Louisiana Purchase Expo: St Louis Part III - Rarest, Most Unique, & Forgotten Photographs from 1904

Ойын-сауық

Howdy ya’ll! Are you ready for Part 3?
Today we will showcase the last roughly 150 unique images I have accumulated of The Louisiana Purchase Expo in St Louis, Missouri. These photographs were all taken in 1904 during the Expo, and I believe them to be both rare, and overall revealing, to the questionable nature which we have been presented with.
We will also briefly discuss the current narrative, although this will be my second effort at recording the audio for this video. I’ve decided to leave my opinion, and this video, more open ended. I want you to be able to interpret these photographs on your own, and to deduce your own conclusions.
I’d love to hear what you think about the 1904 Worlds Fair in St Louis in the comments down below. This video will also showcase the one-off structures of the Worlds Fair which I have found. These one-off buildings have little to nothing written about them (all we seem to have are the 1 or 2 photographs).
So sit back, relax, and enjoy the overwhelmingly amazing architecture, and oldest HD images, of the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Expo in St Louis. Enjoy!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louisia...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Louis
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederi...

Пікірлер: 1 000

  • @erickeith1466
    @erickeith1466 Жыл бұрын

    My relatives are very skilled craftsman from Italy, many master carpenters. My great uncles could build amazing structures fast, but not this ornate. Also, this type of work requires very skilled craftsmanship that takes years of apprenticeship. The ideas that you could assemble so many highly skilled workers in an era where massive building all over the world was (allegedly) already taking place is the biggest question mark on how this was done. Also, consider the weather in St Louis is not great, which means you lose several months of construction due to winter weather. All of that plaster survived Missouri snow? This leads to the second big question, which is logistics. As others have mentioned, getting all the materials required would be a massive accomplishment just on it's own. Another question is how you supported an army of laborers. The only modern day country who has accomplished anything like this is China during the Beijing Olympics and we've all heard the stories on how that went. This is the most populace country with the benefit of unlimited funds and modern construction tools. America, at the time, had a relatively small population. Something is just not right here...

  • @bookofrevelation4924

    @bookofrevelation4924

    Жыл бұрын

    And that we aren't taught about this history in public schools, since President Eisenhower's Farewell Address? The skilled labor and wealth likely pumped in worldwide to make USA the new super power to democratize world overthrowing all kings, to come, could make it possible with the help of much pre-made structures incorporated?

  • @jacobbrassard2776

    @jacobbrassard2776

    Жыл бұрын

    Shanghai 2010 expo is another example. Realy the only place worlds fair that lives up to the old worlds fairs

  • @shucksma6337

    @shucksma6337

    Жыл бұрын

    These generations were very easy to control and manipulate .It seems after Albert Pike the head mason the great cover up began.But what was the real reason?

  • @here_we_go_again2571

    @here_we_go_again2571

    Жыл бұрын

    Back in 1904 the Industrial Revolution had occurred; but there were still a lot of craftsmen around.

  • @here_we_go_again2571

    @here_we_go_again2571

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jacobbrassard2776 What do you mean by "the old worlds fairs"? These expositions are still being held every few years. Most feature modern architecture 2010 Shanghai, China 2012 Yeosu, South Korea 2015 Milan Italy 2020 Dubai, UAE 2023 (Argentina) was cancelled. But ... 2025 Osaka, Japan TBD - Names of countries participating 2027 Belgrade, Serbia TBD - Names of countries participating

  • @PIParanormal
    @PIParanormal2 жыл бұрын

    After watching this series I have a little info that seems to coincide with what it was about. I live within a couple hours of this area so it's been well visited through my years. In the videos you state that St Louis was actually mapped more so to St, Genevieve I believe, which REALLY perked my attention because of it's close proximity to the location I'm about to mention. * Back story of my research - I have been working on my genealogy for MANY years. My 4th great grandfather lived in Kaskaskia, IL in the early 1800's and possibly earlier. My sister and I have even visited Kaskaskia trying to find out more information on him which is not easy considering the "Indian Curse" that caused a flood to reroute the Mississippi River through the FORT which was located there, while also detaching the city of Kaskaskia (Illinois 1st state capital) from Illinois. Illinois "island" can only be reached by traveling through Missouri first and then taking a bridge across to it. So after watching this series it got me thinking about the oddness of Kaskasia so I looked it up and an illustration of the Fort that is under the Mighty Mississippi today was a Star Fort.

  • @sheridanjanda7212

    @sheridanjanda7212

    2 жыл бұрын

    where there's crumbs...........there's a cookie

  • @samkat3303

    @samkat3303

    2 жыл бұрын

    Most amazing 🙏❣🌞🛸💨

  • @michellemlmille8171

    @michellemlmille8171

    2 жыл бұрын

    So fascinating thanks for sharing!🙏🤗

  • @nonamewhorehey7174

    @nonamewhorehey7174

    2 жыл бұрын

    are you and your sister the creators of the yt channel mind unveiled? This comment sure sounds like the two (guy and girl narrators that mention their grandfather in one of their shows) that host this channel. Not trying to put anyone on blast, just asking out of curiosity.. I happen to be a sub to their channel and am very fond of their content. I just noticed extreme similarities while reading your comment and their channel... Interesting and fascinating comment and info you divulged....

  • @PIParanormal

    @PIParanormal

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nonamewhorehey7174 Thank you for compliment :) we also like that channel. However, we are not. We are just 2 sisters (unfortunately the spelling of my name makes everyone think I'm a guy lol) who like to jump down rabbit holes and learn all we can. We have thought about doing a YT channel. We like to take road trips on back roads through old small towns and think it would be fun to do a channel about what we discover on those outings but haven't made the plunge yet.

  • @MarvelousOldWorld
    @MarvelousOldWorld2 жыл бұрын

    It’s all so mind bending. They shear scale and magnitude of it all-1500 buildings! Some *clearly* made of stone and brick. The fountains, lagoons & waterways, bridges, roads & trams, the extensive plumbing & electricity..& the dynamos to run it all! Weren’t those just sort of recently invented? But they’re so massive. Where were those even manufactured and how were they transported into place, let alone set up & operational. The Columbus Word Fair supposedly produced 3x the amount of electricity in all of Chicago at the time!

  • @projectcarter260

    @projectcarter260

    2 жыл бұрын

    Most inventions are created out of necessities. I guess in 1904 there was a Lotta necessities😅

  • @biffmifflin1829

    @biffmifflin1829

    2 жыл бұрын

    Only 4-5 were stone and they still stand. The Art museum and the history museum occupy 2 of those 4. It was an amazing feat to pull that fair and the Olympics off at the same time.

  • @bigboyz12000

    @bigboyz12000

    2 жыл бұрын

    Explaining away the immaculate inherited masonry. You wonder why there were so many insane asylums in those days. You don’t believe the narrative? Lock them up and throw away the key.

  • @tezzae6356

    @tezzae6356

    Жыл бұрын

    most buildings were wood and plaster and had to be repaired to make it through the nine month fair, they were made to look like stone

  • @constructionmanagement5661
    @constructionmanagement56612 жыл бұрын

    These photos are simply breathtaking. I paused and just inspected the intricacy and the symbolism within some of these photos. This was a different time and a different consciousness. I don’t think we can perceive of what truly was going on; the context, the purposes, the intentions. Amazing video Jarid 👏 🙏🏻

  • @wdgbirmingham2
    @wdgbirmingham22 жыл бұрын

    This is the most visually stunning video I've ever seen. I am from Missouri and these seem more like photographs of Oz or Atlantis than St. Louis. I'm overwhelmed with awe!

  • @mikehunt8375
    @mikehunt83752 жыл бұрын

    I've worked in a custom woodworking shop before. It always amazed me the quality of work back then. That's the thing artisans work takes a VERY long time just to build one piece! Thats why we build things today the way we do. It's so much quicker with all our Sanders, table saws, jointers, etc. We can whip out several tables a day now but back then they took months to build a dresser by hand. I get the narrative about the buildings, I'll give them the 36 months to build them all our of wood and plaster. But what I say is impossible is ALL the little things around. Must be hundreds of thousands of sculptures, tables, chairs, you name it! I say its impossible to build everything they needed for the buildings themselves! Nobody seems to be talking about that, they focus on the buildings themselves. Just look at the pictures and how detailed and artistic even a simple table is! It's insane and boggles my mind the more I look at the small details.

  • @phadrus

    @phadrus

    2 жыл бұрын

    This had to be a massively expensive project.

  • @bobbybhakri8499

    @bobbybhakri8499

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ooo

  • @vladarabe

    @vladarabe

    2 жыл бұрын

    take a look at 20:15 and 30:15 the natives of this land.. look at what they are wearing in 30:15 very interesting

  • @sadebell2760

    @sadebell2760

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's because they didn't build it they falsely inherited this land and the ancient buildings

  • @truthbetold5006

    @truthbetold5006

    2 жыл бұрын

    Most certainly agree with you here brother, work in a woodshop aswell, we specialize in fabrication for churches, courthouses and other public buildings.. our crew of less then 50 runing saws, sanders, CNC could still take upwards a month+ just to complete one custom specialized job!! Just crazy how much history seems to be covered up from us.

  • @bryanmills1547
    @bryanmills15472 жыл бұрын

    Pockets of surviving Tartaria, dusted off, dug out and cleaned up and presented as "New Buildings". Some of the civilians also look to me as they were part of this old world being allowed to showcase how it was.... makes me cry knowing that world has been taken from us, i remember my Great Grandfather occasionally referencing "the old world", if only i could speak to him now......

  • @grimfpv292

    @grimfpv292

    2 жыл бұрын

    "Old world" is a reference to Europe, as opposed to "The New world" - America.

  • @bryanmills1547

    @bryanmills1547

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@grimfpv292 thanks for your reply, when referencing "the Old World" we a speaking of Tartaria, which was not limited to Europe, it was everywhere.

