I remember being a poor kid in Michigan, every Thanksgiving, and Christmas the Odd fellows brought us a big box of food. Thanks to those fine Gentlemen.
I grew up 6 miles from there. My step mother was born and raised a mile out of town. Not really a ghost town just a little town where most of the businesses closed up after the big box stores opened up.
I was a realtor for a while and tried to sell a house there once. As you can imagine, it didn't sell. We did several open houses during which my partner and I read and napped without a single visitor.
The railroad still goes through pompeii but it hasn't been the grand trunk in decades. It is now the great lake central and it services the grain elevators in middleton.
There is an abandoned Free Mason lodge above the old Farmer PEET meat market in Chesaning, MI. I only know because my uncle was helping a community manager restore the bottom half of the building into a community center. 140 N. Saginaw St, you can see there is a door that leads up to the top level. They removed the Free Mason insignia on the door but there is a stone about it with their writings. We explored the inside, there was a ceremony room, rooms with long closets for their robes, a dining room that converted to a basketball court, and a kitchen. There was a locked room in the attic, my uncle tried getting me to go but I was too spooked. 😆
If you're interested in visiting other ghost towns in Michigan, you might want to take a ride up to the Thumb on the eastern part of the lower peninsula - they've got several towns that have populations of 100 or less - and some of them have great backstories. For example, Pinnebog (pronounced "pin-uh-bawg" - or as some old timers say, "pin-eh-Pog").The name is (I believe) Ojibwa and it was once a logging town. Or visit Huron City (a former Chautauqua-type community on the northeastern shore of Lake Huron with a very rich history) ; or Parisville (the first Polish-American farming settlement the US). Grindstone City is also quite interesting historically - it was a "quarry town" that still features several buildings made of the local limestone from which it takes its name. True ghost towns in the Thumb - that is, towns that used to be, but are no longer - would include Port Crescent (an old lumber port near present-day Port Austin). Most of Port Crescent's remaining buildings were moved to Port Austin in the early 20th century when the State decided to use the land for a park, but the graveyard is still intact as is the old sawmill chimney which is located in Port Crescent State Park - the beach is fabulous! And then there's the old Ora Labora site (which was a religious community - the name means "Pray and Work") located near the little town of Bay Port, where they manufactured some of the original brick that you can still see in the the older 19th century buildings that dot the farmland of the Thumb. I could go on, because this just scratches the surface. Finally, outside the Thumb, let me suggest Hell, Michigan - you can always go to Hell for fun and have a drink at the Dam Site Inn. Keep up the good work. Michigan always has good stories to tell.
There was a series of books written in late 60's- early 70's called The Ghost Towns of Michigan. Michigan seems to be home for a huge number of ghost towns. Defining ghost towns as towns that existed and are no longer or somewhat abandoned. In northern lower MI lumbering towns were abandoned after the trees were all cut, or burned down then not rebuilt. The UP had mining towns, mines close towns disappear. Another common way towns disappear is the railroad ignores them and goes through a town a few miles away, without the railroad people and business leave. There is another type of ghost town that isn't talked about much and that is the shanty town that would spring up on the outskirts of cities. With higher income jobs and the invention of the bulldozer these disappeared in the early 20th. century.
When I was a child in the 60s my dad took us out to Grindstone city. At that time the ground was littered with grind stones of every size, I don't know if they were rejects or just unsold. I don't believe there are any remaining now.
@@rivjoy- I went there as a kid also, with my grandparents. I remember all the grind stones. I actually have one, it didn't come from Michigan, found it at an unauthorized dumping place, rural area of Tampa, still have.
In the western US, many fraternal organizations built 2 story lodges as well. Often, the ground floor would be used as a one room school that could convert on weekends to have dances or other town social events while the 2nd floor held the lodge.
I live in middleton and before we bought our house there was no houses for sale at the time but after we bought out a cpl went up for sale and sold. Interesting to see the video as i have passed through pompeii more times than i can even remember.
I own an old IOOF building in downtown Perry, the main hall still had a stage, hidden door locks and a peep hole. There was a second smaller hall also for the order of the Eastern Stars.
Has anyone read, " Ghost towns of Michigan ", by Larry Wakefield? He tells of numerous towns, many of which were built up centered around the logging industry but when the logging died, so did the town and people moved on. Interesting reading.
ive known of this place for a while but never planned to visit. but one of the shots in the first min of the video i have been there. turns out i drove through it many times and its alot closer to where i live than i thought.
