Old World Cincinnati

I always thought it had a double 't' at the end. Porkopolis, the Queen city, let's take a closer look at the old buildings of Cincinnati. I think there's much more to this place than pork and beer...what lies beneath?

Пікірлер: 204

  • @scottpike9009
    @scottpike9009Ай бұрын

    I worked downtown Cincinnati for 20 years. This is an Old World City. Magnificent structures, all over the place, after the reset.

  • @shannonbiehl4282
    @shannonbiehl4282 Жыл бұрын

    Cincinnati had America’s first telescope, radio signal and atomic clock. I visited for the first time this summer and the city is incredible. You can feel something special about it

  • @scottlong7168

    @scottlong7168

    Жыл бұрын

    BORN AND RAISED HERE, INSIDE THESE BUILDING ARE AMAZING. Grew up big old German built home, amazing woodwork and high ceilings.

  • @insanebeatjunkie

    @insanebeatjunkie

    11 ай бұрын

    Yes cincinnati is spirited

  • @bscott33

    @bscott33

    10 ай бұрын

    What do you mean Shannon?

  • @shannonbiehl4282

    @shannonbiehl4282

    10 ай бұрын

    @@bscott33 I don’t understand your question

  • @Homeopath6

    @Homeopath6

    10 ай бұрын

    Seriously, most of what you heard is probably Lies and every city is special like that

  • @Dommommy
    @Dommommy Жыл бұрын

    The destruction of that library literally hurt my heart. Their destruction of our world angers me to no end and I wish more people felt this way also!

  • @pagerhoads1531

    @pagerhoads1531

    Жыл бұрын

    I have a bunch of pictures of the library and music hall and the library and old subway on Facebook

  • @Dommommy

    @Dommommy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pagerhoads1531 I appreciate that but I'm not on Facebook. Can't tolerate it.

  • @insanebeatjunkie

    @insanebeatjunkie

    11 ай бұрын

    I went to north and central fairmount those schools still had the old world construction. Millvale elementary looked like it was built in the 80s and its already tore down and destroyed..

  • @stocksj

    @stocksj

    9 ай бұрын

    Sad that America is so quick to tear down it’s past and history. Always chasing the new and shiny objects. I remember a few of these old buildings that are now long gone.

  • @mrbeastfan7431

    @mrbeastfan7431

    7 ай бұрын

    I do 💯

  • @popojojo7
    @popojojo7 Жыл бұрын

    i am from Cincinnati. i like your outside perspective to our city. This city is rich in history.... Thanks

  • @mattthornton8474
    @mattthornton8474 Жыл бұрын

    Those "bricks" that you refer to as having a "heat damaged look", are limestone blocks and are an entirely different material than regular red bricks indeed.

  • @cathychilders5109
    @cathychilders5109 Жыл бұрын

    The part of town on top of that hill is Mt Adams, today it’s a very exclusive part of town. Been to Cincinnati several times, the Zoo is incredible, it’s a lot older than they say it is. Love your content, thanks for sharing.

  • @cbtventures6994
    @cbtventures69949 ай бұрын

    I've lived in Cincinnati all my life. Your compilation of these old pictures is beyond fantastic, and it illustrates just how much Cincinnati has let go of. Cincinnati once was known as the Paris of the new world, but your video proves just how small minded Cincinnati has been, what a shame. Some of the buildings you showed I remember as derelict; they have been torn down, shameful. Having worked in construction I can tell you that the cost of replicating the craftmanship of that age would be prohibitive. Rise of inflation and decline of personal pride of craftsmanship; but that's not only a Cincinnati problem. The difference in building materials for structural walls that you point out are the rougher cut stone for foundations and brick for upper levels. There is even varying quality of stone used in foundations, stone for homes is usually much rougher than for the public and municipal buildings. I have a love hate relationship with Cincinnati. Cincinnati coulda been a great city like Chicago or Boston, but has squandered its potential glory, and continues to do so.

  • @jamiecobb5066
    @jamiecobb5066 Жыл бұрын

    I just bought a house in Cincinnati that was built in 1880 the architecture in Cincinnati is amazing and there are still a lot of old buildings and houses.

  • @insanebeatjunkie

    @insanebeatjunkie

    11 ай бұрын

    Lucky you its tons of old homes going up Elm st and in the Bond Hill Avondale area I like the Upper Price Hill area the most

  • @jamiecobb5066

    @jamiecobb5066

    11 ай бұрын

    @@insanebeatjunkie that’s where it is, in Price Hill! So many cool houses up here!

  • @gregorymerritt2528
    @gregorymerritt252810 ай бұрын

    As a Cincinnati native I can tell you it has all the hallmarks of an old world tartianian city that was mud flooded. As yes the area called over-the-rhine is a neighborhood of 19th century buildings of dubious history

  • @dorybleu1
    @dorybleu14 күн бұрын

    I am a native Cincinnatian the photos are phenomenal, I know many of the buildings that still exist, I really appreciate your photos, your commentary not so much. Thank you

  • @basicbreakfast
    @basicbreakfast Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic images! Thx so much for your work. Old Cincinnati architecture really is just as magnificent as the bigger cities. What a treat!

  • @chrisadams5676
    @chrisadams5676 Жыл бұрын

    My family owned a pizzeria on ground level in the Dr.'s Building(12:16) on 8th and Vine in the 1980's .The building was being placed on the Historical Register and had to be restored to its original form.I would explore the basements at night as it was all opened up because they were excavating.What I saw was a city under a city.I was confused at the time but now I understand.

  • @Level_No_Curve
    @Level_No_Curve11 ай бұрын

    Great video on my hometown. I see this old world arcatecture almost every day

  • @heathertyler6786
    @heathertyler6786 Жыл бұрын

    Love hearing your connections to the process of unlearning.