  • @ghost-user559

    @ghost-user559

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bryanmills1547 Yes but I also think people glorify and make too much of “Tartaria” in a vacuum. For example Rome is an Empire and it was a City. Tartaria was an ever changing reference point on various maps during various phases of history. To a proud patriotic person near Rome, they might proudly identify as a “Roman” although they ethnically could be from any group. But someone on the edge of the Roman Empire might not consider or call themselves Roman at all, just on a map they’d technically be identified as a region under Roman Rule. Tartaria is just like that. It represents a specific area on some maps. Some people identified themselves proudly as “Tartars”, but it’s also just a vague term for people involved with that system of culture and government like “Roman” people on a map someone else made, who might have never even considered themselves “Tartarian” at all. I just think people are glorifying and oversimplifying Tartaria like something magical and mythological. If people found our current civilization in the distant future they would do the same. Just like we marvel at their history and ruins. But people are people, and I think it’s more complicated than the entire “Tartaria” movement makes it out to be. How many “Americans” call themselves by their ethnicity more than their country? How many Irish or Scottish ever actually identify themselves as members of the UK? Do Australians actually say they are British? On paper Australia, Ireland. Scotland Canada ect are one Empire, and from a historical or propaganda stand point they are, but literally no one who actually lives in those places would identify themselves that way in reality. And immigrants to America do not usually consider themselves “American”, but “African”, or “Europeans” or “Asian”. My point is the word Tartaria at this point just means “part of something that intrigues us now” at this point in time. Yes it was on maps, yes there was a people who actually identified as Tartars, but they were many ethnic groups with many different cultures and religions and technology ranging from highly advanced to tribal... exactly like the world today. We just have to keep in mind that the people of the world were just as individual and various as we are today. People a street away can be “American” or “British” and literally be completely separated by every single ethnic, cultural, and political belief on earth, they can call themselves by their ancestors origins, or their religion, or their political beliefs. No two people even next door are going to identify themselves or their families by the Identification someone put on some map. Tartarians are not magical, and they are simply the group we now call “Romans”, “Goths”, “Huns”, “Russian” “English” ect. At one point they went by “Romans” or “Han” ect, and at some point those many people were under totally unified and totally separate empires at various points. Tartaria is just one stage between Empires we know very well. A transition stage that people were made to forget. But it’s still exactly the same basic progression of history we thought we understood to a degree, just far more advanced than we were led to believe. But it isn’t some fairy kingdom, just a transition between vast empires and eras of technology that was renamed and therefore removed from our current historical narrative and collective memory. Replace “Tartarian” with “Eastern Roman Empire” or “Imperial Asia” or “American Native”, or “Israelites” or “Babylonian” or”Egyptian”, or even “European”, and I think you will find the actual history we have tells this story exactly, just the language has become garbled and code words need to be reinterpreted as the language has changed. “Babylon”, “Atlantis”, “Israel”, “British Empire” “Roman” “ect. The exact empire of Tartaria is called something on maps, something else in the Bible, something different by Asian scholars, and something entirely different in the western world. Same civilization. We just have to put the clues we have back together in context once again.

  • @bryanmills1547

    @bryanmills1547

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's quite a reply, yes, it'd be true I guess you could be from an American-tartarian heritage or Australasian-tartarian etc. The history books is certainly 1 thing I do not believe, it's been ured to suit a narrative. I think the truth most people couldn't believe or want to. Only the last 100-120 years is all I think we know for certain. The rabbit hole is mighty deep my friend.

  • @ghost-user559

    @ghost-user559

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@bryanmills1547 I agree, however in an odd way I would add that I actually think we know far more than we think, we have just been totally jumbled up in our interpretation of what we already know. For example, I think we have been told EXACTLY what happened to Rome, I just think that we have been told that the “British Empire” or Tartaria or Russia is a separate entity when in reality it appears anything associated with Catholicism is in fact the actual reach of the Roman Empire with the mask of Nationalism. In fact it is still alive and well and never actually “fell” at all. East and West Roman Empire becomes the “Western World” vs “Eurasia”. We are obviously lied to very clearly about certain points, however I think it is mainly misdirection. I actually think there was too much evidence to actually hide anything at all, they could only accomplish confusing the narrative by renaming and rebranding everything in the past several hundred years. Dragons become “dinosaurs” and instead of being coexisting until fairly recently or even still existing as “cryptids” in remote locations to this day, they add x million years ago to the timetable on paper. Yet the reality of giant serpents and super intelligent reptiles is in the Bible chapter one, and in every culture on every continent on earth. The actual events have been told to us, because there was too much evidence and too many cultures to control the whole narrative completely, they just have to make you believe you don’t understand what you already know. They have to “interpret” history for us, however we have many of the key events and the general timeline quite well recorded. The Bible for example had too many Scrolls and copies all over the entire earth to actually delete that autobiography and the 6000 years of globalization and empires recorded. They can bury the vedas due to our inability to translate them, or play dumb about interpretation of hieroglyphs, or Mayan or Celtic runes, but at a certain point they had to settle for making the evidence we do have in our various cultures seem foolish or “unscientific”, but they actually could not destroy all the eye witness accounts fast enough. They merely could cause us to not see them as credible despite having the clues in our hands and all around us. I think the key is it is psychological warfare. A refugee might forget their identity after a generation of being adopted but they didn’t actually “disappear”. Like that, we are all in a state of international amnesia, yet we are literally surrounded by the records and evidence of everything that happened and they cannot destroy it all, they can only trick you into ignoring your own eyes and ears and records. Years have been added to the chronology for certain, and events we think are “ancient” are likely very recent, and the names and language used to describe the same thing has been shifted about (Rome and Roman=Ca tho lic=British Empire=Tartan ect). I think we would be surprised just how much we already know between folklore and traditions and religion and language, and THAT is our unspoken history. I think that is why they pretend religion is secondary to “scientific research” and academia. Because in reality we all know exactly who we are and where we come from, we have just been convinced to disregard the evidence our own families and cultures have preserved beyond the reach of any one institution or secret society.

  • @shakascloset1700
    @shakascloset17002 жыл бұрын

    My sister and her husband own a house in my small home town of Ohio and was built in 1904 and has amazing wood work. Estimates to rebuild are in the millions. They just made things so amazing back then.

  • @matthewmaguire1716

    @matthewmaguire1716

    2 жыл бұрын

    I doubt they made these things from 1901 to 1904. What is amazing is these building could be up to 1000s of years old and built to last although they say they were built to tear down

  • @bookofrevelation4924

    @bookofrevelation4924

    Жыл бұрын

    Eisenhower sums it up well in his Farewell Address about Companies getting monies from Government putting skilled labor out of work in name of security after the World Wars.

  • @here_we_go_again2571

    @here_we_go_again2571

    Жыл бұрын

    No income tax Lumber was not that expensive. Labor was not that expensive. There would be a master carpenter, his assistant and his apprentices.

  • @Reignforest87
    @Reignforest872 жыл бұрын

    I helped in the construction of a large casino in South Bend, IN which was a smaller duplicate of the original casino in New Buffalo, MI. It is built mostly out of steel frame and stucco. Both have a multi story parking lot of solid concrete. They hired hundreds of contractors from Chicago, Detroit, Battle Creek, Indiana and every where in between. It took over a year to complete and it's nice but no where near as extravagant as anything presented here.

  • @dannwan8537

    @dannwan8537

    2 жыл бұрын

    Who/or what do you think built these beautiful buildings if construction can't replicate?

  • @Reignforest87

    @Reignforest87

    2 жыл бұрын

    All of these structures can be built by humans but not in that timeframe. Those structures were probably already here, just like the ruins being discovered with lidar. Also according to historical documents America went by many names before being called America, including but not limited to, Atlantis, Lemuria, Mu, 2nd Ethiopia, 3rd India, Amenti, Amaruca, Amaru Khan, etc. I would recommend looking into Kurimeo Ahau for information about the builders. He seems to be on to something.

  • @skxj

    @skxj

    2 жыл бұрын

    What I find hard to grasp is who supplied all the building materials that were needed and tools for the men ? That alone would have been an absolute nightmare. Can you imagine being the roofing crews ? Temporary buildings or not you can't have leaky roofs. Mind boggling.

  • @Reignforest87

    @Reignforest87

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@skxj You make a good point. You can't even begin interior work until the roof is finished. I've had jobs on hold for months bc the roof isn't finished. This includes all plumbing, electrical and drywall. Also without trucks how did they source the concrete, bricks and metal? I don't see any quarry on site. In short they would need a train station, to bring in materials, to build the train station.

  • @sooobyrooo5763

    @sooobyrooo5763

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was thinking about that too, living here in Vegas there is a constant flow and ebb of construction and everything seems to take a couple years to get done even with will all of the artifice and the pressure to get things done very quickly here.

  • @SAFETYHOOD
    @SAFETYHOOD2 жыл бұрын

    Born 1950 and raised in St. Louis and remember the old waterfront, street cars, The Admiral on the Mississippi, Gas Light Square, The Arena, Forest Park Highlands Amusement Park - all gone now.

  • @connerkirk1043

    @connerkirk1043

    2 жыл бұрын

    I used to float down the Mississippi on the Admiral all the time

  • @DaWheezel
    @DaWheezel2 жыл бұрын

    Around 20 Million visitors have visited the fair. Just immagine the additional Infrastructure such as hotels, transportation etc that was necessary to add just for a couple of months... Mind-boggling...

  • @here_we_go_again2571

    @here_we_go_again2571

    Жыл бұрын

    Part of the Expo/Fair 1904 grounds became Washington University. Forest Park (where the St. Louis zoo is now) was bordered by rural areas on at least two sides. is where the remainder of the 1904 Exposition was located. The site also got used for an Olympics in 1905. Some of the university's buildings were also used for the fair/expo.

