Milwaukee-Old-World Brew City
Вставка
- Опубліковано 5 жов 2024
- #tartaria #oldworld #milwaukee
An exploration of Milwaukee the brew city on Lake Michigan supposedly settled mainly by Germans but mostly designed by some guy named Mix with clashing styles. This exploration seeks more detail on some of the structures to appreciate a city where the Old-World is reflected quite visibly.
Links to other Milwaukee Explorations on the channel:
1. Top Ten of Milwaukee
• Video
2. Soldier's Asylum
• Soldier Asylum-Refuge ...
3. Live Stream Exploration
www.youtube.co...
-Special thanks to Raven and Sage for Milwaukee images.
-Support the channel or do not, it is your choice. ;)
#tartaria #oldworld #milwaukee
The level of sarcasm these videos bear... this is pure gold. :D
The water towers with windows and no water in them make perfect sense…Lol
Bathrooms
@@Test7017 if u mean full of shit yeah…😂
Airship mooring tower!
They leave the windows open, clouds roll in and they squeeze them like a sponge. And a few buckets on the floor catch the water
@@zanedzikonski4234 well obviously………..
Born, raised and still living in Milwaukee...here's a fun fact on city hall,
The Milwaukee City Hall is in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S. It was finished in 1895, at which time it was the tallest habitable building in the United States
I'd like to do a collaboration video on SF.
Much appreciation for your open minded research, sir!
I would be delighted to do so! That is a huge compliment that you even asked. Feel free to hit me up on the channel e-mail at your convenience-LtRaiden@msn.com
You do some of the very best boots on the ground.
Kairos!!! my faves coming together that would be such an awesome idea🎉❤
Sadly big areas these old cities have been destroyed over the past 50 years and continue to get worse and more crime ridden. Not going to get into how or why. But everyone knows and is afraid to address the real problem. Anyway very interesting channel you have here. Have learned alot.
Problems are joooooz
Well said!
Your narration is just awesome.
Thank you!
Regarding Miller Hill the underground beer garden is the entrance to the caves that were used for cold storage of the beer in olden days. Great show!
Millers caves, you learn about them and see them on a miller brewery tour. Underground storage to keep the beer cool. 80% of Millers production goes to Chicago (Chilaga) Miller produces beer for Chicago.... cheap real estate just 80 miles north.
They made city hall in 1800s without power tools the same with Milwaukee public library made of marble and beautiful on inside. I don’t think they built these, these were here and they came up with a story.
It would be quite a fall if that were not the case!
I live in Milwaukee and just a little bit ago I was looking at a book my family took out from the library w these pictures in it for the neighborhoods of Milwaukee and so many looked like castles and now this video pops up like 2 seconds after I stop looking at the book.... I've always wondered about what is being discussed in this video.... Like they built log cabins in the 1830s and decades later they had these incredible buildings... It doesn't make sense....
I wish I would've seen the inside of the Basilica.
Nice video. Nice town.
My daughter lives there, what an amazing city seeing it with new eyes.
Most of the columns have some kind of waves on the top. This is a sign of the Great Flood. 14' - vases on the roof - sure those bared ashes of the people drowned and cremated after big water took off. Which also shows us the tall towers were crematoriums. Very convenient to convert them into the breweries. Also, this may signify those buildings were probably built sometime in the18th after the first flood - century.
Something is wrong with a statue of Germania. If this is Germania, there supposed to be Eagle(s) around like on a Plaque Germania Building, not the British Lions.
Very nice to tell us this is a Church (19'30"), so we know for sure it's not a Brewery, nor a school, or Asylum.
You forgot the Shriners temple on Wisconsin Avenue and the rave building
wow really want to visit there after seeing this
You didn't cover the truly incredible railroad factory in the Menomonee River valley near Silver City.
A sign at the site shows a picture of some part of a massive factory that covered a large part of the valley. It says that by about the height of its production by about 1855, it was turning out three complete railroad trains every week, with an engine, a hundred cars, and a caboose.
Not more than a lazy half hour's walk away, on honey creek, there are the remnants of a log cabin one room school house and one of the oldest graveyards in the area.
It looks like Little House on the Prairie, and it tells the story of the 20 year old settler and his 19 year old bride who made the rough journey there from the East coast and settled a 60 acre farm in 1832.
He contracted with the township to provide the graveyard and to build a schoolhouse.
His children would have scarcely grown up in their rustic farm settlement with their one room schoolhouse before the largest train factory in the world was cranking out three railroad trains a week.
I bet they had an assembly line, long before Henry Ford supposedly invented the idea.
