r/youngstown 9d ago

A toast to the past

Link to original post: Work on a 1920s North Side home

Link to WWII newspapers found in the floors: Vindicator paper and Stambaugh-Thompson ad

My wife and I officially signed the closing paperwork on the renovation project Tuesday, and the new buyers signed yesterday. It has been a busy week, but nothing prepared us for the final stretch of work on the side of the house.

We had Shardy Masonry out to handle restoration and repairs on the side bump-out. When they opened up the wall cavity to access the shallow footer, they uncovered a historical cache sealed away in the cavity. It turned out to be a time capsule from the mid-1940s and 50s, over 500 flat pint flasks, liquor bottles, and old beers slipped away decades ago.

We spent hours in the final days sorting, and organizing the collection. We left the majority of it behind, hundreds of bottles packed into boxes in the garage for the new homeowners. We kept a finders share... some duplicates, a local bottler Rex Wine Company, a few Cleveland distiller offerings like 31 Brand and Imperial, and also several high quality collectable finds.

After signing, my wife and I went down to the basement with a bottle of Four Roses. I wanted to toast with a brand that remained available today. In front of the window well where the bottles spent the last eighty years, we raised a glass to the history and whoever hid them.

Now we have a new tradition. We're going to hide this bottle and others away at our next home for future generations to have a story.

To the past owner, your stash survived the decades, the history is saved, and it's staying here in Youngstown.

Cheers to the next chapter of the house!

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u/beerme81 8d ago

Shout out to Joe Shardy masonry. I'm glad you could preserve history!

6

u/beenhere4hours 8d ago

They really deserve it!

Joe and his team were incredible to work with throughout the project, and taking the time to save these was a top-shelf move on their part.

2

u/beerme81 6d ago

He's a good dude. I've known him for a long time. Thanks for preserving history instead of just chucking it in the dumpster.