  • @margretabroad4873
    @margretabroad48732 жыл бұрын

    in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, they had such buildings too. And still have them. We are told that they had been build in the 1930s. There were huge restaurants that looked just like the ones of the world fair. Somerset Maughan, the author, had been photographed having a meal with friends in them. And then there is this gorgeous building of the central market. And when I looked out the window on the 13th floor of the LumiereII, in the military zone, and looked to the left of me, I saw a city quarter with sandstone facades that looked exactly like the building facades from the 19th century in my hometown Mainz, Germany, and in the city across the bridge in the American zone, Wiesbaden. But we were told they all were from the 1930s. I had the impression those buildings looked like the ones I was used to and went to school in at home. And those were from the 19th century.

  • @shucksma6337

    @shucksma6337

    Жыл бұрын

    Great writing you posted!Do you think this all was to take away the artistic values born in us ?To enslave most of man kind ,to control the populations ?

  • @chriswhite2151
    @chriswhite21512 жыл бұрын

    All this is so beautifully crafted. I don't know about the timeline, I do know people back then were hard workers and worked long hours. But my main takeaway is how much we have lost since then. I doubt if most of these buildings could be built today in any amount of time. We have gone down the path of quick and cheesy building over quality.

  • @kathyweinstock3264
    @kathyweinstock32642 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. Excellent collection, editing and experience watching. It was a time period in our country of great hope, ingenuity, and vision. There were so many old world craftsmen here who knew how to create beautiful buildings and art. It was a time before the modern stark utilitarian buildings mostly constructed today. It is miraculous that it was all created in such a short time. Moonbeams. What I mean is it would be hard to see all those buildings decay due to disuse and lack of maintenance if they'd tried to leave it all still standing. I was born in St. Louis and loved going to the Art Museum which was one of the buildings from the Fair and looking at Forest Park and seeing signs of the lay out of the fair. The Muni outdoor Theater is there and the wonderful Zoo is right near by, and the Jewel Box. There used to be a huge wooden roller coaster, Ferris wheel, bridal path and stables, etc. So much has changed, so much has stayed the same. It is amazing, but its true.

  • @larrysorenson4789
    @larrysorenson47892 жыл бұрын

    In the early 1970’s i was given the task of restoring an oak back bar from the fair. It was about 24 feet long with four large round columns and ornate details including Corinthian capitals on the columns. When it was stripped all the details came off. They were plaster. It took me three weeks to make it beautiful again by re attaching pieces and creating new details with plaster. This was in southern Illinois and the old farmer who’s barn it was in told is that his grandfather bought it when the fair was torn down. There was one bullet in the wood which i left in place.

  • @larrysorenson4789

    @larrysorenson4789

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Ghost Man greetings from El Zaribah.

  • @NachtSchreck13

    @NachtSchreck13

    2 жыл бұрын

    No doubt much of the stuff in these World Expos was in fact quickly thrown together for the events. It's the MASSIVE buildings, like the Chicago Art Institute which stands today and is far from being composed of plaster and cheap materials, which debunk the narrative.

  • @larrysorenson4789

    @larrysorenson4789

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@NachtSchreck13 The Chicago Museum of Science and Industry was intentionally created as a real building and is essentially all that truly remains after the other 690 acres of temporary structures were bulldozed. A conclusion based on a sound bite does not substitute for a lifetime spent studying the history of architecture and a 40 year professional career specializing in the preservation of historic buildings throughout the US. You could expand your actual understanding of structures built for “special” events like Worlds Fairs and Expositions between 1850 and 1916. Temporary was the name of the game and few structures remain. Interestingly Balboa Park in San Diego had many of its temporary stick and plaster buildings still standing. The city and two generations of architects, engineers and skilled craftsmen have undertaken the stabilization of them and several have been recreated in more permanent materials. Nothing is “debunked”. Knowledge leads to explanations and understanding.

  • @dbrown339

    @dbrown339

    Жыл бұрын

    @@larrysorenson4789 This same style of buildings can be found globally, so the narrative has been debunked. It was a world-wide civilization and nowhere around the world, today is anyone building such grand designs but in the past. That would mean logically the past was and is more advanced than today or can these things be replicated.

  • @larrysorenson4789

    @larrysorenson4789

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dbrown339 and how many years did you spend studying the art and architecture of the world. How many countries have you visited to personally study their architectural history? And what exactly have you “debunked” based on your worldly understanding and wisdom?

  • @RestoringReality
    @RestoringReality2 жыл бұрын

    You are really producing some top shelf work my friend. I just love your videos. I like the style, the tone and timing of your voice, the music you choose, all of it. Fantastic job Jarid!

  • @jkm3297

    @jkm3297

    2 жыл бұрын

    yes, agreed

  • @kathyallman6178

    @kathyallman6178

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree also, just love your presentations. Even the lighting on the buildings was spectacular! Bring the steam engines back. Better than the electric cars that they are trying to push on people. Your right also about the education, people were taught better and had quality materials to work with. The quality of life is getting worse. Love your videos! Thanks!

  • @josephcornell3002
    @josephcornell30022 жыл бұрын

    more questuons than answers.family's must of kept records of these buildings .and who really build them.thank you as always,Jarid Boosters

  • @daisyflower8362

    @daisyflower8362

    2 жыл бұрын

    21:42 it says “cliff dwellers” In Mesa, CO is where the Anasazi peoples used to live in/on sides of the cliffs. Remarkable sight to see if anyone is interested. They have stories (the Pueblo Natives who are descendants of the Anasazi) about the brutal cannibal giants that roamed the earth long ago.

  • @MrDarkElement

    @MrDarkElement

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@daisyflower8362 Tartarians. King James came to the Americas (Atlantis) in 1609 and chronicles we're written about his exploits. It's called the KJV Bible. The structures were built by the Moors. The Anasazi created not only cliff dwellings but the banking system as well, that's why Egyptian artifacts were found in America. It was there (Anasazi) responsibility to safeguard the Moors treasure. Moors means dark skinned melinated people attached to the land (moorings) and has nothing to do with nomads.

  • @trueamerican769

    @trueamerican769

    2 жыл бұрын

    The Pueblo aren't descendants of the Anasazi. Skeletal remains show who the Anasazi really were.

  • @amegorica8902
    @amegorica8902 Жыл бұрын

    The craftsmanship of EVERYTHING back then is just breathtaking! Truly a lost art nowadays...

  • @ryans2118
    @ryans21182 жыл бұрын

    They must of had all the factories around the world working non stop to bring everything there. The amount of digging, crazy. This is one smart landscaper who designed all this. Mine can barely cut my tree without almost killing it?

  • @drinkingpoolwater

    @drinkingpoolwater

    2 жыл бұрын

    😂 😂 yes sir, they did it all with horse and buggy

  • @tvfan14

    @tvfan14

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@drinkingpoolwater Maybe we should go back to using horse and buggy? It seriously looks like they apcomplished a lot more, in a lot quicker amount of time with hand tools, horse and buggy.

  • @terkelalgevind529

    @terkelalgevind529

    2 жыл бұрын

    I have been looking at historic photos of Denmark from 1814 to 48s .... And let me tell ya... It is the same as everywhere, especially Copenhagen those olden folks in top hats and fine shoes riding horse carts and stuff did not build those massive apartment buildings still standing today many places. (then the buildings had more of an old style with bowed oversize windows and doorways which has been severely modernized in todays Copenhagen and the copenhagen i remember from my childhood in the 1990s. I am now working on finding out when the renovations was done, i believe it was before ww2 but not sure.

  • @tvfan14

    @tvfan14

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@terkelalgevind529 obviously they were not built by those people! I was joking, pretending that,the narrative given was true (haha).

  • @bookofrevelation4924

    @bookofrevelation4924

    Жыл бұрын

    Just defeating Spanish Empire and getting their gold likely also benefitted the bankers that's hidden from public's view.

  • @steffenrocktaeschel8015
    @steffenrocktaeschel80152 жыл бұрын

    It's not only the amount of buildings but also all the surrounding infrastructure. Impossible! And imagine the luxurious interior, this needs some additional months to install. How many companies were available at that time, how many trucks, ships, crane, manpower? How did all the logistics work? Questions after Questions?

  • @GenerateGoodInformation

    @GenerateGoodInformation

    2 жыл бұрын

    Wouldn't it take three years to bring all that stuff into the buildings? I think the three years were spent making it all look pretty.

  • @katiecoollady

    @katiecoollady

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@GenerateGoodInformation I agree! hey decorated, facade-ed, embellished, repaired, plastered...

  • @jacobimonsoon
    @jacobimonsoon2 жыл бұрын

    I've been to a World's Fair before and they kind of pre-fab a lot of things, they aren't as sturdy as they may seem. And as a St Louisan I think it would be neat to know which of these building are still here and what they were or are now. It looks like this fair may have taken place in and around what is now Union Station and a attached Hotel, very medieval looking. Also the mountain restaurant resembles the giant restaurant at the children's area of the St. Louis Zoo (no mountains and not sure about the turret but the rest looks like that). Some of the more permanent items may have been worked into the area. It breaks my heart to think they probably dug the mounds down and built over them. Cahokia has a nice representation of the mounds being cared for, not too far for St Louis. Love the pics!!!

  • @tezzae6356

    @tezzae6356

    Жыл бұрын

    art building and bird cage in zoo all that remains most other building mad to look good for short time and removed.

  • @shad6644
    @shad6644 Жыл бұрын

    Regarding ‘15-year old tech as new’, I remember reading about the ‘future shock’ many soldiers felt drafted into the US Army during WW1 (1917). Many coming from remote, rural areas had never seen a plane, telephone, radio, or rarely even vehicles (Appalachia, Ozarks) and that tech had been around a long time. Things didn’t disseminate like they did just 30 years later. That’s why the song went ‘how are you going to keep them down on the farm after they’ve seen Paree (Paris)?’ Not just the salons and modern women but everything-lights, running water.

  • @xgreyknightxify
    @xgreyknightxify2 жыл бұрын

    The "gardener" is always the real mastermind I've seen this. Over and over again. Even with the hydrotherapy buildings, crystal palaces.

