40,000 Pound Stones in a Horse Wagon?! - Minneapolis City Hall

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Hidden Truth Hidden Truth

Hidden Truth Hidden Truth

Күн бұрын

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@karma3101
@karma3101 Жыл бұрын
The fact that there are no architectural drawings or any records of how such a magnificent public building was constructed, apparently only just over a hundred years ago, is highly suspect in its self!
@chasethecat3839
@chasethecat3839 Жыл бұрын
They lost all that when they lost the instructions on how to build a space craft that could go back to the moon. 😊
@Overstand100
@Overstand100 Жыл бұрын
@@chasethecat3839I want to know how they called a landline from the moon?
@acousticpineapple7851
@acousticpineapple7851 Жыл бұрын
lmao @@chasethecat3839
@BobbinMcferry
@BobbinMcferry Жыл бұрын
There are no drawings for the minuteman missiles built 60 years ago. does this mean nukes are a thousand years old? there are photographs of this building being constructed. are they also a thousand years old?
@thebobsmith1991
@thebobsmith1991 Жыл бұрын
​@@chasethecat3839prolly a 🔥
@resqfreedom9308
@resqfreedom9308 Жыл бұрын
In every single town, in every single state! Same Story everywhere you go! Great job my friend! Boots on the ground,.. LOVE IT! Thank you for ALL YOU DO AND GOD BLESS 🙏❤️✌️
@maxwellsmart6601
@maxwellsmart6601 Жыл бұрын
'Masonry' is a religion, NOT a construction technique or building material. The term "block mason" or "brick mason" was cooked up just like "mason jar". I'll give ya 2 guesses who cooked up those terms.
@davidroberson8030
@davidroberson8030 Жыл бұрын
Okay got me Who???​@@maxwellsmart6601
@noahmichael-7652
@noahmichael-7652 Жыл бұрын
The free:) seen similar in Cinci and here in Phx, AZ too
@keithlayton5483
@keithlayton5483 Жыл бұрын
Every single nation all over the world!! Literally, every continent, including Antarctica!! Ya, definitely a little more going on here than we've been taught.....
@kellikelli4413
@kellikelli4413 Жыл бұрын
WHY are Americans so surprised at this archetecture? Don't they know America was colonized by EUROPE - surely Americans see the resemblance...
@theyrekrnations8990
@theyrekrnations8990 11 ай бұрын
Wiki now has changed the dates. Was 1891-1895, to now 1889-1906 or 17 years to construct, They also claim that there was an old city hall that was torn down prior, same spot. No construction photos in 16-17 years except for the roof (possibly photo shopped?)
@mrparrehesian1742
@mrparrehesian1742 Жыл бұрын
The Minneapolis population in 1891 was only 430k. Why would they need a city hall that big? What other Govt offices were posted in this building? Impressive work.
@hiddentruthhiddentruth
@hiddentruthhiddentruth Жыл бұрын
I see 164,738 for Minneapolis census population for 1890 so even much smaller! (As if that is even reliable). Thanks for comment!
@mrparrehesian1742
@mrparrehesian1742 Жыл бұрын
Dang, my bad. Gotta read instead of glean, you're right! My numbers are of the 2020 census. Thanks for the video.@@hiddentruthhiddentruth
@elim7228
@elim7228 Жыл бұрын
​@@hiddentruthhiddentruth I wouldn't be surprised the population was even smaller. I can draw any numbers on Wikipedia.
@thomasm.7058
@thomasm.7058 Жыл бұрын
It was the beginning of the industrial revolution, they knew what was coming... I live in a city build 1860 forward, it was planned and called "high industrialization", almost all buildings exist even today....
@mikekline261
@mikekline261 Жыл бұрын
It might have been easier in the winter with horse drawn sleigh, or work was slown down, it gets cold here in Minneapolis
@Connorkinn
@Connorkinn Жыл бұрын
Asked my 80 year old grandpa about these old buildings they were told masons came and built them left and they have no idea what mortar they used to hold the buildings together Guthrie Perry and Stillwater Oklahoma all have the same style buildings all going in the ground
@paulchannel8868
@paulchannel8868 Жыл бұрын
I was born and raised in Guthrie Oklahoma. , lived there till I was forty . There is some weird stuff I know and experienced about the old buildings there . Also there is a vast tunnel system there , I have snuck into a little of it several times . And need I mention the largest Masonic temple in possibly the world is found there too .
@stephenguthrie3907
@stephenguthrie3907 Жыл бұрын
My name is Stephen Guthrie.my grandfather Dee Guthrie. Our family is from Scotland ,and freemasons of the Scottish.settled Guthrie Oklahoma .now the family is in Tx for the most part ,and I now live in Alaska .
@stephenguthrie3907
@stephenguthrie3907 Жыл бұрын
The family motto from coat of arms is latin .STO PRO VERITATE.( I stand for Truth)
@65ramblerman
@65ramblerman Жыл бұрын
NEVERE under estimate the Free Masons!! They have been studying and building with stone wayyyy before the 1800'S
@earthmansurfer2328
@earthmansurfer2328 11 ай бұрын
@@paulchannel8868 - Need a temple to keep track of all that Free Masonry. ;-)
@victorponce7238
@victorponce7238 Жыл бұрын
Now think about it.....all that tonnage. How many thousands of tons that building weighs ok. And it's not shifting. Has no cracks from foundation giving away. I ask what is the foundation? What is underneath the building supporting it that it hasn't moved/shifted in all these years. How far does it really go down?
@Stand-back-up
@Stand-back-up Жыл бұрын
Building is only as solid as it’s foundation. Bedrock? The original ground level?
@EarthResearch
@EarthResearch Жыл бұрын
very good point.
@jaseperi
@jaseperi Жыл бұрын
Good point. The stones in the foundation must be ginormous. And how deep?!
@gary5799
@gary5799 Жыл бұрын
Great question?I'd guess it has to be built on solid rock. But it has reminded me of the churches with deep tunnel networks under them.
@See-through-The-Veil
@See-through-The-Veil Жыл бұрын
@@gary5799 Has a massive Freemasons lodge below it.. So definitely has tunnels, just us mere mortals wouldn’t be allowed below 🤫✌🏼
@meganlee162
@meganlee162 Жыл бұрын
Love this. There are too few of us that see reality. I look at crazy stuff similar to this in Milwaukee a lot. Also, try checking the old newspaper archive for a 5 year period surrounding when an amazing building was supposedly built, and you’ll find no mentions. This was especially obvious for Milwaukee City Hall, the world’s tallest building when it was built in 1898! And none of the local papers mentioned it!