  • @jerrelboyd2441
    @jerrelboyd2441 Жыл бұрын

    Cincinnati is built on seven hills, five of which had an incline to move people and vehicles up and down. They were all removed of course. The city is famous for manufacturing high quality machine tools, which have been shipped all over the world and still in use today. The ''Over The Rhine'' district was the part of town where German people settled. It got it's nickname for the land on the other side of the Miami and Erie canal which ran right through the city so the locals naturally called the canal the Rhine. You are correct about the high number of breweries, which the beer drinking Germans had a lot to do with. Mt Adams is one of the hills, and has incredible views of the Ohio river and the downtown, as well as across the river into Kentucky. This is where Eden Park is located with it's amazing architecture. The Rookwood Pottery company is up there as well, which has produced high quality pottery and ceramic tiles since the 1800s. It's a beautiful city today, but must have been incredible back when the inclines were all running and the canal boats and steam boats were everyday sights. Hopefully someday, the truth will be known about our history and ancestors. 🤍

  • @marytrout4474
    @marytrout447411 ай бұрын

    In all the videos regarding the history of cities, the creators never mention the masonic lodges in every locale, even the smaller towns, like Milford, have a masonic lodge in them. The one in downtown Cincinnati is on 5th and Sycamore, I believe. Great video!! Thanks

  • @Dirty_Dan02

    @Dirty_Dan02

    9 ай бұрын

    This country was founded by Freemasons. George Washington was a Freemason.

  • @LJ-jj5vn
    @LJ-jj5vn Жыл бұрын

    I don't think the average person ever questions any of this, especially now that everyone's always distracted by a screen of some sort with someone on it spewing all kinds of bs at them...that they faithfully follow and invest themselves fully in. shm I wish I could find someone near me that was as interested in this as I am but alas I'm surrounded by people who look at me or speak to me like I have three heads for even noticing these incredible buildings, little alone wanting to talk about them or discuss the ludicrous narratives we've been given regarding them. lol I'm so grateful for people like you and channels such as yours. I appreciate the work you put into your research and the videos you produce as well as the audience you attract. I'd have zero faith in humanity if it weren't for the people I find on channels such as this and others that dare challenge the status quo about anything these days. lmao Thank you, each and everyone of you! 💯👍

  • @derrickcobb5360

    @derrickcobb5360

    Жыл бұрын

    If you can understand 🤔.....white people in the World today🙄 have to believe in the history told in school 🤭 it's based on there "PRIDE"🤷🏿‍♂️

  • @derrickcobb5360

    @derrickcobb5360

    Жыл бұрын

    Now🤔...does it make sense "The slave story".....you were told slave built this from Africa 🤭.....you still THINK we from Africa 🤨....we were already here🤷🏿‍♂️

  • @Dommommy

    @Dommommy

    Жыл бұрын

    I am grateful for channels such as these and people such as yourself as well. It's the only reason I'm ever on the interwebs. I don't watch tv because the shows are so stupid or oozing with messaging and programming. People around me don't care or think about any of this and how much this history impacts our modern lives. There's a better way but most cannot envision it. Thanks for your comment, I commiserate.

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks LJ, I really enjoy connecting with people on here. We have each other to bounce ideas off of. Perhaps one day these ideas will be more accepted by a larger audience...

  • @mlmiller6

    @mlmiller6

    Жыл бұрын

    @ LJ great comment...too bad we aren't neighbors...who knows, we could actually be!!! 😂 I'm in TN and I feel ya! Take care of yourself, friend.

  • @TomElliott_7HRO7LHAU5
    @TomElliott_7HRO7LHAU5 Жыл бұрын

    Keep creating brother! Thx for leading the way alongside many others

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you I appreciate this!

  • @MrAMERICAFOREVER
    @MrAMERICAFOREVER14 күн бұрын

    I have a collection of newspaper stories and photos from the great flood. My Father-in-law was raised there in the early 1900’s to WWIi. He told me that he grew up in the Ky side. As a boy the city was filthy with coal suet. And where the suspension bridge is there were then active gallows’s. He also said that when he was 16 he swam across the Ohio from Newport over to Cincinnati. He and his father were musicians and were in the union. He played trumpet and his father played Saxophone sometimes in the e Same gig. He played at the Beverly Hills Supper Club and played “Dixieland” Style. His mother , whom he did not live with and his Uncle raised him. His mom and Dad were both rounders. He went to the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music and studied under Vogulmouth. I would like to donate what I have to someone who would like to have his story

  • @hoy6705
    @hoy67058 ай бұрын

    I’m from this city and this is beautiful work you’ve done here thank you and well done.

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    8 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much!

  • @jencincy1363
    @jencincy13637 ай бұрын

    The Mt Airy Water Tower still stands and my kids called it the "witch's castle." The Observatory is still there. Music Hall and Memori a l Hall next door are both still magnificent buildings. The last I heard though was they were going g to "renovate" Memorial H a ll which is typically code for modernize and/or ruin the asthetic.

  • @Jenny_Lee_
    @Jenny_Lee_ Жыл бұрын

    This is fantastic! Thank you. I live about 80 miles north of Cincinnati, in Columbus.

  • @dennisstone1207

    @dennisstone1207

    Жыл бұрын

    Amen I live in Cincinnati

  • @dennisstone1207
    @dennisstone1207 Жыл бұрын

    Musick hall is my favorite building in this city . It's beautiful

  • @ASCUMBAGWh0re

    @ASCUMBAGWh0re

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey man relax! You commented too much. Put it all in one comment

  • @ASCUMBAGWh0re

    @ASCUMBAGWh0re

    Жыл бұрын

    And if you're a freemason i wamt nothing to do with you.

