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Brown Castle, Tacoma WA, Stadium Bowl, Flood o Mud, Steam Shovel, Old World Photographs Antiquitech

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Jarid Boosters

Jarid Boosters

Күн бұрын

Welcome back to the channel. Today I will be discussing The Stadium High School in Tacoma Washington, formerly known as Brown Castle.
The narrative says this castle’s construction began in 1891 but was halted near completion in 1893, only to sit abandoned until it was consumed by fire in 1898. From here, the narrative says, the building was reconstructed, one of the first and most unique Stadium Bowls in America was added, and the building was converted into a High School.
Today we will look at some Old World images of the school, some images of pre-fire, and post-fire, as well as taking some looks at the construction equipment the narrative says was used to build this mammoth castle.
Please let me know your thoughts down below, and I thank you for being here!
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Пікірлер: 168
@MarvelousOldWorld
@MarvelousOldWorld 3 жыл бұрын
I am so glad somebody is covering this structure. 15 years ago I was working for the architecture firm that performed the historic restoration of Stadium HS. I wish I knew then what I know now-I would have asked a lot more questions. A couple more noteworthy factoids: when the building burned, the fire was (allegedly) visible all the way from Seattle! What kind of fire is that?! Also, there are melted bricks inside supposedly still visible-how hot does a fire need to be to melt brick? Until the recent lockdowns they were running tours of the interior including the attic and basement. As an architect and builder, I do not believe the given narrative-I just don’t see how it is possible to build such magnificent buildings with the primitive methods available to a population of miners and settlers. As an aside, Newark NJ has some of the most extraordinary old world buildings that would make for an excellent video. I’d be happy to make my photo collection available. Cheers!!
@thewanderer7705
@thewanderer7705 3 жыл бұрын
Great idea,very kind of you.I love that about this community,everyone willing to share with each other.I hope he makes a vid on it.
@victorponce7238
@victorponce7238 3 жыл бұрын
Mr Matthew Smith that is very interesting. I'm glad u have an archive of photos to share. Post them on social media sir if u can. Or create ur own utube channel. I wish u well Mr Smith. 😁🏘️
@OMirantedoValeNaoTem170Metros
@OMirantedoValeNaoTem170Metros 2 жыл бұрын
Is there any chance you have some architectural drawings from the school? I'd love to make it as a 3D model.
@josapolis4564
@josapolis4564 3 жыл бұрын
10 thousand children in costumes blew my mind.....that castle is beautiful and hiding secrets. 😎
@gregoryfelkins2534
@gregoryfelkins2534 3 жыл бұрын
Yes. How many school districts did it take to come up with 10,000 " children"
@josapolis4564
@josapolis4564 3 жыл бұрын
EXACTLY!!! 🤔
@keding9159
@keding9159 3 жыл бұрын
Go look up the El Paso High School and stadium. The 'seating' stairs of the stadium are wide enough to pitch a tent and for every original step, they've added two steps to make it work for modern man. Where it is located in El Paso is also an area known for tunnels.
@NACHOTHEIST
@NACHOTHEIST 3 жыл бұрын
Wow! It looks so ancient
@victorponce7238
@victorponce7238 3 жыл бұрын
Yes I saw a show about tunnels. Mysterious ones
@CarlosMorales-jd5hb
@CarlosMorales-jd5hb 3 жыл бұрын
Always wondered about that school's construction, El Paso history is filled with many interesting buildings that have been torn down, original library and court house.
@sidneysill8495
@sidneysill8495 3 жыл бұрын
I doubt all the "strife" in the region is a coincidence. What better way to destroy things and/or have it go unnoticed?
@jpat_
@jpat_ 3 жыл бұрын
That’s an incredible building from another time. Great find.
@MIKEMOSSGONNAFLOSS
@MIKEMOSSGONNAFLOSS 3 жыл бұрын
I lived down the street from here, always have been curious about this Castle! Definitely left over from the old world...
@gregoryfelkins2534
@gregoryfelkins2534 3 жыл бұрын
Is it occupied by anyone now?
@sighinara743
@sighinara743 3 жыл бұрын
@@gregoryfelkins2534 It's still the high school for students in the North End of Tacoma.
@gregoryfelkins2534
@gregoryfelkins2534 3 жыл бұрын
@@sighinara743 That's Amazing. Thanks for the rapid update.
@ElZorroFox1
@ElZorroFox1 3 жыл бұрын
I live in Tacoma. I'll get you more info. Now, you got me interested. Peace.
@pamelapope8292
@pamelapope8292 3 жыл бұрын
Interesting... I grew up in the neighborhood and spent much time as a child being enchanted by this castle and the bowl and the architecture in the neighborhood. I still am in the area and enchanted ...
