentimental value and is not connected to the Family's History.
He deserves that house. He's doing it justice
good heavens that's a beautiful home. it's a shame how far architecture has fallen.
Architecture changes, but classic, and classy, architecture does not.
Its not architecture that has fallen, its people their wallets and buying power.
This wasn't the average house
Sometimes it feels like the world peaked and has steadily fallen since the Industrial Revolution. What we see as progress could easily be seen as decline from the earth’s perspective perhaps.
What a great place for a writer!
He made his community a better place to live. Everyone is happier because of him, and he will have a happier life. This is what happens when people do good things.
This house was definitely purchased by the right person. This house is so fortunate to have this man to bring it back to life.
You know That’s Right!
As a journeyman carpenter, back in the day it was traditional to leave the plans to the house inside the newel post of the staircase 🤔
My husband is a contractor and one day, he showed me what he left behind the crown molding of every house. N+P in a heart written in pencil. You may change carpet, tile, sinks, lights, but how long is that crown molding going to stay there?? He’s retired now, but his one consistent romantic gesture will be around a looooong time.
Fascinating!
I alway either signed my name or left a business card some where in the jobs walls. Retired carpenter superintendent.
I wonder if the foyer’s staircase has a mortgage button. There should be a hole in that prominent place, and the bank gave you a button that looks like a beautiful stopper to show that you paid off your house.
Cool
I live in a 1915 shingle style house, not a lot of treasure like coins or anything, but old windows and doors, woodwork and glass.
Old houses have a warmth and feeling that's worth a lot of treasure in my book.
❤️ I agree! ❤️
🤗
I totally agree ! My little cottage was built in 1904 by a bachelor. It is a gem in my eyes and the eyes of many ! Cozy and home!
1918 here. Love the Ole girl.
My house was on the map in 1865, just a cute little farmer's cottage. It's the house that just keeps on giving!!
My daughter and her fiancé removed an old defunct chimney from an 1800s house to make room for a pantry in their kitchen and found a checkbook from the 1910s, an old sewing pattern, some sewing supplies, old wooden hangers, pieces of clothing, and playing cards from the late 1800s.
Wow how neat
What did they do with these items?
I'm a big-time solitaire player. I would have loved to have seen those cards!
What a amazing guy. I was touched by the fact he took the time to find the a previous owner’s family and give them the pocket watch he found above the book shelves. I wish him and his wife many more treasures hidden in this beautiful old home. They are truly wonderful and the fact they give so much, not only of themselves, but to organizations that make a difference. Thank you for sharing this amazing story with us. ❤️
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back from u 😊
The fact that he is hiding current day items for the next owners is a beautiful gesture. I wonder if he needs a roommate? I can be the quiet ghostly tenant in the attic.
It does NOT need to be a mansion for cool old stuff to be found in an old house! Sometimes construction workers will leave things (like, BEER CANS) inside odd places, (informal time capsules?) I owned a house where I removed one of the mantel pieces so I could restore it. Inside a hollow part of the mantel piece was a 1906 calendar from a local farm supply and feed store (The area is FAR FROM "rural" today!). The house was completed in 1907. Not at all a "mansion", just an 800 Sq. Ft. 2-bedroom, wood frame little "worker's house"! That calendar was OBVIOSLY an "Easter Egg" left by whoever installed the mantel piece!
you don't write well
@@Jack_Russell_Brown Cool Story! 👍😊👍
Wow. What fun that must be! They are animal lovers too. I hope and pray for them all the best ❤
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back fr u 😊
As a serious American Pocket Watch collector, I can relate to this story more than most. What impressed me the most was the fact that he does not consider himself the "owner" but instead the "caretaker" as am I the caretaker of all my watches in the collection. I have hopes that this house and my watches can be passed down to others in the future so that someone else can be the caretaker of them. Get story.
I agree
I didnt listen closely enough if they credited him as the actual owner. Caretaker means caretaker…i guess i need to watch the video again. Lol. Beautiful house!!
@@Mister_Listener In this case, he is officially the owner of the house, but at the end of the story he considers himself also the caretaker of the house. I own all of my watches, but am also the caretaker of them, making sure the all perform correctly, and will eventually be ready for the next generation of collector.
@@AmericanPocketWatch wonderful attitude to have. Is your collection large? There have been several films made about houses being haunted and carrying secrets from years past…Burnt Offerings is one of my favorites. I watch a lot of those and i guess thats why this video came up, nice chatting with you. The house needs to be made into a movie, lol!