  • @marklandwehr7604
    @marklandwehr76047 ай бұрын

    Louisville was Porkopolis because of my family's Butchery they move the Butchery to Chicago across from the Ford factory are Butchery was on the Licking River I asked my great-aunt how we got the property that Ford leases from us she said that's where we offloaded the cattle deer😊 Evan Sinclair wrote his book The Jungle he sat tired our families Butchery

  • @tonyringo6309
    @tonyringo63096 ай бұрын

    Your music is beautiful!❤ thank you

  • @dennisstone1207
    @dennisstone1207 Жыл бұрын

    I love here ots a neat place . Over the rhine is super old world to bad its extremely crime ridden . 1 in 4 chances of being a victim of a violent crime . I feel they make the older places the most ghetto. Thank you for doing this video you became my favorite channel ❤ God bless you

  • @reddeadwitch4217

    @reddeadwitch4217

    Жыл бұрын

    Very true, I drove a white truck through over the Rhine & got a bullet hole in the driver side for no reason at all. Very scared & will never drive that way ever again! Daily shootings now, watching the news can be very sad about Cincinnati Ohio!!

  • @pagerhoads1531
    @pagerhoads1531 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for posting this I live near Cincinnati I know they didn't build any of those old Tartarian buildings they were already there, strange story about Ohio female college/ Cincinnati sanitarium/ Emerson North hospital the history says that the structures were already on the property at the time of the land acquisition

  • @mikepostell8720

    @mikepostell8720

    Жыл бұрын

    Where did you see that the structures were already on the land?

  • @pagerhoads1531

    @pagerhoads1531

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mikepostell8720 Google Emerson A North hospital, I think old memories was the title of the pictures and I went to the website and seen them and the history that it was originally Ohio female college and then Cincinnati asylum and then Emerson

  • @jillbriska2416

    @jillbriska2416

    10 ай бұрын

    I agree! They are not ours. History is written by the victors and with time, 1/2 truths and coordinated efforts “the truth” can be can be whatever the powers that be want it to be. Cincinnati is a hotbed of “founded” buildings or buildings with very suspicious histories. People really should question things more but they don’t. It’s easier to dismiss the people that do question as crazy. Speaking of crazy-the insane asylums across the US alone are enough to make anyone with any cognitive reasoning skills at all realize that we’ve been lied to about our history. Look at new construction- it’s basically prefab! We are not at all the smartest most advanced civilization. The average IQ is 95 and dropping for Pete’s Sake!

  • @copperred7901

    @copperred7901

    9 ай бұрын

    💯💯💯

  • @floydthompson8668
    @floydthompson8668 Жыл бұрын

    If you look close at Music Hall, it is 3 buildings connected.

  • @timothydillow3160
    @timothydillow3160 Жыл бұрын

    It is 1900, only one out of every ten women gave birth in a hospital, yet Cincinnati had a fully operational subway system.

  • @mjt708

    @mjt708

    Жыл бұрын

    They never had an operational subway system? They started digging it out mid 1900s and because of flooding and the destruction of neighborhoods for the interstate they stopped construction.

  • @astrosmith6313
    @astrosmith631311 ай бұрын

    Great video Right on point brotha thanks just open my eyes up to much more to link in the lost knowledge I've been seeking I'm from Cincinnati I see this stuff every day wen I go through downtown to work blows my mind

  • @dennisstone1207
    @dennisstone1207 Жыл бұрын

    You been spot on I live here. So much can be said about ot tho thank man this has got to be the coolest video I've seen by far .

  • @Jenny_Lee_
    @Jenny_Lee_ Жыл бұрын

    At 24:03 , the design of the iron rods on top of the music hall is the same design etched into the stone at 22:39 . What does this pattern represent I wonder? I've been told that is a Native American symbol.

  • @birdwatchohiolive
    @birdwatchohiolive10 ай бұрын

    I have some family history knowledge of Cincinnati. My great great grandfather owned a home building company in Cincinnati. He was originally from Europe. He built some of the extravagant homes in the Silverton area and even had a street named after him. He was ultimately forced out of the city to California unexpectedly and nobody knew why. He left behind his family and the city ultimately renamed the street for some reason. Some of the homes he built still exist today. My mom has an old article about him and his building company. I know he was extremely wealthy and influential in the city in the mid to late 1800s. I wish I knew more but these are a few of the things I remember my grandfather telling us before he passed away.

  • @dennisstone1207
    @dennisstone1207 Жыл бұрын

    Alot of the downtown buildings are two stories under ground dirt floors . Bricks bricks bricks.

  • @floydthompson8668
    @floydthompson86689 ай бұрын

    Beautiful pictures, but to understand the architecture, there are many books on early Cincinnati architects. All things PORK in Cincinnati are because Cincinnati was once iconic in the pork slaughter and processing industry. You can do far more than imagine, you can read history books.

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    9 ай бұрын

    You sure can read the history books...but can you trust what you're being told? I appreciate you watching....consider the possibility that the history books may not be telling you the whole truth.

  • @bobaret4336
    @bobaret4336 Жыл бұрын

    If you deny history you are doomed to repeat it

  • @LJ-jj5vn
    @LJ-jj5vn Жыл бұрын

    I agree with you regarding our having collective amnesia but I believe that amnesia started during the South African War (sometimes referred to as the Boer War, Second Boer War or Anglo-Boer War) and that it continued right on through WWI and WWII. They had multiple generations that needed to be "reset" and short of a world-wide natural disaster nothing works better as a distraction then a war or recovering from one. Everyone is busy fighting for their survival in some way, therefore less likely to challenge anything going on around them.

  • @mlmiller6

    @mlmiller6

    Жыл бұрын

    Interesting...I was thinking the "Civil War" was the beginning of the reset here in America. It is so strange to me that virtually nothing happened from the founding of this country in 1776 to around the "Civil War" period. Yes, there was the war of 1812 and a few others but where are the stories about THE PEOPLE who were LIVING HERE and WORKING and BUILDING IT OUT and UP? Does ANYONE have access to ANY historical records or written diaries kept by family members or published books authored by ANYONE from this period who lived in this country and recorded the day to day life of the early American settlers and the happenings of their lives here other than Laura Ingells and her "Little House on the Prairie" writings? Does ANYONE have a family tree going back further than the mid 1800s who are FROM THIS COUNTRY?