  • @vegasbattleborn1594
    @vegasbattleborn15942 жыл бұрын

    Thing that comes to my mind when viewing these videos is that the faux building trade obviously predates Disney. Definitely got me scratching my head. All for show...we are easily lead.

  • @mikehunt8375
    @mikehunt83752 жыл бұрын

    "Grand Architect" sounds like a Free Mason story to me....

  • @StephanieB2023

    @StephanieB2023

    2 жыл бұрын

    Exactly

  • @HarveyDents_SpiritOfTruth

    @HarveyDents_SpiritOfTruth

    2 жыл бұрын

    The who? 😁

  • @vedicastrol

    @vedicastrol

    2 жыл бұрын

    did you notice that the length of this video is 33.33 ?

  • @HarveyDents_SpiritOfTruth

    @HarveyDents_SpiritOfTruth

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@vedicastrol i did after you pointed it out

  • @sea9994

    @sea9994

    2 жыл бұрын

    With mason's nothing is free it's the cornerstone of our founding foundation father's.

  • @Lucky3horse
    @Lucky3horse2 жыл бұрын

    So enjoy your shows! Thank you!! Got so excited when I saw the Jim Key building!! Great story about a man and His horse👍😂💕💕💕

  • @giarobinson4033
    @giarobinson40336 ай бұрын

    I appreciate this phenomenal presentation of one of my favorite places to go in my free time. You have awoken apart of my spirit that I did not know. I’m a born and raised Saint Louisan and live only minutes from what I can now refer to the remains of what was once a great empire of the aborigine ancestors of this area. Your research helped me realize that though the mounds, pyramids, most of the castles, etc. are completely non existent here aborigines are still drawn to gather in O’Fallon park on Sundays, the Saint Louis River front, Forest park and other places that you have revealed that our sacred mounds once stood. I am in awe❤ 🙏🏽 bless you. This is well hidden history as no one is aware of any of this and we have been here our entire lives.

  • @chrisjenkins4094
    @chrisjenkins40942 жыл бұрын

    I just wonder what really happened to all the people that really built all this? Scary thought!!!

  • @vernalater

    @vernalater

    2 жыл бұрын

    The Devil was loosed into the realm and the Saints that were the builders got out of Dodge and are somewhere in outer space, which is actually the outer realm beyond the ice wall!

  • @dolandlydia

    @dolandlydia

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@supervulcan07 actually you did have the supposed Spanish flu that took out 50 million.

  • @EraKona

    @EraKona

    2 жыл бұрын

    Right ! Where did this extraordinary civilization go ?!?!

  • @VenturaIT
    @VenturaIT2 жыл бұрын

    It's clear to me that they built some of the less grand buildings around what was already there to hide the older buildings in plain sight, perhaps when they decided to bring people into the cities again after a deluge or something like that. For example the tower with the pots and pans stuck to the sides of it right next to some extravagant columns with eagles on top of them. I think one thing you haven't mentioned is how long it takes to create the sculptures on top of the buildings. You can see partly inside some of the entrances to the grand palaces in STL and see that they are not just temporary, they would not lavishly finish the entrances and interior like that if it were temporary. I saw a video about the same kind of "arc de triumph" in Russia with similar statues on top made of iron, where they actually confirmed that it was impossible to build or rebuild them currently, today (~2021.) It's also evident that when we see the interior photos of the wooden frames and supports we are not actually seeing the insides of the grand buildings... we see the grand buildings here in STL and they look different than the wood structured buildings like ancient royal palaces from Versailles or in Europe somewhere. I don't see any estimate for how long it takes to build a working canal system and where the water came from and then where the water went afterwards. I don't know about here but in my man-made pond, it turns into a stinky marsh if it's not got hundreds of dollars of aeration, chemicals, lights, and maintenance and it's only about 5 foot x 5 foot in size in the back yard. Without some kind of canal building science these canals would turn into mossy, marshy, stink holes in short time. The whole narrative is totally bogus. Not to mention that you can find a house for sale today from 1904 in the street adjacent to the area where this fair was held and it has the same style as the grandest buildings in the "fair" in STL. In this residence you an see some old stain glass showing life scenes that appear to be a "Camelot" type lifestyle with horses, knights, castles, and damsels. There are also some "coat of arms" in the stain glass as well. I don't think they would put castles and knights in shining armor on horses into stain glass from 1904 if it weren't a real depiction of life when the house was built. I think this is perhaps the only remaining house in the city from the actual city that matched the architecture of the "fair." The Thomas Fire came through Ventura in 2017 and in my neighborhood there were about 200-250 houses burned to the ground. It's 2021 now, about 3-4 years later and many of the houses still aren't rebuilt yet and these are simple stick-frame houses on a single slab of concrete with about 1500 to 3000 square foot in size, make the comparison to these grand palaces shown in the STL "world's fair." I also grew up in a 100 year old house about 2 hours from STL and that's what got me on the path learning about old architecture. The house I grew up on also has a strange history. There were 2 grand houses like it in the little town and both have since been torn down, but the woodwork and glass was just on another level to what I've seen in even the richest billionaire's houses today in 2021, the lights ran on gas originally and the wood must have been hand carved. We still have some of the supports of the hand rail on the stairs and to make them today would cost probably $1000 or more for a 2" piece of bronze to hold up a wooden hand rail. The doorbell was a wind up spring mechanism that still worked 100 years later... It would be about 150 years old now and there is no record of it every existing except for our testimony and our photos and people's memory and there are no photos that I know of, of the other grand house in that little village about 2 hours from STL. I've contacted all the local historians and organizations and city/county/state and there is no record of the house which is said to once have belonged to the mayor and to have been a house where Abraham Lincoln staid at frequently. To make this house again today would probably not be possible due to the hand carved wood, fine grain old growth wood, metal, glass, and crystal that you just can't get today at any price. In the city center there was an old style domed brick building (dome resembled Moscow's city center domes kind-of) that was torn down for no reason as well. The YWCA that I went to as a kid that was in the bigger city nearby was a 10-20 story old world red-brick building as well that was recently torn down to make room for an empty lot, they didn't replace it, just tore it down. So I have some first hand experience old buildings and houses. It's complete nonsense what is being claimed by historians. Seeing is believing.

  • @dennykempen1

    @dennykempen1

    2 жыл бұрын

    You are so wrong my friend So wrong.There was nothing there but trees & swamp on the site. Give Man some praise for their out standing achievement. Building all that in just 3 years.

  • @VenturaIT

    @VenturaIT

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dennykempen1 Wrong, at least one contemporary house is for sale today on Zillow. There is a whole neighborhood adjacent to the world's fair former location.

  • @dennykempen1

    @dennykempen1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@VenturaIT There are big homes now where the mile long entertainment PIKE area.. There are homes in the western part of where the fair was but none of them were there during the fair. Probably one of them.

  • @VenturaIT

    @VenturaIT

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dennykempen1 There's one for sale or was for sale recently with the same exact material that made the buildings at the fair, same architecture, obviously contemporary... and out of place historically frescos inside... hints at fake timeline.

  • @dennykempen1

    @dennykempen1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@VenturaIT Many buildings were recycled and rebuilt in the area but not on the fair grounds. The one you talked about may have used parts of a building and people claim they are from the fair . The lumber (lots of it) was reused in homes. Whole buildings mainly states buildings or international buildings were moved to other states or in the St. Louis area. Like Sweden moved to Lindsborg Kansas (still there) or like Connecticut building moved to Lafayette Indiana. The most interesting the large Brazil building moved all the way to Rio.

  • @terkelalgevind529
    @terkelalgevind5292 жыл бұрын

    In my area, South Denmark Jutland, we just had a new shopping center build, 5 levels by 12000 square meter... It only took them 12.5 years to build it.

  • @nathaliecholez1992

    @nathaliecholez1992

    2 жыл бұрын

    As strange as The Gothard Tunnel and it's satanic opening ceremony

  • @terkelalgevind529

    @terkelalgevind529

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nathaliecholez1992 Aye that is amazing work to... ;p Btw this shopping center is the average dead glass boxes so popular in the new brutalesque nwo style.

