Swift River Valley Eminent Domain takeover. Boston, Massachusetts Drinking Water. Largest Body of Water in Massachusetts.
Жүктеу.....
Пікірлер: 122
@dharuacharya2 жыл бұрын
Same narrator as on forensic files. What a great voice! I keep thinking he's going to talk about a gruesome crime.
@jacktorrance26332 жыл бұрын
People like the mother that owned the hot dog stand are a blessing to us.
@mattgross77265 жыл бұрын
The narrator is Peter Thomas. First heard him on Appalachian Impressions. His narration is like your grandpa is telling you a story.
@capesquirt
4 жыл бұрын
I thought his voice was familiar. Is he often narrating for Discovery ID forensic type TV shows?
@co2metal
4 жыл бұрын
Why isn't this on his IMDB?
@Luis-xr6ec
3 жыл бұрын
Forensic Files
@BillCesavice
3 жыл бұрын
He also did the voice in the song 19 by Paul Hardcastle.
@turduckenwrath61105 жыл бұрын
not even 100 years later and we’re like “omg let’s go diving for this historical lost location!”
@kyleharris97486 жыл бұрын
I moved to New England 4 years ago & go fishing there all the time! Amazing & very informative. I won't ever look at quabbin the same! Thank you for the great video
@jonlamontagne6 жыл бұрын
I remember hiking there as a kid and following old railroad tracks that lead right into the water. Beautiful area!
@ethansalvadore7189
3 жыл бұрын
Was that any chance near Soapstone hill?
@bricecenter
3 жыл бұрын
I’m curious where, too.
@EyeonthePrize2472 жыл бұрын
Doesn’t this guy narrate Forensic Files, too?
@RickieFareShowe186 жыл бұрын
One of the best Quabbin documentaries and so glad I found it on here! The best spot to check out is the old town of Dana. its not mentioned on here because its the only one of the 4 ghost towns that's mainly above water. Theres so much to see; old cellar holes, the starfire plane crash, Dana common, lots of biking and hiking opportunities, some geocaches benchmarks and letterboxes, and my personal favorite: the lost grave stone of Wendall Farnsworth. I highly recommend checking it out; right off 32A at gate 40! My first time was quite an emotional one seeing all that land that people once called home. There are fewer people than I have fingers that once lived here and are still alive. Truly a very special place. Thanks for uploading this!
@greenwich1754
2 жыл бұрын
Prescott has a majority of it's original average above water as well (hence the name Prescott Peninsula). Most of the eastern and northern sections of Dana are out of water, and it was not part of the original taking, but they realized that having the major manufacturing village of North Dana being flooded, there would not be much of a town left, so it too was included. As a percentage of total acreage of the town, I believe Prescott is the least "flooded", but impounded on 3 sides by water.
@ebinmaine
Ай бұрын
Bicycling is no longer allowed
@kevinsmith52883 жыл бұрын
I was born in Ware and grew up in Palmer. Visited there many times growing up. My father had his own plane, and would tell stories about flying over it in its early stages of being filled and seeing cellar holes. I also have a copy of Quabbin The Lost Valley by Donald Howe. Excellent book, and oh yes, this is an excellent video!
@greenwich1754
3 жыл бұрын
Donald Howe was my Great Uncle. Unfortunately, I only met him once before he died, and long before I knew the Quabbin story. The truth be known, there are errors in his book, as it is a compilation of people's submissions, not written by him. The info was not "fact checked". An example is that one story refers to "Corbin lake" in Greenwich, which was actually Quabbin Lake. I was told by Walter King, who was born in Greenwich Village in 1914, that my great uncle had working for him someone at WARE radio station (another one of my G. Uncles enterprises) who liked to drink, and was used in the editing/collecting of the info for the book. Hence Corbin Lake, etc.
@RidinCountry7 жыл бұрын
Beautiful place. I go there weekly. Did a couple "motovlogs" there and Quabbon never gets old!! .. great job on this! ✌️
@MrTihaw15 жыл бұрын
A wonderful documentary of the quabbin
@skyblazer9137 Жыл бұрын
I lived in Worcester all my life and would fish the Quabbin during the summer months. Would rent a boat at gate 64 i think ? In ware. Had a 10hp Mercury engine. So peaceful and quiet. 🤗🤔😎
@beefsoda14 жыл бұрын
Great documentary. Thanks
@elvee78513 ай бұрын
This was an excellent documentary, I really enjoyed it and it was well put together. Cheers to a job well done and to preserving the history that preceded the Quabbin.