  • @LJ-jj5vn

    @LJ-jj5vn

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mlmiller6 I'm in Canada but yes, I have the same questions myself! I laughed out loud at your Little House On The Prairie reference as I watched that while growing up in Saskatchewan (which we refer to up here as being part of The Prairie provinces ironically). lol I recall there being an old western tv series called Bonanza, as well as many old John Wayne movies that alluded to the States during part of this time period as being the "Wild West" yet we see little evidence of that existing on the scale that they implied it did. In Canada the narrative has always been that the only people living here during the early 1800's were the Natives/Aboriginals, then the English and the French arrived and so on. I don't think I've ever met a non-aboriginal "Canadian" who's family has been in Canada longer than four generations. This is what they've been told by their parents or grandparents anyway. Now I'm not suggesting here that they've all been purposely lied to about it by their family members. This is just a hypothesis that I have regarding this narrative. When you see old pictures or videos of the people who were supposedly just arriving to North America you can't help but notice how dazed and confused they all appear to be so (this of course is just my opinion based on my observations of these things and by no means a medical fact pertaining to their state of mind) what if all of these people just thought they'd arrived from overseas somewhere but in fact had really been here the entire time? I know this sounds crazy but what if during one of these previous "resets" people were given something (or something was done to them) that made them either forget about their past or highly suggestable to believing something "new" to be true regarding it? This potential "experiment", as well as the reason for the reset, could potentially explain the huge "need" for so many asylums and hospitals in the early 1900's as well as why there were so many orphans. This would also explain why there is so little personal information regarding this time period in North America. I'm sorry, I get carried away with this subject, as so much of what we've been told just doesn't add up. haha I'm a big fan of old rural cemeteries and one thing I've noticed up here is how few headstones/grave markers there are that date back prior to 1880. What did people do with their dead back then? And yes, why are there so few personal accounts/diaries of people's lives during this era?!

  • @riverbilly64

    @riverbilly64

    9 ай бұрын

    Good Lord, I have no idea what the two commenters were going on about. My first ancestors came to America in the 1600s. A lot was going on between 1776 and the Civil War. It’s written about in regular books, digital collections of libraries, digitized journals, so on and so forth. Really, all you gotta do is google to find out more. I won’t get into the notion that there are no cemeteries with graves older than the 1880s - depends on where you live. Think about what many early tombstones were made of. 🤦🏼‍♀️

  • @simulationsecrets6540
    @simulationsecrets65402 ай бұрын

    Great video! Never thought much about this aspect of the deception but compelling and now going through your research and digging it, thank you!

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    2 ай бұрын

    Good to have you here!

  • @Honeycawt
    @Honeycawt Жыл бұрын

    Samuel Hannaford apparently “designed” a lot of the old buildings and high schools and courthouses, ridiculous… one man from England has all these different designs and then has enough people to built 30 5-8 story buildings including an oddfellows temple that at the time HIS NAME WAS NOT EVEN ON PAPER OR ANYTHING. Then it discovered he built it and tore down

  • @heyokaempath5802
    @heyokaempath580210 ай бұрын

    From Cincinnati, born and bred. We also were first in radio and television. The picture you showed as Vintage Central Trust bldg, today known as PNC Tower, is being made into luxury apartment. If you have any questions, please ask me!

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    10 ай бұрын

    love your name...

  • @heyokaempath5802

    @heyokaempath5802

    10 ай бұрын

    @@oldworldex Thanks!! 😊

  • @heyokaempath5802
    @heyokaempath580210 ай бұрын

    The old Enquirer Bldg is at 800 Broadway, and is now the Juvenile Court. Most of the bldgs you are showing are entirely gone. The Roebling Suspension Bridge has one similar to it in NYC, also built by John Roebling. The old Library's heads outside were William Shakespeare, John Milton and I forget the third one.

  • @stevevice9863
    @stevevice9863 Жыл бұрын

    All of the details you show on these old buildings can still be done today. No one is willing to pay for them in money or time. The immigrants coming from Europe brought these skills with them...stone carving, masonry, wood working and the desire to replicate the architecture of the cities and countries they came from....it is what they knew. It's not the Architects, Contractors , or Craftsmen that don't exist today, it is the will of the owners, developers, and tax payers that refuse to foot the bill for this level of craftsmanship.

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    Жыл бұрын

    Mystery solved..

  • @Honeycawt

    @Honeycawt

    Жыл бұрын

    No they can’t buddy a designer who did 4 to 5 years in “college” is not going to replicate what someone has been doing for 10s of years with there hands or tools even if they had money they don’t know certain teachings of old world architecture or buildings

  • @jkm3297

    @jkm3297

    Жыл бұрын

    lol

  • @thebrittford
    @thebrittford Жыл бұрын

    The building standing alone at the 18m30sec mark- that was part of the natural history museum, supposedly, and it is the only part that survived some how

  • @floydthompson8668

    @floydthompson8668

    Жыл бұрын

    That was originally a water pump tower. The museum was built later.

  • @Jenny_Lee_
    @Jenny_Lee_ Жыл бұрын

    At 22:39 , look at the faces on the building. 😶

  • @kosmokritikos9299
    @kosmokritikos9299 Жыл бұрын

    Mister Q's version of Cincinnati.

  • @jeffmorrison579
    @jeffmorrison5797 ай бұрын

    At 24.33 mark I think that's called the bald knob .

  • @kellymiller120
    @kellymiller1207 ай бұрын

    Pigs with wings are beautiful.

  • @floydthompson8668
    @floydthompson8668 Жыл бұрын

    The subway was first stopped by the great depression, then cars and highway construction. Plans still existed, but costs were too high to loop all the way up following the Norwood Lateral.