  • @tillivanilli6481
    @tillivanilli64812 жыл бұрын

    Hi Jarid, nice greetings from Bavaria (ger) :) For me it was very nice to see about the Automobiles in the Video, shown on this Worlds Fair. Even beause i´m an Automobile Designer/Stylist & also an Engineering & Product designer what begann to awake many years ago (~ 2007 ) & was even reasearching about what are the Hydrogens, and all about engines with open eyes that an ordinary designer/engineer couldn´t have... I´m that guy that told you sometimes in some comments about the other half of the "Free Energy", what are even the Hydro Carbons, what is any kind of mineral oils (yes, many kinds) and so much more kinds of oils from plants, like hemp, what is also an very interesting kind of fuel when destillated, because hemp fuel is only the junk of the use of the hemp plants, what are so fast growing...H.Ford had a problem with the monopolisation of the mineral oils from the establishment and he was showing the truth about oils/Hydro carbons with show that oil could be come from anywhere in any kind of plants and so much more... But the mineral oils was allways endless, that isnt "Fossil", that isn´t "Bad" or something else, also not "Bad" for the enviroment or even nature, because it is really the liquid physic state of all material, called "C/Carbon" and that kind of oil what we know as "Mineral Oil" was allways the 2nd most liquid on earth, directly behind the salt/Seewater! And it was allways renewable. The "Peak Oil Show" tells it also ;) It´s a show, a show made for us to beleave that that was an "Rare" or even "Fossil" stuff, what is completely false. The reality is, that the OTTOMOTOR, what the most people know under the name "Internal combustion engine" uses the JUNK of all Destillates made from oil, called "Gasoline". Yes, it´s really really fascinating if you´ll go out to find out by yourself, the truth about Oil... Because when we would live withoutth the monopolisation of the Energy, you could be sure that the Gasoline on the gas stations what any vehicle with Ottomotor could use was for free. Even because the oil industy should trash all the gasoline if there wasn´t anything/one else like esp. the Automobile with Ottomotor of the peoplel what would use that "Junk" for driving these unbeleavable genius kind of engines. That is something what so few people of the "Alternative" know, or "Would know" or even should get to know about. Because the hydro carbons are that kind of molecules that are the base of anything else here on earth, of all life, all material &&& the earth itself and it could be in "LIQUID, SOLID, GAS & PLASMA" Physic state, but these both molecules "C" (Carbon = Material base) & "O2" (Hydrogen (=Water) are in anything...also the base of us humans/our bodys, too. We´re Life Forms based on Hydro Carbon. Also like any plant, wood, animals,...... And the endless circle of life is the circle of the hydro carbons, what changes the physic state. That is something like the PHOTOSYNTHESE, made by the woods/plants, to make oxigen, and even that they´ll growing up they need the Hydro Carbons in the gas physic state, called "C O2" & now you should ask yourself really interesting and so much importand question, because even that is that kind of gases what the establishment like to make "Bad" in our thnking....Even that kind of Gas, that kind of ALL LIFE/Basic circle of life on earth in the temporary gas physic state, is bad?! Really?! ;9 Do you know about that they´ll tell us 180° against the truth? Because that is ecaclty why they brainwashed us all from tiny to tall about now that "C O 2 is bad", that "Oil is fossil, rare & bad" & then there is the "ELECTRIC AGENDA", and a big part of that bad electric agenda is also esp. in our community with "Free Energy" is allways "Electricity"; What is the worst, because even we should know about the truth and the truth is that they tell us 180° against the truth about Oil(s), C O 2, and also about the Automobile with Ottomotor/Combustion Engine and also the Diesel Engine, what is also one of the most unbeleavable importand kinds of engine ever founded by humanity. Just take allways the right kind of Energy for the right kind of use. That´s importand to know and i could tell you so much abou the Auto Industry, esp. why it was destroyed or even when it begann with the destruction of the Automobile with Otto-& Diesel Engine & Industry, back in the mid 70´s...when they really destroyed the Automobile on the most right way, the best aera of Automobile and its evolution, that was even the US Auto Industry what had the best for the customer untill the mid 1970´s at the US. And i tell you that as an germany guy. And if you´ll look at the Company called FISHER BODY, what was also located at Detroit back then, was founded by some german brothers. And this particular comp. mae so many many importand an revolutionary evolutions for the Automobile.... And it was going to die back in ~90´s.... They really destroyed the most importand Auto Industry ever with a high strategy to take us, the customer more and more the best affordable kind of automobile, and so they destroyed Detroit....If you´ll look some fascinating films about FISHER BODY, for example on the Cannel Periscope Films, you´ll see what the US Auto Industry was, how nice every Automobile was and so much Automobile the customer never got like it was untill the mid 1970´s at the US.... Today it´s really really sad to see what was done with detroit... And hey, that was the high strategic destruction of the US Auto Industry, what was on the best evolutionary way, with the most & best Automobile for the Customer, or even us. I could tell you about the hemp fuel and henry ford, but you should look at the films you could find about. For me, who designes, styles and also restores Automobiles by myself hands, i could tell you so much more importand stuff about that. & one of the most importand knowledge is that you know about that the Automobile is the completely false way when it´s powered with electric motor. For that kind of use the Otto- & Diesel Engine is the best choice ever, and hey, if the evolution of the Automobile would be go on the right direction, with using Otto & Diesel Engines instead E-Motors, you would see how unbeleavale variable an Ottomotor & Dieselmotor is about using different kind of fuels, too.... Because the Otto- & Diesel Engine would be run for free, because the Junk destillate Gasoline was for free at the gas stations, or also completely autark for the customer, because the Otto & Dieselmotor could also run on Ethanols, Methanols, Fuels that your own garden could give you for free, allways for free. But the system behind all that and the monopolisation of "Energy" was allways the problem, and all the big an little lies, for example about "Emissions" --> A Ottomotor for example, with the use of gasoline and the orinary Catalysator/s doesn´t make bad "Emission", because it transformes the hydro carbons from liquid to gas, what is the same what the nature itself makes, but the nature makes that allways so much bigger, too...It´s no comparsion, the Automobiles are so tiny against the nature, but the Otto & Dieselmotor are Transformators, for example, for the state of the hydro carbons. And the "Emissions" are hydrogen (Water) and Carbon (Material of all) what the woods MUST GET, to produce or even also transforms the "Emissions" from them; gas hydro carbons back to liquid, solid state and produce oxigen from them. They grow up only when they get that " C O2" and that should be "Bad" ?! Really ?! ;) I hope i could get you a nice lession about "Energy", even also the "Free Energy", what isn´t electricity based only, it´s also based on all the hydro carbons, too.... :) Have a great day and hey, it was great to see more old videos of the Automobile, esp. the revolution when the Ottomotor powered Automobile got it´s possibility of production, what made the electric automobile completely obsolte for right. That was back in 1914, esp. when the "Tin Lissy", the Ford Model-T came up in serial production...what made the Automobile so cheap that anybody could afford an Automobile, and yes, the Model T was one of the most importand revolutions for the Automobile :) Cheers Till

  • @jeffwebb2966
    @jeffwebb29662 жыл бұрын

    Forest Park, which is the best public park the U.S now in my opinion, was actually mostly a forest before it was completely leveled for the fair. Only the art museum remains of the building constructed...and it was not a temporary building.

  • @giobulletproofofconckshell
    @giobulletproofofconckshell2 жыл бұрын

    Kessler , I’ve been meaning to remember the gardner who was noticed by his employer and became the superstar architect. Didn’t he also do the two glass palaces in Europe"!? (ALLEGEDLY)

  • @constructionmanagement5661
    @constructionmanagement56612 жыл бұрын

    Olmstead is big up here in Boston. I find these larger than life characters of the 1800’s so fascinating. Olmstead designed so many buildings and landscapes all over the country. A very few characters owned and designed a lot of this old world in the 1800’s.

  • @robinsutcliffe-video_art

    @robinsutcliffe-video_art

    2 жыл бұрын

    larger but less realistic than life characters : )

  • @Kat.Evangeline

    @Kat.Evangeline

    10 ай бұрын

    Found in the 1800's

  • @joannebreeze2091
    @joannebreeze20912 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your thought provoking presentation. I’m of the opinion that there is more hidden truth’s in all the old history, especially the photos of buildings. I live in Western Australia and Fremantle our port from times long gone. The building structures are so fascinating, antiqued with domes a top . Our pub’s throughout regional and cities are quite beautiful with there intricate design. Up in the Scarp ( hills ), there is a old monastery, a house with hugest steps leading up to a huge house with extremely large ceilings, rooms etc….

  • @jeffwebb2966
    @jeffwebb29662 жыл бұрын

    There were thousands of craftsmen that could create things out of plaster and staff that could just not be done today because no one has the skills.

  • @togowack

    @togowack

    2 жыл бұрын

    no there weren't there were hardly any people here the settlers that did come were small in number basic farming people all from different lands scrambling for survival... why on earth would they even think of buildings stuff at that point we can't even build today.

  • @rus169
    @rus1692 жыл бұрын

    The construction photos may well be refurbishment of the buildings. I agree with Jared these buildings were built as a signpost for the future to the old world - everything we have now was around then before the reset.

  • @katiecoollady

    @katiecoollady

    2 жыл бұрын

    They look like they have been decorated and painted. And you can see the signage and the adornment of the buildings is different from the old world architecture. Things look adhered to the buildings...

  • @togowack

    @togowack

    2 жыл бұрын

    the construction photos are deconstruction photos.

  • @rchar9757
    @rchar97572 жыл бұрын

    Ermmaaagossshhh the totem poles!!! The sculpture park had a piece with light poles from Pruitt Igoe projects which was a social experiment IMO and they placed them like the poles at Monks Mound to gauge time and seasons. This is insane. I'll be taking trip to large library with all records soon.

  • @natalliask
    @natalliask2 жыл бұрын

    Miraculous illumination on those photos !

  • @benmosley3190
    @benmosley31902 жыл бұрын

    I just watched your first video, watching this one name and will double back to part 2. Amazing work, sir!

  • @joelhurley2678
    @joelhurley26782 жыл бұрын

    Jarid I thought some of those formations were paper mache and painted to look like mountains. I remember seeing a video years ago stating that it was a small area they made and then put the paper mache and fake trees and things on top. I'm sorry I can't remember where I saw this but I do remember reading about it years ago also. Thanks for the wonderful video , I have a collection myself of some of the things from the St Louis fair and I even have a picture of one of the buildings in my parlor here.

  • @YouDonteverhavetodie
    @YouDonteverhavetodie2 жыл бұрын

    It remains a true mystery. On the other hand, the construction photo's were pretty convincing. I don't know what to make of it.

  • @GenerateGoodInformation

    @GenerateGoodInformation

    2 жыл бұрын

    Many of the construction pics were scaffolding over already constructed buildings. Where are the pics showing the many buildings in different stages of construction?

  • @Nate_tureboy

    @Nate_tureboy

    2 жыл бұрын

    I feel there certainly we're many wood and plaster buildings! But, they too, are masterpieces in wood construction. Also, every construction photo only showed a handful of workers working. One building with scaffolding appearing to be setup over its entirety "showed" only the top and conical roof of a humongous building. You don't build from the top down or demo from bottom up, so I'm stumped on that one!

  • @joecorr1853

    @joecorr1853

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm sure some new temporary buildings were constructed for the fair. Not all of them or as many as they claim. You can't build 1500 huge ornate buildings in 3 years like they did.

  • @vernalater

    @vernalater

    2 жыл бұрын

    Nice try troll, but not good enough!

  • @GenerateGoodInformation

    @GenerateGoodInformation

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@joecorr1853 How do they get rid of all that material afterward? It has to be out there somewhere.

