Lost Settlements of the Appalachian Mountains Part 2: History, Wilderness of the Appalachians
Wilderness Outfitters of the Appalachian History travels back in to see lost places in the Appalachian mountains. Part 2
Жүктеу.....
Пікірлер: 216
@suemoore97825 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this vid. I’m a born and bred W.Va. Granny, now 80 yrs. old. It was wonderful to see the Mountains and hills and to hear you talk about the old days. Thanks again.
@citizen11149 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad to see young folks care about their heritage and the folk that have gone before.
@daisyflowers933410 жыл бұрын
Those homes were built. Still have the glass windows. They'll stand longer than the cheap stuff passing for expensive home today. The last two home were nice, in their time. The stuff in the kitchen were from a much newer era. Thank you for these great videos!.. very enjoyable.
@angelartistic30568 жыл бұрын
Had to comment again AMAZING ! Your family should be extremely proud of you. We have to know our past to know where we are going. You have a concrete foundation about this concept. So many people young and old could care less but those who do care like you do have a very good sense of self. Grandpa would be proud. Thanks . Loved it!
@brendapenny40946 жыл бұрын
It's 2017 as I'm watching, I loved hearing about your Grandpa. Thanks for making these, I love history. Hope you're doing well still, greetings from Northern Canada :)
@proaggregatesinc72689 жыл бұрын
Thank you for taking me on your walk with you.
@brubakersflatcakes97555 жыл бұрын
Great stuff. It's amazing that the artifacts of a life are still there in those last places. It's a real snapshot in time.
@Oldgittom7 жыл бұрын
Excellent! This is lost history being uncovered. The music is outstanding, too, being authentic - the real thing. Keep up Alan Lomax's work.
@clanrobertson72005 жыл бұрын
Great video. Where are you? I am amazed that the antiques haven’t been scavenged. I am 70 years old, born in WVA with family roots in SW Virginia that preceded Daniel Boone. I used to do a lot of camping from Georgia to Main and mountain stream fishing in the south. Keep up the good work.
@CathyCrothers3 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU for sharing your family history. Very educational AND just sweet history!
@licksnkicks10 жыл бұрын
Wow part 2 was just as good or better than part 1! You are such a natural at doing this. I love the historical detail that you give us the viewer! I am very impressed with your videos. Beautiful scenery. Great work!
@earthangel64807 жыл бұрын
EARTH ANGEL THANK YOU FOR A VERY INTERESTING VIDEO! THESE BEAUTIFUL AND WELL BUILT. BUILDINGS HAVE SURVIVED THROUGH THE TESTS OF TIME! IMAGINE LIFE IN THOSE DAYS!🤔👍😊😇
@trapperraptor73569 жыл бұрын
I look at this and feel for my folk that left this side of the pond to go to a strange land to make a new life,and yet i feel so proud of them,they built a Nation,,,,Respect,,,,,,, Trapper,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
@lauracolon227
5 жыл бұрын
My ancestors did so much work here in TN...it's amazing what these folks did in a lifetime!!! I have told my daughter how much they did to get what their children and grandchildren now enjoy...well some of them many have left but I came to where my granny and pa grew up and raised my daughter here...I'm more than humbled to say the least...pa and my dad worked for the railroads in Ohio where I grew up!!! Thanks and hey that mountain view area...stunning and majestic!!! Your blessed
@josephbragg63883 жыл бұрын
My dad logged near Smoke Hole in his younger days.Great video, love West Virginia. Thanks for taking an interest.
@danakoogler97925 жыл бұрын
This is fascinating! What a setup they had for their times! Thanks for taking time to preserve this history and share it. I enjoyed it very much.
@edhunley10 жыл бұрын
I'm sure that I just saw some of my family heritage. Maybe not the specific places, but the style of life in the Appalachia of the 1800's and 1900's. Thanks so much for doing this. I think it's very important to remember from where we came.
@harpguy19 жыл бұрын
They did great stone masonary work , thanx for the post
@intoleranttexan56873 жыл бұрын
I can not wait to visit Appalachia! I see great and mysterious things. The old world was something else, wasn’t it :) I hadn’t known about the Appalachian old world, I’m so excited about what I’m seeing! Thank you so much for sharing 🙏🌟
@devwreck19210 жыл бұрын
Awesome video, keep 'em coming. These ruins are so fascinating. So much interesting history in the mountains, and I feel like it gets overlooked too often. Glad you're bringing them to light.
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching.