Great video! I live at the opposite end of the county, but I do occasionally drive through Pompeii on one of my backroads rambles; nice to encounter it here.
I've been through there a million times and never knew anything about this town. It would be interesting to know why there are 3 little towns so close together, Pompeii, Perinton and Middleton
Railroad went through there to service the grain elevators which in turn serviced the farmers back when these little villages were formed people didn't drive to the bigger towns. 5 miles was a long way with a horse cart or later a model T Ford. I'm 71 and I went to a one room school not too many miles north of Middleton in a berg called Houserville .it consisted of the school house, a general store, and the grange hall. A mile south of there at the corner of Washington road and Ely highway was the berg called Eugene it consisted of a blacksmith shop and a general store. The store at Eugene is now a home and the schoolhouse at houserville has been converted to a home the store was closed around 1965 and torn down shortly after, the grange hall is still standing but the roof is in bad shape so it probably won't last.
Interesting channel, just found it today. I was born and grew up in Michigan, Rochester. Left in the amearly 80's for Florida. But Michigan is my home state and proud of it.
Definitely don’t speed through this town. Gratiot county sheriff’s love to hang out in this area looking for speeding and drunk drivers. YOUVE BEEN WARNED
Also, maybe a better description of a ghost town (for individuals upset at the terminology you used) is a town whose economic activity that supported it (usually industrial or agricultural) has failed or ended for any reason and resulted in a substantial loss of residency.
I can't tell you how many times I've traveled 127, well before they created the highway between Ithaca and Lansing, and had zero clue this place existed. Wild. Good content.
When I was a little kid, my great grandparents lived not very far from POM-pea-eye. The railroad was nicknamed as the Try Weekly. If it got there one week, it would try to get back the next. Courtesy of Half Vast Flying
Thanks for this! Every summer I come back from CA to stay at the cottage my grampa built near 127 and Snowbowl Road (a few miles south of Houghton Lake). We drive right past this place. Definitely going to visit next time!
@RaymondPeckIII...hey your grandpa's cabin isn't to far from my mothers place. She's off of 75 & exit 227 Houghton Lake. I absolutely love the area...especially during autumn, absolutely breathtaking.🍁
My great grandparents lived nearby. Locals pronounced the town name as “POM-pea-eye”. The railroad was nicknamed “the try-weekly”. Because if it did get there one week, it might try to return the next week. Courtesy of Half Vast Flying
If you take 127 N. Exit M-57 and turn left at end of the ramp. Go roughly 2.5 miles to State Rd, turn right and it's about half a mile up the road. Watch out coming into town though. Gratiot Co. likes setting there to catch speeder's.
The railroad was called the Grand Trunk Railroad? Now a rock group from the seventies makes sense...Grand Funk Railroad! It only took about fifty years. 😏
if you go to flint( i believe it is on fenton rd) there is an overpass that says grand trunk railroad. i was raised there and went under that overpass hundreds of times. i don't know if it is still there. that's where they got the name for the band since they are all from around flint.
@@popofzero mark farner lived down davison rd from me. i went to school with his sister (sue). when i was in 11th grade don brewer lived across the street from me in knollwood apartments.
If the town worked it right History could be a draw for it. Fix up what buildings are left and have a tour going through each one. And of course play up each building is haunted. (even if they're not!)
I live here and there's nothing special to come here and see. It's boring and out of the way that's why the town died in the 1st place. It wasn't because the train stopped running State road still was the main road at the time for automobiles and horses.
I've lived in Michigan my whole life and everyone I know always pronounced it Pom Pea eye. But I've never asked anyone that lives there though so I could be wrong. Never mind, As I was writing this the credits where done rolling and I heard your correction.
@PopofZero isn't it amazing that some of these places are still here, with all of the corporate farms that now exist. My mother lived in one just like the video. All it had was a store and post office. Talk about your nightlife... or lack of it!
I think most people stop watching once they hear the "old" pronunciation so they don't catch on that you explain the different pronunciation later in the video.
Id love to live in a ghost town of pop 0. I would vote myself as mayor, comptroller. Hoa president etc then do what i liked with the paperwork to back it up.