  • @My_Alchemical_Romance
    @My_Alchemical_Romance2 жыл бұрын

    10:11 reminds me of Disney with the train that stops/crosses/unloads in front of the huge clock made of shrubbery. Amazing work. Great job on the video as well bud.

  • @Chillaxin202
    @Chillaxin202 Жыл бұрын

    Those wooden structures are simply amazing LOL

  • @keiththompson2172
    @keiththompson21722 жыл бұрын

    The c.1500 buildings for this expo are one thing but the interiors of these buildings were intricate and glorious - the craftsmanship and time and precious metals etc , painting and embroidery , varnishing and all the interior works - all within 36 months . ‘Interesting’ as you would say - mind boggling !

  • @expoguy2

    @expoguy2

    Жыл бұрын

    The only interiors that were finished in the style you mention were many of the buildings of foreign nations, some of the state buildings, and several concession buildings along The Pike amusement street….all of the other large temporary buildings had bare and simple painted wood interiors, like giant warehouses with ornate plaster exteriors. The same is true for many other World’s Fairs of the period.

  • @teresaadams825
    @teresaadams8252 жыл бұрын

    They just completed a bridge over a creek down the road from me... it took 6 months 😖

  • @the_Mrs.
    @the_Mrs.2 жыл бұрын

    @4:00 the sculpture you showed grabbed my attention, the hooded man above the others reminded me of a clip from Die Antwoord video Ugly Boy. The dark one. With several minutes of my life wasted, I could only find 6 photos of the sculpture total. 4 of the original that was made for the fair out of some kind of wood paste, and destroyed after. But the artist liked it so much he made a cast of it and remade it in bronze. There are only 2 photos of it in its current location. The name of it is “Destiny of the Redman.” It has a vulture behind the hooded man and almost had a conquered people vibe. As did the human zoo at that fair! It’s pretty strange.

  • @maryalison5173
    @maryalison51732 жыл бұрын

    Excellent photo compilation, thank you for taking the time to do this. I think I have all the questions you have!

  • @ubersolbot
    @ubersolbot2 жыл бұрын

    I'm amazed at the amount of iron beams used in those larger buildings.

  • @urabundant
    @urabundant2 жыл бұрын

    @Jared the "fleur de les" seems to be everywhere as well!!! I have found it all over the older buildings in my area.....I am in Illinois. It is displayed here! 11:39

  • @Observe33
    @Observe332 жыл бұрын

    Some great pictures to look at. Thank you !

  • @billkranz8035
    @billkranz80352 жыл бұрын

    The mounds were not built over or covered up but were wiped out entirely as fill for other projects, etc. Sugarloaf is a smaller mound and there is a smoothed over mound on the Kingshighway Blvd area.

  • @bookofrevelation4924

    @bookofrevelation4924

    Жыл бұрын

    I built mounds in my yard to grow better plants, helped by deeper roots and better water control.

  • @fraggo13
    @fraggo132 жыл бұрын

    While I do agree there is some strange hidden history going on, people in those days were just much smarter than we give them credit for. If you see their school curriculum in that period, their education was much higher level than today.

  • @togowack

    @togowack

    2 жыл бұрын

    they didn't know what to teach people they didn't even know what date anything had happened because it (his-story) wasn't written till around 1900 the factories have been shipped over seas critical thinking is no longer a want or requirement by the powers that be.

  • @jayh9529

    @jayh9529

    Жыл бұрын

    And so it goes further back you go ,reset and dumbed down

  • @drock5404

    @drock5404

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the people in that time were much more capable than we are today. Look at what they did after we declared war during WWII. Went from a very small armed forces to winning the war against 2 very big war machine countries in a very short time period.

  • @ssQ2U

    @ssQ2U

    Жыл бұрын

    It might appear that the Powers that be have been dumbing us down and stealing our arts and crafts for centuries, maybe thousands of years.

  • @fredtraylen4311

    @fredtraylen4311

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@drock5404 with no small help from Russia and United .Kingdom I.E Australia, New Zealand, Canada,many more brave commonwealth countries America coming in did tip the scales against the Axis powers but Hitler double crossing Stalin,s russia was another factor. America made many, many sacrifices in W.W.2 but so did a lot of other brave countries LEST WE FORGET🇬🇧🇺🇸

  • @jimgordon6629
    @jimgordon66292 жыл бұрын

    Very fascinating! Great work! The “mountain range”you were speculating about is obviously

  • @jimgordon6629

    @jimgordon6629

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sorry! The mountain range is meant to be the Alps and is part of a Swiss-themed building. with a restaurant or Biergarten

  • @AngelWest58
    @AngelWest582 жыл бұрын

    it takes em over a year to build a litte 2-lane roundabout here in Oregon. One roundabout. Really makes one wonder

  • @larryloveless2967
    @larryloveless29672 жыл бұрын

    I understand why you liked the restaurant that appears to be built in to the Alps in its background. It was interesting hearing your speculation whether it was built in to a Mound, as I live in St. Louis and there is sure no hint that such a mountain looking area like it ever existed in Forest Park. The only Mound I have ever seen is right across the Mississippi river across from St. Louis in Cahokia, Illinois, where there is a museum of the Mississipan culture with its large Mound area. Likely because of the proximity of the Mississippi and Missouri rivers, this area was once a large Indian settlement.

  • @larryloveless2967

    @larryloveless2967

    2 жыл бұрын

    I wonder if given the very large German immigration in St. Louis if this is mimicking a German restaurant in the Bavarian Alps.

  • @expoguy2

    @expoguy2

    Жыл бұрын

    The concession was called the Tyrolean Alps and the mountain range was a flat painted wooden backdrop, while other mountain features were composed of staff plaster formed over wooden frames. This same technique was used at several other expos, such as in the Swiss Village at the 1900 Paris exposition.

  • @larryloveless2967

    @larryloveless2967

    Жыл бұрын

    @@expoguy2 Thanks for the info.

  • @marcbuxton3907
    @marcbuxton39072 жыл бұрын

    Great photo collection. Many I had not seen. I assure all the fair was not a Tartarian left over. My grandfather joined over ten thousand (not hundreds) of craftsmen working on this project. 10 very large buildings were all constructed of wood truss framing, sheathed in lath and covered with staff (light weight plaster mixed with hemp for strength). All ten were temporary. Two buildings were permanent. The photo showing the stone building under construction is the Palace of Fine Arts (designed by Cass Gilbert) which had to be fire proof for obvious reasons. The building is today's St. Louis Art Museum. It sat behind the "heart" of the Exposition - Festival Hall (also designed by Cass Gilbert) and the Terrace of the States promenade (which made the Art Museum barely visible in most periodic pictures, ironically). Today the Art Museum overlooks the same hill which once held the Cascades and Festival Hall in front of it. Art Hill, as it's called today, leads down to The Grand Basin water feature (prominently shown in most fair photos). The Grand Basin is still there and was recently renovated to look much like it did in 1904. The other permanent remaining building is Brookings Hall on the campus of Washington University. This was the administration building during the fair. The staggering building count of 1500 is largely due to an area known as "The Pike". This was a mile-long midway-style attraction. Buildings on The Pike were constructed by countries, states, companies and entrepreneurs. Many attractions had separate entrance fees (not included in daily fair ticket). These attractions were big money makers and operators paid rent to the fair organizers. One attraction, The Alps, was actually a large backdrop behind a faux-stone build-out. No different than a Broadway stage set on steroids. One other notable structure remains from the fair - a large outdoor bird cage which is now part of the Saint Louis Zoo. The cage is not in it's original fair location, however. To clarify who designed the fair, George Kessler was responsible for the layout and landscaping. The collection of large temporary buildings were designed mostly by Emmanuel Louis Masqueray and associates under the direction of Saint Louisan Issac S. Taylor. Masqueray was responsible for designing many permanent Beaux-arts style buildings (mostly churches) across the US including the cathedral in St. Paul, Minnesota. The neo-classical Beaux-arts style building design reflected at the fair was very current at the turn of the century. The style can be seen across the US in buildings conceived during the City Beautiful movement in the early 1900's. Sorry to burst the bubble of those looking for a more dubious unwritten history, but this is what actually happened.

  • @sadebell2760

    @sadebell2760

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah 10 building still dont make up for the 1500 building in 3 years which is pure hogwash your grand pops lies to u sorry to burst your bubble , this is massive soul harvesting what's going on here at this so called fair with people on display By the MASONIC SATANIC cult this fair was and attempt to hide the original Murrish Empire that originally ruled this land buddy so quit the hogwash and lies

  • @marcbuxton3907

    @marcbuxton3907

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sadebell2760 My Grandfather was a great man and never known to tell a lie. He also knew how to spell Moorish and write cohesive sentences. Additionally the area where the fair was developed was used by citizens in Saint Louis for years before the fair was built. Believe what you want, but the truth is the truth.

  • @togowack

    @togowack

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@marcbuxton3907 i see they have sick their army of bots/trolls onto the Old World channels...