How else does such a large factory crank out entire railroad trains that quickly?
It is mind boggling to consider that the little farmhouse and the one room school were adequate to serve such an industrial miracle, at the same time the breweries and other buildings were being built.
There's an old railroad track that runs across the bottom of the stream hers, with an old gauge of rail that was used primarily for commuter trains on the East coast in the early 1800s.
I researched it a little and it seems to have been the first rail line through Wauwautosa. No explanation of why it is under a stream, with an old stone wall built on top of it. I believe the stone wall was part of WPA projects in the thirties, when te land and creeks and rivers were being engineered to prevent fooding. i think the area got seriously flooded in the twenties.
So, add extensive engineering of the land and waterways around Milwaukee to the herculean accomplishments of the depression.
I wish I vould remember where I saw something about an old newspaper from the early 18th century, before the Revolutionary war, in which the author was saying that the American continent was filled with magnificent buildings, and he mentions Milwaukee as having a particularly magnificent collection of buildings. On a lake shore, it would have been one of the first cities they noticed as they used boats to explore.
It does seem incredible that they built so much so quickly, when everybody else everywhere else was building so much too.
Weren't we always taught that at least 80% of the pre-industrial population were farmers.
Were all the rest stone masons and builders?
Some mad mathematician ought to look at all the buildings and calculate the number of builders needed to accomplish all the recorded building in the time it supposedly took, and calculate the agricultural productivity, and the percentage of settlers needed to support the population, etc.
Is it even possible for the reported population figures to accomplish so much work.
Read Wiconsin Death Trip, and other collections of newspaper accounts of settlers in that era. Life was brutally hard, and people wondered if they would survive the next winter. People got cabin fever, and there were way too many axe murders.
I just have a hard time imagining Mr. Ingles walking twenty minutes from his homestead, past the one room schoolhouse and church he built, to see a railroad factory as big as a modern airport cranking out railroad trains.
"We'll need more milk cows!"
"we're gonna make our dreams come true, doooin it our way!"
14:50 That tower looks really functional, like that tower on 33 Thomas Street NYC. The 4 circular portals at the center of the 4 triangles,also look functional.
Well, anything stamped with a 33 on, better be functional indeed😊
Hello from Wisconsin...thank u for doin this vid...cause ther r mud flood old buildings that r way older then they say
Thank you.
Your sarcasm is appreciated !
Very insightful.
I like this unique and funý explanation. This aproach is nice to listen and is funy. And make some sense in our lives.
I have mi own theory about timeline, uncludes big cycles - era 29250 year, ice age 150.000y cold -15.000year warm, and 3600 year cycle. ... but your detailed theory is so nice to listen.👍👍👍
Every theory is important, and I am sure the truth is somewhere between it all. Thank you much! Big cycles make a lot of sense overall.
Based on everything I’ve seen about gazebos on Conspiracies R Us channel it’s so wild to see places with grand bandstands out in the court yard and to equate them to like a subway station set of stairs or something like that pic of the Convent of Norte Dame…still mind boggling!
And ur right about Germans and the conflicting designs! Everything to me looks more Scottish with all the square towers…somebody would def have said SOMETHING!?!?
And what a shame that they got done with city hall in 1895 when the first power drill was JUST invented! RATS!!!
Poor old Mix lost his contract because he could not design German enough!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 🤣🤣🤣
Very interesting! There is 1 near me in old Stuart by the Railroad.
Old good
New bad
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 he sure was in the Mix!!!!!!!!!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 bro we need “In the Mix” t shirts!
love your explorations! can`t wait for the underground one and more of ur US and Canada link ups.
Almost 20 years ago, I UEed the abandoned Pabst complex. Passed over Juneau Ave on the walkway with the huge sign. The friend I went with went back later and eventually found the beer caves. I got into a bunch of other abandoned industrial buildings before they were torn down or repurposed. I watch Tartaria/mudflood videos sometimes for entertainment, so seeing a parody covering a city I've lived in and explored is cool.
Random pillar is the mid summer festival shaft. Made for the festival that took place there way back when.❤
Isn't it interesting how so many of the same architectural motifs repeat in different places? The "Union Station Revival" style is an example of this. The Mitchell Building in Milwaukee shares similarities to City Hall in Philadelphia, or the former Post Office building in Boston. The Old World speaks a consistent design language that a few disparate 19th century architects wouldn't be likely to replicate on their own.
Off the top of my head there were 3 goddesses.
Britannia, Germania and Columbia.