  • @insanebeatjunkie

    @insanebeatjunkie

    11 ай бұрын

    Yea cincinnati would of been a marvel of a city trumping every city in ohio

  • @jeffmorrison579
    @jeffmorrison5797 ай бұрын

    That album cover photo of Janis joplen on a motorcycle was taken at Eden park .

  • @marthaball8029
    @marthaball80297 ай бұрын

    Last picture...Weirdeman brewing company was in Newport, Ky. right across the river of from cinn.

  • @illmatticx
    @illmatticx Жыл бұрын

    I think your skeptisim is so deep you don't even realize that limestone is entirely different than brick. Probably shouldn't be so vague either, be more specific

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    Жыл бұрын

    how about I be what I want to be and you watch if you want to watch...but thanks for the tips and input.

  • @illmatticx

    @illmatticx

    Жыл бұрын

    @@oldworldex if your whole shtick is to "uncover the truth" than be more specific if you want people to be aware, how many people do you think watch this and have a semblance of a fuck idea what the mud flood theory is? Most don't, it would be beneficial if you were to elaborate. But yea, do you

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    Жыл бұрын

    @@illmatticx The entire area of research is vague. If you're looking to formulate your own theory there's plenty of places to research. Nevertheless the answer won't be served up to you on a silver platter. I appreciate your input but you came at me with a personal attack and I'm not one to shy away..at least you're looking I suppose. Good luck on your search!

  • @illmatticx

    @illmatticx

    Жыл бұрын

    @@oldworldex I think maybe I came off wrong, I didn't mean to be rude and I'm sorry about that. Just about one of the only conspiracies I think holds a lot of ground is the mud flood, I was more referring to just perhaps random people from cincinnati who have never even heard of it coming to the video, and being confused. I think you should go more in depth to educate people on it. Because although I know of the theory, I just came to the video to look at some of the historical buildings

  • @thebrittford
    @thebrittford Жыл бұрын

    Some items not covered: There are “temples of love” in multiple parks around Cincinnati, especially the parks that sit on hills (like Mt Storm). Several have caught fire- one in Burnet Woods by University of Cincinnati. Several other places describe them as temples to Ishtar or Aphrodites. P&G world HQ, they built hanging gardens similar to those described in Babylon, that take up 2 blocks downtown. There are lots of tunnels, big tunnels too. The subway stalled being built because too many people were dying trying to build it. They gave other reasons to cover tho. early 1800s, 3 big earthquakes hit Cincinnati, caused the river to flow backwards for a couple days... There is a lot more too- too much to put here- worth digging on tho

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    Жыл бұрын

    thanks for this!

  • @LivelifeLit

    @LivelifeLit

    Жыл бұрын

    If you have more info or interesting stories, plz share. 😅

  • @jamiecobb5066

    @jamiecobb5066

    Жыл бұрын

    Cool comment, very educational, thanks for sharing.

  • @pagerhoads1531
    @pagerhoads1531 Жыл бұрын

    Definitely mud flood windows halfway underground

  • @dergutehut3961
    @dergutehut3961 Жыл бұрын

    Why cities had higher growth rates in that time is the very BASIC question everyone who makes videos about the history of the time of the INDUSTRIALIZATION should be able to answer. Not being able to answer that is like making videos about American-Football strategies and not knowing when the players have to kick the ball. That you haven't did a bare minimum of research is indeed very suspicious.

  • @pagerhoads1531
    @pagerhoads1531 Жыл бұрын

    I have a bunch of these pictures on my Facebook probably several hundred pictures from over 100 years ago the oldest ones I could find, Cincinnati was founded by a group of gentlemen called the Cincinnati 👁

  • @marthaball8029
    @marthaball80297 ай бұрын

    I've been in a few of these buildings..

  • @Michelle-vr2bz
    @Michelle-vr2bz Жыл бұрын

    Forgot Finley Market

  • @kmb_jr
    @kmb_jr10 ай бұрын

    Amazing video. Even the Mt. Airy water towers are questionable.

  • @mattthornton8474
    @mattthornton8474 Жыл бұрын

    re: Music Hall not having it's statue work in later photos. The earlier pictures were RENDERINGS prior to construction. The statues as originally planned weren't ever built.

  • @johnwilmes3703
    @johnwilmes37038 ай бұрын

    Love this showing of Cincinnati! Would like to know more of your thoughts about the town and it’s developments as I am a traveled Cincinnatianin love with my town.

  • @TimSpaw1leg
    @TimSpaw1leg6 ай бұрын

    I grew up in Norwood and hung out downtown and in Correyville/Clifton... Over the Rhine wasn't called Over the Rhine because of the Ohio River. There was a Canal that ran from Milford, Hamilton and other cities to OTR. The canal is now called "Central Park way".. A lot of these buildings you're showing are still there.. some of the old hotesl, Odd Gellows is gone... General Hospital is now UC Hospital... If you look at the Civil War so called reconstruction in the south, around the same time or just after the Civil War just about every US city had a "great fire" in the late 1860s all the way to the late 1870s.. There's mass old buried forgotten buildings underground. You can still get into via tunnels.. somebody took the time to research this stuff back before I was born and dug out these buried buildings.. I know parts of Cincinnati nobody knows about.. I know places in Norwood, the zoning department knows nothing about.. these places are completely forgotten and structurally sound.... Norwood blocked off the more well-known places like the old subway tunnels, but I know where more is, and they're still there to this day.. stayed in a place hidden to the public and city council for 2 weeks about 5 years ago.. only 1 other person knows where these 2 other places in Norwood are, and he was a really close friend of mine who died a few years ago.. I would say the samething about some spots in Cincinnati but averytime I visit those spots I find condoms, needles, footprints etc so they're not secret anymore.... I apologize for the novel... there's most likely 100s of more spots around Cincinnati I don't know about.. I'm not gonna mention any of these places out in the open.. so of ypu wanna get ahold of me.. we'll have to work something out and I'm keeping my spots to myself.. but I'll show you anything else.. old abandoned pump houses, old buried train depots, old buried foundations.. old buried building that I ha e no clue what they used to be.. there's even an old buried 2 story building buried under some railroad tracks.. some of the old stone art on these buildings were made of plaster..I was gonna take one that ead laying on the floor of a buried building and when I went to pick it up, it crumbled in my hands.. I did take a Polaroid of it back in the 90s and my grandma said it looked like something from the World's Fair cause her mother stole some stuff from the World's Fair when they were tearing it down.. she also said that a lot of the buildings that were in the World's Fair were there years before the world's fair and then tore those down with the faked buildings.. the World's Fair was definitely a cover up...