Sounds a lot like today. Ones worth is based on material gain that is left behind. So I made it a point to have what I need that is of no value for anyone to fight over when my spirit leaves
The local woman is wrong. Pompeii is already a word, and it's pronounced PomPAY. You don't get to change the pronunciation of word that's been around for thousands of years just because you say so. It's. Pompeii- deal with it.
Wow.... It's obvious you didn't speak to anyone that knows much about the town because you didn't pronounce it right. Also that was an Odd Fellow and Rebekah hall.
Your near Lansing… gross overpopulated flat farmland. Boring dead brown landscape for most the year. I apologize for anyone who cant escape the armpit of America
@@user-bg2oi4bz3p why do you say that? Think I’d be scared of some hoodlums that couldn’t aim too save their own life 😂 I hope that’s not where your goin with this
I remember being a poor kid in Michigan, every Thanksgiving, and Christmas the Odd fellows brought us a big box of food. Thanks to those fine Gentlemen.
Thanks for your story
I grew up 6 miles from there. My step mother was born and raised a mile out of town. Not really a ghost town just a little town where most of the businesses closed up after the big box stores opened up.
Thanks for your reply.
I was a realtor for a while and tried to sell a house there once. As you can imagine, it didn't sell. We did several open houses during which my partner and I read and napped without a single visitor.
Thanks for watching.
@@popofzeroyour response is so lame dude
Sorry you feel that way
@@popofzero just this one, otherwise your video is cool
Thank you
The railroad still goes through pompeii but it hasn't been the grand trunk in decades. It is now the great lake central and it services the grain elevators in middleton.
Thanks for your reply
And the Grand Trunk Western itself is now gone; Canadian National absorbed it.
@@trainencounters586CN always owned it.
There is an abandoned Free Mason lodge above the old Farmer PEET meat market in Chesaning, MI. I only know because my uncle was helping a community manager restore the bottom half of the building into a community center. 140 N. Saginaw St, you can see there is a door that leads up to the top level. They removed the Free Mason insignia on the door but there is a stone about it with their writings. We explored the inside, there was a ceremony room, rooms with long closets for their robes, a dining room that converted to a basketball court, and a kitchen. There was a locked room in the attic, my uncle tried getting me to go but I was too spooked. 😆
The door is on the right side of the old PEET meat market, now called PEET Community Center.
Thanks!
@@Mattybot3000 Farmer Peet's? IDK. The spelling is correct.
My cousin Cody Lyons is from ches and Ovid Elsie. The owner of the lumber yard gave me some o scale buildings he's a nice man.
@johnramirez5996 that's awesome!
We passed the road going into Pompeii hundreds of times when we went to visit my grandpa. I always wanted to learn more about it so thank you!
Thanks for watching, and the comment. 😃
My family is from the area and my grandparents owned the grocery store for over 20yrs. It was named "MAHAR'S." They were both involved in the IOOF.
Thanks for the comment!
The corrected pronunciation of Pompeiī is the actual Latin pronunciation, Pom-pee-eye. Good for her.
If you watch and listen to the whole video, it is pronounced correctly.
New sub here..originally from Flint Mi, now a resident of Gladwin Mi. I love learning about my state so ty for the video! Keep up the good work! ❤
Thanks for your sub and comments it means a lot to us!
From Clare, got friends in Gladwin and its not a bad place, can't do Flint though, to many bad memories hanging out there as a late teen.
Pfft..don't we all?..lol
If you're interested in visiting other ghost towns in Michigan, you might want to take a ride up to the Thumb on the eastern part of the lower peninsula - they've got several towns that have populations of 100 or less - and some of them have great backstories. For example, Pinnebog (pronounced "pin-uh-bawg" - or as some old timers say, "pin-eh-Pog").The name is (I believe) Ojibwa and it was once a logging town. Or visit Huron City (a former Chautauqua-type community on the northeastern shore of Lake Huron with a very rich history) ; or Parisville (the first Polish-American farming settlement the US). Grindstone City is also quite interesting historically - it was a "quarry town" that still features several buildings made of the local limestone from which it takes its name. True ghost towns in the Thumb - that is, towns that used to be, but are no longer - would include Port Crescent (an old lumber port near present-day Port Austin). Most of Port Crescent's remaining buildings were moved to Port Austin in the early 20th century when the State decided to use the land for a park, but the graveyard is still intact as is the old sawmill chimney which is located in Port Crescent State Park - the beach is fabulous! And then there's the old Ora Labora site (which was a religious community - the name means "Pray and Work") located near the little town of Bay Port, where they manufactured some of the original brick that you can still see in the the older 19th century buildings that dot the farmland of the Thumb. I could go on, because this just scratches the surface. Finally, outside the Thumb, let me suggest Hell, Michigan - you can always go to Hell for fun and have a drink at the Dam Site Inn. Keep up the good work. Michigan always has good stories to tell.