@lbbradley55
5 жыл бұрын
@@wildernessfreak81 really enjoyed it. My son & I found a couple of these type old house places. 1 wile Hunting just outside of Fort Deposit Al. Was old well. & Foundation stones. ,& I was looking for Graveyard didn't find any there. Then another on top of Scott Mountain Al. Hunting & stone Pillars for House & Stone Well.& two children graves with small fence around it. Makes you wonder what years & how life passed them by. ! Had to have been very hard as they lost two children.
@liladove3468 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing! I miss the mountains. you are blessed to have grown up there.
@jenniferhudson61454 жыл бұрын
Your grandpa must have been a helluva man ... The youth of today couldn't begin to imagine how much back breaking labor it takes to clear land and make it so smooth and pretty...
@oldguy53710 жыл бұрын
enjoyed watching , you live in an area full of amazing history .. thanks for posting
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching.
@jimmyhappysmith2046 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your informative video. I appreciate your time to make this video.
@nangonzalez68469 жыл бұрын
I thoroughly enjoyed this. Thank you for sharing it.
@doberman1ism8 жыл бұрын
Wonderful presentation. Great video work. Reminds me of the hollers of Panther, West Virginia. My kin the Walker's live there. I have truly enjoyed the journey through the past.
@triciadold16543 жыл бұрын
I can remember walking in the hills of Pulaski County Kentucky and seeing rock walls like these. I never thought they were once houses. Great video
@icarusburning22085 жыл бұрын
Been back in these parts by the old hotel, taking cold spring road in from the gap. I absolutely enjoy the rejuvenated woods and history. Have since been to many places out west and the only place that compares to that wilderness is northern Minnesota on the border with canada.
@williamphelps24236 жыл бұрын
The holes in the side determine the amount of air you let in to maintain charcoal temperature by blocking the amount of air let in t to The chamber
@catheylunsford147
4 жыл бұрын
Moo
@susangibney38056 жыл бұрын
AMAZING structure! beautiful rock work. Thanks
@JanetWilham9 жыл бұрын
Oh please I beg you that if you value those old buildings and all you find to take great pictures of them with a drawn map location and dates and any more important information...then give this to your historical office and even burn all to a DVD or such and also send copy to your state. That way all will not be lost if in time you pass on it will not be lost. Also some states if they see a high importance will restore things as they were. I am a 65 year old granny and hillbilly and since the passing of all my family I really got into genealogy and history and even for other people along with documenting an old graveyard I found in the hills of West Virginia that had a generals name on the grave marker. Thanks for this wonderful video and watch for snakes and Bigfoot!!! Lol
@Meattrapper10 жыл бұрын
That's a really good video. We have an old Civil War Ironworks at Tannehill here in Alabama. Looks very similar. You have to admire what they built and got to work. Was a nice touch showing the map and then finding the remains in the woods. I really enjoy these types of historical videos.
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Hey, Thanks I plan on showing more settlements.
@sharonc74796 жыл бұрын
I loved walking out in the woods and finding old things...homes barn sheds creeks anything really..I use to do that on my Grandmothers property but it's not in our family any longer..,,I am no longer able to do those walks due to medical problems but I sure miss it.... love your videos and all the history you tell about it...Thanks so much for sharing
@jackstarnes9927 жыл бұрын
man that was so Interesting, I love mountain history, been to cades cove several times. thanks for posting
@hankfrankly72403 жыл бұрын
Another very interesting video. Thanks again.
@maggiereeves85855 жыл бұрын
This is a great video. Very interesting. I have seen that picture before and was impressed with your work. Thanks for posting.
@christihiatt34592 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for this excellent effort!
@shawn170326 жыл бұрын
Awesome video,it awesome that people like you keep the history alive
@angelartistic30568 жыл бұрын
wow this is awesome. Thank you for preserving this history
@kollerbrian3 жыл бұрын
A fine way to tour the wild. Not a happy place at night. Stay Safe at night, BAK
@BRUSHWOLF-qn6qh8 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video. Great Hisytory.
@cymoncyrado28796 жыл бұрын
13:22 this caught my eye....The Blue Eyed Six were a group of six men, all of them coincidentally blue-eyed, who were arrested and indicted on first degree murder charges in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania, in 1879.
@sirdukeusa3289
5 жыл бұрын
TY for telling who the Blue-eyed Six were, I was wondering.
@jeffreybaker1725
Жыл бұрын
This young man was exploring in Lebanon County in Cold Spring Township near the town of Gold Mine. Delorme Atlas Pennsylvania page 69. The Appalachian Trail is nearby
@ThePickleSquad24014 жыл бұрын
You really need to run the Equinox 800 over those areas. These really are some amazing pieces of HISTORY you are showing! Thank you.