You see their statues respectively in the Americas and Europe. I believe Columbia's territories were South America, hence the country of Columbia perhaps the capital and America with the District of Columbia and Canada with British Columbia.
It sounds like a great topic for an exploration to me!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 👍
Reminded me of Brittanic, Olympic and Titanic. Why would a seemingly Protestant Christian nation, choose such names for its biggest and bestest ships???
Jedes Flussbett in grossen Städten ist aus Granitstein.
Ich glaube die zerschmetterte alte Welt sind alle Steine in dem Fluss.
You certainly drive home the impossibility (albeit subtly) of Mr. Townsend being able to achieve all that is attributed to him. I’ve pondered the same about Frank Lloyd Wright.
That arched city hall dome looks a lot like the one under NYC city hall on Center Street.
The "Germania" statue, about 12 min in, looks alot like Minerva. Her hand, should be holding a wreath. When the prince or king, can`t recall atm, came to Ottawa they built a triumphal arch with Minerva place on top centre.... Not saying Ottawa stole it lol, although they could have, just noting the familiar look.
In 1892, Ingersoll first sold an early version of the watch that would eventually be dubbed the Yankee for $1.50. Orders were so great that over the next few years, he was able to drop the price to a single dollar. From a marketing and production perspective, the watch was a breakthrough.
Was it better than a Waltham?
What a great video!!! I always thought Milwaukee would have been a boring city, but you definitely changed my mind! 😁🍻
It is funny how they try to portray these cities that have a lot of these types of buildings still standing today. Thank you!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 absolutely!!!! Even more insanity is that people BELIEVE their narrative/DON'T CARE that we are being lied to! Why are they making us live a lie? Thank you for broadcasting the truth
Lies only have power if they are accepted without question. You are most welcome.
3:00 That's a side-shot of Espenhain Dry Goods department stores. Opened 1879, and closed in 1932, because people got "greatly depressed" and couldn't be bother to go shopping,allegedly.
These things also happened. It isn't all a reset legacy. See my long comment.
That city hall looks like a cruise ship
Check out the Hotel Emma in San Antonio. It is superb! Used to be a brewery!!! If you ever go to San Antonio, don’t miss it. What a gem
It's really amazing how otherworldly some of these older structures appear. It's even more stunning to hear that we're really incapable of recreating them today. I wanted to be an architect when I was fifteen years old. To think if I was alive in the mid nineteenth century... Fifteen would have been the ideal age to design and erect a construct that defies imagination.
E. Townsend Mix apprendcied under Sydney Mason Stone, might help explain his prodigious output.
It's not what you know, it's who you know. 😂
@@elim7228 right, or who creates the characters.
I was looking into mudflood and thought world war one might have clues and in fact i think it does. Look into it, like who was fighting who? The answer on Wikipedia makes no sense. A war about factions?
What countries fought in World War I? The war pitted the Central Powers (mainly Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Turkey) against the Allies (mainly France, Great Britain, Russia, Italy, Japan, and, from 1917, the United States).
Was it tartiria vs new world order
Hey just wanted to say the “Doors Open” event in Milwaukee is this weekend. I remember you mentioning you wanted to check out some of the buildings when this came around. Wish I could’ve given more heads up but I literally just found out.
Thanks for sharing!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 dude thanks for the awesome content
Do u think they kept certain buildings as there's tunnels for people to get from place to place without being seen?
Very strong possibility and also serving some other unknown purpose. I have some theories but those will come when I get too the underground.
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 yeah defo. Trafficking and everthinng. Xxx
As a Wisconsinite, I can confirm this is real
I found a sculptor Legros, sparse info on him and yet there is an Elder Le Gros or Legros. Funny I get the impression it was a company doing the exquisite marble 3D carving or other construction process. Oh and virtually the whole family does the same style of sculptures but there is almost nothing about them, but what an easy thing to do -- attribute works of art to a group of hopeful amateurs or non existent persons you fabricate, with no known origin or backstory.
Darn it! I’m a couple days late LoL
Great to see another excellent presentation about my home town!
I have a supposed construction photo of the City Hall plus a couple others that are interesting to say the least. How can I get these to you?
Channel e-mail is LtRaiden@msn.com or you can post them on the reddit site.
www.reddit.com/r/Lucius_Aurelian/
Your choice!
@@Restitutor_Orbis_214 Thank you I’ll have them in around a week!
One thing that I've often thought about is where are all the people buried? There is only a fraction of the population going back to the late 18th century that are in graveyards, it seems a few hundred million people are simply missing, considering the first cremation in the US was in 1876.
The underground and other undocumented locations.
