I grew up in the Old Wilber Store building from 78-95 and the pictures of it has my dad's truck and his boat in it. My Grandma lived below the Mason lodge so neat to see you cover this
These are the places I look for when I go riding on my motorcycle. I think it is fascinating to to see them first hand, then try to imagine what life looked like back in their heyday. I appreciate your videos. It's videos like this, that can give us a look back, with info on what went on and happened to the places. This one is within a day ride, I'll defiantly make this a pass through place. Thanks
I lived 2 miles up the hill (south) . We went to church there. Got gas and some groceries. Knew several residents and relatives there. More to be said . Thank you for your work.✅
The Hartford Ford was a treat! Figuring out just how flooded it was was not easy. I used to drive home from work as a teen from Krogers in Laerenceburg and cross it nearly every day of the week. To say i had some very close calls would be putting it mikdly. But i never got stuck on it once. But i knew people who were stranded and people who died trying to get themselves unstranded on their own. Back then there was no cell phones, and you domt see many vehicles after 11 pm, so crossing overnight was very dangerous if you did not know what you were doing and or got yourself stranded. Since i lived up hartford ridge the only other way home was going through aurora and then up Hartford Pike, which was alot father.
Thank you so much for this! I have lived about 1/2 mile from the center of town for 45 years and I remember Mrs Bennetts store so well! Also, you are correct about the pews in the Methodist Church....they were beautiful, curved wooden pews I'd guess spanning maybe 14 feet? They formed a broken modifyed horseshoe shape if I am remembering correctly. I do wish you had shown Miami Mound, the large brick house on the outskirts of town that was built in 1822. It is inhabited and has been as long as I have lived here.
In the early 70's, my family owned the property going out of Hartford towards Rising Sun on Nelson Road. The one with the stone spring house next to the road. Mr. Pew (or Pugh) lived in this house. He would walk his 2 black labs and come see us. I was about 6 or 7 at the time. He would tell me stories of hearing the footsteps in the house of the Indians that rose from the mound at night. Made quite the impression on my young mind!
I remember going to the original General Store with my great grandfather in the 70s. The old man that ran it was just golden. I also remember the new store of course but it just never had the character and charm of the original one. Sad to see the church deteriorate. That church was always so beautiful when I was growing up. I guess I know most of the ones who lived close because I lived up the hill several miles. We lived where my great grandfather Bob Walton lived and farmed.
6:47 ~ I live in northern Indiana and see homes like this every so often and wonder what the heck happened. Barns out in countrysides are commonly found like this aside a freshly built one so that makes sense. In 2019 I went _alll the way up_ to Mackinaw City for short vacation. After getting bored enough from the Island, the folks and I went further north just to see what's up, then made a side trip to Sheboygan where houses like this were the norm. Rotted, weather beaten wood structures with barely any paint on them. Actual "house" sections were leaning to one side and the porches were leaning to another. Certainly is something but considering the weather that far north I wouldn't blame the occupants from abandoning the area. It was June and snowing. We all have to draw a line somewhere. The occasional 'ghost town' makes me want to explore and photograph just like you but unfortunately they're hundreds of miles apart. My exposure happened to come from childhood fact books, the first happened to be Hannah House down in Indianapolis which supposedly housed refugees but caught fire from a lantern. Maybe one day we can all afford ample time to explore as you do. :)
This was a blast from the past! I grew up in Switzerland County in the 80s and when I started driving all these backroads were my stomping grounds. In my junior year I dated a girl whose mom crossed the ford in Hartford 5 days a week, depending on water levels, to get to work.
What a great video! I lived in one of the Cole houses (the one on Cole Lane) from late sixties to mid seventies and would walk the mile, cross the ford to the general store, open at the time, and buy me a Mickey Banana Flip! Yum!
Please consider covering Zenas, Indiana in Jennings County. It used to have a school, post office, general store and a telephone directory but now only has a church. But the church is quite old and still very active.