@@Mister_Listener In this context, my collection is not as large as this house, but I do have watches that go back to the late 1850s on up to 1940s. Every one of the watches is looked after, cleaned oiled and adjusted and I try to keep them looking as well as running as if they were new. Some are easier than others, but I do take extreme pride in the watches that I do take care of. To answer your real question. About 250 to 300 so far.. I keeps growing. Just received a new one today.
Most collectors are after quality. I, on the other hand, am after quality and possibly a story behind each watch. Not always possible, but if they could talk, what stories they would tell.
If you listen, near the beginning of the story, he says that he went to the top of a large book case and found a pocket watch up there. Oh, what would I have given just to see the watch that he found up there. He stated he returned it to the family. I admire him for that..
Those 3 books were hidden because in 1907 they were considered highly controversial ( especially for Women to read).
Thought so!
Now known as birthing persons under the current governor who is a self proclaimed "birthing person" following orders from the DNC
True, making them valuable today.
No they weren’t! 😂😝😆🤣 SMH…
Rebecca of Sunnybrooke farms?! No. Neither was Ben Hur.
I found an old newspaper while remodeling, and in the sports section, the Red Sox coach was talking about a budding prospect. He had a rookie that seemed to show real potential as a slugger. That was Babe Ruth.
🧢
Wow, what a find! I recently came across a newspaper with a front page headline about Neil Armstrong walking on the moon, but I’d say yours is much more valuable 😊
@@kellyshomemadekitchen Thank you!
That's actually worth a lot of money, probably worth more than his first rookie card.
After a friend's grandfather passed they found a room behind a bookcase. That room had a plastered over space containing a wall safe. With lawyers, family and a safe cracker present they opened it up. It contained the old large currency bills at face value of thousands. The lawyers placed it into a bank at face value. When the family got their share it was only based on the face value and not the collector's value of gold and silver certificate notes. The bank said those deposited bills were just placed at face value and were long gone. Shyster lawyers and bank.
Why shyster bank? What rules did they break? Sounds like they were going by the book. You have to look after your own interests and check details. Many is the celebrity, for instance, who left it all in the hands of a manager who ran off with everything. It's a big, bad world out there and the wolves will eat you up. You have to be smarter than that and ask a lot of questions.
@@653j521 My comment was based on the family believing the lawyers and likely the bankers knew to exchange the rare bills for modern currency. Then resell them on the collector's market for themselves. Meaning they all belonged to the same tribal cabal.
@@josephbingham1255 why would the family believe the Lawyer and Bank go thru the effort to maximize profit.. It’s not their job to market antiques, money or else wise. Derrrrrr😂
Your relatives must've been pretty stupid to let that happen. Why blame it on the lawyer who had enough sense to know what they were?
@@mawi1172 It was a former friend's grandfather. The family knew they were valuable. The family believed the lawyers and bankers being of the same tribe conspired. You know. Taught from childhood to "take advantage."
Thank you for not removing its history and replacing it with modern tacky design!
Yes! My thought exactly.
Get a grip!
That wood work is insane in that house. Its crazy to think back then without all the fancy power tools how they made all that wood work by hand
The house we bought 2 years ago built in 1864 and found a penny from 1819. Love the old treasures we keep finding on our old farm. It will be passed down to our daughter in a trust.
My Father was a Master Carpenter.He was NEVER finished....great story. Brought me great memories! Thanks
a Master Carpenter .. always creating, building, restoring. Something that takes a lifetime to learn and you can't learn it in college. BUT you gotta love it and be an expert
I bought and renovated an old home years ago. It came with a treasure I didn’t want. I discovered a grave about 3 feet from my home. Turns out it was a family cemetery to a nearby historical home, and yes I also heard things in the attic. My 7 year story there would rival any Hollywood movie.
Do tell your story, it is interesting to see so many discoveries in many different homes, some good like from the video and some terrible, like yours. I can only imagine the spooky shit you might've heard at night.
amityville!
So you never had to pay property taxes I just heard a lawyer say if anybody is buried on your property it’s tax free forever and gov. Can never take it away except for 3 of our states.
@@merlinsowl9458what?! I never heard of that...we been paying taxes on our home all these years....there's a small cemetery on the back side of our pasture where a husband and wife were buried in the early 1900s. 🤔
@@krystaldaniels7940 It's true
A writer finding those old original books is amazing.