@TheAnnaFisher7 ай бұрын
Wow, fascinating documentary. Sad for the railroaded families. Glad you shared the story! Thank you.
@richardboyle33662 ай бұрын
My father who was born in Spfld. in 1905 had about 6 photos of N. Dana I donated to the Quabbin museum the one I remember was the 1 garage fire dept. with a bell on the roof...
@TedBackus2 жыл бұрын
The quabbin is one of the few bodies of water, that you can take a boat on, look over the side, & see all the way to the bottom, as easy as looking at your feet. Ive lived near it for decades, & aside from the snakes, its very nice
@jamesjwalsh
Жыл бұрын
I imagine that's true in some areas but it must be very deep elsewhere.
@Joe-oi6eh
Жыл бұрын
Snakes?! I'm out lol
@bumblebeemoi4 жыл бұрын
Interesting to hear Harvey Dickinson's very slight "Boston" accent. I grew up in Holyoke (not far away) and there is simply no trace of the accent there. A friend who grew up in Ware had it, but not a severe one. Perhaps the Swift River itself was somehow the "border" of the accent.
@EyeonthePrize247
2 жыл бұрын
I live in Central Mass and we most definitely have a good trace of the accent. A watered down version albeit.
@ryanb1314 Жыл бұрын
Forensic files guy my favorite narrator Peter Thomas I believe talking about my favorite fishing hole
@CorbinAce3 жыл бұрын
I remember when I was a kid Boston had the greatest drinking water 75 years ago. It tasted great and was cold right from the faucet. Massachusetts ruined it by adding Chlorine. When I was little me and my father used to fish there.
@Mike-dy8sj3 жыл бұрын
I grew up in Palmer and spent every summer at the quabbin rolling down the damn. There was an old myth that there was a hidden military base under the quabbin. There were even myths that there are nuclear missile silos hidden there.
@jamesjwalsh Жыл бұрын
Destroying a town to make way for a reservoir is the back story in the great movie "Deliverance".
@FAHRENHEIT-gj4ng2 ай бұрын
Just started watching, hope they explain how they filled the reservoir? Where they diverted the water source from etc?
@leverettrailfan54146 жыл бұрын
What makes me particularly sad, isn’t just that you can’t go there- but that almost nothing is left. What remained, underwater, is scarcely anything better than what remains above. I’ve always been a train lerson, since my early childhood, and I often wonder about what the railroad would have been like today. A direct route, from Athol, to Springfield, would have meant that trains no longer needed to be routed through the busy freight yard in East Deerfield, Massachusetts, which is right at the center of the Former Boston & Maine railroad, where the line’s major north-south, and east-west routes crossed eachother. The sixe of today’s trains, is much greater than they were then. It is unlikely that the Boston & Maine would have run this line, as it was in the hands of the Boston & Albany at the time of abandonment. The B&A would ultimately be leased by the New York Central system, which in turn would be absorbed into Penn Central around the start of the ‘60s, which would collapse around the end of the decade. The govornment stepped in, and reorganized it as ‘Conrail’, which today, is no more, having been divided and sold off to today’s railroad companies, Norfolk Southern, and CSX Transportation. If the ‘Rabbit’ were still running today, and followed these changes of hands, then it would be part of the CSX system. The line would most likely have little to no buisness along the line, depending on how many mills were still active, and still shipping by rail. It would most likely be used as a faster route, to transport freight between springfield, and points east and west, along the former B&M system, now operated by Pan Am Railways, a rebranding of the former “Guilford Rail System”. Or perhaps not. Look at the Massachusetts Central Railroad. A little short line railroad, which toils daily, monday through friday, up and down the ware river valley, between Palmer, where it meets CSX and the New England Central, and South Barre, where freight that must travel further than the reaches of the rails, is transloaded to trucks for the final step in delivery. This line travels along an old, and windy route, something that appears, in tradjectory and function, as though it would have been abandoned decades ago. And yet, it is nothing of the sort. This indipendant line regularly sees trains, and the train length varies greatly, one day three cars, the next day, twenty. Despite only having a connection with other railroads at one end of the line, this little railroad continues to prosper. It assumed operations, after the Boston & Maine decided to leave it. Perhaps the swift river valley would have recieved a simmilar fate, if conditions were right. Who can say? We can never know. The history that would tell this tale to us all, is one who’s opportunity vanished in the face of one of the most shocking govornment projects New England has experienced.