@soundmind69
@soundmind69 Жыл бұрын
Yes When I Pass through Milwaukee I'm amazed at some of the old buildings and churches They're tall and magnificent I'm from kenosha but live in upper Wisconsin now.
@meganlee162
@meganlee162 Жыл бұрын
@@soundmind69 I hate how they’re slowly but surely still pulling them down. Several years back one of the such churches you mentioned had a “mysterious fire” and I watched it burn. So infuriating! They did “renovations” on City Hall recently that lasted about 20 YEARS and cost an ungodly amount of millions. Funny how it takes two years to build the tallest building in the world, but takes 20 years to renovate it 100 years later at 100 times the cost.
@bluevireo425
@bluevireo425 11 ай бұрын
Once many years ago a flew into Milwaukee for a conference weekend...All I could think of was WOW...what an amazing old city...my jaw hung down as I walked around thinking WHAT THE HECK...no one ever told me about how beautiful this city was...and I kept thinking something was off....had a weird feeling even while there...running around on the beach and into a small park...looking at the old buildings in awe. Now over 30 years later...we have begun to put pieces together, intuition is something we should not ignore...ever.
@ropace37
@ropace37 Жыл бұрын
What’s more even unbelievable is, The stuff in the joints isn’t technically “mortar”. It’s just a bead of weather and friction sealant preventing ice and water from penetrating due to the cooler climate as the natural stones do not need or require any mortar or bonding agent when the cuts are so precise on such a material, allowing a near perfect, durable, stability.
@i11_wi11
@i11_wi11 Жыл бұрын
You’d think we’d learn way more about these magnificent constructions in history class if we truly built them, we would be proud and want to show them off not hide them…
@fibonaccisrazor
@fibonaccisrazor Жыл бұрын
That's an excellent point. There should be huge amounts of construction information, drawings, photos etc. The lack of these indicates things are being hidden.
@trumpershaveblinderson7470
@trumpershaveblinderson7470 Жыл бұрын
Admitting that. Would force them to rewrite the official storyline. Which they're not going to do.
@CursedInEternity92
@CursedInEternity92 Жыл бұрын
They don't want you thinking about it or asking questions. The fact that they are more advanced already throws a wrench in their lie and it's about giving you a place holder story in your mind for what really happened. Horse and buggy people with out cranes did not build faster than us with less time, and with less population. if you do believe they did ypu probably will believe anything.
@parisdegrassie1013
@parisdegrassie1013 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely! Not only that. If they truly built all the buildings that are said to have built in the late 1800s - we would also learn about the incredible effort that the entire country would have had to put together to supply all the building materials for these thousands & thousands of courthouses, churches, factories, post offices, schools, librarys, etc.. Like there would have to have been a window factory in every county, a steel factory, brick, concrete, wood, organ building factories, brass, copper, nails, screws & soo much more. After years of this research you start to see just how many buildings they say were built in a 50-60 year timeframe. You see things mainstream historians miss - as they usually focus on certain regions or subjects - anything but actual construction or the like. There aren't these factories, there aren't these stories of EVERY single persons great grand fathers, every able bodied man that wasn't a farmer would have had to have been in a factory making building supplies or working construction to pull of this sheer scale of construction that is said to have went on. That's before adding the elements of no power tools, proper transportation or limited transportation of building materials, horses needing 10+ gallons of water per day & the absolute ORNATE details & the fashion/building style of these structures that just frankly look like something a different civilization, a high grand one built! These workers went home to wood shacks & lived by candlelight in the primitive way we are told at historical societies. & Then traveling to work to make these Greco roman structures that look like ones from Europe built many hundreds of years earlier!!? People don't build in styles that are hundreds or thousands of years old out of nowhere after building wood shacks. It's just bonkers nuts crazy. : )
@PSALTISK
@PSALTISK Жыл бұрын
They will only teach us what they want us to know. They were more advanced than we are in the past. They built great buildings, and many other things on this planet with fake stories of how it was done. Then they just reset us again. Just like they are talking to day.
@thekreatorr
@thekreatorr Жыл бұрын
The smooth 165 mile dirt roads probably helped tremendously with the transportation part of the entire process
@Fredsta4christ
@Fredsta4christ Жыл бұрын
lmao I love your humor let's just face it yall, social media and climate change just has us dumbed down, we'll never be able to recreate these structures in our time because we lost the technology to build them and telemetry data /s
@maratonlegendelenemirei3352
@maratonlegendelenemirei3352 Жыл бұрын
Especially during winter and heavy rain and snow.
@allenschmitz9644
@allenschmitz9644 Жыл бұрын
Thats not part of the narrative....lol'
@alexanderebersberger4650
@alexanderebersberger4650 Жыл бұрын
Have you ever heard something about railroad?
@theyrekrnations8990
@theyrekrnations8990 Жыл бұрын
Winter helped as well. 4-6 months of winter, 2 months severe(cold as -20 in Feb). So theoretically, the 4 years should be reduced to two or three years at most of workable time.
@dionpeek4339
@dionpeek4339 Жыл бұрын
People nowadays could not conceive of working that hard to build something that beautiful and complicated
@RomeTWguy
@RomeTWguy Жыл бұрын
Correct
@chrishov8890
@chrishov8890 Жыл бұрын
Tataria.... I've been a builder over 40 years and worked on building and homes, barns, you name it. Yes you are on the trail and trial of seeking. This type of construction cannot be reproduce today and on top of that the tradesman today don't have the no how or passion or pateice to do or try to find a super or advisor to comprehend a process from beginning to end. Forsight. Good luck, you will also find melted rock era or white wash over the clad... spot on
@kshoults2566
@kshoults2566 Жыл бұрын
Perfect craftsmanship, and why would we lose the ability or desire to make something as beautiful of significant? What happened? It’s hard not to admit there was some reset or falling away from knowledge/ skill. Amazing time to be alive and thank you for helping figure out the true history!
@johncater7861
@johncater7861 Жыл бұрын
No, I think you can partially blame people who think like accountants. Bean counters. No sense of workmanship, pride, building something for the future. These days if a building stands for 20 years it is considered old and will most likely be torn down and another crappy building replaces it.
@GrzegorzDurda
@GrzegorzDurda Жыл бұрын
What happened is people moved away from being a nation of God. This was all driven by the Christian religion and those building were built with and for the glory of God.
@1neAdam12
@1neAdam12 Жыл бұрын
It's all by design. In fact, one of the planks of Communism is to stifle man's creative potency by making architecture bland and uninspiring. Even artworks in public spaces were deemed to be shapeless and dull.