@licksnkicks10 жыл бұрын
OMG the view at 11:26 is breath taking! Beautiful videography! Such history. Thanks for sharing with Canada to!
@wdavisga8 жыл бұрын
You should travel to abandoned community known locally as “Silvers Town.” It is located in the East Tennessee mountains in the southern part of Unicoi County,near a village called “Flag Pond;” at the last exit off I-26 before entering North Carolina. In Flag Pond, take the “Rice Creek” road south a couple of miles and ask for directions to Silvers Town. You will have to leave your vehicle parked on Rice Creek road and hike up the side of a mountain to get to Silver’s Town. There,you will find intact houses, stores, a church, a school, a cemetery and various other buildings. Inside the houses, you will find home made rustic furniture with dishes and cups on the tables, farming tools outside, etc. It is not commerciled, but nobody can explain why the residents just up and left the area, leaving their belongings behind.
@sammalone9527
6 жыл бұрын
i know where that is..im from carter co..just next door
@trentlaborde9946
6 жыл бұрын
Can i live in silvercity
@trentlaborde9946
6 жыл бұрын
Can i live in an abandond town
@trentlaborde9946
6 жыл бұрын
Mr davis can anyone move to silver town
@dianaschmitt8854
6 жыл бұрын
Could have been a dioxin site?
@keithgood71818 жыл бұрын
Awesome video!!! Keep up the good work, I would love to see more!!
@jwgbmp404 жыл бұрын
Some of that old stuff likely built by Scotish Highlanders that migrated over in the late 1700's.. fascinating history
@hogcat8586 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot for the videos. What a great story them places could tell if they could speak. Really enjoyed them.
@MegaMarineRecon10 жыл бұрын
That is so cool you show the old railroads and homes. I like the old history of our country. Thanks for the tour, and keep up the good work.
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching.
@RustyNail58568 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video. Great History. keep up the good work.
@JustMe-uc1lt3 жыл бұрын
That was fascinating, thank you. 🙂
@paulsharrow30044 жыл бұрын
Great series mr. Silk !
@servicarrider7 жыл бұрын
I really enjoy your videos. What you are doing here is a public service. Stay proud of who you are and where you came from.
@dorascott82868 жыл бұрын
Great job, thank you.....
@kimberleyakin24169 жыл бұрын
I LOVE IT! KEEP UM COMIN!
@kimberlywhistler68076 жыл бұрын
Beautiful stone work on those furnaces and bridge too. Ever feel like you were born about 150 years to late?
@IMZReady4Anything10 жыл бұрын
That was good stuff. I'd love to find an old house like that full of stuff. You can really get a sense of how they lived there.
@maryjohnsonscott2708 Жыл бұрын
Love this
@marilyngordy36705 жыл бұрын
This is so very interesting to me because my ancestors are from the mountains of NC. Thank you for keeping the old ways going?
@garychynne13776 жыл бұрын
thank yew for the series
@BeverlyM5210 жыл бұрын
I love your videos.
@jennyvanniekerk96002 жыл бұрын
I wud love to see some of those places restored to their former glory
@kyriljordanov20866 жыл бұрын
Thank you. I always liked this. We have some remains of old plantations in Mississippi but not much abandoned old settlements like this. I know of a few places along the Mississippi River which are abandoned towns but I think there's a lot more of this in the Apalachian Mountains.
@Chuckhall80883 жыл бұрын
Wow that was some cool old stone masonry work
@unanimous30047 жыл бұрын
I have read that before the Europeans arrived on this continent, between the Rocky Mountains and the Atlantic Ocean there was one "Uninterrupted" forest. Thanks for showing this good stuff.
@FrankGreenway7 жыл бұрын
I'm enjoying your videos, would love to see these places in person someday. BTW be careful walking around the woods, could step right into a old well that the wood has rotted away years ago
@TheCarpentersSon5 жыл бұрын
Really cool thanks
@alphawolftactical1604 жыл бұрын
Really cool. People had to be completely self-sufficient and ingenious
@marthacain14685 жыл бұрын
"...down in some alone valley, in a lonesome place, where the wild birds do whistle & their notes stir up the trees, I loved pretty Saro but I bade her adu~tho I'll love that bright angel, wherever I roam..." Pretty Saro, from my Laurel Ridge, mountain home, S.W. Pa.