@squidward5804
3 жыл бұрын
You’ve got a record for biggest and longest comment
@sherriworley3079
3 жыл бұрын
@@squidward5804 please See, this is valuable insight
@attentive.affairsyt99995 жыл бұрын
My great grandfather dwight Cooley lived there in the town of Dana
@donnebes9421
4 жыл бұрын
Colin Brow I had relatives there too.
@greenwich1754
3 жыл бұрын
@zighm No connection, to my knowledge.
@joebethune5330
Жыл бұрын
I spent 15 yesterday in petersham, met plenty of cooleys
@CPez3 жыл бұрын
So so So Happy That this Documentary was done. West an AWFUL tragedy. Telling townspeople with barely any technology that because if the City Folk, Far away (Especially in those days), your towns have to be completely destroyed for them. Wow. This was REALLY the best option?
@SilhouetteJudas
Жыл бұрын
“Enfield will never have a bicentennial celebration” I wish I could’ve seen these towns, that there were still people living there
@doreenbooth49444 жыл бұрын
Not everything was torn down when i was a kid i remember walking down gate 22 across wooden bridges i remember walking to the waters edge to get drift wood seeing utilitie poles and lines and a two story bulding standing deep in the water the water up too the 2nd floor but the top of the building still stood what a disgrace to the towns and people who lived there lost their lives and their property not everything was removed yet they lie and say they were shame on boston
@ericlakota65125 жыл бұрын
You see a pic of a man on ice wen he talks of frozen lakes. Thats a pic of old bridge on swift the sight is still their saw it in a book. Its of river rd id dave cusacks backyard right up from the zipline on the swift
@auggieeast5 ай бұрын
Yeah this was terrible for those required to move, but metro Boston is the main economic engine for the state, and without enough water, we'd all be much poorer.
@jackl81332 ай бұрын
Why doesn’t our residents in Belchertown receive property tax break for the water Belchertown supplies to Boston?
@lorincowell69443 жыл бұрын
Not water for 'People,' but for Labor Resources.
@karenlindsey59884 жыл бұрын
At 25:27 there is a face on the chimney!! I had to go back and do a double check. ...but Yup! It's there all right!
@Mtbker456
4 жыл бұрын
Karen Lindsey Weird, almost looks like an Alien.
@doreenbooth4944
4 жыл бұрын
Kinda creepy i thought
@squidward5804
3 жыл бұрын
What the frick your right
@ericlakota1847 Жыл бұрын
My granpa lived and moved out of quabbin it was in the depreshion so they where all broke so geting money for the land at the time was good and of corse some dident want to go I live in belchertown next town to quabbin we have a common in center of town granpa worked building the place pushing roller across the dam
@willisleonard21353 жыл бұрын
Sad that tombstones still remain......gotta wonder what else remains beneath the water.....sad
@greenwich1754
3 жыл бұрын
Jimmy Hoffa?
@squidward58043 жыл бұрын
21:59 I know that guy he sells coins at rietta ranch in hubberstand mass!
@DanielPerez-ee3wp3 жыл бұрын
Is there structure still remaining?
@greenwich1754
3 жыл бұрын
Only the remains of the DUgmar clubhouse. The stone walls minus the roof are standing on Curtis Island.
@freemarketjoe9869 Жыл бұрын
There is a very rare rattlesnake a DRC emoyee told me about living on one of the quabbin islands. it is indigenous to the area and has the distinction of having no rattle on the end of its tail. Local residents have been killing them on sight, but it is now illegal since it is now protected. The state says the snake is quarrentteed on an island, but the residents say that is nonsense because the island has a causeway, connecting to the mainland. The state must assume the snakes will obey the 'stay out' signed posted on the connector and not migrate off the island for fear of substantial fines.