@leahelliott3585
@leahelliott3585 3 жыл бұрын
I do not think there were enough children living in Tacoma Washington to justify the size and grandiose architecture of this building. There is no way.
@divinetrinethreesixnine7350
@divinetrinethreesixnine7350 3 жыл бұрын
I grew up in Tacoma and graduated high school in 1974. Going from class to class was nuts with all the stair cases. When I was a kid we were told the school used to be a hotel and it did have a fire.
@refillingthecup6750
@refillingthecup6750 3 жыл бұрын
Tacoma School District must have one Hell of a budget to work with!
@Cornerstanding
@Cornerstanding 3 жыл бұрын
Last time I went to school in that area was over 20 years ago and we had to use nasty text books from the 60's and 70's most of which didn't have functioning pages or covers and missing pages often water damaged with graffiti all over every page. That school district is not the greatest and it is kinda odd the old Castle was turned into a school.
@refillingthecup6750
@refillingthecup6750 3 жыл бұрын
@@Cornerstanding I was just thinking about the cost for electricity, how many janitors and maintenance people it would take to maintain that building.
@jimzeske3326
@jimzeske3326 3 жыл бұрын
Very interesting presentation. I am surprised they didn't call this an insane asylum. Your comment on manpower is significant. This goes for most things we question. Skilled labor would have to be shipped in. The local community couldn't supply it. The same for the bricks though it is convenient part of the narrative the railway built this. They could have shipped in the material along with the skilled labor on their trains. Great info on the steam shovel. Been looking for the use of powered equipment as all we see usually are horse carts and guys with shovels.
@oldworldex
@oldworldex Жыл бұрын
The only problem with the 'shipping them in' narrative is that this type of construction was going on everywhere at the time. Skilled builders would have been a hot commodity! It's a shame there's no place for these skilled tradesmen in history. Only the architects and project funders get their names etched in time...
@gopnikguy3778
@gopnikguy3778 3 жыл бұрын
Great video. Might check out Portland Oregon. It has very old red brick buildings labeled “schools”. Start with Benson Polytechnic High School. It’s a red brick building with huge white columns in front. School has its own metal foundry and radio station. Small odd hill out front. Looks like it was dug out.
@trondon6606
@trondon6606 3 жыл бұрын
Great video! I also live right by it. The streets of downtown Tacoma are all incredibly steep sloping down to the water with many old world building built into them. No way they would have dug into these hills to build and then cover up the upper half
@sighinara743
@sighinara743 3 жыл бұрын
YAAASSSSSS!!! I've been waiting for someone to do a video on Stadium HS ~ I used to live a few blocks from there & it's one of my favorite buildings ever. They filmed "10 Things I Hate About You" (with Julia Stiles & Heath Ledger) there in the late 90's. Thanks so much for this!❤️
@arienpiccolo7239
@arienpiccolo7239 3 жыл бұрын
Another awesome video. I've been born and raised in the Pacific Northwest outside of Portland Oregon for 41 years. Always been fascinated by old photographs of the cities around me and my own and one thing that is consistent is the anomaly of the trees. I see it in real life hundreds of thousands of square miles with no trees outside of a couple parks that are older than maybe 150 years and why such an elaborate building for a high school my town has what I believe to be a mud flood building red brick still standing and I've looked for photographs I have found one of the very first school claimed to be built for all but 40 students and it's a red brick building with columns first story half buried maybe a quarter million bricks and they said they tore it down after only 20 years I've only been able to find one picture and the infrastructure not being there to move all those bricks I don't know where else to go to find pictures in my own area of construction or any kind of narrative of how they built the schools but completely fascinating to think about
@bradleyhenderson1198
@bradleyhenderson1198 3 жыл бұрын
They are all over Portland. Cleveland HS. But go to the bomb shelter (which is itself ancient I believe but never explored) near downtown and head downtown walking. You'll see many. Not to mention underground Portland. Ever notice all of those really ornate iron decorated stairs that lead down to a locked, chained, barred steel door? Yep. Ever wonder why Portland has huge steep hills, but all the 'interesting stuff' is in the basin near the river? The 'courthouse' at pioneer. Etc, etc, etc...
@MTCali70
@MTCali70 3 жыл бұрын
Oh! I saw this castle/high school in another video with this guy who does tours around Tacoma..his home town..and Seattle..pretty cool.. Pretty Gritty Tours is where he talks and walks through Stadium High.