My dad pastored in that church building (Trinity Baptist Church) sometime between the 2005-2008 era. The bank wouldn't approve for them to purchase the building because the property was too small for a septic system. There was an outhouse behind the building. The interior of that building was extremely well preserved at that time. The curved pews were really well built. The way the pulpit/stage area was built was to be able to project sound. Definitely a piece of history.
I grew up in Rising Sun and remember stopping at Bennett's general store to get sandwiches. I have driven across Hartford ford may time with and without water. The minister at Rising Sun Methodist church finished his sermon in Rising Sun and then drove the 5 miles to Hartford for the service there. There are so many more stories that can be told about the small communities of southeastern Indiana.
There is also a Hartford city Indiana. Which when when you when you first started, I thought you were talking about it. I'm originally from Indiana and of coarse I didn't know about this 2nd Hartford. Hartford city is in Blackford County.
I feel like Dunkirk Indiana is. Which is where I'm from and is close to Hartford city Indiana. Yes there are a few businesses there but nothing like it use to be. I can't even go back there anymore. 😪 breaks my heart that town use to be such a thriving town with 2 glass factories. Now just one. Town was always busy. Homes are so run down. Sad.
I have a suggestion for you: Royalton. We lived there about 12 years ago. Our rental house was either on the site of or was the actual structure of the original Post Office. I'd heard that when the railroad established itself in Zionsville, Royalton faded. I'd also heard that the town was an epicenter of moonshining or some such, with folks saying they had a Royal Ton of booze for sale. Interesting place that as far as I know, is still on the map.
The state of Indiana...sorry about that! It is in Eagle Township just inside Boone County and just outside Marion County, so it is northwest of Indianapolis and five miles from Zionsville. Interesting location by the interstate that few folks know about.
@@kskssxoxskskss2189 Neither. I think it was because of the automobile. People became more mobile and it was easier to drive into the larger towns to buy food and household items.
I ride my bike and drive on HWY 8 in north Kentucky along the Ohio river between Hebron and Covington and there are several foundations and retaining walls of what I can only imagine were once houses. Would love to lnow what used to be there.
Loved that drive when I worked there for a couple of years! I found interesting history the locals weren't even aware of. What great memories I have of Hwy 8 along the Ohio river!
I grew up right up the road on Hartford ridge. Beautiful place. The lodge building that is still standing is the home of the free and accepted mason’s lodge. It was housed in the top floor of that building.
Satolli, another awesome video, thank you very much. A potential project would be the 50th anniversary of the tornado that struck. Sayler Park in Western Cincinnati, Ohio????
Veyvey Indiana. Mom grew up there and always told us kids about life there. She's buried there. I would like to understand why she loved that community.
Great video into Hartford .if this is Hartford city I'd say it has its spooky. I ghost hunted and many other come the at blackford county jail. Or Monroe house. Ervin Campbell speakeasy. Or center church..I think a place near gas city in is heyday helped hartford then . The courthouse is a great building there
This is not Hartford city Indiana we go to this city alot and I'm sure there is not that many trees around that city and there are more then twenty five people living there.
@@angelawible8654 It does say that. Did you watch the video? At the very beginning at the 30 second time stamp it shows the exact location of the town of Hartford, Indiana in Ohio County, Indiana.
2 місяці тому+1
My Billingsley ancestors lived in Hartford in the 1800s. 1846 my 2x great grandfather, James Billingsley, built a Greek revival style house on Hartford Pike and it is still occupied as a residence. I believe my great grandfather, Geo Washington Billingsley, b. 1834 lived in Hartford till 1869 when he and his wife and baby moved to Grandview in Spencer County, Indiana. Thank you so much for this incredible video. I have never been able to find much information on Hartford!! Did you happen to find anything on Billingsleys??
I grew up in the Old Wilber Store building from 78-95 and the pictures of it has my dad's truck and his boat in it. My Grandma lived below the Mason lodge so neat to see you cover this
No kidding? That was his truck & boat?
