Thank your posting of Bridgeport . This is my hometown. I love Bridgeport
@FreeSpear Жыл бұрын
I was in Sante Fe, New Mexico and i heard that the "Oldest Still Standing Curch in North America was here... so went to see it... totally mudd flooded... as are the surrounding modern structures.
@boydmking1 Жыл бұрын
Apparently "founded" actually means "found it" . . .
@fungi42o0 Жыл бұрын
duh 😅
@JamieCrain5349 Жыл бұрын
Yep
@usmustdie4peace405 Жыл бұрын
Thats why there is free masons! They cant build even a dog shed without their slaves! And in the past they just claimed they own the buildings! Without building anything
@Badgerlust9 ай бұрын
More like stole it 😅
@kateemma- Жыл бұрын
Amazing to see that at 10:19 the roads still appear unmade, something which can be seen again and again in old world photos, the buildings beautifully constructed, every care taken, yet at the same time the roads remaining mudbound and unpaved.
@joer9156 Жыл бұрын
No motorcars so no need.
@loginsinhasu Жыл бұрын
@@joer9156 so you say horse and buggy did not sink 1-2 feet in the mud while carrying such a heavy construction materials ? ROADS are first thing that is being build, working on construction site with 5000 people, and first thing was done, was ROAD to enable raw materials delivery
@annother3350 Жыл бұрын
Newearth made a video a few years back showing many old photos of well made roads when apparently we only used cobblestone, she demonstrates well made roads of some kind of concrete/tarmac type of substance
@kateemma- Жыл бұрын
Yes, the Romans, among others, were known to have built very strong roads, often with concrete or other geopolymers, I even live near an old one in the UK. However, in the supposed "new" cities in the US, Australia and New Zealand, many large constructions were erected but the roads were left as just dirt, this makes any work so much more difficult come rain or wintertime. It is very strange how, in the photo at 10:19, there are cars and large constructions, yet the roads appear unmade or covered in mud.@@annother3350
@elim7228 Жыл бұрын
@@loginsinhasuI hope he was sarcastic. But yes - first thing you have to establish is the communication routes. Be it in a war or in a peaceful build.
@Glen-y7u11 ай бұрын
I used to live in Bridgeport back in the 60s and 70s and in 80 in 1980 i moved from Bridgeport to scranton pa that is were i live now my mother is buried in Bridgeport conn at park cemetery i go the onece a year to visit her she passed away in 1975 i miss her so much i just hope that see is with god .thank you for the video
@judioliver8082 Жыл бұрын
So interesting, thank you. Gosh that's early to have such well built houses on it. Good spotting. The more we look the less sense it makes.
@MarySonatore10 ай бұрын
The alien property transfer is very interesting, would like to understand more about those.
@chrisgems85954 ай бұрын
Wow I never knew how amazing my City use to be
@bookofrevelation4924 Жыл бұрын
The first producer of automobiles, especially luxury for elite, Locomobile Company of America had their headquarters there, and after 2 years from it's founding in Watertown MA moved all their factory there until the Great Depression, then it became Durant Motors, then Oldsmobile when moved to Flint Michigan.
@JJ33438 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video I was raised in Bridgeport went to Bassick High and worked at Pleasure Beach. I remember all the old brick buildings - manufacturing buildings - during WWII made ammunition for the war. Thank you for this!
@davolbc Жыл бұрын
Thanks for making these videos I love these nostalgic videos and pictures and everything you show and talk about.
@terrywinfrey2266 Жыл бұрын
Howdy....love watching your videos...bringing up old history to surface
@edwinheredia430511 ай бұрын
I was race in the city and I love this city with all my heart.
@johnje4285 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant video. I see lots of mudflood windows
@QuartzMatrixed Жыл бұрын
Recently saw an unrelated video on a guy who made "plasma lamps" wireless. Hand held sealed glass tubes of various gasses/elements. While in close proximity to small Tesla coil they all emitted different color light. This reminded me of the mercury balls on building spires for harnessing free electricity
@elgoog7830 Жыл бұрын
You should investigate the photographers the who took alot of these old world pictures. Try and find out who they're connected too.
@michaeldesilvio221 Жыл бұрын
Amazing photos.
@nyquil762 Жыл бұрын
Incredible and thank you.💯
@americanopinion5711 Жыл бұрын
I see at around 14:17 the spray paint may date the photo. Great stuff as always
@michaelstiller2282 Жыл бұрын
Haven't watched yet. But Bridgeport is basically my backyard, as i live in CT. And love the history. Its a unique place. The state capitol building is very iconic.