@vivianworden
@vivianworden 2 жыл бұрын
You're in my backyard now. I just wrote an urban fantasy series that features Tacoma's landmark buildings as energy generating structures. ♥️
@dustinspeicher3390
@dustinspeicher3390 3 жыл бұрын
I was born on Fort Lewis, & grew up within 20 minute's of Tacoma because any closer than that & you'll have to endure the Aroma of Tacoma. Anyway, the Stadium High School is right next to I-5, meaning if you do any driving through Tacoma you're likely to drive passed it, & I can remember even as a 3 year old little snot faced kid being mesmerized by the sight of this building. I never thought to associate it with the old world & the possibility of it being a mud flooder, but now since you've mentioned that scenario in conjunction with the thousands of times that I've gazed up at this impressive structure it clicked & now I completely believe that what you are suggesting is 100% accurate & has to be the case. It checks every box normally attributed to an architectural specimen we've inherited, even down to the tale of a destructive fire soon after it's construction. You think they would be a little more creative in their fabricated narratives, like really, these are supposed to be the most powerful, distinct people in the world whom secretly control the masses & the financial systems globally, yet they aren't able to get a little more creative in their construction of our supposed history. Like even that word 'HIS -STORY' his fictional story sucks balls with how repetitive & predictable it is, I think HIS STORY should follow the premise of HIS STORY & BURN. I'm just grateful they decided to leave this structure intact & not destroy such a sight to behold like they've done with so many other equally impressive structures, works of architectural art really are what they are.
@leahelliott3585
@leahelliott3585 3 жыл бұрын
I live in Easton MA, and the buildings here are beautiful and old and remind me of this building. Back in the day, the Ames' family (who basically owned all of the land in this area, and there is like 3 or 4 mansions in Easton that the Ames' had built), anyways, they say that the Ames' family got their riches from producing and selling shovels... yes. Shovels. There is a wicked old train station in the center of Easton, which is apparently how they were able to sell their shovels across the US. Supposedly this was all back in the early 1800's. Easton was founded in 1752... but what's interesting to me, knowing what I know now, is that, they were selling so many shovels because the railways were all being built and so many men were working building the rail ways, that it really makes me stop and wonder, how were enough men even left to build such grand buildings, especially after accounting for every other profession men were in... annnnd, the fact that they were selling so many shovels tells u something about the tools they had available at the time. Some of the mansions and old "historic" buildings in my area, are from the latter 1700s and early 1800s... they are simply beautiful, but it realllly makes me wonder about who built them and when they were sctually built.
@lindadiggs6420
@lindadiggs6420 3 жыл бұрын
I was attracted to your video for two reasons. I've been studying mud floods for a while. It is fascinating how these architectural anomalies are coming to light. I live in Philadelphia and our city hall sums it up. The other reason I listened to your lecture is because my sister lived in Tacoma for many years. Excellent observation of what clearly substantiates the mud flood theory.
@tiredironrepair
@tiredironrepair 3 жыл бұрын
Good stuff Jarid. The federal courthouse in Tacoma is a good one too with it's gigantic red brick arches.
@BIGkundalini
@BIGkundalini 3 жыл бұрын
So glad to find your channel. You are doing great work, please continue. You, john levi, martin liedtke, flat earth British sub, old scary world, you all are doing a great service. Please continue
@jaguarjoe7820
@jaguarjoe7820 3 жыл бұрын
Old stadiums around the country are dug out of the earth, previously built centuries ago. L.A. colleseum in a basin.
@Vexation4632
@Vexation4632 2 жыл бұрын
I spent three years at this school. Grew up in Tacoma. Been completely throughout this structure. And you are hilarious.
@bboy1481
@bboy1481 3 жыл бұрын
I went to this school, and I always wondered about the construction myself. This was a good video
@Nate_tureboy
@Nate_tureboy 3 жыл бұрын
Whoa! Is it huge?! It looks F*n huge
@bboy1481
@bboy1481 3 жыл бұрын
@@Nate_tureboy yes it is f*n huge and so is the stadium. I hated running those during football.
@libertycan6959
@libertycan6959 2 жыл бұрын
I use to live by it. Its quite the sight. Thanks for the revisit.. Amazing building! ...and yes it was in the movie...The 10 Things I Hate About You. If you go at the right time you can take a tour...its very interesting and beautiful inside after the restoration.
@reithchase7784
@reithchase7784 3 жыл бұрын
I live like 5 min away from tacoma and have just started researching tartaria, given the amount of settlers here at that time and all around the puget sound even seattle the official narrative just doesn’t make sense, especially when looking into the Alaska-Yukon-pacific exposition(Seattle’s first worlds fair). I know people didn’t have much distraction back then ie video games and television but still to build such a grand structure for a town of a little over 1000 is illogical and un reasonable. It does seem weird that the cobblestone of the stadium building seems to be at the natural ground level then the red brick seems to go on up from there. Im going to have to go down and check it out in person and see if theres anymore clues. The tacoma union station is also another sort of out of place building especially in the late 19th century, i think it also was allegedly built around the same time as stadium high school.
