Isn't it interesting how all these amazing structures, all with similar designs, all over the planet, were supposedly erected in the mid-late 1800s by people who barely had the tools and the skills to make simple dwellings?
It's the most obvious in Australia. At that time there were very few convicts there who had any sort of skills, and yet these world-class cathedrals and government buildings were all built there within a span of 50 years.
On an excursion in 2006, I found a solid porcelain glazed hand of a statue buried in the side of a creek bed in Forest Park, St. Louis, the site of the WF 1904. There is nothing temporary about it. Most of the buildings that were "built for the purpose of the fair" only to be destroyed, were buried within the boundaries of the massive park. The Ferris Wheel axle has yet to be found. I believe these buildings existed way before 1904 and the Expos were a way to fool the gen pop. Jon Levi is excellent at explaining it all. The StL Art Museum still exists and it is a stunning fixture on a huge hill. There is no way people with horse and cart transported massive slabs of granite through muddy roads. Trains, perhaps? But not wagons as we are led to believe.
Isn't it interesting how all these amazing structures, all with similar designs, all over the planet, were supposedly erected in the mid-late 1800s by people who barely had the tools and the skills to make simple dwellings?
It's the most obvious in Australia. At that time there were very few convicts there who had any sort of skills, and yet these world-class cathedrals and government buildings were all built there within a span of 50 years.
If this sort of thing interests you, check out the Tartarian Truthers channel on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/TartarianTruthers
Edit: Having read through the rest of your comments here, I see that you are already well versed in this topic, lol!
Yes! And then try to fathom their explanations for tearing most of them down not long after.
On an excursion in 2006, I found a solid porcelain glazed hand of a statue buried in the side of a creek bed in Forest Park, St. Louis, the site of the WF 1904. There is nothing temporary about it. Most of the buildings that were "built for the purpose of the fair" only to be destroyed, were buried within the boundaries of the massive park. The Ferris Wheel axle has yet to be found. I believe these buildings existed way before 1904 and the Expos were a way to fool the gen pop. Jon Levi is excellent at explaining it all. The StL Art Museum still exists and it is a stunning fixture on a huge hill. There is no way people with horse and cart transported massive slabs of granite through muddy roads. Trains, perhaps? But not wagons as we are led to believe.