Thanks for the comment 👍
There was a series of books written in late 60's- early 70's called The Ghost Towns of Michigan. Michigan seems to be home for a huge number of ghost towns. Defining ghost towns as towns that existed and are no longer or somewhat abandoned. In northern lower MI lumbering towns were abandoned after the trees were all cut, or burned down then not rebuilt. The UP had mining towns, mines close towns disappear. Another common way towns disappear is the railroad ignores them and goes through a town a few miles away, without the railroad people and business leave. There is another type of ghost town that isn't talked about much and that is the shanty town that would spring up on the outskirts of cities. With higher income jobs and the invention of the bulldozer these disappeared in the early 20th. century.
When I was a child in the 60s my dad took us out to Grindstone city. At that time the ground was littered with grind stones of every size, I don't know if they were rejects or just unsold. I don't believe there are any remaining now.
Fayette is another..I've been there
@@rivjoy- I went there as a kid also, with my grandparents. I remember all the grind stones. I actually have one, it didn't come from Michigan, found it at an unauthorized dumping place, rural area of Tampa, still have.
Interesting about the IOOF lodge - a lot of fraternal organization lodge houses I have seen were above grocery stores
Good point, thanks for watching
In the western US, many fraternal organizations built 2 story lodges as well. Often, the ground floor would be used as a one room school that could convert on weekends to have dances or other town social events while the 2nd floor held the lodge.
@@TCW838 thanks we are working on getting out west.
I live in middleton and before we bought our house there was no houses for sale at the time but after we bought out a cpl went up for sale and sold. Interesting to see the video as i have passed through pompeii more times than i can even remember.
Thanks for watching and commenting
As someone who grew up there i just want to say It's pronounced pom pea eye
Thank you! That was driving me nuts😂
Watch and listen to the whole video, it's pronounced correctly later on in the video.
grew up in perrinton !!! back in 60,s-80,s !!!
Thanks for your reply! 👍
My ex bro and sis in law lived there. It’s a quiet little place.
"they didnt have spell check back then", love this
Thanks for reply
Very interesting but I couldn't take the repetitive music, it was like being on hold!....HELP!
Thanks for watching. You're not on hold anymore. 😀
I own an old IOOF building in downtown Perry, the main hall still had a stage, hidden door locks and a peep hole. There was a second smaller hall also for the order of the Eastern Stars.
Thanks for sharing 👍
Has anyone read, " Ghost towns of Michigan ", by Larry Wakefield? He tells of numerous towns, many of which were built up centered around the logging industry but when the logging died, so did the town and people moved on.
Interesting reading.
Thanks for the information.
People live next to Pompeii, like within a block…
Thanks for watching
ive known of this place for a while but never planned to visit. but one of the shots in the first min of the video i have been there. turns out i drove through it many times and its alot closer to where i live than i thought.
Thanks for the comment 👍
Great video! I live at the opposite end of the county, but I do occasionally drive through Pompeii on one of my backroads rambles; nice to encounter it here.
@@h.a.harris7423 Thanks for watching! 😃
New sub to yr channel.. Michigander here myself. Love learning more of my state
Thanks for the sub! We will do the same! We are looking forward to seeing your content.
Same.
Thanks for watching and subscribing.
Michigan is a corporation nothing else
I've been through there a million times and never knew anything about this town. It would be interesting to know why there are 3 little towns so close together, Pompeii, Perinton and Middleton
We can look into them.
Railroad went through there to service the grain elevators which in turn serviced the farmers back when these little villages were formed people didn't drive to the bigger towns. 5 miles was a long way with a horse cart or later a model T Ford. I'm 71 and I went to a one room school not too many miles north of Middleton in a berg called Houserville .it consisted of the school house, a general store, and the grange hall. A mile south of there at the corner of Washington road and Ely highway was the berg called Eugene it consisted of a blacksmith shop and a general store. The store at Eugene is now a home and the schoolhouse at houserville has been converted to a home the store was closed around 1965 and torn down shortly after, the grange hall is still standing but the roof is in bad shape so it probably won't last.