@awesome2204 жыл бұрын
any animals on those islands?
@chukandsarahpratt
4 жыл бұрын
there are many eagles there, golden and bald... there have been cougar sightings as well
@sashahobbie22587 жыл бұрын
interesting
@bruh-bd1tr6 жыл бұрын
Isn't this where we get our water?
@wlavs87
5 жыл бұрын
"T" Spotter I've pee'd in it.
@dirtymikentheboyz5935
5 жыл бұрын
I literally shat in this place
@CorbinAce
3 жыл бұрын
@@dirtymikentheboyz5935 You just reminded me. When my father and I were fishing there my mother rinsed my baby brothers diaper in the water. When we told her what she had done she wanted to go home. LOL
@greenwich1754
3 жыл бұрын
Well, ultimately it's God.
@peterunnels33112 жыл бұрын
Imagine if they tried to pull this today.
@user-uh4dv2zn5m Жыл бұрын
i've seen a book,,, pictures and info, older book, one picture was of a granite structure, slate roof,, all around that , all structures were torn down,,, my thought was they didn't care, cause it was stone, that they left it there, i don't know.
@celestemckenna-lagrant1622 жыл бұрын
I live here
@jeremytravis3603 жыл бұрын
It's a shame that people did not think about the future environmental impact when they flooded the valley. They could have at least removed all the lead.
@greenwich1754
3 жыл бұрын
And the populous of Boston and its environs have been impacted how? Oh wait, they keep electing blue - perhaps you are right.
@EyeonthePrize247
2 жыл бұрын
@@greenwich1754 You do realize that blue doesn’t necessarily refer to ultra liberal left and “snowflakes” right? Massachusetts is mostly moderate plus we have a Republican governor.
@greenwich1754
2 жыл бұрын
@@EyeonthePrize247 Republican in name only (Rino). He governs much more as a Democrat - that's why this state (mostly democrat) likes him so much.
@karaDee2363
2 жыл бұрын
@@greenwich1754 I can't think of one red-state in this country that is prosperous and beneficial to the people for the greater good. So thank God Massachusetts is a blue state
@greenwich1754
2 жыл бұрын
@@karaDee2363 I'm not sure about that. Texas and Florida immediately come to mind. Even AOC went to Florida. Never here any problems with places like Wyoming & Montana. I believe they are red. Seems like most of the violence and crime are in blue states.
@myronchamberlain77344 ай бұрын
How many lives were ruined by the state to build this
@MrUSSAM7 жыл бұрын
Nice to know that Boston's water supply has a dump within it."Small Impact?" sure
@chukandsarahpratt
7 жыл бұрын
good catch.... that's why the water tastes like garbage.... lol
@MrUSSAM
7 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed the video,informative,so thanks for posting !..Whoever wrote the narrative needs a history refresher "New England's Underwater Pompeii"? not even close to the same situation..
@greenwich1754
7 жыл бұрын
Hey Chuckles - the best tasting water in Mass. Largest untreated water source in Mass.
@greenwich1754
7 жыл бұрын
@Uncle U.S. Sam - Nice to know that they built a reservoir on top of a region where people lived, loved, worked & died, not knowing one day the state would take their lives & lively hood from them. There's a dump in the reservoir? They should have built a reservoir in another place, in my opinion. Evil people just making a living, and "Hey, guess what, we want to flood your land & kick you out, and blame you for any contamination to boot!"
@phantasmtheater6015
4 жыл бұрын
Considering how the Boston Lefties screwed people over in the Quabbin region to get the reservoir, yeah. They can have a dump in their drink.