@skyelyte1699 Жыл бұрын
Indeed I lived in Connecticut all my life. The cities that have suffered the most intentional destruction under Democrat control via stripping jobs to result in high poverty, and high crime so residents would destroy these beautiful magnificent cities, that is Bridgeport, Hartford, and Waterbury to name a few I am convinced has been done because Connecticut is rich with so much miraculous old world advanced artifacts. The community hasn't touched much on Connecticut. I am sure you know Hartford Steam is an open secret in that they use free (Old world infrastructure/technology and water plumbed from The Deep) to provide free heat and cooling to the State Capitol, Hartford Hospital and many buildings controlled by the elite. I moved out of state, so unfortunately when I do feel Connecticut is a state that needs a deep dive for research because it is a treasure trove of proof of the advanced old world. All of the history Jarid narrates though is all lies and fake. So I suggest you mute the video after listening to his first point that government seized so many of the buildings in Bridgeport. That was done all across the country so the first point Jarid made is an important piece of the puzzle so unfortunately Jarid pretty much buries and destroys by polluting the entire video with outrageous fake his-story.
@ladyvictory3158 Жыл бұрын
I was born and raised in Waterbury, CT on the east end of town. Attended St. Mary's Grammar School and Sacred Heart High School. Both very beautiful Old World brick buildings, and sadly, both schools recently closed. Waterbury is called "The City of Churches", and most are Old World churches that were allowed to remain. St. Anne's near downtown is breathtaking and rivals anything in Europe. And the Immaculate Conception Basilica is the most beautiful of all of the Old World churches in the city. They say it's "modeled" after Saint Mary Major in Rome, but they are most likely contemporaries. I worked at Yale University for a while in New Haven. The "old" section of campus is entirely Old World buildings. I would walk the campus on my lunch break just to marvel at the architectural beauty.
@michaelstiller2282 Жыл бұрын
@@skyelyte1699 CT isn't a blue state. It' had just as many republican governors as democratic governors. The last republican governor went to jail. Giving the state the nickname Corrupticut. The state sales tax was made law by a republican governor. The state capital is one of the few old cities with the most documentation about how it was designed, planned, by who and who paid for it. Connecticut was extremely religious back when it was founded and carried through to modern time. Couldn't buy beer past 8 pm, because it was a religious thing. Couldn't buy alcohol on Sunday because it was a religious thing. The state capital was paid for by a religion.
@labbeaj Жыл бұрын
@@skyelyte1699When I drive by Hartford Steam and all that steam is pumping out in the sky..... I wonder if they also make clouds?
@skyelyte1699 Жыл бұрын
@@labbeaj good point.
@tiakennedy1681 Жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙏
@FilthyMoss Жыл бұрын
Maybe look into the repurposed founded psych wards. Finding families that had great great great grandparents that where thrown into those divine buildings that mysteriously popped up in just 4yrs or less.. The people who remembered what was and spoke out probably had a mental issue and couldn't be in public lol... Paper records, life stories.. Have a great day everyone, keep learning and seeing the devastation around the world 300yrs ago
@urabundant Жыл бұрын
12:12 that could be Schylar Avenue in Kankakee Illinois in the 50s!
@Jollygreengeocentric Жыл бұрын
Funny how the tech algorithms support all the “impossible architecture” channels while the real truth is constantly buried. “Can’t make assumptions” but assumes old buildings “can’t be built.”
@lucabrasisleepswiththefish77 Жыл бұрын
When Nicola Tesla died in NY during ww2, his documents were seized by the office of Alien property. Tesla was a US citizen.
@Paul-dw2cl Жыл бұрын
awesome video @Jarid Boosters
@charleshunziker74163 ай бұрын
I am looking for a photo of st.John nep in the east side before 1925
@BasementVinyL85 Жыл бұрын
Question At the 1:02ish mark, is that like the Housatonic Ave neighborhood maybe? Because I heard that whole area was houses and etc before the building of Route 8 highway
@warlockborn10318 ай бұрын
This is now known as the Gateway apartments at the intersection of Waterman st, and Connecticut ave, I lived there for 50 years. Directly across from the American Fabrics building.