@Klara_walkingonthemoon
@Klara_walkingonthemoon Ай бұрын
@@GrzegorzDurda which God though? So many in the Masonic culture of gods? Gargoyles and super ornate buildings with secret symbols and geometry? Dig deeper beyond the first layer of the Bible.
@timothykuring3016
@timothykuring3016 Жыл бұрын
The city hall in Milwaukee looks similar. I would wonder about things like that and why the people who built them didn't document their story, or take pictures of the wagon trains filled with lumber and stones it would have taken to build them. I wondered why writers like Mark Twain who would write about anything astonishing and amazing, were there to witness the building of San Francisco and Virginia City, New Orleans, Chicago, etc. and they never had anything to say about it. mark Twain would write about the minutia of the difficulties, verging on almost impossible and difficult to endure, like riding a stage coach, and the inconvenience of having to ride a horse, but he never mentioned the thousands of wagons filled with lumber and stones that must have been everywhere at the time. He visited the Mormon Tabernacle shortly after they began construction of it: "The Salt Lake Tabernacle, also known as the Mormon Tabernacle, is located on Temple Square in Salt Lake City, in the U.S. state of Utah. The Tabernacle was built from 1863 to 1875 to house meetings for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church)" But he had nothing to say about the thousands of men and wagons filled with stones undertaking such a gigantic and ambitious project. All he talked about was the difficulty of giving a child a yo-yo when you have seventy-five children, and you have to have a box full of yo-yos to hand out. it seems almost incredible that a man who would comment on almost every human folly and question every excessive ambition, and find some way to call every large project foolish or amazing would have no observations about such a herculean task from people who had only recently settled there. "No sooner do a bunch of Mormons arrive at their desert location after being chased from the United States, and fighting Indians, and nearly dying on the planes, than they set about building a giant temple, and transporting stone and lumber from far away." He would marvel that they didn't plant gardens first, or at least build an outhouse for the workers. Everything people wrote was carefully edited back then. I think they knew what they weren't allowed to write about. Whole pages would be slashed out of their manuscripts if they mentioned old buildings or construction. Even when it must have excited much admiration - either for the building projects or the buildings. I think like Ancient Rome in Europe, everyone knew the buildings and ruins were there. Only the Indians were honest about it, because we have records of them saying they didn't build the buildings - they were just there, and left by ancient builders. Today, we presume they were only talking about pyramids in the jungle, but they might have been referring to buildings all over North America. The Mormons seem to have looked at an old map and found that there was a cathedral in the middle of nowhere that they could take over as long as they got there before anyone else. Most people weren't interested in going to the middle of nowhere, when there were plenty of nice buildings easier to find and in better places, but the Mormons were being persecuted, so the middle of nowhere was appealing to them. There are several levels of below ground construction. When Mark Twain visited, I believe the temple was in the early phase of construction, so the writer would have commented that they dug a huge hole in the ground to build the first several stories below ground. Or maybe he was used to seeing people start construction of buildings by digging huge holes in the ground, so the first few floors could be under ground. Anyway, it beggars the imagination that they did such huge projects, but they had no inclination to document them, or to boast of their accomplishments in construction. They would have crowed to Europeans, who gave up on building such structures hundreds of years before, that Americans could build more cathedrals than all of Europe in all of its history, in a single year, or a few years, with no more than a few tools hauled in covered wagons, across distances that Europeans couldn't even imagine. They have Notre Dame, but look: America has the Mormon Tabernacle, built by a bunch of cowboys while they were fending off Indian attacks. And a million other cathedrals and railroads and canals were being built by America's small population in an area almost as big and empty as Siberia and Russia combined. While America was fighting wars. If we were still as productive, we would all be living in palaces made of cut stone. Why did we stop building like that? A question I kept asking when I was a kid, and I never got a satisfactory answer.
@timothykuring3016
@timothykuring3016 Жыл бұрын
How did we start thinking ugly buildings were better? American character seems to have completely changed. Countless stone masons and builders suddenly decided they didn't like their jobs and they wanted to build ugly buildings out of wood, or steel and glass. Why were there no comments on the millions of people who suddenly decided they didn't like their craft or their profession? Don't people usually kick up a fuss when someone shuts down their industry? The controversies would have filled the papers if you laid off a whole sector of the economy. There would have been tragic novels about the broken and impoverished builders and stone masons, like mine workers, laid off when the mines closed. There were stories about the men who worked in mines. Something is certainly missing in the big picture, and it is the explanations of those buildings and the men who built them, and what must have been their efforts to gather the resources. Wagons full of stones would have outnumbered wagon trains by the hundreds, and Indians would have attacked them. There would have been stories of trains of wagons filled with logs and trains of wagons filled with stones that needed cavalry protection. There would have been forts at the quarries and near the woods along the supply lines for building materials, and there would have been records of the soldiers dispatched to the forts. Politicians would have been making speaches about building better roads for the forty-mule train monster wagons. mark Twain did tell a story about some Mormons who agreed to haul some lumber for some non-Mormon settlers, and how they quit when it became too dangerous and expensive, but the Mormon leader forced them to complete their work at their own loss because they had agreed to do it, and they were not to break their word. It is interesting that Mormons were hiring themselves out like that when they must have needed every man to build their own temple, and also interesting that they couldn't estimate the cost of hauling logs when they must have been doing so much of it. it just doesn't add up.
@timothykuring3016
@timothykuring3016 Жыл бұрын
It's hard to search the literature for what people didn't write about, but I bet there are clues there too.
@soundmind69
@soundmind69 Жыл бұрын
I heard Mark teain was just a fake name and person so when people ready these stories it spoon feeds you all you need to know about this subject, same with old western movies and civil war photos where everything looks staged. They had to create false stories to complete their plan of deception.
@mikeshell4214
@mikeshell4214 Жыл бұрын
Another great video!!!! Good work!!! This is a superb example of impossible architecture that clearly shows that there is hidden/suppressed technology. The stories we are told about the construction of these marvelous buildings is a pack of lies. This was supposedly built when we were barely out of cowboy and Indian days. There are never any genuine construction photos because it would show the machines and methods we are not allowed to see. How did they excavate for the foundation for such a massive structure??? How did they really transport and lift the stones?? We have been deceived about our history.
@letthedeadburythedead2148
@letthedeadburythedead2148 Жыл бұрын
Satan the father of all lies has been at work for a very long time
@elim7228
@elim7228 Жыл бұрын
I'm convinced it was poured polymer, not stones cut and transported from a quarry. Nevertheless, this is a stunning work of construction engineering. The angles, transitions, and fit and finish are incredible.