Thanks for that.
And Fulton highschool
@@jenemcik good question 🤔
Interesting channel, just found it today. I was born and grew up in Michigan, Rochester. Left in the amearly 80's for Florida. But Michigan is my home state and proud of it.
Thanks for your comment!
Elderly Instruments in Old Town Lansing is an old IOOF building.
Thanks for the comment.
Definitely don’t speed through this town. Gratiot county sheriff’s love to hang out in this area looking for speeding and drunk drivers.
YOUVE BEEN WARNED
Thanks for the tip and reply
Also, maybe a better description of a ghost town (for individuals upset at the terminology you used) is a town whose economic activity that supported it (usually industrial or agricultural) has failed or ended for any reason and resulted in a substantial loss of residency.
Thank you
I can't tell you how many times I've traveled 127, well before they created the highway between Ithaca and Lansing, and had zero clue this place existed. Wild. Good content.
Thanks, we appreciate your kind words! ❤️
The downtown Buffalo wild wings is in a building that has oddfellows on facade in detroit,same exact color brick
That's weird, that fir the comment.
FYI If you turned the background music up just a bit more, those of us that are older and hard of hearing ,couldn't understand you at all
Hmm, it is fine on our end.
When I was a little kid, my great grandparents lived not very far from POM-pea-eye. The railroad was nicknamed as the Try Weekly. If it got there one week, it would try to get back the next.
Courtesy of Half Vast Flying
@jackvoss5841 thanks for the story
Thanks for this! Every summer I come back from CA to stay at the cottage my grampa built near 127 and Snowbowl Road (a few miles south of Houghton Lake). We drive right past this place. Definitely going to visit next time!
You're welcome, and thanks for watching!
@RaymondPeckIII...hey your grandpa's cabin isn't to far from my mothers place. She's off of 75 & exit 227 Houghton Lake. I absolutely love the area...especially during autumn, absolutely breathtaking.🍁
Cranberry lake here.
I live near here and I didn’t even know some of this history.
Pom-pea-eye.
Thanks for watching
Wow very cool 😎. Thanks for the cool information & footage. New sub here 🤘😊
Thank you! Welcome aboard.
@@popofzero you're welcome 🤘😊
Neat and informative video! New sub here❤
Thanks, and welcome! ❤️
I live in Grand Rapids! Haven’t heard this story! Thanks for sharing
@fikustoast5118 😊 Thanks for watching!
I’m glad you got the pronunciation correct in the end! I was about to stroke out hearing it said the wrong way. Pom-pee-eye…. Not Pom-pay
Thanks for watching, especially to the end. 😃
My great grandparents lived nearby. Locals pronounced the town name as “POM-pea-eye”. The railroad was nicknamed “the try-weekly”. Because if it did get there one week, it might try to return the next week.
Courtesy of Half Vast Flying
Thanks for the story
Thank you to the speaker for not using the local pronunciation.
Loved the video. We live in a ghost town in NE Michigan where the railroad used to end. 😄
Thanks, we have more ghost town videos on our page
I lived in Baldwin and as a kid their were a bunch of abandoned houses in the woods.
Thanks for the comment.
I got dupped into some property in Idlewild
Thanks for your story
I’m legit only a few minutes from this town I’m gonna have to check it out!!!! Thank you!!!!
You're welcome.
Where is this city located at in Michigan at ... ok 😢sad to know that this city is know more.
Thanks for the reply, it is north of Lansing.
It's still there.
@backwoodshillbilly3971 Yes, it is, and thanks for watching.
It is in Gratiot County. Couple miles north of M57. If I remember correctly.
If you take 127 N. Exit M-57 and turn left at end of the ramp. Go roughly 2.5 miles to State Rd, turn right and it's about half a mile up the road. Watch out coming into town though. Gratiot Co. likes setting there to catch speeder's.
Nice job. From a fellow Michigander.
Thanks for the comment, we have more videos on Michigan topics over at our page.