@mildredrharmon4032 Жыл бұрын
Amen my daddy probably cut some of those he worked at sawmills literally all his life! 🥰🙌🏼❤️🙏🏼 my moms uncle Dolph worked with iron! I have an old stool/chair that he made! ❤️ I’ve got family from Clark’s creek n.c. Every house we ever lived in my daddy would build a fence or a rock wall! ❤️😊
@beckyjustice42697 жыл бұрын
5:35 those are definitely cisterns, not wells. They caught spring water from the earth's natural springs.
@erbhotrod6100
5 жыл бұрын
They were the out houses for the Hotel.
@phyllisarrington7436
3 жыл бұрын
We called them spring boxes. Cisterns were boxes with a loose cover that caught water off of roofs. The water was dipped or hand carried or gravity fed to use in the house for everything needin water...it was even fit to drink. I live in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Western North Carolina (aka the southern Appalachians)
@t.w.milburn826410 жыл бұрын
'mornin 2 ya, Branden; Many thanks 4 taking us along on a wonderful journey through your History,& 'ole sites from yesteryear.Wonderfully done video,Looking forward 2 the next part. Hoping this finds U & Yours safe well & warm. Happy Trails From The Maritimes In Canada A.T.B. Terry " GOD BLESS "
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching and all your comments.
@RevampastryBlog8 жыл бұрын
the last witch hunter or hansel and gretel must be filmed here..perfect location..the well, the well, the well..always well :D curious"
@NSTRAPPERHUNTER10 жыл бұрын
Awesome footage Brandon. Very interesting
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching and all your comments.
@chintasrvvegankitchen77615 жыл бұрын
At 12 min and 08 seconds you can see the old bed posts against the wall from the window shot. Amazing.
@keithmartin78315 жыл бұрын
The big building was a girls finishing school. The concrete trough was the early sewer system. Dump your slop jars and they would flood it at a certain times washing the night soil away.
@sackett6810 жыл бұрын
Very cool!
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
thanks for watching
@pigoff1238 жыл бұрын
I wish someone would restore the house
@Possumn11385 жыл бұрын
In central NC, as kids, if we saw black snails in the water, we knew it was safe to drink. And we filled our canteens there.(but naturally I would not drink it today). I assume they are the same snails you'd see in some aquariums. But if the water was bad, they were the first to go.
@Possumn1138
5 жыл бұрын
Access to safe surface water like this drastically decreased in the 60's and early 70's both here and in the blue ridge mountains as well. Once people would drive to the mountains to fill jugs with mountain spring water by the side of the parkway. The use of shallow wells is still declining here due to concerns of over population.
@brianelkins86045 жыл бұрын
I love the Applicatia. My blood comes from all over Europe but this is my home. It runs threw my veins more than anything else.
@bobreeder24415 жыл бұрын
What a great find. Joseph Raber victim of the Blue Eyed Six. Read up on the history of this. Very interesting.
@TheBoone577 жыл бұрын
Great footage! The kids narration was amateur but genuine and heartfelt. This was fun to watch.
@JRoberts126010 жыл бұрын
Dude! that's some cool stuff!
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching.
@ergot577 жыл бұрын
Just happened up on this. Thanks.
@tapolna7 жыл бұрын
It's nice comparing drawings and maps of the past to the present. I imagine there's a lot of such comparisons we can make.
@HE_HATE_ME5 жыл бұрын
cool history
@trosanelli10 жыл бұрын
I like seeing this stuff. It sounds like you live in the Hershey, PA area. Is that right? I live pretty close. I am to the west close to the Delaware River.
@IMZReady4Anything10 жыл бұрын
I'd love to know how those old furnaces worked. You can find them all over southern PA. Though I don't think I've ever come across one that big
@TheSWolfe8 жыл бұрын
Many of the decommissioned rail lines in northern WV have been converted into recreational hiking/biking trails, which I find funny because when I was growing up, my father & I, and later my friends & I, used to walk those same tracks for fun. The only difference now, is, there's no danger of getting hit by a train or falling through the ties while crossing rail bridges. The old Rt. 7 rail trail, I believe, goes all the way from the headwaters of the Decker's Creek watershed in Reedsville/Arthurdale/Masontown? to downtown Morgantown, where the Creek enters into the Monongahela River. Midway somewhere, near Greer Limestone, there's an old road that turns off Rt. 7 heading away from the trail and the Creek and way back into the mountains. Eventually, the road morphs from paved, to gravel, to dirt, and then into trail. If you walk aways, you'll come to an old spring that's been tapped; the water continually trickles from a metal pipe sticking out of a rock in the mountainside down to a small stone basin, the overflow being absorbed into the muddy, pot-holed, fern-lined path at your feet. Sweetest water I ever tasted. Don't know if this place even exists anymore. My daddy took me there just to show it to me & take a sip one summer afternoon. He grew up roaming those WV mountainsides & I loved to explore. He had nothing of monetary value to bequeath me at his death, which just makes me value the paths, trails, old abandoned farmsteads, lagoons, rock formations and long-unused roads to yesterday that he shared with me on our long walks together all the more.