@johncater7861
@johncater7861 Жыл бұрын
Well, I don't know. Perhaps at that time there were some ingenious architects and builders not to mention excellent artisans who took great pride in their work.
@OldTraffordNorway
@OldTraffordNorway Жыл бұрын
It can have been there for a thousand year. It's stone. So it last for a unlimited time.
@drawingmomentum
@drawingmomentum Жыл бұрын
​it would show signs of weathering
@AhJodie
@AhJodie Жыл бұрын
I appreciate you pointing out all the amazing little things about this fantastic building! It is a piece of art and genius to witness, I think it even helps my mind expand! I moved some bricks a few blocks in a truck and almost lost a transmission and axil..... it was close!
@S_raB
@S_raB Жыл бұрын
I live in Minnesota. One thing to note about construction times up here - during winter, at least 3 months but sometimes as much as 6 months, the ground is frozen solid & avg temperature will be near 0° F...so there's no way this was being constructed year round. The 5 years in actuality was at most 4 years due to the extreme winters we experience. Quite the accomplishment. 1891 official data - even into April it was still below freezing in Minneapolis, just for reference.
@oldworldex
@oldworldex 11 ай бұрын
and mortar needs warm weather to set..
@christopherjames4422
@christopherjames4422 Жыл бұрын
Excellent quality captured a lot of detail. It's truly amazing looking at these master pieces with the eyes to see them for what they are and how they don't belong in our timeline.
@billwillock7245
@billwillock7245 Жыл бұрын
It’s actual granite. This becomes clear from the closeups of the veins of aggregate minerals therein. It’s MAGNIFICENT! The masons here had hardened steel tools and the advantage of having been quarried and shaped during the industrial revolution of the late 19th century, which afforded tremendous advantage over those who were responsible for much older megalithic, granitic constructs. Just bloody tremendous.
@colingilchrist9988
@colingilchrist9988 Жыл бұрын
What an incredible structure. It is spectacular and I very much doubt that it could be made today.
@1neAdam12
@1neAdam12 Жыл бұрын
Why can't it be produced today?
@lightbeforethetunnel
@lightbeforethetunnel Жыл бұрын
​@@1neAdam12We wouldn't be able to produce it *exactly like that* today. The perfectly fitting, circular massive stones, etc. Ask any stone mason today if they could do that and they'll tell you no way.
@ryaneverett9901
@ryaneverett9901 Жыл бұрын
People get caught up in the scale, precision, complexity, & craftsmanship of these buildings. Not to mention the beauty. We do not think of all the hardened steel tools, saw blades, nails, & screws needed for a project like this and the manufacturing need to produce all those things. It goes to a completely different level.
@gregorymerritt2528
@gregorymerritt2528 Жыл бұрын
The city hall here in Cincinnati has the same kinda of stone with the same timeline for construction
@tomprivate3362
@tomprivate3362 Жыл бұрын
You should check with thee Hennepin County Historical Society. They will have pictures of the construction. In the 1890's Minneapolis was a railroad center. I suspect the building stone was transported from Northern Minnesota to Minneapolis by rail.
@hiddentruthhiddentruth
@hiddentruthhiddentruth Жыл бұрын
There's always a story ... and sometimes pictures which when looked at closely then just raise more questions. Pictures from the time are always blurry when the technology of tintype was ultra high definition. Background skies are blurred out, shadows don't match...etc. One has to examine closer than looking at a picture for a second. Also as said in the video the history given is horse and wagon. Not railroad. Railroad doesn't remedy the narrative even if it were used. These are gigantic perfectly cut boulders/stones. There was wood at the time to build things that would have been manageable.
@264yh
@264yh Жыл бұрын
I work in that building as a tradesman. I am also very perplexed by it. Many mysteries. I agree it probably has floors below what we see and I have many photos of archways in the basement that have doors framed in them but are cut down to about 5.5 feet because the floor has been built up. Also, windows that only have the top of the frame exposed. Or stairs the go to nowhere. No one there seems to notice or care if you say, huh, would you look at that?
@Shananana99
@Shananana99 Жыл бұрын
My husband is a mason. I love showing him these structures and telling him what yr and how fast they are said to be built. He just laughs. Says no way!
@robertmcgivern6585
@robertmcgivern6585 Жыл бұрын
Some of the old smoke stack chimneys in the North England are magnificently detailed structures. One of these masterpieces has parapit stones atop weighing in at 7 tons each. I don't think anyone has ever explained how they got them up there.
@J.Burrough
@J.Burrough Жыл бұрын
The ingenuity of these old timers were impeccable. Horse & buggy on dirt (muddy) roads, block & tackle, these men were some of the greatest no doubt.
@rico7180
@rico7180 Жыл бұрын
They didn't build it. They inherited. They have no idea who or how it was built
@alexanderebersberger4650
@alexanderebersberger4650 Жыл бұрын
That was not the "horse and buggy era", it was the railroad era.
@stevenkettle3143
@stevenkettle3143 Жыл бұрын
So where was the railroad that went right to the site?? and where did it come from.... The quarry itself perhaps?
@orneryoccultist9680
@orneryoccultist9680 Жыл бұрын
Very true, and rail technology has been around since the 1500. Even if animals are used rail makes for way easier pulling.
@Hope-fv3kf
@Hope-fv3kf Жыл бұрын
It still required men to load from quarry to train and unload train to location (even if temporary tracks were built to the location it needed moved to a specific foundation or place to lift it to the top of the building). Using a horse drawn buggy. Small stones to large granite of 6000 lbs. Over and over and over and....
@soundmind69
@soundmind69 Жыл бұрын
​​@@orneryoccultist9680the point is The buildings are older than we are told Could be from 1500 rather than 1800 I commented on the main comments how the guy that founded my town said there were already people and buildings but because they had permission and money to basically steal it all, they did.
@theyrekrnations8990
@theyrekrnations8990 11 ай бұрын
It's possible trains could have been used. It would still be a monumental effort. my thing is that there are rarely photographs of any of the construction sites. In this case i have never seen any, and wiki now says that it was constructed over 17 years. So , no construction pictures of it over a 17 year period except for the roof. try not to laugh. The Duluth Central High school is the same thing, no construction photos except for doing the roof .. Just a co-incidence though. My theory is that many buildings were here already and they were simply taken over by the old black nobility of ancient blood lines who sent scouts out to locate the buildings when they started coming to America. exampl, is Lewis and Clark
@N8_R
@N8_R Жыл бұрын
Very nice video, I have been passing this building on my way to work for the past few months and have been taking pics. I have been taking pics of all these kinds of buildings around the Twin Cities and have noticed a pattern: faced off emblems and signage areas. At 1:00 in the video this is a perfect example of stones having been faced off and replaced with embossment. I am also seeing some fire damage on the right side of the triple arch doorways. This place got seiged.