@nordz14984 жыл бұрын
It’s a nice fishing spot though 😂
@kingspuppet32656 жыл бұрын
I'm from Boston and as I was watching this I was chewing on ice from the soda I am drinking...ice that I made from the sink...the sink connected to this water supply. I literally spit out the ice and dumped the rest of it. I was just chewing on old gas station and basement water! Spit it out just as they were talking about how cloudy the water is due to "micro-organisms." Then they discovered the graveyard. If they lied about moving ALL the stones, you know they most likely never removed the bodies..Great...I'm drinking dead people... I'm gonna go barf now. Hahahaha
@bryantbressette7397
6 жыл бұрын
Kings Puppet The water is all filtered with ultraviolet light before getting to boston
@jjg5365
6 жыл бұрын
Boston- actually all Massachusetts tap water have some of the most stringent government standards in the world. so your tap water is safe to drink. read more here: www.mass.gov/service-details/safe-drinking-water-in-massachusetts
@phantasmtheater6015
4 жыл бұрын
Considering that the Boston Lefty Establishment screwed over the people of the Quabbin region to get their drinking water, yeah.....that glass of filth is the least of your worries. Karma's a bitch.
@Luis-xr6ec
3 жыл бұрын
Phantasm Theater 😂😂😂
@Christians_outdoors2 жыл бұрын
Me who lives only 43 minutes away 💪🏻
@Joe-oi6eh
Жыл бұрын
You should visit the Ukraine, I hear it's lovely
@petergrant23314 жыл бұрын
Most of it you can't even see, got a friend who works for DCR mass sucks
Пікірлер: 122
Same narrator as on forensic files. What a great voice! I keep thinking he's going to talk about a gruesome crime.
People like the mother that owned the hot dog stand are a blessing to us.
The narrator is Peter Thomas. First heard him on Appalachian Impressions. His narration is like your grandpa is telling you a story.
@capesquirt
4 жыл бұрын
I thought his voice was familiar. Is he often narrating for Discovery ID forensic type TV shows?
@co2metal
4 жыл бұрын
Why isn't this on his IMDB?
@Luis-xr6ec
3 жыл бұрын
Forensic Files
@BillCesavice
3 жыл бұрын
He also did the voice in the song 19 by Paul Hardcastle.
not even 100 years later and we’re like “omg let’s go diving for this historical lost location!”
I moved to New England 4 years ago & go fishing there all the time! Amazing & very informative. I won't ever look at quabbin the same! Thank you for the great video
I remember hiking there as a kid and following old railroad tracks that lead right into the water. Beautiful area!
@ethansalvadore7189
3 жыл бұрын
Was that any chance near Soapstone hill?
@bricecenter
3 жыл бұрын
I’m curious where, too.
Doesn’t this guy narrate Forensic Files, too?
One of the best Quabbin documentaries and so glad I found it on here! The best spot to check out is the old town of Dana. its not mentioned on here because its the only one of the 4 ghost towns that's mainly above water. Theres so much to see; old cellar holes, the starfire plane crash, Dana common, lots of biking and hiking opportunities, some geocaches benchmarks and letterboxes, and my personal favorite: the lost grave stone of Wendall Farnsworth. I highly recommend checking it out; right off 32A at gate 40! My first time was quite an emotional one seeing all that land that people once called home. There are fewer people than I have fingers that once lived here and are still alive. Truly a very special place. Thanks for uploading this!
@greenwich1754
2 жыл бұрын
Prescott has a majority of it's original average above water as well (hence the name Prescott Peninsula). Most of the eastern and northern sections of Dana are out of water, and it was not part of the original taking, but they realized that having the major manufacturing village of North Dana being flooded, there would not be much of a town left, so it too was included. As a percentage of total acreage of the town, I believe Prescott is the least "flooded", but impounded on 3 sides by water.
@ebinmaine
Ай бұрын
Bicycling is no longer allowed
I was born in Ware and grew up in Palmer. Visited there many times growing up. My father had his own plane, and would tell stories about flying over it in its early stages of being filled and seeing cellar holes. I also have a copy of Quabbin The Lost Valley by Donald Howe. Excellent book, and oh yes, this is an excellent video!
@greenwich1754
3 жыл бұрын
Donald Howe was my Great Uncle. Unfortunately, I only met him once before he died, and long before I knew the Quabbin story. The truth be known, there are errors in his book, as it is a compilation of people's submissions, not written by him. The info was not "fact checked". An example is that one story refers to "Corbin lake" in Greenwich, which was actually Quabbin Lake. I was told by Walter King, who was born in Greenwich Village in 1914, that my great uncle had working for him someone at WARE radio station (another one of my G. Uncles enterprises) who liked to drink, and was used in the editing/collecting of the info for the book. Hence Corbin Lake, etc.