@RobD-jq7ry
2 жыл бұрын
Anywhere near wheeling wv by chance?
@TheSWolfe
2 жыл бұрын
@@RobD-jq7ry Not too far from, but more Monongalia, Preston & Marion Counties, altho I was born nearby & raised slightly south of.
@RobD-jq7ry
2 жыл бұрын
Cool. Thx for getting back to me. I enjoyed reading your post.
@cindys18197 жыл бұрын
Hey, THIS is the real America folks....
@sirdukeusa32895 жыл бұрын
What state are you in? We have a Sharps mtn in WV. You usually get good water from the mountains. Could you imagine the work that went into honing out those old stones? @12:28, I'd love that old cook stove and that old wash tub in the background. Oh my that old heat stove @13:06. What a gem. What is "The Blue-eyed Six?". Liked and subbed, I love this type of history. TFS
@peterd966 жыл бұрын
nice job.
@rachelginter36164 жыл бұрын
In Owingsville , Kentucky there is an old iron works furness if your interested in finding it..it's actually not too hard to find or get..
@kargudin7 жыл бұрын
very cool dude
@SirTesoroz10 жыл бұрын
Looks like some locations here in N. GA. Very cool video.
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching.
@jnreedy9 жыл бұрын
Great Videos, How did Cut the rock to make the walls or is it brick from mud?
@dianahowell40113 жыл бұрын
Wise young man.
@redrockasrama72157 жыл бұрын
super cool
@WORRO10 жыл бұрын
Awesome video!
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching.
@KaterinaStClaire6 жыл бұрын
Lived close to Mt. Savage Furnace in Carter County, Kentucky. They had furnace days when I was growing up.
@52daytripper5 жыл бұрын
great video, that furnace is huge, who and how did they cut and place the stones? in NY where I lived there are old iron furnaces also, just like this one, huge
Пікірлер: 216
Thank you for this vid. I’m a born and bred W.Va. Granny, now 80 yrs. old. It was wonderful to see the Mountains and hills and to hear you talk about the old days. Thanks again.
I'm so glad to see young folks care about their heritage and the folk that have gone before.
Those homes were built. Still have the glass windows. They'll stand longer than the cheap stuff passing for expensive home today. The last two home were nice, in their time. The stuff in the kitchen were from a much newer era. Thank you for these great videos!.. very enjoyable.
Had to comment again AMAZING ! Your family should be extremely proud of you. We have to know our past to know where we are going. You have a concrete foundation about this concept. So many people young and old could care less but those who do care like you do have a very good sense of self. Grandpa would be proud. Thanks . Loved it!
It's 2017 as I'm watching, I loved hearing about your Grandpa. Thanks for making these, I love history. Hope you're doing well still, greetings from Northern Canada :)
Thank you for taking me on your walk with you.
Great stuff. It's amazing that the artifacts of a life are still there in those last places. It's a real snapshot in time.
Excellent! This is lost history being uncovered. The music is outstanding, too, being authentic - the real thing. Keep up Alan Lomax's work.
Great video. Where are you? I am amazed that the antiques haven’t been scavenged. I am 70 years old, born in WVA with family roots in SW Virginia that preceded Daniel Boone. I used to do a lot of camping from Georgia to Main and mountain stream fishing in the south. Keep up the good work.
THANK YOU for sharing your family history. Very educational AND just sweet history!
Wow part 2 was just as good or better than part 1! You are such a natural at doing this. I love the historical detail that you give us the viewer! I am very impressed with your videos. Beautiful scenery. Great work!
EARTH ANGEL THANK YOU FOR A VERY INTERESTING VIDEO! THESE BEAUTIFUL AND WELL BUILT. BUILDINGS HAVE SURVIVED THROUGH THE TESTS OF TIME! IMAGINE LIFE IN THOSE DAYS!🤔👍😊😇
I look at this and feel for my folk that left this side of the pond to go to a strange land to make a new life,and yet i feel so proud of them,they built a Nation,,,,Respect,,,,,,, Trapper,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
@lauracolon227
5 жыл бұрын
My ancestors did so much work here in TN...it's amazing what these folks did in a lifetime!!! I have told my daughter how much they did to get what their children and grandchildren now enjoy...well some of them many have left but I came to where my granny and pa grew up and raised my daughter here...I'm more than humbled to say the least...pa and my dad worked for the railroads in Ohio where I grew up!!! Thanks and hey that mountain view area...stunning and majestic!!! Your blessed
My dad logged near Smoke Hole in his younger days.Great video, love West Virginia. Thanks for taking an interest.