@BasementVinyL858 ай бұрын
@@warlockborn1031your absolutely right I can tell now and I had a cousin that lived in one in 2004 they just look different now compared to that time, thanks for the info
@warlockborn10318 ай бұрын
@@BasementVinyL85 My Grandparents bought the house on Waterman St back in the thirties, I moved away in 2018.Miss the neighborhood! There were two more pics of the American Fabrics, one that shows the triangle courtyard!
@sixmax115 ай бұрын
wonder how mr. barnum transported these elephants from africa to america in the early 1800's. also, how did they survive new england winters?
@bngood760 Жыл бұрын
Right on bro:)
@graceandglory1948 Жыл бұрын
At age 76, what you call Old World style was all I ever knew until around the late 1960's, growing up in Baltimore, Maryland. The entire east coast was like this. I much prefer it to the steel buildings of today which lack the sense of comfort and a warmer style than the steel and glass buildings. Funny....when I think of old world, I think of straw buildings, huts, log homes, or wood housing using boards...definitely not the beautiful brick buildings I grew up seeing all around me.
@derrickcobb5360 Жыл бұрын
Who do you believe built all of these buildings 🤔
@graceandglory1948 Жыл бұрын
@@derrickcobb5360 People, of course. Architecture styles change throughout all of history. The only exception to that are the stoneworks where it is painfully obvious that only giants could have moved those stones. Giants are a historical fact, and I am referring to those in antiquity.
@derrickcobb5360 Жыл бұрын
@@graceandglory1948 what people specifically and when🤔
@graceandglory1948 Жыл бұрын
@@derrickcobb5360 Human beings...1930 approx...some much earlier 1800's..by Patterson Park. Those homes still had the slave quarters in the 1970's.
@derrickcobb5360 Жыл бұрын
@@graceandglory1948 You do know 🤔...you are a UNITED STATES citizen born in AMERICA 🙄.....there were AMERICANS here when your grandparents came here 🤨
@Dee-oh1je6 ай бұрын
Ever do anything on Bethlehem Pa, Main Street?
@riggedreality420 Жыл бұрын
I noticed at the 9:39 mark that large building has what it looks like is mud or black paint all over the top of it that went down halfway
@inquisitive- Жыл бұрын
Tarred like for water sealing. 10:12 fake tree taken down?
@jessecarlson6410 Жыл бұрын
How do you feel about Sears and roebuck co?
@simbayoung4757 Жыл бұрын
13:40 funny thing is you won’t even know if they’re your relatives
@wethepeople7961 Жыл бұрын
confused bridgeport with new london , silly me😂, connect i cut may have some meaning as well., both towns i mentioned have ferry service to long island , bridgeport to port jefferson and new london to green point? they discussed in the 80s about a making bridge from long island to connexticut since its just seven miles. .... it takes three hours to drive from port jeff to new london a bridge would have changed the northeast... i dont think we have the ability to do so.. the chesapeake tunnel causeway , did u ever see the shoddy construction of that in some areas , must be built on something underwater.. Awesome video ....
@ANDREWWHODGE Жыл бұрын
So potentially the aboriginal people were advanced (old world) pre 1800, but wiped out by disease approx 1492, leaving empty unkept towns to be founded but no history as to who or when they were built or the skills to build that way again. Also based on architecture and skeletons perhaps giants. So by 1800s cities founded but photos looking empty of people. It was also said that Manhattan was "bought" from aboriginals.
@derrickcobb5360 Жыл бұрын
Who are the AMERICANS 🤔......did they die🤭....or are they still alive 🫣
@cinnamon96210 ай бұрын
We do not call them “aboriginal”. SMDH
@chadbear8759 Жыл бұрын
Check out Collinsville, CT. there’s so much here and it will blow your mind.
@goblintown Жыл бұрын
Tell more.
@Rlpaladin Жыл бұрын
I actually did the "wine" walk for the first time last year and stood outside while my wife was doing the tastings. So many things stood out to me since stumbling upon video's like these. I pointed out so many of the buildings to a buddy of mine, he was rather confused.
@FredMcIntyre Жыл бұрын
🙏🏻❤️👍🏻👊🏻
@BostonShovinstuff Жыл бұрын
I have a friend in Connecticut... thriving through it and even where she lives (mountain view looking down toward Hartford) and the look and vibe is absolutely "off" from what we're supposed to think
@skyelyte1699 Жыл бұрын
Indeed Connecticut is a treasure trove of proof of the advanced old world. I lived there all my life until a year ago. I had started the research on the advanced old world a few years before I moved but unfortunately I didn't get the time to get out and document it, when relocating out of state took tremendous time. I hope someone in the community that is more honest than Jarid that doesn't pollute the entire video with fake history, does a deeper dive into Connecticut.