@@historyinyourownbackyard2363 That was his old truck with the camper on top and his boat in the back of the house
Is this Amy? Cause this is Amanda, which I used to come and stay all night. So much fun😊
@@amandaunderwood321 Yes this is Amy and that is awesome. yes so much fun.
Hi Amy. This is Stephen.
These are the places I look for when I go riding on my motorcycle. I think it is fascinating to to see them first hand, then try to imagine what life looked like back in their heyday. I appreciate your videos. It's videos like this, that can give us a look back, with info on what went on and happened to the places. This one is within a day ride, I'll defiantly make this a pass through place. Thanks
Glad you liked it. There's a whole world out there to discover.
I lived 2 miles up the hill (south) .
We went to church there.
Got gas and some groceries.
Knew several residents and relatives there. More to be said . Thank you for your work.✅
Glad you liked the project.
The Hartford Ford was a treat! Figuring out just how flooded it was was not easy. I used to drive home from work as a teen from Krogers in Laerenceburg and cross it nearly every day of the week. To say i had some very close calls would be putting it mikdly. But i never got stuck on it once. But i knew people who were stranded and people who died trying to get themselves unstranded on their own. Back then there was no cell phones, and you domt see many vehicles after 11 pm, so crossing overnight was very dangerous if you did not know what you were doing and or got yourself stranded. Since i lived up hartford ridge the only other way home was going through aurora and then up Hartford Pike, which was alot father.
That was a dangerous crossing.
Thank you so much for this! I have lived about 1/2 mile from the center of town for 45 years and I remember Mrs Bennetts store so well! Also, you are correct about the pews in the Methodist Church....they were beautiful, curved wooden pews I'd guess spanning maybe 14 feet? They formed a broken modifyed horseshoe shape if I am remembering correctly. I do wish you had shown Miami Mound, the large brick house on the outskirts of town that was built in 1822. It is inhabited and has been as long as I have lived here.
Glad you liked the video!
Has the mound ever been examined by an archaeologist?
I don't know if it has or not.
In the early 70's, my family owned the property going out of Hartford towards Rising Sun on Nelson Road. The one with the stone spring house next to the road. Mr. Pew (or Pugh) lived in this house. He would walk his 2 black labs and come see us. I was about 6 or 7 at the time. He would tell me stories of hearing the footsteps in the house of the Indians that rose from the mound at night. Made quite the impression on my young mind!
@@dandecamp3901 Indian burial ground. Also one about one mile west also.
I remember going to the original General Store with my great grandfather in the 70s. The old man that ran it was just golden. I also remember the new store of course but it just never had the character and charm of the original one. Sad to see the church deteriorate. That church was always so beautiful when I was growing up. I guess I know most of the ones who lived close because I lived up the hill several miles. We lived where my great grandfather Bob Walton lived and farmed.
It was a neat little town.
6:47 ~ I live in northern Indiana and see homes like this every so often and wonder what the heck happened. Barns out in countrysides are commonly found like this aside a freshly built one so that makes sense. In 2019 I went _alll the way up_ to Mackinaw City for short vacation. After getting bored enough from the Island, the folks and I went further north just to see what's up, then made a side trip to Sheboygan where houses like this were the norm. Rotted, weather beaten wood structures with barely any paint on them.
Actual "house" sections were leaning to one side and the porches were leaning to another. Certainly is something but considering the weather that far north I wouldn't blame the occupants from abandoning the area. It was June and snowing. We all have to draw a line somewhere.
The occasional 'ghost town' makes me want to explore and photograph just like you but unfortunately they're hundreds of miles apart. My exposure happened to come from childhood fact books, the first happened to be Hannah House down in Indianapolis which supposedly housed refugees but caught fire from a lantern. Maybe one day we can all afford ample time to explore as you do. :)
You have to wonder what happened.
The before and after pictures blew my mind. Great job!
Glad you liked that portion of the video.
Awesome episode! Love the before and today photos! Great find! Thanks for sharing the history!