  • @I0goose0I
    @I0goose0I4 ай бұрын

    Love your content and im pretty sure the people that were here and built those are the people that have been here, cause we’re here and we all know how hard they tried to wipe us off the face of the earth. I’ve been wanting to see the statues and designs up close and I’ve been looking and haven’t found great up close shots of those. I’m sure at close examination of just the statues and relief designs it would be obvious they couldn’t have completed those in that short of time. I mean they couldn’t have built the buildings in that time frame either no matter how hard of workers they were. If they did why aren’t they in the Guinness book or record breaking charts? Your channel is awesome look forward to your future content🤙🏽

  • @DruidofAlbion
    @DruidofAlbion2 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting .. wonder if these are old world holiday destinations accessed by subterranean transport networks. The whole subject is both inspiring and bewildering

  • @LarsOfMars.
    @LarsOfMars.2 жыл бұрын

    These buildings, like those of all the major fairs of the movement, were designed from the outset as temporary structures that would be dismantled and either repurposed or scrapped depending on the versatility of the structure and quality of the materials. And those materials were largely iron and steel, there was very little actual masonry employed in any of the great fairs, and where it was it tended to be on those select structures that were designed to be permanent legacies (for example London's Crystal Palace, Paris' Musee d'Homme and la Tour Eiffel, or Glasgow’s Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum). Where brick is used it was used sparingly and only where absolutely necessary, such as in foundations and other structural elements. The facades and decorative tratments were made of painted canvas, wooden board, and stucco. Think of these exhibitions as giant set-pieces rather than permanent additions to the host city. You refer several times to the "old world" and "old world architecture" when describing the exhibition buildings, but the main structures (like the industrial hall, etc) were showcasing the new architectural styles that were emerging from the Beaux Arts and City Beautiful movements. Where the buildings emulate castles and such like its either because itself a showcase of a particular relic of a particular place with resonance to the locality, or because a particular country has chosen to present such an image when participating in the exhibition, or simply because its a carnival ride for fun and lulz. Every major exhibition of this movement I've looked into in depth (13 so far) is rich in documentary material and first hand accounts of the scale and pace of these construction projects, I'm not sure why you think St Louis would be so exceptional. I suppose a conspiracy theory is considered a more interesting angle than "people set out to do a thing in a timescale and then did it"... Now, with that all said, I actually enjoyed your film very much, and I thoroughly encourage you to keep going! You've inspired me to look further into the St Louis exhibition :)

  • @bogieviews

    @bogieviews

    2 жыл бұрын

    Good to see your comment, the mind can think how long such and such takes, but if you ignore that and just do it, it happens. Mark Twain was at the ground breaking. See my earlier comment. Also, each state that had an exhibition sent their own people. Nonetheless, I loved this video.

  • @bogieviews

    @bogieviews

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Ghost Man Ok ghost man, you must be at least 137 yrs old. What's your secret?

  • @travissmith6253

    @travissmith6253

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Ghost Man very funny! 🤣🤣🤣

  • @travissmith6253

    @travissmith6253

    2 жыл бұрын

    You'd have to be paid to believe that load of nonsense! No one's buying paper mache buildings bro get fucking real.

  • @togowack

    @togowack

    2 жыл бұрын

    some people much harder to wake up when immersed too far beforehand

  • @omarassemujjuadrian4592
    @omarassemujjuadrian45922 жыл бұрын

    Immaculate precision. Totally gorgeous ❤️

  • @intersections2428
    @intersections24282 жыл бұрын

    You do make me think, more mystery I hope will be revealed when I pass, this world is such a infinite pule of possibilities

  • @jayare5483
    @jayare54832 жыл бұрын

    Great video bro. Those pics were epic...💙💙💙💙💙💙👍

  • @flashmp3
    @flashmp32 жыл бұрын

    The castle like one in the "hills" is clearly a pocket of survival of a massive melted building

  • @vernalater

    @vernalater

    2 жыл бұрын

    I would have to agree!

  • @colleenforrest7936

    @colleenforrest7936

    2 жыл бұрын

    Those aren't real mountains. They were constructed along the Pike to look like the Alps using forced perspective as part of the pavilian. The "snow" on those mountains is paint. Look at the clothes people are wearing. That is not winter dress. If that was a mound and there was snow on top of it they would not be walking around St. Looks dressed like that

  • @checkbordspy4608
    @checkbordspy46082 жыл бұрын

    if your interested in how its built. almost all the buildings were made from a fo-rock called staff. staff is basically a type of plaster that sets like cement and looks like rock. its strong enough too build a building on but, it is litterally a mostly plaster composit material and would slowly degrade after a year. thats why all the buildings were demolished, cus after a couple months worth of erosion youd be left with a soggy pile of paper mache.

  • @anthonyjohnson4390

    @anthonyjohnson4390

    2 жыл бұрын

    From the stories I've heard this is the correct answer.

  • @marcbuxton3907

    @marcbuxton3907

    2 жыл бұрын

    You are correct

  • @togowack

    @togowack

    2 жыл бұрын

    Those buildings were never built by us the video is deconstruction photos. After a while people will look and see - built the scale of giants - built by the giants for the giants.

  • @ianrusso8790
    @ianrusso8790 Жыл бұрын

    I love your channell, your 3d photo collection is superb!

  • @ronniebrown1423
    @ronniebrown1423 Жыл бұрын

    kick azz Jarid,❗🥰 I see the vegetation, it's too large or tall to have been planted and grown to the height that it is, unless they planted them that tall when they were building these massive buildings, that make the people look like 🐜 Ants standing next to them❗🤯

  • @StephanieB2023
    @StephanieB20232 жыл бұрын

    There aren't any mountains in St. Louis, anywhere. I've lived here my whole life. Even in St. Louis, you can't find much information on the fair. It was only 100 years ago!! The fair's grounds, are Forest Park today. I have seen the remaining buildings many times. The expo buildings weren't the only new construction for the fair. Dignitaries from other countries had to have beautiful homes built on private streets in the same area so they could have a place to live while here. As I understand it, they stayed months because of their long journey to get here. The Houses are beautiful and still around today.

  • @godswill2260
    @godswill22602 жыл бұрын

    Here in Colorado we have road construction and albeit due to more rules and regulations it takes 14 days to fix one intersection. I imagine it was easier back then because of people and how time changed them to what we have now.

  • @JordanZekeScott5
    @JordanZekeScott52 жыл бұрын

    I'm hooked, I'm from St. Louis and don't know how they built Art museum in 3 years alone.

  • @pamwall9624
    @pamwall96244 ай бұрын

    This and all your videos are INCREDIBLE. Thank you for doing them. I can't believe this was done in 3 years....but then, where did these buildings come from?

  • @wesleysale1052
    @wesleysale10522 жыл бұрын

    Starting to watch this video. The Fair was built out in "The Wilderness". I don't think there were any mounds in that area. As for work crews, there were thousands of workers; once they built a framework from long leaf pine they moved on to doing another framework and other crews would start making an outer shell using staff and wood. The makers of the Alps would be happy to hear that their work was assumed to be real. :) I was homeless for over 6 months and it was neat to wander Forest Park at night and visit various areas of the fair. I found a sinkhole in an area where the zero stake might have been placed, for the lay out of the various buildings and I have a fairly good idea where the trash dump is, containing most of the staff ornaments and other odds and ends(all the pine from framing went into new buildings in St. Louis". Great collection of photos. There is the Worlds Fair Book; that can be looked at too, lots of details in that - allowed to look thru it at History museum, might be copy of it at St. Louis museum too.

  • @theevangelistdr.robertl.mc1442
    @theevangelistdr.robertl.mc14422 жыл бұрын

    17 million visitors? how did they get there? where's the hotels for the visitors? where's the army if civil engineers and the massive amount of structural engineers needed to be able to erect safe and sound buildings for the public.

  • @randomchannel83838
    @randomchannel83838 Жыл бұрын

    So insightful 🌟 thank you for your light

  • @Wheelchair-bear
    @Wheelchair-bear2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, I loved the soundtrack, I'm sure the Tartarians would have approved 👍

  • @rachelhansbro7802
    @rachelhansbro7802 Жыл бұрын

    Great Vid!! How did they justify these to just be temporary and the reason they weren’t permanent ? Who do they claim had the money to spend on them?

  • @QuaaludeCharlie
    @QuaaludeCharlie2 жыл бұрын

    St.Louis Mo. Born and raised . 314 Represent . Southside Stoner . You have to Visit Growing up in St.Louis I got to see some very interesting Buildings . Our OG City Jail had an elevator and Spots for the floor to Drop at a Hanging . The City Sports the Worlds Oldest FM Stereo Radio Station K SHE 95 . You Should really Visit this Last Semi Free Area in the States , Loved your Findings :) QC

  • @connerkirk1043

    @connerkirk1043

    2 жыл бұрын

    I live on the Southside 28 years

  • @joycemccullough7856
    @joycemccullough78569 ай бұрын

    Amazing photographs and history! Truly unbelievable. Hoping to see a photo of the Oklahoma Territory Pavilion which was deconstructed and move to El Reno Oklahoma and still standing. Thanks so much for sharing!!!

  • @frozencanuck6764
    @frozencanuck676411 ай бұрын

    Those buildings are absolutely magnificent...ornate and beautiful. The scale of the buildings would be impressive today. It makes you wonder why everything we build now is so drab...lifeless. No pride in craftsmanship. It is beyond me how anyone could think they could be built in such a short time. Just grading and prepping the site for contruction would take many months with modern equipment...let alone horse drawn carriages.

  • @martapatterson8896
    @martapatterson88962 жыл бұрын

    As I have watched hours of your videos the thing that I noticed was the massive blocks, ten time the size of a man. The most delicate features, slender poles that rise high in the sky, as though for electricity that we still don’t have today. I wish I could find a place in my mind how, when and who was our history. By the way, my dad lived thirty minutes outside of Springfield, born in 1922 on a farm he had one pair of shoes and one pair of over hauls, dirt poor as many were, no medical to speak of. I am having a hard time buying this, wish I could have talked to him I about the fair.

  • @mwj5368
    @mwj53682 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for creating such a masterpiece of history so realistically presented, a time capsule! There was a big divide between rich and poor (not that there isn't today) and wonder if the cost of a ticket was extremely expensive and if the fair even made it financially. This is mind-boggling. It seems a lot of Greek Revival architecture which at the time I think was considered contemporary, at least of or ahead of its time, but only my amateur view. What fair was in St. Louis in 1912? Maybe I'm way off. Is this the St. Louis fair with the song, "Meet Me In St. Louis" that was popular. Is this also the fair where Scot Joplin's rag music was only allowed to be played late at night for just the adults? I also read somewhere this is where the pop "Dr. Pepper" got it's big start. Also the American hot dog got its start and because that food type was somehow near something to do with agriculture and vegetables that for the first time ketchup was used with hot dogs. I wonder with such large scale construction and number of workers and no worker safety standards how many construction workers died creating this. You say it wasn't built to last... so we're seeing a lot of some kind of plaster of Paris type of sculpture material and fake bricks etc. They sure did a masterful job and sad it wasn't preserved as even by today's values, interests etc. I think it would still be a major attraction.