Beautiful place. I go there weekly. Did a couple "motovlogs" there and Quabbon never gets old!! .. great job on this! ✌️
A wonderful documentary of the quabbin
I lived in Worcester all my life and would fish the Quabbin during the summer months. Would rent a boat at gate 64 i think ? In ware. Had a 10hp Mercury engine. So peaceful and quiet. 🤗🤔😎
Great documentary. Thanks
This was an excellent documentary, I really enjoyed it and it was well put together. Cheers to a job well done and to preserving the history that preceded the Quabbin.
Wow, fascinating documentary. Sad for the railroaded families. Glad you shared the story! Thank you.
My father who was born in Spfld. in 1905 had about 6 photos of N. Dana I donated to the Quabbin museum the one I remember was the 1 garage fire dept. with a bell on the roof...
The quabbin is one of the few bodies of water, that you can take a boat on, look over the side, & see all the way to the bottom, as easy as looking at your feet. Ive lived near it for decades, & aside from the snakes, its very nice
@jamesjwalsh
Жыл бұрын
I imagine that's true in some areas but it must be very deep elsewhere.
@Joe-oi6eh
Жыл бұрын
Snakes?! I'm out lol
Interesting to hear Harvey Dickinson's very slight "Boston" accent. I grew up in Holyoke (not far away) and there is simply no trace of the accent there. A friend who grew up in Ware had it, but not a severe one. Perhaps the Swift River itself was somehow the "border" of the accent.
@EyeonthePrize247
2 жыл бұрын
I live in Central Mass and we most definitely have a good trace of the accent. A watered down version albeit.
Forensic files guy my favorite narrator Peter Thomas I believe talking about my favorite fishing hole
I remember when I was a kid Boston had the greatest drinking water 75 years ago. It tasted great and was cold right from the faucet. Massachusetts ruined it by adding Chlorine. When I was little me and my father used to fish there.
I grew up in Palmer and spent every summer at the quabbin rolling down the damn. There was an old myth that there was a hidden military base under the quabbin. There were even myths that there are nuclear missile silos hidden there.
Destroying a town to make way for a reservoir is the back story in the great movie "Deliverance".
Just started watching, hope they explain how they filled the reservoir? Where they diverted the water source from etc?
What makes me particularly sad, isn’t just that you can’t go there- but that almost nothing is left. What remained, underwater, is scarcely anything better than what remains above. I’ve always been a train lerson, since my early childhood, and I often wonder about what the railroad would have been like today. A direct route, from Athol, to Springfield, would have meant that trains no longer needed to be routed through the busy freight yard in East Deerfield, Massachusetts, which is right at the center of the Former Boston & Maine railroad, where the line’s major north-south, and east-west routes crossed eachother. The sixe of today’s trains, is much greater than they were then. It is unlikely that the Boston & Maine would have run this line, as it was in the hands of the Boston & Albany at the time of abandonment. The B&A would ultimately be leased by the New York Central system, which in turn would be absorbed into Penn Central around the start of the ‘60s, which would collapse around the end of the decade. The govornment stepped in, and reorganized it as ‘Conrail’, which today, is no more, having been divided and sold off to today’s railroad companies, Norfolk Southern, and CSX Transportation. If the ‘Rabbit’ were still running today, and followed these changes of hands, then it would be part of the CSX system. The line would most likely have little to no buisness along the line, depending on how many mills were still active, and still shipping by rail. It would most likely be used as a faster route, to transport freight between springfield, and points east and west, along the former B&M system, now operated by Pan Am Railways, a rebranding of the former “Guilford Rail System”. Or perhaps not. Look at the Massachusetts Central Railroad. A little short line railroad, which toils daily, monday through friday, up and down the ware river valley, between Palmer, where it meets CSX and the New England Central, and South Barre, where freight that must travel further than the reaches of the rails, is transloaded to trucks for the final step in delivery. This line travels along an old, and windy route, something that appears, in tradjectory and function, as though it would have been abandoned decades ago. And yet, it is nothing of the sort. This indipendant line regularly sees trains, and the train length varies greatly, one day three cars, the next day, twenty. Despite only having a connection with other railroads at one end of the line, this little railroad continues to prosper. It assumed operations, after the Boston & Maine decided to leave it. Perhaps the swift river valley would have recieved a simmilar fate, if conditions were right. Who can say? We can never know. The history that would tell this tale to us all, is one who’s opportunity vanished in the face of one of the most shocking govornment projects New England has experienced.