@jupiterlegrand4817
@jupiterlegrand4817 Жыл бұрын
Population in 1890 approx. 160,000. That "courthouse" could serve a population of millions. Add to that the impossibility of moving materials that heavy (and in those quantities) or constructing it in just over 4 years and on and on and on...
@averysmithsr.2103
@averysmithsr.2103 8 ай бұрын
Mind boggling! Perfect engineering and precise fitting!!
@anda9690
@anda9690 Жыл бұрын
I love it when they call these buildings “post office” 😂😂
@dellcoc
@dellcoc Жыл бұрын
It's funny that they have the construction plans for the old basic square buildings that were supposedly made the same year.
@danneumann3274
@danneumann3274 Жыл бұрын
I am always suspicious of a carved date in a stone building.
@edgardopineda3317
@edgardopineda3317 Жыл бұрын
It is almost neolithic, but in a smaller scale, the technology is similar to ancient technology. I had never seen this building, thank you for making this video, have a good day!
@aceventura5398
@aceventura5398 Жыл бұрын
You can easily lift a brick and put more mud or make up the level on the next row.A little dip in a few bricks won't ruine the over all appearance. But theses beast need to be placed very carefully on precise beds the first time. Must have used thin steel frames to create gauges to float off the mortar. Moving the block once it's on the bed is not an option. Moving huge blocks would spoil the bed. Whoever built these types of buildings were VERY GOOD.
@jamesthewarrior693
@jamesthewarrior693 Жыл бұрын
Were onto them! ❤ Give us the free energy!
@abrahamspies7611
@abrahamspies7611 Жыл бұрын
When constructed, the building claimed to have the world's largest four-faced chiming clock. At 24 feet, 6 inches (just under 7+1⁄2 meters), the faces are 18 inches (45.7 cm) wider than those of the Great Clock in London (which houses the famous hour bell Big Ben). The tower housing the clock reaches 345 feet (105 m) in height, and was the tallest structure in the city until the 1920s when the Foshay Tower was built. A 15-bell chime in the tower is played regularly, with noontime concerts provided to the public on holidays and on Fridays and certain Sundays during the warm months. The chime was originally 10 bells, and it was first played on March 10, 1896.
@karinadsouza4929
@karinadsouza4929 Жыл бұрын
I love this style of video with a closeup tour and explanation of the stonework
@bobgillis1137
@bobgillis1137 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the vid. I noticed mortar joints on some corners, which suggests facades were used. Corners would be inherently weak if not composed of singular blocks, IMHO. This building closely resembles the style of Windsor Station in Montreal I got to know as a kid. That was the HQ and main station for the Canadian. My Dad ran a while floor of office types in the station, so I frequently visited the building, alas not with a critical eye. The building still stands, even though CP once sought permission to demolish it some time ago.
@Emily_Marilyn
@Emily_Marilyn Жыл бұрын
Amazing. What a beautiful building. I visited Vancouver Island last year and saw the British Columbia Parliament Building in Victoria, the stones here reminds me of that building. One thing I find interesting is recently I saw a renovation photo of the B.C. Parliament Building where the outer facade was actually removed and it was all red brick underneath! Pretty interesting.
@andyirons7162
@andyirons7162 Жыл бұрын
^ we have a winner....I bet most of that building is simply facade. The inside is red brick.
@TouchoftheTism420
@TouchoftheTism420 Жыл бұрын
Back in 1994 the 4th floor housed the Hennepin County Jail. I spent a week there. That building is so haunted.
@jkm3297
@jkm3297 Жыл бұрын
Divinely constructed
@timothydillow3160
@timothydillow3160 Жыл бұрын
The only logical explanation is the one no one thinks about.
@luxuriousfir
@luxuriousfir Жыл бұрын
Yes. People with glorified bodies.
@itellyouwhy6957
@itellyouwhy6957 Жыл бұрын
Or with better technology than we have today.
@timothydillow3160
@timothydillow3160 Жыл бұрын
@@itellyouwhy6957 same thing
@foadrightnow5725
@foadrightnow5725 Жыл бұрын
It would certainly seem so!
@oldworldex
@oldworldex Жыл бұрын
Remarkable! Thank you for giving us the close up...
@ChadPrestonOfficialThree
@ChadPrestonOfficialThree Жыл бұрын
That is BEAUTIFUL! So massive! Wow. Incredible Architecture. I'll bet this bad boy was standing in 1700.
@Badboyteddybear
@Badboyteddybear Жыл бұрын
Murphy wagon had a straight box. A Murphy could comfortably haul between 1,800 to 2,200 pounds.
@emmanuelwolfmusic410
@emmanuelwolfmusic410 Жыл бұрын
Amazing channel, keep it up. Me and my home schooled son are learning so much.
@mattjones6323
@mattjones6323 Жыл бұрын
Where do you tell them where the people went to and how was it repopulated?
@Gustavo-sr2ju
@Gustavo-sr2ju Жыл бұрын
Ancient world reset. Great job Sr.!!! Hugs from Argentina !!!.
@randyhaight1617
@randyhaight1617 Жыл бұрын
Awesome; In Every Way!...Another Great Take!...ThanX, Again, 4 Sharing! Blessings, & Merry Christmas, r.j.
@Tracer3
@Tracer3 Жыл бұрын
What a Magnificent Building. Stunning. Tysm for Sharing the Truth about our hidden History. Super Well Done.
@bakkila99
@bakkila99 Жыл бұрын
When I was in 5th grade we took a field trip here from a small town, and it was the first time I seen a big city, and skyscrapers, and this building was just so massive to me. It blew me away.
@gregoryagogo
@gregoryagogo Жыл бұрын
Overwhelming! A world where this is the only kind of architecture is the world I want to live in!
@edouardsowa3660
@edouardsowa3660 Жыл бұрын
What an incredible and beautiful piece of art. Certainly not built by our actual civilisation. A great amount of these buildings have been destroyed by wars,and fires,as if on purpose. Makes you think that our history is not what we learned. We have to rewrite it again.
@sparklesparklesparkle6318
@sparklesparklesparkle6318 Жыл бұрын
you can literally google "Minneapolis City Hall Construction." And there are tons of photos of it being built.