@BostonShovinstuff Жыл бұрын
@skyelyte1699 Definitely! Up in the hills , the stone walls , even driving on the highway , there MILES of barely visible walls . I notice them . The area my friend lives in , up on a very big "hill" has old stone foundations just sitting there out in the woods . I live in Boston and our are , especially the suburbs and towards the west , is just ... too obvious of old world evidence
@skyelyte1699 Жыл бұрын
@@BostonShovinstuff yes, I know the Hartford and West Hartford, Avon, Seymour area well. I expect that is the area you are talking about. It is astounding when we do finally open our eyes to see our environment what is right in front of our eyes and has always been. The ruins of the advanced old world indeed are everywhere in Connecticut. The narrative 'we are told' of course is rather absurd that claims the stone walls that are all over Connecticut that span too many acres to guess when you are driving by are from stones property owners collected, and no less during an era we are told people struggled tremendously to merely get by to provide their family with food. But they had so much leisure time and incredible strength to haul thousands of stones to put up pretty attractive borders on their property. I built one small stone structure that was a decorative well to hide the pipe to the well in front of my house. So I know that was really hard work to lug all those stones and this was for just a circle that was about 4' across but we are to believe people did this to border thousands and thousands of feet and more to border their property. Indeed, there are stone foundations in the woods as well as all over Connecticut as you state. I am a photographer so I have spent time in the woods in Connecticut. There are massive stone chimneys too that remain, at times deep in the woods where they shouldn't be. Just before I left Connecticut, to move to Virginia, at the end of winter I drove through a section of Waterbury and I noticed a very large stone gazebo in a patch of woods, in the middle of the city. I pulled over but due to the reputation of that area, I wouldn't chance going into the woods to explore more. Old World architecture is just everywhere in Connecticut. In fact, I actually have been fascinated with old world architecture since I was a young child growing up in Connecticut because it is everywhere and when I started photography I took photos of some of my favorite homes and one photo is an old world building with antiquetech that still exists on the roof. It was my favorite house as a kid when I used to walk by it walking to school. It is interesting that you brought up the stone foundations that are all over Connecticut. I have moved to Southwestern Virginia, Appalachia and I have trouble not driving off the road here because I can see and know without question that massive stones (that have been melted) that runs along the entire area are absolutely foundations to massive castles that used to be here. You can see the very defined lines in the stone work where some of the evidence of the architecture that displays these stones were hand tooled are still here. There are stones that break away from the main former massive foundation that are perfect rectangles and perfect square again that are massive. Right angles just don't happen like that in nature. Also, I bought property here that goes up a mountain. I have a LOT of work to do before clearing the property that has been neglected for many years. Though when I first moved in at the end of winter, the foliage was clear enough for me to hike up the mountain. I could not count the stones I saw on the mountain that are absolutely tooled by human hands or machine that are perfect squares with right angles. There are chunks of foundation on the mountain that have to be artifacts that are either enormous steps to a castle or they are sections of stone that were once sections of a foundation (as I said) and they are massive. There are stones too, with holes that appear to be notches for some type of anchor, that is some of them have details of tooling. These stones are literally all over the mountain I live on, that is the property that is the back yard of my entire neighborhood. If that is not enough, I have a mountain view and one of the mountains that I see every day is a perfect pyramid shape. I really don't believe that shape happens naturally and I think more likely pyramids are everywhere. (I see these pyramid shapes in mountains all the time in this area when we are out on the road in the area.) Last, you should check out a place called Pinnacle Rock Park in Bramwell West Virginia that is in my area. If you get a chance look it up online. I drove by there one day, just out and about to get things done for the house, and my head swung even worse than it ever did when I can't count the times I almost wrecked my car on 84 looking at the steam stack in Hartford and the Hartford Capitol building. lol I didn't have the time to stop then, but I did take a trip up there to see it up close. I walked the path and around the front of the 'rock'. That absolutely is the face of what was once a massive castle beyond what we can maybe even believe could exist. There is aerial photography of it on youtube. So you have noticed something with the stone foundations in Connecticut where I think Appalachia might tell even more of that story. That North America was indeed covered with massive castle like structures and here in Appalachia these buildings went literally into the clouds. 