Good books too!!! Must have been a secret believer, hiding their faith from someone.
It's so fun renovating homes. I have found clothes, school books, teachers name from the time period and more in the Ringling brothers birth-site house. They said on TV and the paper that it burned down. It didn't. It was only a porch fire. The house still stands at the end of Walton's hollow in mc Gregor Iowa. I have lived here for over 32 years. I won't give up on the house.
Wow that's awesome!! And I do t blame you a bit I couldn't give up on it either!! I've always loved those old homes and antiques!! I've always been told I was born into.the wring Era lol I turned 44 in February 😊
Wonderful! A writer found those old books!!! People do love them, still!!! What a great treasure to find! Cool home, and I’m so glad he’s taking such wonderful care of it and the donations he’s making are fabulous. 👏👏
The coins from the attic are worn, So they were not placed there when they were new. Perhaps hidden in panic during The Depression?🤔
I watched videos on hoarder homes and bags of coins were popular things to hide, one assumes like the hidden jewelry, from possible thieves. There was no panic in the Depression that would make people hide coins. The Depression wasn't like that. The only panic was getting money out of banks before they closed to be examined for irregularities, in particular the widespread practice of taking depositors' money to play the stock market, before being reopened, often under new management, and the panic by stock speculators who got caught short. Otherwise, it was just a slow descent into misery.
Yes..my thoughts..
When was that type of insulation put in? Im going to guess when IT was put in...the coins were as well.
Those coins are worn smooth. All cull coins. Notice they didn’t say he had any big finds in the coins. Facts are if you have two jars of American coins that were put in a jar a hundred years ago they would not be worn smooth from not being handled the last 100 years. And that would give you a better the average of having high grade coins, which he has none. I call bs. But hey don’t take my word for it, you can pay him to metal detect the same yard he already did. 😂😂😂😂
@@Jack_Russell_Brown interesting. i know its illegal to spend change outside the us even now because the metals are worth more than the currency itself.
I love old homes/buildings! It's the history that is my favorite. Beautiful home....wonderful treasures.❤
He's living my dream. What a wonderful home and project!
Bless you for taking this wonderful old home and loving it! You are helping history by your finds...again BLESS YOU!
He's an inquisitive sort of person, the type that finds an adventure anywhere he roams.
Great story!
Nice find. Thanks for finding the heirs and donating. There are still good people out there.
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back fr u 😊
What a cool story! I'm so grateful he wants to keep everything original and maintain the spirit of the house. 😍
I absolutely love old houses like that one and it looks like it was well taken care of over the years. My only issue is electricals, plumbing, A/C, Heat. these great older homes just don't have all the comfort stuff and when a historical society gets involved the suddenly you can't do anything without a ton of paperwork and approvals from people you never even met or have seen the house in question.
That’s very true! If you buy an old house beware that you can update as you wish. Old houses are beautiful but can be drafty and cold.
My friends grandparents left him a home built in 1916. One day he was remodeling the walls and in one of the walls he found a map from the 1800s. The map led all the way to Mexico and the missions that were built by the Spaniards to convert to catholisism. On the back of the map it stated the reason for the map. He has the map in a glass case and its so brittle.
So awesome the home is loved again :)
I am so grateful to people like him. I love old buildings and wish we could see them lovingly preserved more often
We have similar homes here in New Hampshire that much people don't know but were part of the under ground railroad, crawl space he found looks like hiding quarters like ones we discovered here at relatives home when they were renovating. Actually in Portsmouth they give a tour of the homes they found similar tunnels or tunnels tooms that would connect to other homes or roads. This place is so beautiful I am glad he is trying to preserve the history!
What a wonderful story, and think of the storylines made possible by this man. Not enough stories being told like this. Thank you
Tracking down the heirs, super classy. And sharing it all with us like this. Nice. ☺️
We used to own a painted lady Victorian home in Michigan build in 1890. We had a lady ghost living with us. I traveled a great deal at the time and when I was gone she would sing and scared my wife who would sleep in a couch downstairs. We decided to restore the first floor main rooms and my wife and daughter picked out the wallpaper for the front parlor. After we removed 6 or 7 payers of paper we discovered the first wall paper and it was almost an exact match to what they hand bought 3 months before. I took a roll up to where the ghost lived and showed it to her and told her we were restoring her beautiful home and to leave my wife alone. She stopped the singing immediately. We didn’t find any treasures.