@jamesleyda365
@jamesleyda365 6 ай бұрын
Been there many times, its a beautiful building and awesome stadium overlooking Comencment bay. Has to be the coolest highschools in the USA 🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘
@drumstick74
@drumstick74 3 жыл бұрын
It was an old structure, which burned, yet it didn't collapse to the ground like the WTC. They sure knew how to build those Tartarians.
@billmillerflip
@billmillerflip 3 жыл бұрын
When we consider all the structures of the Old World we have to be talking about trillions of red bricks...trillions.
@lloydhawkins538
@lloydhawkins538 3 жыл бұрын
Agreed, now look at the Grand Canyon with a different perspective?
@danthomas9077
@danthomas9077 3 жыл бұрын
Trillions of bricks, oh my, not trillions! So what, that's nothing, a single brick factory can crank out millions easily. One thing you mud flooders can't explain is how we could of had floods that would flood buildings, but it didn't push them over or damage them, how so many buildings could survive such a flood is never explained and should be the real mystery.
@billmillerflip
@billmillerflip 3 жыл бұрын
@@danthomas9077 You're right, I probably under estimated the brick count. Tens of trillions.
@law3062
@law3062 3 жыл бұрын
@@danthomas9077 Well, to start All of those "mud flooders" are built a wee bit sturdier than your local walmart built by local 66. In fact they were and still are so sturdy that "they" had to invent countless wars to bomb the shit outta most of em in order to hide history. YOU can find videos where normal demolition meathods are useless vs. "mud flooders". YOU can do a lot of things with YOUR computer but truth starts with an open mind and some critical thinking Capt. Dan and it should always come from within ... So dont demand answers from "mud flooders" or blindly consume the static ... or trust the fact creators ... Take it all in and live your truth Cap. Dan .. Peace
@danthomas9077
@danthomas9077 3 жыл бұрын
@@law3062 That's so funny you schooling me on how to use a computer and the internet. My first computer was a commadore 128, been on the internet since before youtube was even a thing, I'm well aware of the who what where. I watched the live news reports on JFK's fateful day, read every conspiracy book on the subject and many others topics by the time I'd graduated high school, I've been down the rabbit hole and back several times, you don't need to "school" me. The truth is subjective, members of our own government killed JFK, these same people did 911, these same people did sandy hook, whomever "played" Adam Lanza also plays David Hogg, the virus is a scamdemic, etc, etc, etc, I could go on and on, there's so many "conspiracies" that are real, but one I can't find "real" is so called mud flood buildings like this one. Granted there's many unanswered questions about past civilizations and who built what and when, but this building has documented history of it's creation and build, there's no way it's a left over from a mud flood and has been repurposed. While I believe there was a great flood/s, I'm not a believer of one in the 1800's and we repurposed buildings that didn't get destroyed, and your suggestion that there's buildings we can't demo because they're built so well is really funny, you''ll have to provide evidence of such as I've never heard such nonsense. I grew up in Seattle, there's historical photos of the Seattle Tacoma area being logged, no pioneeers or settlers ever reported finding this or other buildings amongst the trees, and what about the native Indians who lived in the area, how come they used crude huts to live in when they could of used this building, it just doesn't fit the history as we know it, and it's unlikely they could of hid the fact or rewrite/erase history if we did find and repurpose such buildings in the USA, now Europe is/might be a different story.
@garyharden7311
@garyharden7311 3 жыл бұрын
That building must be 500 to 1000 yrs old SO we’ll made. Wished they had dug it all out .. wonder how deep it goes? Mudflood.. antiquetech.. architecture we could never build today
@weirdotter930
@weirdotter930 3 жыл бұрын
I went to Stadium high School, I still live right down the street from there. The movie “10 things I hate about you” was filmed there. My dad told me that him and his friend built stadium with their bare hands when they were teenagers, so mystery solved
@shlomo_jewinstien-Doodoowitz
@shlomo_jewinstien-Doodoowitz 3 жыл бұрын
When then you should be able to whip ouy some photos of the construction then right
@weirdotter930
@weirdotter930 3 жыл бұрын
@@shlomo_jewinstien-Doodoowitz that would be nice if I could produce some construction photos but unfortunately they didn’t hand out construction photos to the students. All that we were ever told is that it was an old hotel.
@victorponce7238
@victorponce7238 3 жыл бұрын
Built it with their bare hands???WTF Dude what was ur dad smoking back then? PCP??