This is fascinating! What a setup they had for their times! Thanks for taking time to preserve this history and share it. I enjoyed it very much.
I'm sure that I just saw some of my family heritage. Maybe not the specific places, but the style of life in the Appalachia of the 1800's and 1900's. Thanks so much for doing this. I think it's very important to remember from where we came.
They did great stone masonary work , thanx for the post
I can not wait to visit Appalachia! I see great and mysterious things. The old world was something else, wasn’t it :) I hadn’t known about the Appalachian old world, I’m so excited about what I’m seeing! Thank you so much for sharing 🙏🌟
Awesome video, keep 'em coming. These ruins are so fascinating. So much interesting history in the mountains, and I feel like it gets overlooked too often. Glad you're bringing them to light.
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching.
@lbbradley55
5 жыл бұрын
@@wildernessfreak81 really enjoyed it. My son & I found a couple of these type old house places. 1 wile Hunting just outside of Fort Deposit Al. Was old well. & Foundation stones. ,& I was looking for Graveyard didn't find any there. Then another on top of Scott Mountain Al. Hunting & stone Pillars for House & Stone Well.& two children graves with small fence around it. Makes you wonder what years & how life passed them by. ! Had to have been very hard as they lost two children.
Thanks for sharing! I miss the mountains. you are blessed to have grown up there.
Your grandpa must have been a helluva man ... The youth of today couldn't begin to imagine how much back breaking labor it takes to clear land and make it so smooth and pretty...
enjoyed watching , you live in an area full of amazing history .. thanks for posting
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching.
Thank you so much for your informative video. I appreciate your time to make this video.
I thoroughly enjoyed this. Thank you for sharing it.
Wonderful presentation. Great video work. Reminds me of the hollers of Panther, West Virginia. My kin the Walker's live there. I have truly enjoyed the journey through the past.
I can remember walking in the hills of Pulaski County Kentucky and seeing rock walls like these. I never thought they were once houses. Great video
Been back in these parts by the old hotel, taking cold spring road in from the gap. I absolutely enjoy the rejuvenated woods and history. Have since been to many places out west and the only place that compares to that wilderness is northern Minnesota on the border with canada.
The holes in the side determine the amount of air you let in to maintain charcoal temperature by blocking the amount of air let in t to The chamber
@catheylunsford147
4 жыл бұрын
Moo
AMAZING structure! beautiful rock work. Thanks
Oh please I beg you that if you value those old buildings and all you find to take great pictures of them with a drawn map location and dates and any more important information...then give this to your historical office and even burn all to a DVD or such and also send copy to your state. That way all will not be lost if in time you pass on it will not be lost. Also some states if they see a high importance will restore things as they were. I am a 65 year old granny and hillbilly and since the passing of all my family I really got into genealogy and history and even for other people along with documenting an old graveyard I found in the hills of West Virginia that had a generals name on the grave marker. Thanks for this wonderful video and watch for snakes and Bigfoot!!! Lol
That's a really good video. We have an old Civil War Ironworks at Tannehill here in Alabama. Looks very similar. You have to admire what they built and got to work. Was a nice touch showing the map and then finding the remains in the woods. I really enjoy these types of historical videos.
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Hey, Thanks I plan on showing more settlements.
I loved walking out in the woods and finding old things...homes barn sheds creeks anything really..I use to do that on my Grandmothers property but it's not in our family any longer..,,I am no longer able to do those walks due to medical problems but I sure miss it.... love your videos and all the history you tell about it...Thanks so much for sharing
man that was so Interesting, I love mountain history, been to cades cove several times. thanks for posting
Another very interesting video. Thanks again.
This is a great video. Very interesting. I have seen that picture before and was impressed with your work. Thanks for posting.
Thanks so much for this excellent effort!
Awesome video,it awesome that people like you keep the history alive
wow this is awesome. Thank you for preserving this history
A fine way to tour the wild. Not a happy place at night. Stay Safe at night, BAK
Thank you for this video. Great Hisytory.
13:22 this caught my eye....The Blue Eyed Six were a group of six men, all of them coincidentally blue-eyed, who were arrested and indicted on first degree murder charges in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania, in 1879.
@sirdukeusa3289
5 жыл бұрын
TY for telling who the Blue-eyed Six were, I was wondering.