The railroad was called the Grand Trunk Railroad? Now a rock group from the seventies makes sense...Grand Funk Railroad! It only took about fifty years. 😏
Good band, they're from our hometown.
if you go to flint( i believe it is on fenton rd) there is an overpass that says grand trunk railroad. i was raised there and went under that overpass hundreds of times. i don't know if it is still there. that's where they got the name for the band since they are all from around flint.
You are correct, and if you look, the bands names are on the bridge also.
@@popofzero mark farner lived down davison rd from me. i went to school with his sister (sue). when i was in 11th grade don brewer lived across the street from me in knollwood apartments.
no they call it pom pe i around here. my dads family lived there back in the day
Again, watch the whole video.
There is some old odd fellows paperwork in the attic of Devon title in Kalkaska. As of 2015
@andrewmaynard6693 thanks for the reply
I lived in Pompeii for 3 years. Went to fulton schools. Did not know any of this.
Thanks for watching
I live in Michigan; thanks for the vidro 📹. Wish there was more to it, though.
Thanks for watching and the comment.
I'm coming to Michigan soon. I might go out and check this out.
Thanks for watching
Cool video. I always wondered the history of that place.
Thanks for watching
I usually don't complain but the music is so ominous I just can't even listen to the video it's scaring the crap out of me
Sorry, but I guess the music did its job.
Keep up the creative content brother
Thank you, but it's a couple of people that help.
Thanks. We work hard on these videos
The music on the background is a hand pan
😊
Very cool location to explore ❤
@@BytownUrbex it was!
@@popofzero apparently alotttttttt of cool spots all over east coast USA. I'm in Ottawa 🇨🇦 personally
@@BytownUrbex unfortunately we m9ved to Tennessee, but we will be filming some locations down here.
I was hoping this was about the building in the thumbnail
A follower made that for us
me who lives a mile away from pompeii🤨
Thank you for the reply
If the town worked it right History could be a draw for it. Fix up what buildings are left and have a tour going through each one. And of course play up each building is haunted. (even if they're not!)
Thanks for watching
I live here and there's nothing special to come here and see. It's boring and out of the way that's why the town died in the 1st place. It wasn't because the train stopped running State road still was the main road at the time for automobiles and horses.
So what was the secret and the warning for?
Did you watch it?
Pom Pee Eye....got it, local woman! Right in the eye!
Thanks for watching. 😃
Can you do a video of Painesdale, MI in the U.P.?
We will look into it. Thanks for the reply.
I've lived in Michigan my whole life and everyone I know always pronounced it Pom Pea eye. But I've never asked anyone that lives there though so I could be wrong. Never mind, As I was writing this the credits where done rolling and I heard your correction.
Thanks for watching
Just a mail stop. Indiana is full of places just like this
Thanks for not dropping off bills and the comment.
@PopofZero isn't it amazing that some of these places are still here, with all of the corporate farms that now exist. My mother lived in one just like the video. All it had was a store and post office. Talk about your nightlife... or lack of it!
Nightlife was a party in the corn field
I think most people stop watching once they hear the "old" pronunciation so they don't catch on that you explain the different pronunciation later in the video.
Thanks.
As a local, we actually pronounce it as it’s spelled. Which is wrong but we do it anyways. 🤣pom-pee-I
Thanks, we pronounced it correctly later in the video.
I came here for this comment 👍🏼
I’m from Michigan and have never heard it pronounced pom-pee-eye. Doesn’t make it not so just news to me.
Thanks for watching.
I have family that live in Pompeii and Ithaca
Thanks for watching
not pronounced like town in italy. pronounced like pomp p eye.
Watch again the 6 25 mark we pronounced it correctly
I want to live there
Thanks for watching, I'm sure there are places around there you could live at.
M-57 and m-27 which is now us-127
Good to know
Id love to live in a ghost town of pop 0. I would vote myself as mayor, comptroller. Hoa president etc then do what i liked with the paperwork to back it up.
We would vote for you! 😃
You have the pronunciation wrong, is pomp-pea-eye. This is coming who grew up 5 miles east of there in Ashley.
Did you watch the whole video? We did pronounce it correctly.
The town is pronounced pomp e I not as you are saying it.by husband owned a gas station there for many years. Its gone now.
Watch the whole video. It is pronounced correctly later.
6:20
@@popofzero this is what happens when people watch 2 minutes and drop a comment.
Thank you, very interesting.