@jaseperi
@jaseperi Жыл бұрын
For sure, what we learn in school is mostly lies or distractions away from what’s important. I remember trying to find HOW the Houses of Parliament were built. Nothing
@mateosimon4237
@mateosimon4237 Жыл бұрын
Who built it then?
@finaloption...
@finaloption... Жыл бұрын
And the war's you mention, end with the deaths of millions of craftsmen.
@leek5682
@leek5682 Жыл бұрын
Those horses must've been better than modern 18 wheelers to carry those blocks 😂
@abundantharmony
@abundantharmony Жыл бұрын
I actually just looked up pictures of this place being built and they do indeed exist. You can see the huge stones hauled on wagons with fat, flat, wheels by horses and mules. The largest block of granite weigs 23 tons and caps the basement access entry. Just gotta dig a little. It wasn't built all at once. People added on for decades. "Back before the current city hall officially opened its doors, Minneapolis’ court house and city hall were in separate buildings. The first official courthouse was located on 8th Avenue S and 4th Street while the first city hall was on Hennepin and Nicollet where Gateway Park currently sits. During the first two decades of Minnesota’s statehood Minneapolis grew at a very rapid rate. Because of this, the need for a larger courthouse and city hall quickly became apparent. In 1887 the state legislature assigned a commission to work with the city and Hennepin county to jointly construct a new courthouse and city hall. The firm that was tasked with creating this new municipal center of the city was Long and Kees, who also designed the Lumber Exchange Building, the Flour Exchange Building, and the Masonic Temple, now the Hennepin Center for the Arts. The firm’s signature style was Richardsonian Romanesque as it was one of the most popular styles in America in the late 1800s. This style can be seen in almost every city that saw success during that time. Cincinnati, Toronto, Salt Lake City and Fort Wayne all have Richardsonian Romanesque style city halls. The Minneapolis City Hall began construction in 1888 and it took three years for the first “cornerstone” to be laid. Since this ceremony happened three years after construction started, the cornerstone is actually thirty feet above ground level. To make the timeline of construction even more confusing, the building was officially competed in 1906, although the county and city had been using it for about a decade already. During that time serious court cases were being conducted in the building, and the last execution in Hennepin County happened in the 5th floor attic in March of 1898. Some say John Moshik still roams the halls. The building itself was not intended to be made completely out of granite, but once the citizens of Minneapolis saw the beauty of the Ortonville red granite, they petitioned for the entire building to be made out of it instead of just its foundations. This contributed to the lengthy construction time, as some of the stones weigh more than 20 tonnes. The final price tag for the new city hall was over $3.5 million, or almost $99 million in today’s dollars."
@elim7228
@elim7228 Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂
@wolfie322
@wolfie322 Жыл бұрын
How did they lift these 23 ton stones without crains power tools or modern equipment any photos of that?
@renee8096
@renee8096 Жыл бұрын
So after the architects already had the foundation laid, they had to completely overhaul the materials/master plan for the rest of the project because the citizens liked the look??? ...seems legit.
@sbdreamin
@sbdreamin Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a good story….
@mrjaylesmeister
@mrjaylesmeister Жыл бұрын
All that talk and no links? Come on man!
@Wicknews8100
@Wicknews8100 Жыл бұрын
USA and Canada, this same type of architecture is spread throughout both countries, Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, how do they go from trading fur to constructing Castles, especially where it's winters are harsh and deep.
@gramps6334
@gramps6334 Жыл бұрын
Incredible craftsmanship. Couldn't afford to build this today. Maybe a billion dollars. Craftsmen like these are hard to find.
@anotherperspective8263
@anotherperspective8263 Жыл бұрын
A billion dollars wouldn't build that...
@jaseperi
@jaseperi Жыл бұрын
You’d need more than a billion dollars. And I don’t mean money I mean sound/frequency tech and giants
@1neAdam12
@1neAdam12 Жыл бұрын
​@@jaseperi Nope. Just the European spirit and a few good White men can do it all again.
@pinkiesue849
@pinkiesue849 Жыл бұрын
​@@jaseperiI agree
@craigdavid2162
@craigdavid2162 Жыл бұрын
You should link up with "my lunch break" channel. We have been lied to about everything including our history. Once your eyes opened, you cant go back. Great work mate. Keep showing us these magnificient buildings that we couldnt even build today, even with our "advanced" technology.
@HolgerIsenberg
@HolgerIsenberg Жыл бұрын
Metal plates are used as joints between the blocks, visible in your video! That's the same technology used at the sea wall around Fort Point San Francisco.
@theresa_lili
@theresa_lili 7 ай бұрын
Metal plates?
@luislaplume8261
@luislaplume8261 7 ай бұрын
Notice that the outer stones are severely weathered but the inner stones are smooth and smaller and not weathered. It is far older than we think.
@beereaucrat3233
@beereaucrat3233 Жыл бұрын
can't tell me there wasn't some supernatural technology going on here. this type of construction was EASY for whoever did it. We've definitely lost something, and that in our fairly recent past.
@ruthdelroy6004
@ruthdelroy6004 Жыл бұрын
Many of these large buildings were pulled down after just 60 to 70 years. Why? What were they trying to hide from future generations?
@oldworldex
@oldworldex 11 ай бұрын
Over 200 buildings were demolished in Minneapolis in the 1960's.
@BettyC703
@BettyC703 Жыл бұрын
In Duluth MN we have several buildings said to have been built in 1890's. Old Central high school, Old Carnegie library, Jefferson school, Pilgrim Congregational Church, Spalding hotel just to name a few. The population back then was about 13,000 but quickly grew.
@lightbeforethetunnel
@lightbeforethetunnel Жыл бұрын
I live in Duluth, Minnesota as well. And I'm also researching these matters. Are you aware of any other buildings in this area? I want to make some boots-on-the-ground research to add to my content that I already have up because I think we have some good buildings in this area.
@soundmind69
@soundmind69 Жыл бұрын
I was reading about the founding of the town i grew up in It was said that some dude on a canoe floated along the shoreline of Lake michigan checking out different land his rich friends and such could take Well, there were already structures and people living there But they were basically forced out by "laws" and money Eventually he brought all his rich friends to take over the land. There was a sculpter who created a ruin of a tower that is now displayed at a park in kenosha but was said to be designed after ruins found in lake michigan Ruins that to me appeared like they were from a big structure, very castle like. The sculpter also said the library has a vault downstairs she qas granted access too in this beautiful library where they keep accursed stones... Cursed stones.... what
@marydd4147
@marydd4147 Жыл бұрын
Wow!!! Stunning castle-like architecture juxtaposed with modern brutalist architecture. Thanks for posting this!