@jeffreybaker1725
Жыл бұрын
This young man was exploring in Lebanon County in Cold Spring Township near the town of Gold Mine. Delorme Atlas Pennsylvania page 69. The Appalachian Trail is nearby
You really need to run the Equinox 800 over those areas. These really are some amazing pieces of HISTORY you are showing! Thank you.
OMG the view at 11:26 is breath taking! Beautiful videography! Such history. Thanks for sharing with Canada to!
You should travel to abandoned community known locally as “Silvers Town.” It is located in the East Tennessee mountains in the southern part of Unicoi County,near a village called “Flag Pond;” at the last exit off I-26 before entering North Carolina. In Flag Pond, take the “Rice Creek” road south a couple of miles and ask for directions to Silvers Town. You will have to leave your vehicle parked on Rice Creek road and hike up the side of a mountain to get to Silver’s Town. There,you will find intact houses, stores, a church, a school, a cemetery and various other buildings. Inside the houses, you will find home made rustic furniture with dishes and cups on the tables, farming tools outside, etc. It is not commerciled, but nobody can explain why the residents just up and left the area, leaving their belongings behind.
@sammalone9527
6 жыл бұрын
i know where that is..im from carter co..just next door
@trentlaborde9946
6 жыл бұрын
Can i live in silvercity
@trentlaborde9946
6 жыл бұрын
Can i live in an abandond town
@trentlaborde9946
6 жыл бұрын
Mr davis can anyone move to silver town
@dianaschmitt8854
6 жыл бұрын
Could have been a dioxin site?
Awesome video!!! Keep up the good work, I would love to see more!!
Some of that old stuff likely built by Scotish Highlanders that migrated over in the late 1700's.. fascinating history
Thanks a lot for the videos. What a great story them places could tell if they could speak. Really enjoyed them.
That is so cool you show the old railroads and homes. I like the old history of our country. Thanks for the tour, and keep up the good work.
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching.
Thank you for this video. Great History. keep up the good work.
That was fascinating, thank you. 🙂
Great series mr. Silk !
I really enjoy your videos. What you are doing here is a public service. Stay proud of who you are and where you came from.
Great job, thank you.....
I LOVE IT! KEEP UM COMIN!
Beautiful stone work on those furnaces and bridge too. Ever feel like you were born about 150 years to late?
That was good stuff. I'd love to find an old house like that full of stuff. You can really get a sense of how they lived there.
Love this
This is so very interesting to me because my ancestors are from the mountains of NC. Thank you for keeping the old ways going?
thank yew for the series
I love your videos.
I wud love to see some of those places restored to their former glory
Thank you. I always liked this. We have some remains of old plantations in Mississippi but not much abandoned old settlements like this. I know of a few places along the Mississippi River which are abandoned towns but I think there's a lot more of this in the Apalachian Mountains.
Wow that was some cool old stone masonry work
I have read that before the Europeans arrived on this continent, between the Rocky Mountains and the Atlantic Ocean there was one "Uninterrupted" forest. Thanks for showing this good stuff.
I'm enjoying your videos, would love to see these places in person someday. BTW be careful walking around the woods, could step right into a old well that the wood has rotted away years ago
Really cool thanks
Really cool. People had to be completely self-sufficient and ingenious
"...down in some alone valley, in a lonesome place, where the wild birds do whistle & their notes stir up the trees, I loved pretty Saro but I bade her adu~tho I'll love that bright angel, wherever I roam..." Pretty Saro, from my Laurel Ridge, mountain home, S.W. Pa.
Amen my daddy probably cut some of those he worked at sawmills literally all his life! 🥰🙌🏼❤️🙏🏼 my moms uncle Dolph worked with iron! I have an old stool/chair that he made! ❤️ I’ve got family from Clark’s creek n.c. Every house we ever lived in my daddy would build a fence or a rock wall! ❤️😊
5:35 those are definitely cisterns, not wells. They caught spring water from the earth's natural springs.
@erbhotrod6100
5 жыл бұрын
They were the out houses for the Hotel.
@phyllisarrington7436
3 жыл бұрын
We called them spring boxes. Cisterns were boxes with a loose cover that caught water off of roofs. The water was dipped or hand carried or gravity fed to use in the house for everything needin water...it was even fit to drink. I live in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Western North Carolina (aka the southern Appalachians)
'mornin 2 ya, Branden; Many thanks 4 taking us along on a wonderful journey through your History,& 'ole sites from yesteryear.Wonderfully done video,Looking forward 2 the next part. Hoping this finds U & Yours safe well & warm. Happy Trails From The Maritimes In Canada A.T.B. Terry " GOD BLESS "
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching and all your comments.
the last witch hunter or hansel and gretel must be filmed here..perfect location..the well, the well, the well..always well :D curious"
Awesome footage Brandon. Very interesting
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching and all your comments.