Glad you liked that portion of the video.
This was a blast from the past! I grew up in Switzerland County in the 80s and when I started driving all these backroads were my stomping grounds. In my junior year I dated a girl whose mom crossed the ford in Hartford 5 days a week, depending on water levels, to get to work.
Glad it brought back some memories.
What a great video! I lived in one of the Cole houses (the one on Cole Lane) from late sixties to mid seventies and would walk the mile, cross the ford to the general store, open at the time, and buy me a Mickey Banana Flip! Yum!
The good old days!
Very interesting video, loved the then and now photos
yeah they turned out pretty good.
Satoli, I believe you may have upped your video output greatly with this series. Very enjoyable. Didn't Even have many bridges in it!!!
Thanks!!!! But I did feature one bridge in the video. :)
I have totally been here ! I have great pics of this place ! So cool!
It is a neat place.
Please consider covering Zenas, Indiana in Jennings County. It used to have a school, post office, general store and a telephone directory but now only has a church. But the church is quite old and still very active.
I'm not far from Jennings County. I'll try to get out there in a week or two. Thanks!
This is extremely well done!! I grew up here from 1988 on!! On Nelson road
Glad you liked it Laura.
What a great idea, doing haunted locations series leading up to Halloween.
Not exactly "haunted" but neat just the same.
i,m from evansville so very interesting
Glad you like it.
Another beautiful area to ride. I have also spotted a bald eagle on down the road from Hartford.
You'll find some Bald Eagles over in the Ox Bow just outside of Lawrenceburg also.
My dad pastored in that church building (Trinity Baptist Church) sometime between the 2005-2008 era. The bank wouldn't approve for them to purchase the building because the property was too small for a septic system. There was an outhouse behind the building. The interior of that building was extremely well preserved at that time. The curved pews were really well built. The way the pulpit/stage area was built was to be able to project sound. Definitely a piece of history.
It was a beautiful building but I'm not sure if it can be saved at this point.
@@historyinyourownbackyard2363 I hate that but it at least we have memories. My dad sure loved ringing that bell before service
I grew up in Rising Sun and remember stopping at Bennett's general store to get sandwiches. I have driven across Hartford ford may time with and without water. The minister at Rising Sun Methodist church finished his sermon in Rising Sun and then drove the 5 miles to Hartford for the service there. There are so many more stories that can be told about the small communities of southeastern Indiana.
I agree 100%. The larger towns get all of the attention but I plan to focus on these smaller rural villages.
There is also a Hartford city Indiana. Which when when you when you first started, I thought you were talking about it. I'm originally from Indiana and of coarse I didn't know about this 2nd Hartford. Hartford city is in Blackford County.
Yes, I'm familiar with Hartford City. It's nowhere close to being a ghost town. :)
@@aprilbower136
I feel like Dunkirk Indiana is. Which is where I'm from and is close to Hartford city Indiana. Yes there are a few businesses there but nothing like it use to be. I can't even go back there anymore. 😪 breaks my heart that town use to be such a thriving town with 2 glass factories. Now just one. Town was always busy. Homes are so run down. Sad.
I have a suggestion for you: Royalton. We lived there about 12 years ago. Our rental house was either on the site of or was the actual structure of the original Post Office. I'd heard that when the railroad established itself in Zionsville, Royalton faded. I'd also heard that the town was an epicenter of moonshining or some such, with folks saying they had a Royal Ton of booze for sale. Interesting place that as far as I know, is still on the map.
What state are you talking about and do you have a GPS Coordinate for Royalton?
The state of Indiana...sorry about that! It is in Eagle Township just inside Boone County and just outside Marion County, so it is northwest of Indianapolis and five miles from Zionsville. Interesting location by the interstate that few folks know about.
SE Indiana use to be full of small towns and have only gotten smaller over time. I miss the old days !
So do i...
Was this related to the decline of canals and then railroads, or farms?