@bonnierose1908
@bonnierose1908 3 жыл бұрын
It looks just like all the old state hospitals in Massachusetts and the old buildings on Long Island in Boston harbor, I took a boat out to the islands one time and found piles of old red bricks so old they were completely rounded and super smooth I’ve never seen anything like it and I always thought that kind of erosion would’ve taken much much longer than even a few hundred years to completely round bricks some much smaller than their original size there is a also a movie that takes place at Danvers state hospital called session 9. If your interested in the campus. That’s what the old state hospitals were like, campuses or little cities, Massachusetts has a lot of suspicious buildings like bridgewater state university and bridgewater state hospital too.
@gregoryfelkins2534
@gregoryfelkins2534 3 жыл бұрын
Connecticut and/ or Massachusetts has several secret covert warfare labs on the Long island sound . Many strange "corpses" have washed ashore and Lyme {disease} is located there
@maggiemae7539
@maggiemae7539 3 жыл бұрын
@@gregoryfelkins2534 the patients were experiments?
@Cornerstanding
@Cornerstanding 3 жыл бұрын
Fun fact this is the filming location of 10 things I hate about you. If you want to do more research on Mudflood buildings look up Pacific Ave in downtown Tacoma. There's allot of interesting buildings in that City and the city lay out is really odd, many streets just drop off and go no where. They have a part of the city that was cut off in a part of town known as shalashan containing telephone poles and house lots and no homes, they call that area the back roads. Many streets in the city just cut off and drop into a gulg. many roads threw out the city just end and all of a sudden drop off into a gulg just completely randomly. This one definitely deserves another video. There's a particular building a few minutes from Stadium highschool on Pacific Ave that seriously claims to be the bank of California. Definitely do another video.
@jayshook21
@jayshook21 3 жыл бұрын
The trees shown were secondary growth. The old groth forrest was loged off. The stadium shown in the old pictures is now about 1/3 still standing. Most of the original structure slid down the hill.
@LauraLou222
@LauraLou222 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the time and effort you put into these videos! Great find.
@kimlarso
@kimlarso 2 жыл бұрын
@1:24 (being Indigenous, I find that R&R advertisement pamphlet absolutely wonderful, Thank You! 🦋
@stankygeorge
@stankygeorge 3 жыл бұрын
Personally, I would say; the Roman castle was built to support that Roman stadium! Well, it has to be Roman because they used Roman red bricks and it looks like any coliseum/stadium the Romans would have built, right!
@genevieveestelle8243
@genevieveestelle8243 3 жыл бұрын
Modern day “Stadium Arcadiums” resemble vaporizers, minus the steam units. Modern day gladiators receive awards that resemble urns.
@dickynichols9459
@dickynichols9459 3 жыл бұрын
Considering what we know now. We are told a specific narrative about our history. What I am learning of late, I believe that this is a remnant of the Millennial Kingdom. Even today if our people wanted to build and replicate exactly that construction, could we?
@scienceownsimposters2142
@scienceownsimposters2142 3 жыл бұрын
It is.Its Tartaria.
@user-ol1wk5tk2w
@user-ol1wk5tk2w 28 күн бұрын
I was a freshman the day part of the bowl went sliding down the hill. Typing class looking over the bowl true story a week later transferred to FOSS High School 😊
@c.l.sherman211
@c.l.sherman211 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Jarid, Thanks so much for your information! I grew up near Seattle and wish I had gone to see the Brown Castle-Stadium mud flood high school.
@lizmcnay9947
@lizmcnay9947 3 жыл бұрын
Another great episode! Thank you very much.
@taylor-micheal-thompson354
@taylor-micheal-thompson354 3 жыл бұрын
Great content!!
@warren-out3505
@warren-out3505 3 жыл бұрын
I have fam who went here, i too live here. It is nuts
@johnwitham4527
@johnwitham4527 2 жыл бұрын
Browns Castle is only the tip of the iceberg as far as old world structures that remain standing "in the Stadium district/Tacoma area" are concerned. I think it (Stadium high school) is related to The Chateau Frontenac via The Northwest Passage. The early settlers of Canada (New France/Quebec) were stated to be searching for The Northwest Passage in the mid-1500's & most likely did find it. The two structures are similarly built to my observation.
@patsalas5170
@patsalas5170 9 ай бұрын
My dad graduated stadium high in 1940...both of my parents were born and raised in Tacoma...
@scottgrubert8749
@scottgrubert8749 3 жыл бұрын
Jared Boosters - Nice! Check out Union Station also in Tacoma. Same side as Stadium HS and fairly close. It is glorious. Could be something related to them both being from the Union Pacific Railroad🤔
@scottgrubert8749
@scottgrubert8749 3 жыл бұрын
I messed up your name Jarid, sorry.
