The Queen
City Underground tour was very interesting.
There were eight different places that we visited on our tour. Some of the sights were very eye opening for
me. The tour was spread out over the
town. Many of the sights were hidden by
modern buildings that were built on top of or in front of the sights.
The first
sight we visited was the “Entertainment District” This district had various buildings. Some of these buildings were part of the
entertainment system in the area. If you
lived back in the year 1890, you didn't have all of the entertainment we have
today, with all the technology. So you
would go to the entertainment district and go see a show, play, etc.
The next
sight we visited was the “Heinrich Wielert’s Biergarten”. One of the major things the people from “Over
the Rhine” were proud of was their beer.
Our next stop was St. Paul Lutheran.
Pretty much the all of Cincinnati was run by a
man named George Barnsdale Cox. If you
needed a job, you had to consult him.
Most matters of business were overseen by “Boss Cox”.
Next we
visited the tenement houses. Imagine
living in two rooms with ten other people.
There was a small courtyard, and the building surrounded it. People usually didn’t have enough money to
pay for any personal plumbing, and you had to pay to use public bathroom for
bathing. So people usually just went to
the bathroom in buckets, and dumped them out if their windows.
Our next stop was “Liberty Street ”. This was my favorite part of our tour. This was the street that historically, if you
were a slave, and you were running away, as soon as you crossed this street,
you were free, and no bounty hunters could get you.
The seventh
stop was St Francis Seraph/Crypt. Originally, this had been a grave area. But when they decided to building a church,
they sent out a message that said “come and claim the bodies”. Strangely enough, many bodies were never
claimed. When the church was being
built, people asked if they could have bodies buried directly beneath the
alter. So there was a crypt built for
the dead. Many people did not have
enough money to pay for writing on the stones, so only a few numbers written on
those stones.
The final
stop was the “Kauffman Lagering Tunnels”.
This was where beer was stored.
Since they didn’t have refrigerators back then, they had to store the
beer underground where it was colder.
The tunnels were six floors beneath the street, and they were built so
that beer barrels could roll directly into certain areas. The tunnels were dark. Eventually, people piled up trash in the
middle of them.
The Queen
City Underground tour was very eye opening to what it was like to live back
then.
Outstanding review, Ian! I am impressed with your attention to detail.
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