@squidward5804
3 жыл бұрын
You’ve got a record for biggest and longest comment
@sherriworley3079
3 жыл бұрын
@@squidward5804 please See, this is valuable insight
My great grandfather dwight Cooley lived there in the town of Dana
@donnebes9421
4 жыл бұрын
Colin Brow I had relatives there too.
@greenwich1754
3 жыл бұрын
@zighm No connection, to my knowledge.
@joebethune5330
Жыл бұрын
I spent 15 yesterday in petersham, met plenty of cooleys
So so So Happy That this Documentary was done. West an AWFUL tragedy. Telling townspeople with barely any technology that because if the City Folk, Far away (Especially in those days), your towns have to be completely destroyed for them. Wow. This was REALLY the best option?
@SilhouetteJudas
Жыл бұрын
“Enfield will never have a bicentennial celebration” I wish I could’ve seen these towns, that there were still people living there
Not everything was torn down when i was a kid i remember walking down gate 22 across wooden bridges i remember walking to the waters edge to get drift wood seeing utilitie poles and lines and a two story bulding standing deep in the water the water up too the 2nd floor but the top of the building still stood what a disgrace to the towns and people who lived there lost their lives and their property not everything was removed yet they lie and say they were shame on boston
You see a pic of a man on ice wen he talks of frozen lakes. Thats a pic of old bridge on swift the sight is still their saw it in a book. Its of river rd id dave cusacks backyard right up from the zipline on the swift
Yeah this was terrible for those required to move, but metro Boston is the main economic engine for the state, and without enough water, we'd all be much poorer.
Why doesn’t our residents in Belchertown receive property tax break for the water Belchertown supplies to Boston?
Not water for 'People,' but for Labor Resources.
At 25:27 there is a face on the chimney!! I had to go back and do a double check. ...but Yup! It's there all right!
@Mtbker456
4 жыл бұрын
Karen Lindsey Weird, almost looks like an Alien.
@doreenbooth4944
4 жыл бұрын
Kinda creepy i thought
@squidward5804
3 жыл бұрын
What the frick your right
My granpa lived and moved out of quabbin it was in the depreshion so they where all broke so geting money for the land at the time was good and of corse some dident want to go I live in belchertown next town to quabbin we have a common in center of town granpa worked building the place pushing roller across the dam
Sad that tombstones still remain......gotta wonder what else remains beneath the water.....sad
@greenwich1754
3 жыл бұрын
Jimmy Hoffa?
21:59 I know that guy he sells coins at rietta ranch in hubberstand mass!
Is there structure still remaining?
@greenwich1754
3 жыл бұрын
Only the remains of the DUgmar clubhouse. The stone walls minus the roof are standing on Curtis Island.
There is a very rare rattlesnake a DRC emoyee told me about living on one of the quabbin islands. it is indigenous to the area and has the distinction of having no rattle on the end of its tail. Local residents have been killing them on sight, but it is now illegal since it is now protected. The state says the snake is quarrentteed on an island, but the residents say that is nonsense because the island has a causeway, connecting to the mainland. The state must assume the snakes will obey the 'stay out' signed posted on the connector and not migrate off the island for fear of substantial fines.
any animals on those islands?
@chukandsarahpratt
4 жыл бұрын
there are many eagles there, golden and bald... there have been cougar sightings as well
interesting
Isn't this where we get our water?
@wlavs87
5 жыл бұрын
"T" Spotter I've pee'd in it.