@billmillerflip
@billmillerflip 3 жыл бұрын
@Jarid Booster I, too, have looked into sport stadiums of the Americas. I'm glad that I'm watching your research.
@truepatriot8947
@truepatriot8947 3 жыл бұрын
Follow the Red Brick Road!!!
@Nate_tureboy
@Nate_tureboy 3 жыл бұрын
Most of those pics only show the stadium and or waterside. A couple overheads show the squared C shape. One of the colored pics shows it before the stadium and it appeared to be a pretty deep valley where the stadium currently sits. Jarid mentioned the building being on a point, jutting out, I bet the mud flooded a good portion of the valley after moving past the building and they were able to shape it and level it off in the end
@FreeSpear
@FreeSpear 3 жыл бұрын
They claim its all red brick but some other masonry was clearly used for the first 3 stories at least. In fact this building seems to have been around for at least two severe weather episodes. (Loved that alternative to "reset"). Once rebuilt on top with red brick including the spire antennas, then again on the inside post "fire" by the school district.
@gafengla
@gafengla 3 жыл бұрын
What a stunning post from Jarid and no I don't believe a single word of the 'official narrative' because only craftsmen and architects of the highest standard in plentiful supply could have even attempted a structure of that nature!
@peppie0521
@peppie0521 Жыл бұрын
My dad and uncle went there in the late 30s and made the same comment adding, “It might be almost as old as the dirt it’s sitting on.”
@malajemm
@malajemm 3 жыл бұрын
beautiful presentation, I really enjoyed this video and learned something new....I had no idea there was a huge babylonian/roman castle and arena there.....I bet the interior looks cool. 👍👏👏
@presetnative235
@presetnative235 2 жыл бұрын
Galbani, welcome to California. We have everything better than anything
@boozzledbop9136
@boozzledbop9136 3 жыл бұрын
The Womans Gulch . .. Was before the stadium . . . nice info . . . thanks
@etell4673
@etell4673 3 жыл бұрын
San Diego High School was dubbed the Old Gray Castle and it had a huge stadium also. It was beautiful. But they tore it down. Now it looks like a prison. Wow
@nathantturnert1631
@nathantturnert1631 2 жыл бұрын
Goodnight that place is huge! Oh my I'm so curious on who made these man! Hope we can find more info soon.
@georgeprokopenko3044
@georgeprokopenko3044 3 жыл бұрын
good
@electrictao5180
@electrictao5180 3 жыл бұрын
What if they simply took our technology away, and left us horse and buggy instead? There's no better way to keep us in the dark, and in need. Thanks!
@DaemonZodiac
@DaemonZodiac 3 жыл бұрын
Great find...Hey Jarid, have you checked out the EWAR cahannel series of 7 videos everyone is talking about..? Its called Lost History of our Flat Earth...its pretty amazing.
@vivianhayes6865
@vivianhayes6865 3 жыл бұрын
💯
@Muddyorphan1812
@Muddyorphan1812 3 жыл бұрын
Its the corner if a star city your seeing a tenth of the star structure and star canal system that would have pointed out around it
@michahartt298
@michahartt298 3 жыл бұрын
Well pointed out Bro 👍🏻😀
@darcy5474
@darcy5474 3 жыл бұрын
I never thought of that! I live here, I'll take a look...great thought!
@Cornerstanding
@Cornerstanding 3 жыл бұрын
The indigenous people of the area certainly hasn't mentioned that at all according to my knowledge.
@Muddyorphan1812
@Muddyorphan1812 3 жыл бұрын
@@Cornerstanding tact that on the list
@stephane.monarque3863
@stephane.monarque3863 3 жыл бұрын
Château Frontenac in Quebec City.its same architecture
@summermucha5207
@summermucha5207 Жыл бұрын
@stephane monarque WOW! 😮you were not kidding… super similar!
@Muddyorphan1812
@Muddyorphan1812 3 жыл бұрын
30 40 feet of mud
@jennifermcclean1308
@jennifermcclean1308 2 жыл бұрын
There's almost nothing in Tacoma now. Why would they have needed a massive castle/hotel way back then?
@elizabethdigiacomo8834
@elizabethdigiacomo8834 3 жыл бұрын
Santa Monica High School!
@elizabethdigiacomo8834
@elizabethdigiacomo8834 3 жыл бұрын
POP pier!
@elizabethdigiacomo8834
@elizabethdigiacomo8834 3 жыл бұрын
Third Street Promenade!