Sounds a lot like today. Ones worth is based on material gain that is left behind. So I made it a point to have what I need that is of no value for anyone to fight over when my spirit leaves
Thanks for watching
Ppl live there population is about 200 to 300
It was where we went to break most rules!
Thanks
It's actually pronounced pom-pe-i . I live about 10 minutes from there. In Carson City Crystal.
Did you watch the whole video?
@@popofzero yes I did and since I grew up around there why wouldn't I.
@johnramirez5996 because we did pronounce it correctly later in the video.
@@popofzero I know later in video. Cpl times.
would have been nice to hear the vid.....
Everything thing is good on our end.
You didn’t talk to a local..it’s pronounced pomp-e-eye not like the volcano.
@@RebelCanners we did, but I bet you didn't watch the whole video.
@ actually I did but my daughter did distract me from it to be honest I may have missed that part.
@RebelCanners ok, no problem, it was toward the end. Thanks for watching. 😃
@RebelCanners it's at the 6:17 mark 😃
It is pronounced Pom-pee-i. You are driving me nuts with this mispronunciations!!
Listen to the whole video.
My grandmother grew up there, and yes it’s pronounced ee i
We referred to the proper name later in the video
better research better it is not a ghost town.
Please watch the whole video. We explained it in the beginning.
They’re odd fellows alright. Pagan worship with the same all seeing eye of Horas that the Masons worship.
Thanks for watching
Ghost town 😂 cmon bro I’ve been here 21 years and it’s no where near a ghost town 😂 have you even visited the small town?
Thanks for watching. We did explain the definition of a ghost town at the 25 second mark. Also, We filmed all the Pompeii footage ourselves.
What Pop of zero said. You should watch before you react.
Thanks for watching James
Glad you enjoyed it
Thanks for watching
It’s not pronounced like the destroyed city. It’s Pom-pee-eye. I wish I was kidding.
Thanks for watching. Did you watch the whole video?
It's pronounced Pomp E I, not like the town in Italy.
Watch the whole video
It's pronounced pompy-eye. Not like the historical ruins
We pronounced it correctly later in the video.
Odd fellows are weirdos
@nonyabeezwax8693 We don't judge here. 😃 Thanks for watching. 👍
It is pronounced POM PEE EYE
It is pronounced correctly at the 6 minute 25 second mark of the video.
I know right I knew a girl there satonka sue rip love funny how people get it wrong
LOL!!! Never gets old how some pronounce words & names from a language or dialect they’re unfamiliar with.
@BarryAdams777, please watch the video again. When you do, you will hear that we did pronounce it correctly.
@@popofzerobetter late than never 😂
The local woman is wrong. Pompeii is already a word, and it's pronounced PomPAY. You don't get to change the pronunciation of word that's been around for thousands of years just because you say so. It's. Pompeii- deal with it.
Thanks for watching
Or Planet P!
Thanks
🌴🫛 👁️
Nice!
It is pronounced pom pe i
@marcgow9544 watch the whole video please...
You're creepy music is way too loud hard to hear you
Thanks for the feedback, we will look into it.
Nothing odd about it... lbr
Thanks for watching
Local lady just can’t pronounce her own town lol
Thanks for watching
Pronouncing it wrong
Watch the whole video
Wow.... It's obvious you didn't speak to anyone that knows much about the town because you didn't pronounce it right. Also that was an Odd Fellow and Rebekah hall.
I didn't watch the whole thing before commenting. But I am pretty sure you had the wrong building for the hospital.
Thanks for watching. In the scene we were talking about the hospital, we didn't say the building was the hospital. Sorry for the confusion.
Pompy eye
It is pronounced correctly at the 6 minute 25 second mark of the video.
Pom-pee-eye
Watch the whole video b4 you comment.
Your near Lansing… gross overpopulated flat farmland. Boring dead brown landscape for most the year. I apologize for anyone who cant escape the armpit of America
We are sorry that you feel that way. We believe Michigan is awesome.
It can be gorgeous certain times of year just too many people in the lower half for me personally
Detroit would be a good place for you at night.
@@user-bg2oi4bz3p why do you say that? Think I’d be scared of some hoodlums that couldn’t aim too save their own life 😂 I hope that’s not where your goin with this
@@joh466 You would not last an hour; no survival instinct.
It is pronounced "POMPEE EYE"
@@Paul-ls3nn did you watch the whole video? We did pronounce it correctly.