@justinamontgomery2618
@justinamontgomery2618 Жыл бұрын
So so amazing! Thank you for this up close video! Just found your channel!
@mikecarney73
@mikecarney73 Жыл бұрын
There's a matching house over on Groveland Ave, just on the other side of Hennepin Ave. I wonder if at some point it could have been like a carriage house for this building. By matching, I mean it's the same material, cut and stacked the same way, it's an obvious companion structure. I've been inside both. The house is a gallery and dairy farming office. Very unusual layout in both. It's safe to assume the tunnels would connect them that run underground. I've been in the tunnels all over the twin cities, just not at these particular locations. They go about 350' underground in like 7 layers. The deeper you go, the more sophisticated they get. The deepest are polished brick arches that have the raised point in the center. They blend naturally formed tunnels and man-made.
@mikecarney73
@mikecarney73 Жыл бұрын
There's other mansions in the area that seem from the same Era or from similarly trained tradesmen.
@elizabethmorgan668
@elizabethmorgan668 Жыл бұрын
I believe the date on side is the date people inhabited the building after whatever cataclysmic event happened earlier. No way was it built in 1899. All they were capable of building then were wood and brick structures. We are from the generation of the inheritors.
@N-JOI
@N-JOI Жыл бұрын
Seriously impressive workmanship and scale of work.
@davidwilcox8786
@davidwilcox8786 Жыл бұрын
let me guess.no construction photos and even if there is one or two they would be heavily doctored like most old photos
@MrDhalli6500
@MrDhalli6500 Жыл бұрын
Wow the Cambridge MA city hall was built in the same year 1888-1889 and uses the same type of stone work, it's only a 3 story bld and much smaller but looks a little similar.
@gs1100ed
@gs1100ed Жыл бұрын
How about that roof? What material is that? Is it the original roof? Is there a rain gutter?
@bertemu
@bertemu 11 ай бұрын
It’s a copper roof, when it oxidizes it colors green. Do you know you tube channel CultivateElevate talks also about al the copper that they used in the early years….
@dreen7911
@dreen7911 Жыл бұрын
The history we're taught is a total lie. Thanks for sharing this wonder with us!
@LOGOS_Official
@LOGOS_Official Жыл бұрын
Are these buildings proof of Christ’s 1000 year reign?
@luxuriousfir
@luxuriousfir Жыл бұрын
Yes.
@tribeoflightband8145
@tribeoflightband8145 Жыл бұрын
Good point, I always felt an angelic type vibe from most of these old world buildings.
@spitfire577
@spitfire577 Жыл бұрын
I have that same question. With all the old history beginning to be coming out . All of the old pictures of empty streets, horse and buggy the orphan trains the star forts . The Antediluvian world prior to the flood . It's obvious that we've been indoctrinated into a society full of lies and deceptions and we all suffer from amnesia like where we really come from and who we really are.
@drivventodrumm1
@drivventodrumm1 Жыл бұрын
Where is he, I was under the impression it would be with a rod of iron and he would be physically present
@shecaptain3444
@shecaptain3444 Жыл бұрын
​@@drivventodrumm1you're not looking. Open your eyes.
@cosmichappening1712
@cosmichappening1712 Жыл бұрын
Are there any historical photos or films documenting the construction of this building?
@timothykuring3016
@timothykuring3016 Жыл бұрын
I always loved Mark Twain because I could sense how devilishly clever he was, and he seemed like a decent man, despite his reputation. He was a liar and very proud of his ability to lie and misdirect. But he told truths in the form of anecdotes and stories. He also told a story about newspapers, in the form of a story about how dangerous it was for a newsman to say anything critical about a mine someone was trying to sell, even when he knew the signs of a salted mine. That is, a mine with gold sprinkled around the surface somewhere. A newspaper man would be kidnapped and killed if he printed anything that the people paying for the newspaper didn't want to see in it. Editors could disappear too. Men who were selling things didn't want to see the truth in print. Writing truth was the most dangerous thing in the world, so a writer had to be sneaky. He had to speak in parables that people would not understand unless they thought about them. he knew he couldn't write about the Mormon Tabernacle, which was either already standing, or supposedly under construction. So he wrote about a case brought before the god king of the Mormons, who wisely settles it, like Solomon, about Mormon contractors too incompetent to haul some logs for the railroad. People would wonder how they hauled a thousand times as much material and built an architectural wonder of the world while they were contracting out their excess labor. And they still had to buy hundreds of yo-yos for their kids. How much of the population was playing with yo-yos at the time? In their first generation of settlement? I still wish I could re-read all those books I've read in my life, because even when I knew an author was being clever, I didn't always know how or why. His contemporaries might have been able to read between the lines. I was curious about what he had to say about Chicago, where I was born. I was astonished to find, once I could search it on the internet, that he had almost nothing to say about Chicago, though he might have attended the Chicago World's Faire, and he had probably at least read about the fire. He only said that he had travelled through Chicago a few times in his life, and it was always an astonishment. You would think that a man who liked to exaggerate so much in his writings would have exaggerated a little about Chicago, but it must have been beyond exaggeration. Maybe his skills as a liar weren't creative enough to explain Chicago. Maybe he knew it was dangerous to talk about a city with so much antique architecture. Maybe there was hard core reset brain washing going on in Chicago, and anybody who claimed the buildings were already there was locked up in one of those mental institutions. Most people were new arrivals, who barely spoke English, and they would believe the official stories. Mark Twain would merely call it an astonishment, and it is still an astonishment to people who research the World's Faire.
@corkygoss7403
@corkygoss7403 Жыл бұрын
Some fine thinking there fella. Thanks for provoking our thoughts.
@wesporter2176
@wesporter2176 8 ай бұрын
You may think this is crazy but a cover up of this proportion I feel God Himself somehow had to be involved. For what purpose I guess you'd have to ask Him yourself.
@RANS87IROCZ
@RANS87IROCZ Жыл бұрын
Court house in Pittsburgh here has same stone structure
@sbdreamin
@sbdreamin Жыл бұрын
Are the hewn stones a veneer?
@jamesb.492
@jamesb.492 Жыл бұрын
Eastman Kodak released their consumer camera 1888. If constructed in 1891 ... it should be well documented !
@Salazarsbizzar
@Salazarsbizzar Жыл бұрын
I've worked at stone quarries. I think you might be underestimating how much men working together can accomplish. Very impressive but men were real men back then
@laywip
@laywip Жыл бұрын
Alexa said it would take a team of 500 draft horses to haul that 23 ton stone. i want to see the wagon they hooked up to!