@nathantturnert1631
@nathantturnert1631 2 жыл бұрын
These damn early years sure had alot of fires ehh? Nothing suspicious, I believe whatever they tell me to believe. I never question a THING!
@peppie0521
@peppie0521 Жыл бұрын
Before computers, kids just played a lot with matches.
@TheMinipea
@TheMinipea 3 жыл бұрын
They found it.. then build accessibility
@Effin_the_Chat
@Effin_the_Chat 10 ай бұрын
I'm fairly secure in believing that mud flood builings can be dated to having been built prior to 1815.
@viviangood1406
@viviangood1406 3 жыл бұрын
What if the bldgs were built for people and the remains are re-purposed (Jon Levi term).... when u see some of the pictures from FEB, the huge ships with castles and bldgs. on them...it makes you wonder what's (who) outside this realm. A♤
@iheartyeshua
@iheartyeshua 3 жыл бұрын
I just wish we could know if there were false walls covering underground “basement” windows to nowhere.
@darcy5474
@darcy5474 3 жыл бұрын
Tacoma has a huge underground scene!
@jovaun8863
@jovaun8863 3 ай бұрын
🖤❤️‍🔥😎
@lovejanet51
@lovejanet51 3 жыл бұрын
Considering every city and town back than burned down at some point, always same narrative all built quickly but yet were was man power back than, still using horse and wagon. Who had all this money the railroad surely they could not fund major projects non related to railroad. Notice all so called construction photos only using horses not draft horses I bet that took long time to build at slower pace, let alone all red brick used plus dig out all that mud, how much can you haul in wooden wagon what a joke.
@refillingthecup6750
@refillingthecup6750 3 жыл бұрын
Why would you need a building that huge for a high school?
@Nate_tureboy
@Nate_tureboy 3 жыл бұрын
No F*n way was this something we did 😂 Its clearly flooded with mud a couple stories deep, interestingly the lower levels in a few color images looked whitish. Among the bullshit it says they opened with 878 students and rounded to about 900 including staff. That place could hold a couple thousand people inside. One image said 10k children in costume to ' open ' the stadium. Which btw would've been a massive massive undertaking. Overseas they call melted buildings in the desert castles and over here we bullshit everyone and lie about what they were. Wonder if it had bathrooms pre "re-novation?" You're spot on about the steam shovel theory. Though we see some pics with them in use there's no way in hell they could handle the loads and repeated hard work and maintenance. Still no cranes either. Jarid, maybe look into old construction companies ya know? See if you can find ones pre and post eh hem reset. When did the "founders" like astor get here, who was running steel factories and stone yards and fine carpentry.
@Jessamer
@Jessamer 3 жыл бұрын
At 8:29, nice audio segue, a difficult thing, with recording levels.
@johnthompson9513
@johnthompson9513 3 жыл бұрын
The way the big bowl stadium is laid out below the bldg I'd say they built it that way as a basin to catch run off You know in case it flooded again Look at the layout look close
@Nate_tureboy
@Nate_tureboy 3 жыл бұрын
Most of those pics only show the stadium and or waterside. A couple overheads show the squared C shape. One of the colored pics shows it before the stadium and it appeared to be a pretty deep valley where the stadium currently sits. Jarid mentioned the building being on a point, jutting out, I bet the mud flooded a good portion of the valley moving past the building and they were able to shape it and level it off in the end
@thunderdragon8341
@thunderdragon8341 Жыл бұрын
my daughter graduated from stadium High
@jackbutler1955
@jackbutler1955 2 жыл бұрын
"The first official game of baseball in the United States took place in June 1846 in Hoboken, New Jersey. In 1869, the Cincinnati Red Stockings became America's first professional baseball club." "Soccer was initiated as an organized college sport in the USA in the years following the Civil War. Princeton and Rutgers Universities engaged in the first intercollegiate soccer match Nov. 6, 1876, in New Brunswick, N.J. Rutgers won the match 6-4." "The first American football match was played on November 6, 1869, between two college teams, Rutgers and Princeton, using rules based on the rules of soccer at the time." no sports but they needed a stadium lol
@robertmcgivern565
@robertmcgivern565 3 жыл бұрын
I'd hazard a guess this was originally built years before with a dual, possibly multi purpose aim of main hospital with residential care and /or a retirement home such is the surrounding beauty. Many fantastic structures like this were found, only to be newly designated as enormous lunatic asylums and therefore off limits.
@unicorneater3000
@unicorneater3000 3 жыл бұрын
Yo, jonlevi had a video of similar hotels made by the Canadian railway. But I'm sure it's all a coincidence. 😂
@Madronaxyz
@Madronaxyz 4 ай бұрын
I'd be more interested if you read your documents that you put on the screen before you talk about them. It was not named stadium high School before there was a stadium. It was named Tacoma high School .