@dirtymikentheboyz5935
5 жыл бұрын
I literally shat in this place
@CorbinAce
3 жыл бұрын
@@dirtymikentheboyz5935 You just reminded me. When my father and I were fishing there my mother rinsed my baby brothers diaper in the water. When we told her what she had done she wanted to go home. LOL
@greenwich1754
3 жыл бұрын
Well, ultimately it's God.
Imagine if they tried to pull this today.
i've seen a book,,, pictures and info, older book, one picture was of a granite structure, slate roof,, all around that , all structures were torn down,,, my thought was they didn't care, cause it was stone, that they left it there, i don't know.
I live here
It's a shame that people did not think about the future environmental impact when they flooded the valley. They could have at least removed all the lead.
@greenwich1754
3 жыл бұрын
And the populous of Boston and its environs have been impacted how? Oh wait, they keep electing blue - perhaps you are right.
@EyeonthePrize247
2 жыл бұрын
@@greenwich1754 You do realize that blue doesn’t necessarily refer to ultra liberal left and “snowflakes” right? Massachusetts is mostly moderate plus we have a Republican governor.
@greenwich1754
2 жыл бұрын
@@EyeonthePrize247 Republican in name only (Rino). He governs much more as a Democrat - that's why this state (mostly democrat) likes him so much.
@karaDee2363
2 жыл бұрын
@@greenwich1754 I can't think of one red-state in this country that is prosperous and beneficial to the people for the greater good. So thank God Massachusetts is a blue state
@greenwich1754
2 жыл бұрын
@@karaDee2363 I'm not sure about that. Texas and Florida immediately come to mind. Even AOC went to Florida. Never here any problems with places like Wyoming & Montana. I believe they are red. Seems like most of the violence and crime are in blue states.
How many lives were ruined by the state to build this
Nice to know that Boston's water supply has a dump within it."Small Impact?" sure
@chukandsarahpratt
7 жыл бұрын
good catch.... that's why the water tastes like garbage.... lol
@MrUSSAM
7 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed the video,informative,so thanks for posting !..Whoever wrote the narrative needs a history refresher "New England's Underwater Pompeii"? not even close to the same situation..
@greenwich1754
7 жыл бұрын
Hey Chuckles - the best tasting water in Mass. Largest untreated water source in Mass.
@greenwich1754
7 жыл бұрын
@Uncle U.S. Sam - Nice to know that they built a reservoir on top of a region where people lived, loved, worked & died, not knowing one day the state would take their lives & lively hood from them. There's a dump in the reservoir? They should have built a reservoir in another place, in my opinion. Evil people just making a living, and "Hey, guess what, we want to flood your land & kick you out, and blame you for any contamination to boot!"
@phantasmtheater6015
4 жыл бұрын
Considering how the Boston Lefties screwed people over in the Quabbin region to get the reservoir, yeah. They can have a dump in their drink.
It’s a nice fishing spot though 😂
I'm from Boston and as I was watching this I was chewing on ice from the soda I am drinking...ice that I made from the sink...the sink connected to this water supply. I literally spit out the ice and dumped the rest of it. I was just chewing on old gas station and basement water! Spit it out just as they were talking about how cloudy the water is due to "micro-organisms." Then they discovered the graveyard. If they lied about moving ALL the stones, you know they most likely never removed the bodies..Great...I'm drinking dead people... I'm gonna go barf now. Hahahaha
@bryantbressette7397
6 жыл бұрын
Kings Puppet The water is all filtered with ultraviolet light before getting to boston
@jjg5365
6 жыл бұрын
Boston- actually all Massachusetts tap water have some of the most stringent government standards in the world. so your tap water is safe to drink. read more here: www.mass.gov/service-details/safe-drinking-water-in-massachusetts
@phantasmtheater6015
4 жыл бұрын
Considering that the Boston Lefty Establishment screwed over the people of the Quabbin region to get their drinking water, yeah.....that glass of filth is the least of your worries. Karma's a bitch.
@Luis-xr6ec
3 жыл бұрын
Phantasm Theater 😂😂😂
Me who lives only 43 minutes away 💪🏻
@Joe-oi6eh
Жыл бұрын
You should visit the Ukraine, I hear it's lovely
Most of it you can't even see, got a friend who works for DCR mass sucks
P