@sarahnoah3693
@sarahnoah3693 Жыл бұрын
It looks like a castle.
@nim3186
@nim3186 Жыл бұрын
It would so interesting to take some measurements of the stones to see how similar they are in dimensions. Appears like it was pre-fabricated somewhere else with machinery and then erected on site with smooth finish. Then at some point later faux joints and rough surface was added to make the stones look smaller (Make it look actually feasible…per the narrative). Would be amazing to find out what back side of the stones look like then we would be able to determine if machine was used to cut stones or if they were molded/poured in place. So how did they transport these in original form, prior to creating the appearance of smaller stones! Impressive technique for interlocking the towers stones to walls stones!
@pinkiesue849
@pinkiesue849 Жыл бұрын
And look how deep the walls are. Was it built during the Little Ice Age to keep the cold out? Did giants build it? Its really a beautiful building. I will go with built in 899.
@letthedeadburythedead2148
@letthedeadburythedead2148 Жыл бұрын
Ice age never happened. That's another lie
@foadrightnow5725
@foadrightnow5725 Жыл бұрын
That's a billion-dollar building!
@tomprivate3362
@tomprivate3362 Жыл бұрын
Read some books on architectural history, the city hall is "Richardson Romanesque " style. A good history is by Alan Cowans ; Styles and Types of Noth American Architecture. My Great Uncle was a stone carver for Wausau Monument Company in 1900 they had pneumatic carving tools.
@siriusfeline
@siriusfeline Жыл бұрын
If you can find or take a small piece of the mortar and have it analyzed, you will quickly see if they were using mortar like that in 1890 or not. I'll bet they'll be a giveaway there.
@Hankkan777
@Hankkan777 Жыл бұрын
People did have Way better building skills back then Something we've lost over the years But what always bug's me is if these buildings were built in the time line they say how did they haul the material and how many animals oxen horses exettra would it have taken plus they would have definitely had to buld special beefed up heavy duty wagons No these places leave way more questions than answer's
@pinkiesue849
@pinkiesue849 Жыл бұрын
Could the rail roads have transported the granite? RR lines had terminals just blocks from here.
@aryafeydakin
@aryafeydakin Жыл бұрын
Actually there is a picture of the cart with the 23t (50,700 lb) basement capstone from Ortonville quarry. That would be pulled by a 21 mules hitch, or 15 yoke of oxen. They would go at a snail pace, and it would take many weeks to arrive at the building site, but they eventually get there. A 20 tons objects is the average lifting capacity of most modern building cranes too. Nowaday offshore cranes lift up to 10,000 tons. And it's just the one stone, it's not like the building is made entirely out of 20 tons block, after that it's just a 1 ton block big lego building.
@justingriffin2546
@justingriffin2546 Жыл бұрын
@@aryafeydakin thank you for some clarity.....
@EarthResearch
@EarthResearch Жыл бұрын
This is beyond "building better". This is another tier of forgotten knowledge.
@stevenschmierer1930
@stevenschmierer1930 Жыл бұрын
At 2:22 the masonry shows an advanced form of patina, which takes ages to produce. Granite is stain, scratch, heat and chemical resistant...to see this much patina on that area of supposed granite indicates the age is ancient....
@deekando1068
@deekando1068 Жыл бұрын
Even in SCOTLAND we have the same kind of buildings that are also way deeper than the surface, could be after the mud flood that buried most, but what intrigues me is WHAT machinery did they use to make so perfect cuts and to transport them there and where were all the people.
@timothydillow3160
@timothydillow3160 Жыл бұрын
Between 1891 and 1895 every newspaper in Minnesota should have had a step-by-step progress for this Divine Master Work. Vibrational Resonce creates levitating abilities. Let there be.
@HunterBiden-k6s
@HunterBiden-k6s Жыл бұрын
You think all the newspapers should be telling people a building levitates?
@allenschmitz9644
@allenschmitz9644 Жыл бұрын
Nope: fire burns Swansons barn and Lidholm put it out was the headline story.
@timothydillow3160
@timothydillow3160 Жыл бұрын
@@HunterBiden-k6s touche'
@timothydillow3160
@timothydillow3160 Жыл бұрын
the Great Chicago Fire what started by Elsie the cow in a barn at 3:02 a.m.😆😆😆
@timothydillow3160
@timothydillow3160 Жыл бұрын
@@HunterBiden-k6s yes I do
@kennethhart3904
@kennethhart3904 Жыл бұрын
I've often looked at some of these old buildings and wondered how and no way it was done ?
@alissaayres
@alissaayres Жыл бұрын
Thank you! An amazing and beautiful building. I have a feeling the horse and buggy people did not build it! I don’t think we know how to build something like this now. I’m looking at the same ones in New York.
@johnkean6852
@johnkean6852 Жыл бұрын
1891: the first 1 looks added (younger weathering) as 891 fits perfectly in the centre of that brick.
@captainsafety8231
@captainsafety8231 11 ай бұрын
I've been in the basement of this building. It is a dungeounous Jail. I believe they built a new jail to replace it in the late 1990s or early 2000s. Great video, thank you.
@suntoryjim
@suntoryjim 10 ай бұрын
The height of the entrances to these old buildings is always the dead giveaway.
@ourmeltedreality8731
@ourmeltedreality8731 Жыл бұрын
Incredible structure! You said it all. Thanks for taking us there.
@jasonl.7037
@jasonl.7037 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting detailed and independent observation! Thank you for this video.
@hawaiiguykailua6928
@hawaiiguykailua6928 Жыл бұрын
Horse and cart Official US military testing 1920s. They tested what a horse could pull on flat surface and found a horse can pull its own wait 12 miles a day on avg. So 900lb horse, 450lb cart, 450lb bricks. Avg 8lb per brick equals about 50 bricks. And that's why there are no photos of traffic jams of horse and cart hauling bricks😉
@oldworldex
@oldworldex Жыл бұрын
great comment!
@baboracus
@baboracus Жыл бұрын
did they test oxens?
@gulfy09
@gulfy09 Жыл бұрын
Now figure out how much water a horse needs per day
@joedoesfun9336
@joedoesfun9336 Жыл бұрын
If you think a horse can only pull 50 bricks you have lost your mind. I can pull 50 bricks by myself.
@paulchannel8868
@paulchannel8868 Жыл бұрын
@@joedoesfun9336yes but you as we all know are very macho . These stones came from 160 miles away . Pull hard that’s not far for you is it ?
@mattgould8592
@mattgould8592 Жыл бұрын
Makes me shiver in awe at the sight!
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