@tommyjohnson7280
@tommyjohnson7280 3 жыл бұрын
trees to young ! muud flood
@hawaiiguykailua6928
@hawaiiguykailua6928 11 ай бұрын
Northern Pacific history is comical. One day they decided to build the railroad to Montana from Seattle/Tacoma and hired 25,000 workers, which didn't exist according to official census data. Had 13k between seattle/tacoma/Portland and they were all busy building Castles every few days haha.😊😂
@ernansosa7313
@ernansosa7313 3 жыл бұрын
Its an older building
@tomstanley7568
@tomstanley7568 3 жыл бұрын
wall retainer turned morphed to stadium
@lisamedlin96
@lisamedlin96 3 жыл бұрын
Anyone here seen the series here on utbe called Diehold Foundation. Go give it a listen.
@Wally-pu2hh
@Wally-pu2hh 3 жыл бұрын
I do have some info on the young trees . Since arriving to colonize America and Canada, all the big trees were marked and taken by the world powers for their navy ships. Those masts and boats were made from those giant trees , sadly .
@harryteevee9569
@harryteevee9569 3 жыл бұрын
This school is featured in the movie 10 things I hate about you.
@marcwasson
@marcwasson 3 жыл бұрын
No, it was not as they claim along with many others. The question I have is why (commenters welcome) do they want to lie and hide the true facts and try to cover up with these stories that just don't add up. They are bad liars. So, again why lie?
@drinkingpoolwater
@drinkingpoolwater 3 жыл бұрын
pretty sure this was the school used in the movie 10 things i hate about you
@MrDongodon
@MrDongodon 3 жыл бұрын
People are waking up all around the globe/flatearth...lol.
@withwingsaseagleeyes
@withwingsaseagleeyes 3 жыл бұрын
Wish people would leave out flat Earth in terms of all these antiquette buildings which have nothing to do with a flat Earth. In my eyes it's a means to turn people away from this video that don't believe in flat Earth so please leave that out.
@MrDongodon
@MrDongodon 3 жыл бұрын
@@withwingsaseagleeyes How about Religons ... If all of history is a backwards, upside down inverted lie than maybe the true story of Abram is like this ... Abram/Abraham came from a long line of generational black magicians who practiced ritualistic animal/human sacrificial blood magic and Abram himself was a Magi/Magician from Chaldea who founded the three Abracadabrahamic religions as a cosmic psyops Saturn demanded from Abram blood ritual sacrifices 1Heifer, 1Ram, 1Goat, 1Pigeon, 1Turtle Dove and one young human child Issac Abram's only begotten son which he murdered/sacrificed obediently sealing the blood covenant and that Judaism, Christianity and Islam are subversion's of this pact with Saturn and that those of the three faiths of Jehovah, God and Allah secretly and unwittingly worship Saturn.
@harryteevee9569
@harryteevee9569 3 жыл бұрын
@@MrDongodon OR... Red Hairy man Esau married a Horim, a giant named Aholibamah. Oh the tales of the red haired giants are all over the world yes? search the scriptures and read of the intermingling with the nephilim giants offspring of Seir and Esau and his reprobate sons.. those hairy red devils?
@gregoryfelkins2534
@gregoryfelkins2534 3 жыл бұрын
@@MrDongodon I would con cur that is an awesome description of what we are about to SEE revealed to us and why we are still alive on Earth. The mud flood I believe ( just today at work) happened centuries ago and then was known as the dark ages. I surmise that during the 1600s they began rounding up tribal people from Africa to excavate these cities worldwide, at least for the western civiizations. Asia would have inducted other Asians , etc. That would explain why they were already integrated with indigenous people. Then the colonial south used them after New York and Chicago was unearthed referring too only the massive stone structure as all the wooden homes on top caught fire.
@scienceownsimposters2142
@scienceownsimposters2142 3 жыл бұрын
Yup.I love it.
@refillingthecup6750
@refillingthecup6750 3 жыл бұрын
It looks like Hogwarts!
@scienceownsimposters2142
@scienceownsimposters2142 3 жыл бұрын
Because Harry Potter is based on Tartaria.(the basques/catalans)
@butt-wad3109
@butt-wad3109 11 ай бұрын
I'm just not sure what you are implying here..???
@petestsck7774
@petestsck7774 3 жыл бұрын
Dropped pin maps.app.goo.gl/uu7QLbLAGVdyB4Qt7
@scienceownsimposters2142
@scienceownsimposters2142 3 жыл бұрын
Tartaria which is the real greco roman the basques/catalans
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