  • @sissitop1505
    @sissitop150511 ай бұрын

    "Insane" pictures of a former "insane" city. Unbelievable this summary of Cincinnati. Great work! Thank`s a lot. It`s strange that every city had it`s "fire" or "exhibition" or both. I`ve got the impression that we nowadays live in the so called "stone age". Greetings from Augsburg, Bavaria

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    11 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much!

  • @markridgway249
    @markridgway2492 ай бұрын

    Looks a lot like Detroit and Chicago (in older parts) and they developed the same time and for the same reasons. Access to plentiful resources and fresh water, moving water.

  • @floydthompson8668
    @floydthompson86689 ай бұрын

    The proliferation of cars, and the COST of building on and through Cincinnati hills killed the subway.

  • @richardniemer9752
    @richardniemer97527 ай бұрын

    The fancy buildings are a simple example of first generation European immigrants coming here and earning a lot of money. They were philanthropic and took pride in the public buildings.

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    7 ай бұрын

    Seems simple.

  • @floydthompson8668
    @floydthompson8668 Жыл бұрын

    The water tower "castle" on Gilbert at Elsinore is still there, next to WCPO CH.9 NEWS studio.

  • @gregorymerritt2528
    @gregorymerritt25288 ай бұрын

    The picture labeled walnut hills high school is mislabeled that was an elementary school which has been torn down. Walnut Hills HS is a domed tartarian looking school still in operation today

  • @user-mn5du9te4j
    @user-mn5du9te4j9 ай бұрын

    What is the Real reason these Buildings were Built so Fantasticly??

  • @justinamontgomery2618
    @justinamontgomery2618 Жыл бұрын

    Another shocking great video....leaves me speechless.

  • @mrbeastfan7431
    @mrbeastfan74317 ай бұрын

    🧱❤️🙏🏼great pics

  • @insanebeatjunkie
    @insanebeatjunkie11 ай бұрын

    The music hall still looks the same

  • @vapormissile
    @vapormissile11 ай бұрын

    "Day-to-day fog" in a hundred forms. The anomaly hides behind it like an enemy flotilla behind a rain squall.

  • @georgeprokopenko3044
    @georgeprokopenko3044 Жыл бұрын

    good

  • @eman893
    @eman8939 ай бұрын

    Sadly most of the buildings you shown are gone now.

  • @michaeldesilvio5532
    @michaeldesilvio5532 Жыл бұрын

    I appreciate your skepticism.

  • @user-uo7fw5bo1o
    @user-uo7fw5bo1oАй бұрын

    That was a beautiful city that was absolutely destroyed! There was a massive, extremely dense neighborhood over on the west side of town by the main railway station and in the reset the government tore it all down for an industrial park, a highway, and social housing. And the abandoned half-built subway? The city government ran out of money to complete thanks to World War 1 and the inflation it caused. They could have gone to the voters and explained the situation and got more money to complete it but by that time everyone was embracing the automobile. That started the reset!

  • @MarkWeberMBA
    @MarkWeberMBA4 күн бұрын

    Hey hombre what is your name

  • @dennisstone1207
    @dennisstone1207 Жыл бұрын

    Facebook won't even let em send this link over privet messages its deemed abusive . Yeah abusive to the lies they taught us

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    Жыл бұрын

    really? Abusive? thanks for letting me know!

  • @dennisstone1207

    @dennisstone1207

    Жыл бұрын

    @@oldworldex wwll I might have been sending the link to fast. But still

  • @dennisstone1207

    @dennisstone1207

    Жыл бұрын

    @@oldworldex I was overly excited when I seen this inparticular video I just had to share it with everyone

  • @frozenn4u
    @frozenn4u Жыл бұрын

    Definitely a Mud Flood city, America was filled with Old World city's in 1620 when the Pilgrim's arrived, and was not a "Pristine Wilderness" as we are taught.

  • @mlmiller6

    @mlmiller6

    Жыл бұрын

    We will never know what the Hell was going on or what the truth is about anything. But there most definitely were Olde World built out cities all over these lands, and the "Native Americans" who were here then most definitely were not what we are told and shown. They were completely civilized.

  • @frozenn4u

    @frozenn4u

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ASCUMBAGWh0re The proof is in the architecture, the buildings were built for giants, why else would they build massive buildings with very large doors. The evidence is the destruction of a lot of these Old World buildings and city's, That's why we had all the "Great Fires" of all the major city's. They were getting rid of the evidence. In the Old World giants and normal sized people existed together, but something happened to their society, and they were destroyed by the Mud Flood.

  • @frozenn4u

    @frozenn4u

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mlmiller6 The "Native Americans" the ones that built these city's, were actually the "Lost Tribes of Israel" , they arrived around 700 BC when they were fleeing the Assyrian invasion.

