Riverside: OTHER Millionaire’s Row din Manhattan

Riverside: OTHER Millionaire's Row din Manhattan



Scufundați-vă într-o călătorie extraordinară în timp ce descoperim istoria ascunsă a Riverside Drive din Manhattan, mărginită cândva de conace magnifice și castele pe stânci. De la castelul ultramodern al lui Charles Schwab până la romanticul castel Paterno, descoperiți poveștile din spatele acestor reședințe uimitoare și aflați de ce au dispărut din peisajul orașului. Like, Comentează și Distribuie videoclipul nostru, Abonează-te dacă ți-a plăcut acest videoclip! Locație: Manhattan, NYC Alăturați-vă programului nostru de membru: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkKRXhkY6fcLVT8MLc3FH3Q/join Public Domain Fotografii de la: Library of Congress, CC BY-SA 3.0Fotografii de la: Wikipedia Utilizator: Gigi alt CC BY- SA 4.0 Fotografii de la: Utilizator Wikipedia: Beyond My Ken, Epicgenius Materiale de la: Envato Elements Muzică din Epidemic Sound

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42 thoughts on “Riverside: OTHER Millionaire’s Row din Manhattan

  1. Excellent video, as always! But I do wish you would pronounce "cupola" correctly: it is "KEW-puh-luh" with the accent on the first syllable, as any dictionary will inform you. It derives from a Latin word with a similar pronunciation. Thank you for the work you do in producing these videos. It is fascinating to learn about all these lost Victorian houses and mansions.

  2. This was a beautiful presentation of great domestic architecture.
    However, it also shows the inability of people to preserve handsome structures for
    later generations.
    What a pity that most of these mansions and large houses no longer exist.
    Thank you for posting this video.

  3. KEN, THIS IS DOWN RIGHT TREASONOUS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! REMEMBER THAT I HAVE SPENT TIME IN NEW YORK CITY, AND TO PASS THROUGH THE AREA YOU ARE DESCRIBING TODAY, ONE HAS ALMOST NO CLUE AS TO WHAT ONCE WAS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! NEEDLESS TO SAY, MORE THAN A CENTURY AGO, THIS AREA SHOULD HAVE BEEN DECLARED A DEMOLITION FREE ZONE AND A NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARK AND PARK PRESERVE, MAKING ANY ATTEMPT AT DESTRUCTION OF EVEN ONE OF THOSE LANDMARK ESTATES A SERIOUS CRIMINAL OFFENSE, WHICH IT WAS ANYWAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! WE SHOULD STILL COLLABORATE ON SOME MATERIAL REGARDING DETROIT HARPER HOSPITAL, BUT FOR NOW, LONG LIVE THIS HOUSE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  4. How is it possible that nobody wanted Charles Schwab's mansion and it sat abandoned for years, then torn down! My heart breaks as if It were my mansion it, has to be the most specular home I have ever seen built. Idiot Elon Musk is next, he already lost over 500 billion dollars but is till the richest idiot in the world with like 233 billion and losing, lol!😎😎Anywho, eight months after Rana's death, in September 1939, Charles Michael Schwab, age seventy-seven, died of a heart attack. Schwab's estate showed assets of $1.4 million and debts of $1.7 million, making him technically bankrupt when he died. He wasn't exactly penniless because he was hanging on to some jewels and crap, selling some in a never ending hustle like me, while avoiding bill collectors whenever he needed to eat or party or something, lol.. Oh, that house should have been saved, puts to shame the modern crap we see today, it hurts so much!😭😭😭😭

  5. Love your channel and your presenting. Fantastic video. Loved watching that. It's so sad these beautiful homes are no longer there. What makes London so great, is we managed to preserve a lot more of our beautiful history. Riverside Drive looks ike a lovely place to be back then

  6. I was shocked to hear about Charles Schwab, losing all of his fortune and died with pennies. Yikes maybe he should’ve saved some of that money. It’s a Catch-22 instead of building the house worth almost 200,000,000 by today’s standards. Perhaps he should’ve saved some of that money, it seems kind of ridiculous, whatever happened to the wife did she just pack up and leave when he went broke they never said?

  7. Currently sitting a few hundred feet away from Fort Tryon and Inwood Hill Park. I've seen photos of a mansion that was once in the park, and I found the original footprint of a large house in the woods. Oddly, there was no house, just a wrought iron fence encircling….nothing. Flat tarmac.
    Might have been Mr. Seaman's house? He owned the park before giving it to the city. This was back when Inwood was called Tubby Hook.

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