Check the steps, the risers. Sometimes drawers were built into steps for extra storage. The idea is being picked up again, but it's an old one
I think fixing up this old house very exciting!
Taking care of a beautiful home, interesting history, AND precious animals in need.
A win win win situation. 🤗
CONGRATS. !!!! On. A. Good find. !!!!! Your. A. Lucky. Guy. !!!! Best wishes. T. California
Amazing life and dreams to unfold from the past to live out in the present. Congratulations.
great story! ❤
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back fr u 😊
Way too cool! It's not often we hear stories like this and we were over due for one. Being born and raised on Galveston Island, I absolutely appreciate the uniqueness and special qualities of older victorian homes. Quite stunning and the past owners left some neat stuff!
Bless you, sir, for loving animals; you are ethical, moral, determined, dedicated, and spiritual.
My grans house was like a time capsule. She never changed anything from when her parents owned it. As soon as you went inside you were Transported to the 40s. It was my favourite place.
What a fun story and cool guy
This house is Spectacular. You are a Great Caretaker. Have Fun.
So very interesting!!Thanks for sharing!!
Really liked the idea of seeding new things for people in the future.
Cool buried treasure. beautiful old house
Looks like the new owner is a worthy steward
I grew up in LV, and I had a friend who's house on Broadway had a hidden room in the basement too. their's was an Underground Railroad hideout.
@@thatoneguybones8036 "LV" Leavenworth.. like in the news story we are commenting on..
Amazing
Amazing he gave those Civil War items to the family heir. Not everyone is that honest. Can only imagine what's behind the walls/under the floors of older houses.
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back from u 😊
God bless you for restoring such a gorgeous home! Your finds are amazing!
We once lived in the old Governor’s mansion in Ohio. It had a basement area that was uncovered that was part of The Underground Railroad.
Is that the railroad they used to send freed slaves to the northern cities where they weren't allowed to work or vote for the next 100 years? Some freedom that was.
We lived in a big old house on the river in Indiana and found a hiding place for slaves in our basement.
bet you didn't find any old railroad ties or stations down there. Some people are dumb enough to think the "Underground Railroad" was a REAL coal fired RR built by slaves, complete with stations from Georgia to Canada .... at least that was how it was depicted on an Amazon movie. Totally bizarre
@@rhuephus nope, lol. It had tons of hidden passages and walls which led to out the back of the house. Truly remarkable house.
@@rhuephus YES!!! I know a woman who actually believed that the U RR was a real RR built underground!!!
So Cool !!
In a small town in IL, a man opened up the top of the bottom post of his staircase and it was filled with gold coins. It was held there with a cut nail and no one bothered to look for years. He also searched where the hitching rail was and found many coins. The sad part is when younger his father hired a man to metal detect around the house. The man said he did not find anything other than a few coins and left. Weeks later they came home to a big hole in the yard. They will never know what was there.
🤔
Why didn't they sic the sheriff on the guy? He had to trespass to dig up whatever he found.
I know what would be going into that hole to fill it back in.
This is SO COOL!!! ❤️🙂
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back fr u 😊
It nice to read about a magnificent old home like this that has been bought by someone who truly appreciates its history and wants to pass it along, along with today's history in the making, for future generations to enjoy and learn from. Cool story. Cool (and impressive) mansion.
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back from u 😊
I love that he's adding to the treasure hunt. My brother hunts for and returns to their heirs old photos he's found in antique shops.
I worked at a thrift store and a lady came to my register,she had some picture frames with pictures still in them ,when i looked at them i realized one wad a picture of my grandmother from the 1920s,she let me have the pics but i have never found out who the other people were,my dad died in 2018 so i couldn't ask him
That’s a beautiful home
I love this old home and how it is being renovated/ restored. So many amazing things to be found and yet to be found. Thanknyou for sharing this online.
The new owner opened-up the crawl space in his new house and found
a huge sealed barrel. He knew he had stumbled onto something interesting,
because it was tucked deep in the back.
When he got it opened and looked inside, he found the
body of a young pregnant woman dead for 50 years.
The original elderly owner was still alive living in Florida in
retirement. Authorities questioned him; he said he knew nothing about it, but
they already knew that he had worked at a barrel company for many years.
They told him they would run DNA tests on the victims and get back
to him. DNA results indicated that THE OLD MAN was the father of the baby, and the
mother was identified as an Argentinian who had come to the States in the 1960s.
Her family reported that she had gone missing back in the '60s, but her parents
now deceased, never found-out what happened to her.