At 12 min and 08 seconds you can see the old bed posts against the wall from the window shot. Amazing.
The big building was a girls finishing school. The concrete trough was the early sewer system. Dump your slop jars and they would flood it at a certain times washing the night soil away.
Very cool!
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
thanks for watching
I wish someone would restore the house
In central NC, as kids, if we saw black snails in the water, we knew it was safe to drink. And we filled our canteens there.(but naturally I would not drink it today). I assume they are the same snails you'd see in some aquariums. But if the water was bad, they were the first to go.
@Possumn1138
5 жыл бұрын
Access to safe surface water like this drastically decreased in the 60's and early 70's both here and in the blue ridge mountains as well. Once people would drive to the mountains to fill jugs with mountain spring water by the side of the parkway. The use of shallow wells is still declining here due to concerns of over population.
I love the Applicatia. My blood comes from all over Europe but this is my home. It runs threw my veins more than anything else.
What a great find. Joseph Raber victim of the Blue Eyed Six. Read up on the history of this. Very interesting.
Great footage! The kids narration was amateur but genuine and heartfelt. This was fun to watch.
Dude! that's some cool stuff!
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching.
Just happened up on this. Thanks.
It's nice comparing drawings and maps of the past to the present. I imagine there's a lot of such comparisons we can make.
cool history
I like seeing this stuff. It sounds like you live in the Hershey, PA area. Is that right? I live pretty close. I am to the west close to the Delaware River.
I'd love to know how those old furnaces worked. You can find them all over southern PA. Though I don't think I've ever come across one that big
Many of the decommissioned rail lines in northern WV have been converted into recreational hiking/biking trails, which I find funny because when I was growing up, my father & I, and later my friends & I, used to walk those same tracks for fun. The only difference now, is, there's no danger of getting hit by a train or falling through the ties while crossing rail bridges. The old Rt. 7 rail trail, I believe, goes all the way from the headwaters of the Decker's Creek watershed in Reedsville/Arthurdale/Masontown? to downtown Morgantown, where the Creek enters into the Monongahela River. Midway somewhere, near Greer Limestone, there's an old road that turns off Rt. 7 heading away from the trail and the Creek and way back into the mountains. Eventually, the road morphs from paved, to gravel, to dirt, and then into trail. If you walk aways, you'll come to an old spring that's been tapped; the water continually trickles from a metal pipe sticking out of a rock in the mountainside down to a small stone basin, the overflow being absorbed into the muddy, pot-holed, fern-lined path at your feet. Sweetest water I ever tasted. Don't know if this place even exists anymore. My daddy took me there just to show it to me & take a sip one summer afternoon. He grew up roaming those WV mountainsides & I loved to explore. He had nothing of monetary value to bequeath me at his death, which just makes me value the paths, trails, old abandoned farmsteads, lagoons, rock formations and long-unused roads to yesterday that he shared with me on our long walks together all the more.
@RobD-jq7ry
2 жыл бұрын
Anywhere near wheeling wv by chance?
@TheSWolfe
2 жыл бұрын
@@RobD-jq7ry Not too far from, but more Monongalia, Preston & Marion Counties, altho I was born nearby & raised slightly south of.
@RobD-jq7ry
2 жыл бұрын
Cool. Thx for getting back to me. I enjoyed reading your post.
Hey, THIS is the real America folks....
What state are you in? We have a Sharps mtn in WV. You usually get good water from the mountains. Could you imagine the work that went into honing out those old stones? @12:28, I'd love that old cook stove and that old wash tub in the background. Oh my that old heat stove @13:06. What a gem. What is "The Blue-eyed Six?". Liked and subbed, I love this type of history. TFS
nice job.
In Owingsville , Kentucky there is an old iron works furness if your interested in finding it..it's actually not too hard to find or get..
very cool dude
Looks like some locations here in N. GA. Very cool video.
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching.
Great Videos, How did Cut the rock to make the walls or is it brick from mud?
Wise young man.
super cool
Awesome video!
@wildernessfreak81
10 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching.
Lived close to Mt. Savage Furnace in Carter County, Kentucky. They had furnace days when I was growing up.
great video, that furnace is huge, who and how did they cut and place the stones? in NY where I lived there are old iron furnaces also, just like this one, huge