🤯 INCRÍVEL: 93 Disturbing And Weird Things Found In Homes That Were Abandoned Or Forgotten 😲
Context is key. For example, your own home, even if old and a bit run down, often is comforting and familiar. But if one was to approach a house that looked like it hadn’t had a human inhabitant for years, fear and trepidation might be the first emotions that come to mind.
The “Houses with a History” Facebook group is dedicated to interesting, unusual and sometimes creepy things people have found in old houses. So get comfortable as you scroll through, upvote your favorites and be sure to share your thoughts in the comments section down below.
More info: Facebook
Yeah. This house, built in early 1950s, has hard wood tongue & groove flooring. The lamp that lightens the stairway is missing but was on/off by a two-way switch at this bottom dite & the head of the stairs above. A Great way to save an the electric bill!
Wooden spool from wire-could be electricity wire or it could b from barbed wire if it’s a farm house
That’s an old telephone lol
You could hear when it’s time for dinner
No central heat then, each kitchen had a stove and that was the hvac of the day
Also a rock by the stove was there to take to bed to keep you warm at night
Reminds me of the hole that likely still remains in the floorboards of my Aunt’s home in Denver. One day, back in ye olde late 1900s my Uncle, having just lectured me on gun safety, agreed to show me his firearms. After removing one firearm from the nightstand he tried to clear the round that was in the chamber when the gun went off. Went through the bed, into the floor, and is likely somewhere still in the dirt of the crawlspace.
My father, ever the comedian and somewhat of a jerk, patted my uncle on the shoulder and asked when he planned on mounting his mattress trophy over the fireplace.
Mezuzah. Jewish people have them at each door (except bathrooms). They touch the mezuzah and then kiss their fingers. Inside is a small paper Torah scroll. It’s a visual reminder that G-d is always present.
Omg an ancient Roman bath house, the first ever discovered in America. You should turn your house into a museum and charge 10$ per person
The heat came up from the coal furnace in the cellar. I can actually remember when my grandparents still used theirs. There were smaller grates in the ceilings on the first floor that let heat go up to the second floor bedrooms. They also doubled as an intercom system. You just yelled up or down through them if you needed something
A damper control for a coal furnace. If the floor hasnt been covered over you will find two small holes in the floor below if that the damper chains would have passed through
Duct bank to support the foundation from moving in from the weight of the soil outside the wall. Typical old type build
Navy. Brass bc well everything is brass
S. R. Is state room (where officers live
It tells where the different toilets drain. It is a souvenir from someone’s past. Not Sears roebuck but i like the thought
I’m a submarine guy so I don’t know where mds mdp and all that. Lines up to
mid something portside
Mid something starboard side
Mid something P & S. (Left and right side. ).
It’s just a parallel-tandem outlet, popular from the 1920s until the 1960s. It was made to accept either the old style tandem plugs, or the modern parallel plug. Many might be more familiar with the more common T-slot outlet, which provides the same features
There could be one of three things it could be it could be a water shut off valve for the outside. It could be a wooden truffle that’s underneath the floor to make the floor sit flat you turn it and it provides tension on that board or releases tension or it could bea air duct vent valve that’s in the floor
Ash removal , my Grandmother had one . There’s a container in basement that collect the ashes. The reason she saved hers , in the Spring when she planted her Vegetable Garden she used wood ash too keep the bugs away. She didn’t like it the ideal of pesticides . Really the food she grew was Organic! Hooray for my grandmother !!
What you’re looking at is most likely an old radiator pipe cover or a decorative steam pipe casing. These were used in older homes with steam or hot water heating systems. The rounded, bulbous top often capped vertical pipes to prevent burns and add a “decorative” flair (though, in this case, it may unintentionally resemble… other things).
These pieces were often made of wood, plaster, or ceramic and painted to match the trim. It could also be a remnant of an antique gas lamp system or another utility that was later sealed off.
Bottom line: it’s probably an innocent old pipe cover with very unfortunate geometry.
The object found in the old farmhouse is a glass fire grenade.
These items were a form of early fire extinguisher, popular from the 1880s to the 1930s. They were typically filled with fire-retardant liquids, such as salt water or carbon tetrachloride, and designed to be thrown at the base of a fire to extinguish it.
There was a rope it worked like pulley that object served as a weight because the windows were made so heavy and very long . The rope has seen it’s better days and gone.
Fire grenade, it’s safe as long as its sealed. Some people collect them. Just be careful with it, keep it somewhere safe, it will still put out a fire as well. It contains carbon tetrachloride.
I remember before these they were in walls to allow heat from fireplaces to get to other rooms, in the 1800s things changed a bit, but there was always a way to make sure the heat traveled through,whether from coal stoves, or wood or other there were always forms of making heat travel through old houses
Its a Garbage disposal, someone would pick up the old waste food to Feed pigs at a Farm near by. After heating g it with Steam, from a boiler
Card tables? Maybe they hosted a lot of game parties? It was a much bigger thing back in the day. I found out that the first few owners hosted all kinds of events in my house through searching the local newspaper for my address. They had bunko and bridge parties, “fashion” parties for wives, all kinds of community organization parties, etc. They didn’t have social media, so they put ads in the newspaper when the next party was scheduled
It’s what they call a dry. Well you have a septic tank before that and then as it comes out of the tank it goes into the drywall and then leeches into the ground. That’s what I have at my house and it works perfect
It’s an old water tank where the water was pumped from the cistern into the tank. My hand. It had a check valve on it so the water could be pressurized. There was one in my house when I bought it. I still have it so there was a hand pump prior to the tank with a check valve. Simple as that and when the pressure dropped you had to go and pump it up again
Public toilet lock, and in the UK the source of the saying “I need to spend a penny” as a polite way of saying that you’re going to the loo. A penny was the charge when public toilets were first installed, and I remember them still being in use in department store toilets when I was a kiddie, as well as outdoor public toilets.