  • @mlmiller6

    @mlmiller6

    Жыл бұрын

    @@frozenn4u thank you for that information... I will have to take a dive down that rabbit hole soon. Take care of and guard your soul during these fucked up times. ❣️

  • @mlmiller6

    @mlmiller6

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ASCUMBAGWh0re There is "proof" and "evidence" of it everywhere. Those of us who choose to seek it, are eventually able to find it. But one must first be willing to let go of the ridiculous official story/fairy tale programming we all received during our 12-13 yrs (or more) at the indoctrination camps we were sent to, as well as be willing to actually SEE the proof and evidence when it is presented or found. It's not for everyone, but it is profoundly important for some of us to try making sense out of the utterly nonsensical historical narrative we have been given about the "founding" of this country and the "Natives" who inhabited these lands before our arrival. Most of us have determined, based upon much evidence and scant proof (knowing that most anything holding actual proof was burned down, blown up, bombed out, flooded with mud, or somehow "lost" with "whereabouts unknown" etc. in the 1800s, all of which was intentional destruction of the proof), that it is highly probable that almost nothing we were taught or which is parroted by the mainstream is truth. It's a hard pill to swallow when that realization hits because it can destroy one's entire sense of who they thought they were. So, like I said, it's not for everyone.

  • @ReneMicheo
    @ReneMicheo11 ай бұрын

    Did the germans occupied Cincinnati before the war? was that wealth and power connected to the bad german guy?

  • @bodainwonderland8917
    @bodainwonderland8917 Жыл бұрын

    We’re now the nasty nati btw but tbh cincy became ran like shit for a while hence the decline . We had our riots in 2000 but we love our beer and sports hahah

  • @aaronwatkins8973
    @aaronwatkins89738 ай бұрын

    Cincinnati was hugely influential if for only briefly. It's now just a shell of its former self. The potential was there for something more but is finding its identity.

  • @marthaball8029
    @marthaball80297 ай бұрын

    Oh how I love the sceptical, or in todays terms...conspiracy therioist.... like a badge of courage....

  • @jencincy1363
    @jencincy13637 ай бұрын

    I live here in Cincinnati and you can still see some remnants of old architecture. I, personally, believe that modern architecture is plain, dull and ugly purposely.

  • @Homeopath6
    @Homeopath610 ай бұрын

    You sound so canadian

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    10 ай бұрын

    Oh youbetcha eh..

  • @Homeopath6

    @Homeopath6

    10 ай бұрын

    @oldworldex No I never heard you say that it's something Else goofy. Congeneality almost sheep like. Although obviously not with you are your community.

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Homeopath6 Amazing that you edited this comment and it still remains incoherent...

  • @Homeopath6

    @Homeopath6

    10 ай бұрын

    @@oldworldex Piss Off

  • @bodayshus1437
    @bodayshus1437 Жыл бұрын

    Aside from outright demolition and fire, these great cities are also destroyed by ghettoizing them. Over The Rhine is a perfect example

  • @jamiecobb5066

    @jamiecobb5066

    Жыл бұрын

    True, I just bought a beautiful old house in a Cincinnati ghetto area. The houses here are magnificent, however the ghetto people are tearing them up! It’s sad to see.

  • @thisguyincincy
    @thisguyincincy5 ай бұрын

    @oldworldex I'm confused, can you fill me in on the misinformation of the over-the-top architecture and the real history not being taught?

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    5 ай бұрын

    You'll have to dive deeper into the subject. My channel has a lot more content as well as links to other content creators on the topic. It requires some immersion with the visuals to come to the realization that something is off about the history we have been taught. I appreciate your interest, thanks for watching!

  • @kassduffy3087
    @kassduffy3087Ай бұрын

    Wtf are you going on about?

  • @piedmontatl
    @piedmontatl3 ай бұрын

    You are misleading people. Because there is a state line, Cincinnati is cut in half with a sizeable population across the Ohio River in Kentucky. In addition, millions live in the metro area and they enjoy doing things within the city limits. The actual population of metro Cincinnati is closing in on 3 million people.

  • @royschalk6554

    @royschalk6554

    2 ай бұрын

    I Live in Kentucky, a lot of us don't want to claim Cincinnati, its Kentucky, not southern Cincinnati.

  • @copperred7901
    @copperred79019 ай бұрын

    Great video just to let everyone know Don't get in your feelings i'm just stating facts People who built these amazing structures That's over hundreds of years old came from so-called black people of America today German and Irish immigrants came in as squatters. While black people was at War Along the east coast and the south

  • @StuffthatsGone
    @StuffthatsGone Жыл бұрын

    Annoying commentary. Not sure your point. These buildings were real.

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    Жыл бұрын

    thanks for watching...

  • @rollingoodpaster4839

    @rollingoodpaster4839

    11 ай бұрын

    I find your kooky conspiratorial comments laughable and foolish...the comment about the horse drawn trolleys morphing into electric ones was some kind of historical trickery laugh out loud foolish Your sarcastic comments and uneducated viewpoints are troubling

  • @kollumthirteen
    @kollumthirteen11 ай бұрын

    Artisans will build whatever you ask them if you pay them the money, all the mud flooders have never built anything in your life…

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    11 ай бұрын

    wrong

  • @kollumthirteen

    @kollumthirteen

    11 ай бұрын

    @@oldworldex You’ve never built anything in your life

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    11 ай бұрын

    @@kollumthirteen 🤣🤣🤣

  • @kollumthirteen

    @kollumthirteen

    11 ай бұрын

    @@oldworldex you’re laughing at me when you don’t even understand how Photography works, would you like me to explain, moron???

  • @timgerard262
    @timgerard26211 ай бұрын

    My theory... The population declined after 1960 because the birth control pill arrived in 1960

  • @marthaball8029
    @marthaball80297 ай бұрын

    When do you think the dumbing down of America started???? Please see this.....

  • @pagerhoads1531
    @pagerhoads1531 Жыл бұрын

    33° 😈 Luciferians

  • @dennisstone1207
    @dennisstone1207 Жыл бұрын

    Lewis and Clark expeditions probably were to go threw and destroy .