'We are told' an interesting lie about this area, likely to indoctrinate us to believe there is nothing in Appalachia but inbred people who make moonshine, I think so people are not interested in the area. Now I know this area, definitely was an area of the U.S that was hit the hardest with whatever melting event that took place because there was a lot to hide here. They could never explain buildings that definitely were everywhere here that did reach into the clouds and the foundations go down hundreds of feet, or the buildings went up hundreds and hundreds of feet depending on how you look at it. It has been nice talking to you. I am pretty sad to have left Connecticut in just one way, and that is that I just woke up to the rich architectural treasure chest that is in Connecticut and New England in general. I hope that you explore more and start to document it, and put it up in a blog or youtube channel. That area is so important to this body of research. If you do, drop a line here and let me know :)
@BostonShovinstuff Жыл бұрын
@skyelyte1699 I lived in Virginia for 4 months ... I've only scratched the surface of what I wanted to explore . Being raised in Boston though , I always found blue hills completely bewildering . Hiking up as a kid with my family , the >castle< at the top and the elaborate bridges that lead you up there made NO SENSE to me whatsoever . Square stones strewn about , a few clearly basic , stone stairways on part of the trail . It blows my mind that it's only now being put out there . Technology helps lol but either way , it's great to talk with another open mind
@skyelyte1699 Жыл бұрын
@@BostonShovinstuff Virginia is truly a gorgeous state but with that said it is huge. I am so out of my element here. In Connecticut of course if you travel an hour, indeed you are in Mass or NY, and in two hours you are in New Hampshire. Here I can drive several hours and be in the same state. lol I would love to explore up north a bit to see some of the old world architecture. In a little town, just 5 minutes away from me, there is a pretty run down historical town with an Opera House. I thought, really? Inbred people that made moonshine went to the Opera? LOL Indeed, nothing makes sense. The stereotypes too are a lie and I believe that like everything else is by design. I have not gone to Mass that much but I have watched videos that do show castle ruins in the woods and that is so fascinating to me. Clearly, New England as a whole was astounding beyond our imagination in our not so distant past. The parks too, that they do claim were donated by the inheritors, tell us the level of luxury of the environment people had at that time. The Rose Gardens 'we are told' with old world roses imported from Europe in Hartford, for instance were all over the state and I believe based on my research they were all over the country. I think Jarid included a photo in this video to show there was one in Bridgeport as well. It would be nice to see someone focus on the parks, of that era. Rockwell park in Bristol that has many stone structures on the property, used to have a 'spring' water canal that ran into a so called 'lagoon'. I used to play in the water as a kid and in the hottest days of summer I could not wade in that water long because my feet would start to freeze. I believe these so called 'springs' were all over the nation and they had healing water plumbed from 'the Deep'. They shut down the spring in Rockwell Park, the town claimed due to bacteria. There was never a day people weren't lined up with water bottles to collect it and I think the truth is that the politicians did not want people to have access to the healthy healing water source. Old post cards display this park and parks all over CT were much grander just before the turn of the century. My father told me that the springs were spread all over Rockwell Park when he was a kid. So here too, the water systems of that era need much more study, when I do believe everyone had access to living healing water and no one died of diseases caused by dirty water during this time in our history. Quite the contrary... It sounds like you are a lot like I am in that you also knew from a young age, that our environment absolutely does not make sense. The neighborhood I grew up in, called Federal Hill, in Bristol has a lot of Old World architecture that still remains. I would detour walking home from school by the old world mansions in that area as a child to marvel at them, and I intentionally choose to walk the few cobble stone roads that still remained at that time. I felt then like I was walking back into another time. So it seems we both knew there was a much grander world during those moments when we were hiking or exploring than the one we lived in once we got home. I knew inherently the neighborhood I grew up in just didn't fit but still it took me many years to realize how much it didn't. I am with you, it is absolutely surreal to realize what I always thought was magical literally is according to the lying narrative and standards we live in today. Actually, in college I wrote an essay about how technology has taken so much away from our quality of life. Though you are right, there is a flip side to that when the internet does give us access to so much information as you state. The same here, even in comments and discussions on these videos people still rarely get it (though in fairness it is a lot to take in), so it has been a pleasure to talk with you when you are one of the few that do.
@elim7228 Жыл бұрын
Alien property??? That should raise some very serious questions, as to what exactly are we dealing with. Wow
@skyelyte1699 Жыл бұрын
Indeed the demon parasites in control believe we are the aliens. The opposite of literally everything they claim is true.