It is an old telephone lightning arrestor, a safety device used in older homes to protect against lightning strikes on telephone lines. Back in the day I knew of several people killed and several others, one of which who lived to be struck by lightning a second time, surviving two strikes.
I think it may be a closed well. If you look at the bricks there are several layers and it looks to be in shape of a circle. An outhouse most likely wouldn’t have that many bricks. But it could be a cistern where they gathered water (rain water) for animals, irrigation of some sorts, but they are usually kind of like a barrel or enclosed.
It’s probably the original staircase to the attic. A lot of people put the bathroom in there because the space wasn’t being used when plumbing first came out.
That’s a tandem-parallel outlet. They can be used with modern parallel-blade plugs, but at the time, tandem-blade plugs were also in use and were common enough that outlets were made which could accept both plug types.
This specific one is probably from the 1920s, made by GE.
The visible part of the outlet is made of hard rubber and is not burnt, but has always been black.
By any chance is there an outbuilding on the property? Sometimes they would use a buzzer or bell to let people know dinner was ready if they were in the outbuilding.
There used to be a tradition where you would hide the house key in the newel post as a symbol of ownership to grant prosperity to the home.
This small, domed stone structure in the UK is known as a “village lock-up” or sometimes referred to as a “round-house lock-up” or “cage” in local terminology. These were once common in British villages from the 18th and 19th centuries and were used to temporarily detain drunks, petty criminals, or people who had been arrested before they could be taken to a magistrate or larger jail.
It’s a Saxon game where these were painted differently and made to look like animals then catapulted against walls and wooden buildings..if you were successful you would proceed to next level
In the middle of the dining room floor, it’s definitely a servant call button that sat under the dining table and the host/hostess could tap it with their toe to summon servants discreetly.
Pencil sharpener
I especially like the placement of the dry wall screw , so when you trim your pencil you can rip your knuckles w
Missing parts to a water well pump. We see them here a lot and people take them apart for lawn ornaments . They don’t work – just for decoration
The scales like that were used in assay offices. You put the precious metal on one side and you added weights to the other side until it balanced. They also use those in General stores to weigh merchandise that was sold by the pound
It’s a mechanical doorbell where you turned a knob on the outside of the door and it rang the bell, I just about bought a house that had one of these but a more modern version from the 1930s.
This was for rooms to call for service.
Evidently this household was large enough to have maids or ‘footmen’ and this told them which room required their attendance.
Speaking tube , some you’d blow through and they’d whistle and then you’d talk to the person on the other end.
The Exhaust fan – for smell of fried chicken, bacon, sofrito, rice and beans to billow out into the neighborhood…
The horseshoe signifies good luck. Point up like in the photo means catching good luck. Pointing down means showering with good luck.
As the wife of a Mason this chimney is fully functional. It has flues on both sides of the window, that allow the smoke to rise. The window works at it should opening and closing.
Well pump possible a sump pump but am leaning more at actual pump motor. That’s an electric style one it looks like the gas ones is pretty much once ya got it going it went till it ran out of gas or if ya stopped it ya self an shut it down. I got a dozen or so of those old style motors gas an electric from grandpa I don’t really know much about em still learning on em
Yes…that rack used to hold porcelain insulators, and incoming electrical wires were once tied to them for electrical service. Common on buildings in the 1920s-1950s.
That is an old utility transformer / service entrance distribution point, likely from the 1930s–1950s era.
It’s basically the building’s main power feed, long before modern breaker panels were standard.
It’s a nut and rod that runs down the center of the post and secures it to the subfloor below…. You may be able to see the opposite end looking up between the joists in the basement.
Also, sometimes the homes architectural drawings were placed in the newel post for safekeeping. It happened occasionally with some vintage houses
Memories: in the ‘50s my grandfather had the lids of pint jars screwed to the underside of a shelf above his bench. In each jar were screws, nails, bolts, and nuts and a bit of camphor to keep them from rusting.
Probably the main water shutoff. I’ve seen this as a way to shut off water to the house when it’s in the crawlspace or other inconvenient place. It could also just be for a specific run or fixture.
I ‘ve often seen this in older houses, and in sheds and summer- kitchens. This was an economy. The chimney going through the attic and roof had to be brick for fire safety. But bricks cost money, so they were used only where required.
My guess… a drain. Then again, a portal to Lucifer’s Lair.
Pour a bucket of water down and see if it drains…. But make it Holy Water. That way you are covered on both possibilities.
It is possible to do if each joint is 2 pieces of timber and placed in layers from bottom to top.
Although this image may have had the grain AI ed to fuse the grain.
It was probably added as a phone nook. Since phones didn’t appear till the 1920s. Probably held a candlestick phone.
It is for laundry. I have one without the holes. The clothes or whatever is hot in the pot. It could also be yarn. Whatever you have to stir to clean the laundry….. or really anything that is hot. The holes, I think, help against the resistance. Or if it is short its for spanking and again the holes help against the air resistance.
📢 Gostou da notícia? Compartilhe com os amigos!
Este artigo é uma tradução automática de uma fonte original. Para ler o conteúdo na íntegra: Clique aqui.