  • @ronjohnson4566
    @ronjohnson4566 Жыл бұрын

    i am at a loss. what is this video about. is it about space aliens erasing our memories before ww1 and ww2? the fire didn't happen? that the population of cincy grew rapidly then dropped off? that the buildings weren't really built? I don't get it. there is something wrong with towers on high schools? What is your point? If you don't know, there is a Cincinnati Historical Society located in the Union Terminal/Museum Center. You can get all kinds of information about the buildings, fires, canals, breweries and churches. I would suggest to you that the high schools were built to look like an important places, because they were. Most people didn't even graduate from high school. Many were laborers and craftsmen. Those people were the people who built the pirouettes, filagree, statues and infrasturcture of the city. There wasn't an Osha, or government agency that oversaw specific inspections that a builder must pass. So, maybe as the decorative buildings aged they began to fall apart. Who knows? A library knows and you have one in every city and town in the USA. So, maybe consider going to one of these fancy high schools. Learn about the history, write a paper about what you learned, not what you "don't buy". Then present a video that makes a few points about old buildings and how they got here. And learn about "change". Nothing ever stays the same. Immigrants that came from Germany built like Germans. Italians built like Italians, Irish built like Irish. Those stones and bricks you "don"t buy" are quarried locally and made from local clay. The wood came from local trees. Speaking of local trees, many of the buildings were stone, brick and tile on the outside and wood on the inside. These buildings were lighted by gas lamps. So when a fire started there was a very good chance that the wood interiors burnt and left the stone and brick structure standing. one exploding gas lamp in the hall of a larger building could ignite a big fire. Maybe ask the question, why did old north american citys built like European cities? Name names. Who designed specific buildings, what were it's requirments, and what happened to it in hsitory. The answers can be found in a historical library. Look up who was Roebling, Homestead, Hannaford, and other architects and builders of the 19th century. All your questions can be answered. good luck.

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    Жыл бұрын

    I love this comment. It helps me out immensely in my research. The psychology of accepting the given historical narrative is on full display, yet we read phrases like 'I am at a loss' and 'Who knows' while simultaneously attempting to explain that all is known and can easily be referenced. The cognitive dissonance of accepting what we're told about the past because we have anchored our world view to it juxtaposed with wilfully admitting that there are unknowns which may lead to more unknowns. Speaks volumes!

  • @ronjohnson4566

    @ronjohnson4566

    Жыл бұрын

    @@oldworldex wow! Good luck. Cincinnati is a real place. There are books and photos. To reply to your total ignorance of reality is an insult to me and anyone else that can read.

  • @oldworldex

    @oldworldex

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ronjohnson4566 I do appreciate the reply..

  • @harutakagura4886

    @harutakagura4886

    11 ай бұрын

    @@ronjohnson4566 settle down Ron, clearly many people appreciate these types of videos and the curiosity of a lost time period and architecture. it's certainly a free country and perfectly okay to question the official narrative and timelines we are presented with. you don't find it curious that a Post Office today is a complete isore brutalist construction shack compared to a magnificent massive intricately beautiful palace that would rival any old world construction found around the world? often times these buildings were 'founded' during the Great Depression, which certainly didn't seem to hinder construction on a massive scale, outperforming anything we attempt to build today. I bet you believe everything you read in a history book as unquestionable fact don't you? the idea is that there was a coverup and destruction of old world technology within the past couple hundred years, and the evidence is all around the world and particularly in America the timeline doesn't always make much sense. maybe 2 world wars killed off anyone that had any recollection of a time before the 1850s. if you don't find this topic fascinating, or at least marvel at the beauty that was once commonplace in our very own cities over 100 years ago, go watch the History Channel.

  • @ronjohnson4566

    @ronjohnson4566

    11 ай бұрын

    @@harutakagura4886 I wasn't commenting the buildings beauty. I was commenting on the strange way the publisher of this video told his story. And, I stand by what I said. Oh and building technology, materials, techniques, workforce, and usage has changed. In addition, everything has changed since 1900. So restoration has become very expensive if you can even find someone who can do restoration alla 1900. And even more additionally, toilets , electric, solar building technology, parking, convenience, has affected every part of our lives. Things are different and will continue to be different. I too would love to see innovative solutions to building problems. I would love to see you try and bring back victorian style clothing and laws. But, I was confused as to what heshe was saying.

  • @TheFutureIsThePast77
    @TheFutureIsThePast77 Жыл бұрын

    So you think humans did not build these buildings? I’m not understanding the skepticism. People build and destroy. You see it nature also. We look now and say wow we sure are lazy when it come to building buildings or maybe it’s a culture shift. People were building a country and had a sense of pride I feel. Now it’s all about money so you won’t see these types of buildings being built.

  • @Adam-or1ke

    @Adam-or1ke

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, his comments are vague enough to make me genuinely curious about what he means. I really want to know now.

  • @kyee1713

    @kyee1713

    Жыл бұрын

    Capitalism did ruin a lot of beautiful places. Razed and destroyed for parking lots in tons of major U.S cities. Also loads of highways and crappily built big box stores. All these places turned America into an even worse place than it was. Cities in the 1800s were beautiful, dense, had many stores and apartments, lots of transit systems, and valued beauty as a representation but when everything is commodified no one gives a crap about it and everything is cheap and crappy. The loss of tradeskills and beauty and art is astounding. People stopped investing money into places when everywhere is a scheme for money and greed. No one gives a crap about actually investing in areas if all we do is live in a suburban home and are isolated from everywhere and have to drive past places and never fully experience places. So sad that these places were destroyed. Fountain squares are beautiful. I’m so glad that there’s one on Hyde Park still.

  • @kyee1713

    @kyee1713

    Жыл бұрын

    Worst culture shift of all time. That’s why I am pursuing a career in arts and historic tradeskills. There used to be tons of careers for this but it seems now only a select few actually are trying to build artistic and beautiful. This is expensive work but for people wanting to live forever and invest in places it is an awesome thing to do. Takes a lot of time, skill, art, skilled design, and a lot lot of work. Tons of people used to be doing every single little process but it’s basically all up to a few people now.

  • @madjanetramerez2383
    @madjanetramerez238310 ай бұрын

    Such a shame the destruction, without any war bombings needed