Do you have other YT channels? Your voice sounds really familiar. Anyways, you make my favorite videos on these subjects. Thank you for your hard work:)
Thank you very much and this is the only one.
Mr.Mix was an architectural DJ. Hence the name.
In 2022 there was 8,097 car thefts in Milwaukee, 94% unsolved.
8,097 divided 365 days , it’s only 22.1 cars a day.
I did say at 0:11 as we fly over the current capital of Alabama.
Every building will need a lead engineer who can use calculus & advanced math to calculate weight and will it work with gravity etc.
You're right. Every such building is a unique project. This is a stark contrast with today, where we use repeatable processes to drive costs down and minimize failures. I believe it would actually be IMPOSSIBLE due to a variety of reasons, to build such structures in the present day. That even though we have advanced CAD tools and "modern" factories.
I am a qualified Architect 😅 and i would struggle with our latest design tech to draw up all these in said time frames. By pencil ✏️ 😮😂😅 not a chance. They only put a name to them to keep the fairy-tale working 💪 👷♂️ 😊
I wonder where all the glass windows were made???
Probably the same place they made all the bricks and cut all the very large stone blocks. ;) We are quite challenged to find these locations.
Towers in fire stations are used for drying fire hose.
Looks like they made a solid one for that in this situation.
See my long two comments.
Gotta figure out what to do with all these dangling towers
@@elim7228 As I mentioned, those towers were special purpose constructed for the fire department, and the ones in question were built when they used horse drawn fire wagons too. Re read both of my comments.
Based
Where is tht subway drinking room located?
There are quite a few in downtown, just follow the signs. :))
We'll, if you had REALLY done your research, might you have discovered that the prolific architect had such a huge firm that was able to train many talented proteges who designed under his name?;😂 They just don't emigrate trained, skilled workers like they used to.
Funny you mention that because recently the research is trying to slant that direction without saying it!
Uhm the u.s still imports talent, if they didn’t this country would shatter right now😭
❤❤❤
Hi the old soldier building is in the city of West Milwaukee it's not the west side of Milwaukee
What's the old soldier building?
Gracias ººº
Did the people inherit the shoes and clothes left behind from the giants ?
Maybe they didn't like clothes? ;)
our port only smells most of the time
The size and scale of the breweries in st. Louis and Milwaukee do not make any sense when compared to Yuengling. Something doesn't add up. And that the yeungling brewery is a simple brick building vs these massive ornate complexes. There's something else going on here that we're not being told.
Not really, not in these situations. Back when, they did everything differently, also had to co locate production and admin , in particular prior to the advent of widespread and efficient telecoms and computers.
There's all kinds of design systems , like the pneumatic tubes that carried paperwork between floors in vast buildings that used to be the norm that became obsolete and not worth the cost of maintenance , let alone construction, when we started networking computers. Banks, especially big ones , used extensive pneumatic tube networks between and across floors, and the staff always had interns, low level secretaries, mail room types who picked these things up and carried them to offices rapidly.
We have become much less permanent in our constructions, much more utilitarian and basic in the styling, for a variety of reasons.
If you want an extreme example of what may come, it would be a progression that sees people more and more living in a VR type metaverse, with almost no infrastructure, in a pod apartment eating slop, not even needing wires and telecoms to carry signals.
I have a cellular modem giving me very high speed broadband...not as fast as the fiber I used to have, but plenty fast enough. I can take it, or the sim and a smaller, battery powered travel modem, anywhere I want to go in the UK and Europe. I haven't had land lines for many years, whereas I used to personally upgrade them and run cable in my homes. The way I would design a house today vs 1995 to account for data needs and telecoms would be vastly different today. What you see now is buildings being built when many of the things often co-located with production...corporate offices, mail, payroll, maintenance, carpentry, logistics have become unnecessary, off sited, or outsourced. Just in time delivery systems, enabled by a web of contracting haulage as well as sub contractors, which used to be in house, eliminate or reduce the need for inventory on site, and inventory management.
ALL of that used to be inherent in the business itself , and co located of necessity when these breweries were built.
@@s.e.murphy5096Last paragraph: did you mean to say "all of this used to be INHERITED"?
Telecom is what we use today, we have no idea what they were using back then, to achieve the same goals.
It's obvious that the old world was unified, and interconnected.
@@elim7228 No, I did NOT mean ALL used to be inherited. Some may have been, but within my own family's living memory, many of those iconic Milwaukee buildings were built as reported by my grandparents to me, and in some cases, by their parents to them.