@@kskssxoxskskss2189 Neither. I think it was because of the automobile. People became more mobile and it was easier to drive into the larger towns to buy food and household items.
I ride my bike and drive on HWY 8 in north Kentucky along the Ohio river between Hebron and Covington and there are several foundations and retaining walls of what I can only imagine were once houses. Would love to lnow what used to be there.
The best way to do that is to visit with the Boone County Historical Society. They should be able to provide info on all of those sites.
Loved that drive when I worked there for a couple of years! I found interesting history the locals weren't even aware of. What great memories I have of Hwy 8 along the Ohio river!
I grew up right up the road on Hartford ridge. Beautiful place. The lodge building that is still standing is the home of the free and accepted mason’s lodge. It was housed in the top floor of that building.
Now was that also the I.O.O.F. Lodge???
This is really cool
Glad you like it!
Satolli, another awesome video, thank you very much. A potential project would be the 50th anniversary of the tornado that struck. Sayler Park in Western Cincinnati, Ohio????
That's coming up next April. I remember that day as well as you do. Let me check with some people I know in Sayler Park. Thanks!
You're very welcome.
@@historyinyourownbackyard2363
Russellville,IN.
Good idea!
I'd love to see you explore Centralia, Pennsylvania if you haven't already!
I have not. Let me look into it. Thanks!
Great job Satolli 🧢 🇺🇸
Thanks John!
What is the music on your shows?
Im 99.9 peece t sure that a freind of mine from high school grew up in the former hotel there
When was that???
Veyvey Indiana. Mom grew up there and always told us kids about life there. She's buried there.
I would like to understand why she loved that community.
One of your best. Even without Suzy.
Thanks! Glad you like the video.
The church had services going on later than the 1990's.
Do you know when they last held services?
My wife bought stuff at a woman who had a drapery shop there. I worked with a guy who lived there.
Cool!!!
👍👍
Great video into Hartford .if this is Hartford city I'd say it has its spooky. I ghost hunted and many other come the at blackford county jail. Or Monroe house. Ervin Campbell speakeasy. Or center church..I think a place near gas city in is heyday helped hartford then . The courthouse is a great building there
Come to marengo
Marengo, Indiana???
Who maintains this classification system? National Trust? Rand McNally?
What classification system?
Hey my girlfriend grew up in Hartford City and we can't see that Hartford City is anything like Hartford ghost town can somebody explain that to us
Carlos Indiana in southern Randolph county would be an example ... Just homes and a church left.
I just looked it up! I'll try to get up there this Fall. Thanks!
You should check out Evensport ohio and Florida Ohio
Thanks for the tip! I'll check them out.
Weeelp... at 4:09, that's just YOUR opinion!😃😁
This is not Hartford city Indiana we go to this city alot and I'm sure there is not that many trees around that city and there are more then twenty five people living there.
You are absolutely correct! This is the town of Hartford located in Ohio County as mentioned in the video.
It says in the title Hartford Indiana level 4 ghost town ...
@@angelawible8654 It does say that. Did you watch the video? At the very beginning at the 30 second time stamp it shows the exact location of the town of Hartford, Indiana in Ohio County, Indiana.
My Billingsley ancestors lived in Hartford in the 1800s. 1846 my 2x great grandfather, James Billingsley, built a Greek revival style house on Hartford Pike and it is still occupied as a residence. I believe my great grandfather, Geo Washington Billingsley, b. 1834 lived in Hartford till 1869 when he and his wife and baby moved to Grandview in Spencer County, Indiana.
Thank you so much for this incredible video. I have never been able to find much information on Hartford!! Did you happen to find anything on Billingsleys??
I'm glad you liked the video but no, I didn't find anything about the Billingsley's.
Igo threw Hartford everyday pass50yrs
Good deal.
I didn't see anyone put in a correction, sorry if I missed it, but the town is actually Hartford City, not just Hartford.
Actually this is the town of Hartford with a population of only about 25 people. Hartford City is about 150 miles north of Hartford.
Globalization has been so good for us.
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