@gumvro9985 Жыл бұрын
Check out Norwich ct next a very historic district and also a port city
@SuperAfranks Жыл бұрын
Sure took awhile to fix those streets...
@Grim0954 Жыл бұрын
Get with Kurimeo Ahau, he is showing proof that the indigenous population was renamed "African".
@derrickcobb5360 Жыл бұрын
A subject no one wants to talk about 🤔
@QIKUGAMES-QIKU Жыл бұрын
BLACKROCK....
@fungi42o0 Жыл бұрын
alien aka indigenous
@Astralmindjunkie Жыл бұрын
Why is Jason Bershear’s with Archiax calling you Jared Boosters an agent?
@unknownsender6852 Жыл бұрын
Projection
@Mrbreezehd1 Жыл бұрын
My home state...it looks nice in the 1800s! Not very nice anymore unfortunately...thnx for the history lesson. Glad I'm in Florida 🌴🌴
@taniaperez1989 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely, me too!
@Hermetic_ Жыл бұрын
@@taniaperez1989me three
@unknownsender6852 Жыл бұрын
Diver City
@Davidsavage8008 Жыл бұрын
Could really have been a time machine that is now highly policed ? 😲
@wyioughta Жыл бұрын
you telling me they "Maui'd" this area!?
@frankstewart8346 Жыл бұрын
Brother you put out some proper videos brother ❤❤👍. Would love to see some upstate NY stuff if you run into any of those pictures
@mac-qt3wd Жыл бұрын
Connect I cut sounds like it's a bit of land which connects something. Name of Bridge-port too. Sorry I have no clue of US geography
@AlfredoDiaz-n8lАй бұрын
It’s apparent that the city has not made a big leap to bring business back in. As stated in this documentary it thrived with immigrants coming in and working hard. The love for a city is not evident any longer. One major park pleasure beach has been closed for decades. Utilize this line that the city owns bring business in there.
@stuffedbeagle Жыл бұрын
🤓💚🐶
@nottodaymfnottodaymf9773 Жыл бұрын
Is that the first dunkin donuts in the picture?
@pauljohnstone8989 Жыл бұрын
So the pilgram story BS happy Thanksgiving
@ookie4179 Жыл бұрын
Wtf is a pilgram
@pauljohnstone8989 Жыл бұрын
@@ookie4179 u now
@timelineenjoyer8 ай бұрын
Sooo. You guys think a population of 500 Indians built warehouses and stone/brick structures? The photos are 1800s, not hard to build these things over 150-200 years. By late 1800s we were building powerhouses and factories. Which we never would’ve been able to without already mastering brick buildings. Not everything is a cover up.
@johanna1722 Жыл бұрын
❤❤❤👌☀️🥰💋🌹❤️❤️❤️
@literaine65506 ай бұрын
I am starting to wonder more and more if they just stole this country from the native Americans.
@johnfree2833 Жыл бұрын
Stolen from indigenous,either way..
@peanut422hb Жыл бұрын
So the first group of Robbers stole these buildings and the robber barons set up shop. The original owners, did they exterminate them? Or put them in asylums?
@fungi42o0 Жыл бұрын
genocide
@peanut422hb Жыл бұрын
@@fungi42o0 yes, I bet the Rockefeller bloodline was at the helm.
@derrickcobb5360 Жыл бұрын
@@fungi42o0paper genocide 🤔...... research this saying 🙄..."kill the Indian, but leave the Man"
@pauljohnstone8989 Жыл бұрын
English are not whalers fishermen or trappers who are? The Scottish are top wolf
@inquisitive- Жыл бұрын
Technically the Basque are. Scottish were everywhere though and many "native Americans" were Scottish as well as a multitude of other origins. Lots of tribes have very Celtic and Scythian roots.
@MarshallApplewhite143 Жыл бұрын
So the indians were occupying the old world buildings before the settlers got there? Ive always wondered why this wouldnt be the case and that there would have to be a history of these structures in indigenous American history.
@johnestes31 Жыл бұрын
Alien Properties en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_of_Alien_Property_Custodian of course they'd be repurposed.
@elgoog7830 Жыл бұрын
Very strange, that it says APC(Alien property custodian) was created to keep records of property and possessions taken from the 'enemy.' Are they implying that native americans built these structures? Who tf was the enemy?