When the FBI went back to arrest the original owner, he had committed
suicide
(True story)
Wow.
Note to self: never open a barrel found in an old home tucked away in a remote location.....
Do you have a link for the story? Sad as it is. DNA has got to be one of the most decisive, incriminating discoveries in human history.
@@Zknwlf I posted a link yesterday, but the link was removed.
I hope you got it before it was deleted.
@@BORN-to-Run Thank you very much! I didn't get it but really appreciate your effort! They always take down links it seems.
I love it! I wish I could explore…just for fun!
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back fr u 😊
WHAT A FABULOUS HOME AND IN VERY GOOD CONDITION FOR 142 YEARS OLD. ❤❤❤. THEY SHOULD NEVER TEAR DOWN HOMES LIKE THIS IF THEY JUST NEED MINOR WORK. THEY WORK THAT WENT INTO BUILDING THESE HOMES WOULD TAKE YEARS.
As a finish carpenter I used to sign and date my installations.
What a wonderful man to share all of this with so many other people. This is the kind of news I love to see. Thank you.
Love the house. We have found quite a few items in our old house also, including a hammer inside one wall. I would not want the heating bill for that place.
Nice that you found these valuable coins. They can help pay for renovations.
How wonderful. I would love to tour that whole house!
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear bck fr u 😊
The woodwork! What a magnificent home! What a cool guy! Love that he appreciates the history🌞
So glad to see so many loving old houses. So many contractors try to modernize my 120 yo house and last did huge amount of damage e plater telling it has to in favor of drywall.. he won't come near my house again or I may bite
Just imagine what he has found, that he will never publicize!
There are some salty people in this comment section. Not all rich people are bad. Like are supposed to stay poor and not work for a better life. My family was poor, almost broke, and now we're upper middle class.
House is beautiful
My family owns a 1904 historic mansion. The utilities are so high and it’s in an old coal town, so no one wants it. We rent it out to somewhat offset the taxes and maintenance but it falls further and further into disrepair. If it were in a city it would be worth millions but in this little town we can’t give it away. We keep it going because of memories and history, but it’s not sustainable for much longer.
I can tell you exactly why you're finding things. His daughter believed the house was occupied by her father's spirit. She hid things within its structure as a way to communicate with him and to bequeath his spirit with wealth and abundance. These were very, very common practices in the late 19th century.
He has released the spirits that will soon haunt that home by opening and uncovering their possession and donating them
Super super cool!
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear back fr u 😊
Very interesting.
I’ve been…WATCHing this house for a while now 🤫
My brother (a carpenter) knew about the tradition of putting the plans of the house in the newel post of a house.. so he opened Or Mother’s and Fathers after they past in there 1890 house and sure enough the plans of the family house was inside…, VERY COOL
How marvelous!!!! I wonder if the 3 hidden books were a young teen's secret stash (novels were often considered unwholesome😢). I enjoyed all three in JrHi.....
Watch out for any escaped Federal prisoners...
or Military ones.... 🤣... actually BOTH those facilities are QUITE secure.
That would be so cool! I love old mansions!
Nothing like advertising to criminals your house is open for business.
Cool story
Very cool.
I inherited my grandparents farm house that built in the early 1920's. They left me nothing but used tissues and illegible news paper that they put in the seems of the plaster to fill the gaps :o(
They left you a house and heritage. That is wonderful.
@@AmericanMom-7 Youre absolutely right :) I hope that I didnt come across as being ungrateful in my initial comment.
@@tymz-r-achangin Not at all. The love is evident.
Oh wow! It was always my dream to buy a big old home and return it to its former glory!😍
Greetings from Mexico I came across your comment and I just had to reach out and say hi. Your perspective really caught my attention and I would love to get to know you better. Would you be interested in chatting sometime? Looking forward to hear fr you 😊
My house was built in 1922. Under the floor boards in my office which I accessed from the old pantry in the basement I found several books on german and how to speak it, write it ect. They were ww2 Era and we suspect someone in the family was learning german probably in secret as the Germans weren't popular at the time lol. Found some other cool stuff, small stash of coins, a bag of about 300 dimes all from the 50's. Found out my back porch used to be a cistern, it's a giant empty concrete box with a manhole cover. I'm going to seal it and use it.
House is awesome but finding the vintage old books would have made me so happy
Really poor sound editing. You can barely hear what she’s saying at times due to all the excavation noises
That's one house worth buying. A gift that keeps on giving.