I cannot speak for everything, but the ones I mentioned definitely were built during my own family tenure in Milwaukee. Go back and read the two comments I left, both lengthy.
@@elim7228 You apparently have NO idea as to how efficient non telecoms used to be in the day.
I currently reside in the UK. The mail system now sucks. It is not as bad as the third world countries I have been in, but it is working its way there. Back in the day in places like Cardiff and London (where I am currently), there were up to SEVEN postal deliveries per day, not to mention boys who would deliver messages for a tiny fee as well. The post was, through the early 1980s, a critical part of communications even to run businesses, manufacturing etc on schedules.
Within buildings the pneumatic tubes were quite intricate and amazing. Some may still be in use, but they used to be in constant use. The notions of "packet data" undoubtedly revolved around them.
Teletypes, wired (and in the military, wireless) were crucial, and there is a fair bit I can say about that. In the SF I was accustomed to using spread spectrum commo, especially for frequency hopping, as well as burst transmission systems. The unfortunate reality is that MOST of Gen X has little appreciation of these systems, or exposure, though some might have a passing basic remembrance of them. I started work very young and saw some of them, and asked questions. Millennials and Gen Z types have no memory of these and this isn't what they teach in schools.
Most of y'all would have to make a research project out of it to even get a basic understanding, which likely wouldn't give you any appreciation for it. I am sure if you made effort as if you had to do an involved research paper you might gain a basic understanding.
The analogue world was full of wonders. There were some that were extant prior to both ww1 and ww2 in Europe, with a functional "internet".
On ships (I was navy as well as army), there were sound powered phones, so there could be comms even if all electrical was out.
There are and were very ingenious methods used, and technologies, that we have bypassed. Developing and making them required exceptional levels of artisanship and widespread skills that are now essentially non existent.
The difference is we seem to see all of these evidences of "advanced tech" and think it all came from a reset. Maybe SOME, in some instances.
The reality is that our recent ancestors were more homogenous, more productive, more skilled, and more hard working on average than we are now. They might have not spent as many hours technically AT WORK with always on communications, be it pagers, texts, mobile phones, computing etc, but when they worked, they worked. They weren't surfing facebook, they were not playing solitaire or candy crush or whatnot.
The types of things these people had, and the practical skills they worked on when we spend endless hours in front of TV and computer games, made a huge difference.
As a result, they could withstand the loss of an electrical grid or telecoms much better than we can. I like tech, and commo tech in particular. I did a LOT in the military and as a civilian engineer that used or revolved around it. The problem is it increasingly is a crutch. I have said, since about 2000, that we keep getting MORE ways to be in touch and communicate, but by and large, we do less of it that is meaningful as in the past. Most people do not use tech to accomplish so much more with the tools at their disposal, but to do the same amount plus a little bit more with less effort.
13:42 what's that in the window behind the left side of the statue?
Good question.
🍺
12:43 statute of liberty?
Or the it's cousin.....
Germania is the equivalent of the Columbia Goddess
I think it warrants an exploration.
There were Manny polish people also catholic
We'll fix it in the mix..
I’ll ignore all of the absurdity to ask this question - were they at least exporting goods from the breweries? If not then the account really makes zero sense
We will be told they were, but additional accounts do not provide details.....
I heard that Atlantis was apart of the East coast of America🫣 and that Arkansas was the hub for the crystal mineing for the old technology’s
Very likely, not too far from Mexico either where they have the entire cave.
These buildings wer not built in the 1800s...they wer dug out or re-purposed
Antiquitech removed era...
5th ;)
23:58 PBR Me. A.S.A.P.
LOL so true!
Electro resonance buildings
Horse an buggy did not build these
U r correct a Horse with a buggy, simply couldn't pull this off, unless the horse was a highly skilled stone mason horse
So I'm from Olathe ks, story goes its an Indian word for " beautiful ". Lol
Wisconsin has the most lenient drunk driving laws in the country. I’ve been told that in effect, it amounts to “the first one’s a gimmie” as in its expected that everyone will get at least one DUI so the first one’s on the house, the definition of “a slap on the wrist”.
All these "architects" are they not buried somewhere and have a gravestone ! Probably not 😂😂
Always an initial!
Maybe very industrialists Germans were Prussians ?! That got displaced?🤷♂️
On that note I liked how they interchanged those terms in the Napoleon film. :))
I live in an area full of prussians ! They think they r mexican mennonites ! Lol they have no idea where they come from pre ww2 lol its comical 😂
It's obvious these buildings were built by Master Mason's, i.e Da Moors.
Cheap labor dureing the depresion haaha
No mexicans