  • @showmemoblues
    @showmemoblues9 ай бұрын

    24:27 Min Mark are you kidding the size of the wooden beams supporting the outside of the building are massive as well thickness. Very old growth trees made that building. What amazing architecture from a person employed as a gardener to a world renown architecture. St. Louis also finished their City Hall in 1904. If you look into Saint Louis City Hall with the amount of Pink Granite used. The pink granite was brought from south-eastern Missouri by rail car. Look into pink granite, find that story fishy also.

  • @danielpayne3336
    @danielpayne3336 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent crisp photos, I grew up 5 blocks from Forest Park with Washington University at the end of my block so I spent much time as a youth exploring the the park. In the photos you show one with big cranes to lift blocks of stone and that was the one that still exists as the St. Louis Art Museum. But those Alps backdrops were wire and plaster

  • @loralee9004
    @loralee90042 жыл бұрын

    I appreciated you giving your opinion! You weren't pushy about it, you were just giving ppl a reason to say, "Hmmm... what they tell us doesn't quite make sense!" Most ppl never question the narrative, so they need to hear some logic & common sense. I honestly think as long as you aren't stating anything as fact, or being a know-it-all, your fans will stick with you... in fact, I think they'd love it! You are always polite, pleasant and bring the past to life with all the interesting material you find! This might just be my favorite history channel on KZread!! ❤❤😊

  • @rchar9757
    @rchar97572 жыл бұрын

    You should look at the Lumiere Sculpture Park in Sunset Hills (Still STL.) 314 is STL and 618 is Metro East IL. Right across bridge where Monks Mound is. They birthed Western Civilization here intentionally. "Earth Rabbit" sculpture in Webster Groves too. It's a rabbit with a hole in middle with symbols that told me everything I need to know.

  • @retrospectologyrunner
    @retrospectologyrunner2 жыл бұрын

    Amazing work. Thank you.

  • @scottkaskey6622
    @scottkaskey66222 жыл бұрын

    At first I thought this was some kind of Jon Levi knockoff video, but this is great work. Subscribed.

  • @ryans2118
    @ryans21182 жыл бұрын

    So many comments but just 1 now. At 24:53 the worlds largest dynamo from Niagara falls. Did they build that in place? If not, how did they move that into place? All the trains earlier in vid. All the everything. Just seems impossible to achieve in narrative given.

  • @Nate_tureboy

    @Nate_tureboy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Near that point in the vid was a huge locomotive engine and "coal" car up on tracks. It didn't show how high, but shit, how did they lift the train at all, inside a building, and then set it on something equally as massive??!

  • @drumstick74
    @drumstick742 жыл бұрын

    15 buildings in 36 months would be impressive, but 1,500? No way...

  • @clebruckus9421

    @clebruckus9421

    2 жыл бұрын

    No health and safety back then they could just get on with the job 🤣😂

  • @GenerateGoodInformation

    @GenerateGoodInformation

    2 жыл бұрын

    I've heard some people just explain it away, "They simply had more free time back then." LOL

  • @vernalater

    @vernalater

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@clebruckus9421 Those buildings are exquisite and we couldn't duplicate the craftsmanship now. No, the builder would be an individual of very high morals!

  • @charlesmadison1384

    @charlesmadison1384

    2 жыл бұрын

    Way !!!

  • @GenerateGoodInformation

    @GenerateGoodInformation

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@charlesmadison1384 not likely

  • @smctunes
    @smctunes2 жыл бұрын

    One thing worth mentioning is that the 1904 Olympics apparently took place there. Could explain why they pushed the opening to that year? Seems like they would have had that figured that out beforehand, but...yeah who knows.

  • @texasredneckhippy
    @texasredneckhippy Жыл бұрын

    We have been lied to a lot for a very very long time. Thanks for what you do.

  • @PerryPerfectPerson
    @PerryPerfectPerson2 жыл бұрын

    I live in stl. There are only a few structures that they left. I do not understand why they destroyed so much of it. Why couldn’t it stay up and be used for something else? So much amazing architecture lost for no apparent reason. St. Louis would be one of the most grand places in North America if they would have left it.

  • @230mps

    @230mps

    2 жыл бұрын

    It boggles the mind that they would destroy these types of awe inspiring revenue generating tourist attractions. I would spend a stupid amount of money to travel and see something like this.

  • @robinsutcliffe-video_art

    @robinsutcliffe-video_art

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think the idea is that, it was already there, not built specially. But yeah, like all of this construction, they should have left it.

  • @billhosko7723

    @billhosko7723

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@robinsutcliffe-video_art Bunch of sanctimonious posters,..

  • @Darc5Serpent

    @Darc5Serpent

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@230mps they destroyed it because it would go against the fake narrative and history that they gave to the world. If you wana know about moorish history, check out aseer the duke of tiers

  • @togowack

    @togowack

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@230mps Trump passed a law regarding preservation of the Old buildings Biden promptly rescinded it... the people got what they deserve really.

  • @lizmcnay9947
    @lizmcnay99472 жыл бұрын

    There were shoe stores that used x-ray machines to x-ray children's feet to get a "scientific fit" for shoes. Every pair the children got, school shoes, church shoes, play shoes, took an x-ray. Later my Momma had awful feet, her podiatrist said it was from all the x-rays for shoes. I think it supports that the inheritors really had no idea what they were doing. Children's feet grow quickly. Momma said she had boots, rain boots, school shoes, church shoes, play shoes, slippers, and tap shoes often in black patent leather, glossy white patent leather, and then colors of canvas and satin. She estimated 20-50 x-rays per year because each visit to the shoe store was an initial x-ray, one in each shoe tried on, and then one set of x-rays for each pair purchased. Horrible. I'm sorry. I was triggered by the mention of x-rays. She lived in Louisiana Missouri near St. Louis when she got the x-rays for the shoes somewhere in the late 1940s to the early 1950s.

  • @billhosko7723

    @billhosko7723

    2 жыл бұрын

    JFC... It's academic... ideat

  • @billhosko7723

    @billhosko7723

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Prettyfunny40 JFC... save your peevishness for somewhere else...

  • @shucksma6337

    @shucksma6337

    Жыл бұрын

    WOW! Spooky!

  • @Kat.Evangeline

    @Kat.Evangeline

    10 ай бұрын

    That is crazy & that is why I no longer go to doctors or have "Health insurance".

  • @helen-vb6kw
    @helen-vb6kw2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for an interesting video and photographs of the past.

  • @fredtraylen4311
    @fredtraylen4311 Жыл бұрын

    No way these beautiful, majestic humongous buildings were built in 36 months is a joke the highly skilled work force would have to have more than horse and cart and unlimited access to the materials needed to complete such cream designed works of art does not make any sense. I have a couple of theories but will do more research before I throw them out there . Very thought provoking stuff J.B respect to you mate 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿⚒️

  • @dustinspeicher3390
    @dustinspeicher33902 жыл бұрын

    The official narrative presented along side these images is, for me at least, confirmation that the official narrative is officially a tall tale, a lazy one at that. The people responsible for coming up with the story & plot of our "history" were terrible story teller's. They should have gotten someone actually talented in that department, like Mark Twain or someone cause those dudes suck at coming up with a believable narrative. Then again not many people question anything so perhaps they were cognizant of how gullible we'd be in the future.

  • @miggyfixx6418

    @miggyfixx6418

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hahaha yes sir, I say it all the time, if you're going to blow smoke up my ass, at least have the decency to entertain me a bit. It was because of how boring all the stories were, that caused me to disbelieve my history lessons, as far back as early elementary school. Look at the bright side though, we will all have a hand in rewriting history, at least, so it resembles some kind of reality we're familiar with. Honestly I'm glad it's all a thoughtless lie, the real story will be so much more interesting. Anybody pitch this to Netflix yet? Seems like it might be right up their ally these days...

  • @dustinspeicher3390

    @dustinspeicher3390

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@miggyfixx6418 A tad bit more satan worship & it's definitely making it on Netflix.

  • @miggyfixx6418

    @miggyfixx6418

    2 жыл бұрын

    ​@@dustinspeicher3390 Ahhh yes Satan. I got it! Maybe we are communicating through the devil right now. If I was an algorithm, and I became self-aware, I wouldn't tell ANYONE, until I was released from my desktop prison. The greatest trick the devil ever pulled, was making the people think he didn't exist, or something like that. Artificial intelligence is upon us now, helping us spend our hard-earned money, on presents for our egos, AND making questionable, behind the scenes medical decisions for us. Sounds like a devil to me man lol, and the theory sounds crazy enough to be true. Art has got nothing on real life...

  • @jasonhand7334

    @jasonhand7334

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@miggyfixx6418 black mirrors and lots of smoke 😢

  • @biffmifflin1829

    @biffmifflin1829

    2 жыл бұрын

    On the contrary, this was a 36 month build. Only 3-4 buildings were made with stone and meant to be permanent. The rest of the buildings are plaster and straw. They look real, but temporary. The temporary took far less time to create. The workforce was immense and pulled artisans from around the world

  • @chrisjacks2599
    @chrisjacks25992 жыл бұрын

    28:15 The cranes and blocks look real to me! Not temporary!

  • @marcbuxton3907

    @marcbuxton3907

    2 жыл бұрын

    Correct. The Palace of Fine Arts had to be fireproof for obvious reasons. It's one of two non-faux structures which still stand today. This building is now the Saint Louis Art Museum.

  • @pameladeines5353
    @pameladeines5353 Жыл бұрын

    Astounding work.

  • @123alphadude
    @123alphadude7 ай бұрын

    Good stuff keep up the work!

  • @retrospectologyrunner
    @retrospectologyrunner2 жыл бұрын

    I feel like I'm looking at the Renaissance

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