Most days, a home is just a home. Walls, bricks, doors, windows, and whatever we’ve filled it with. But sometimes, there’s more to it than meets the eye.
In the Facebook group A House With History, curious people share strange things they’ve come across in their own homes or while exploring old, forgotten places. Think secret rooms, hidden tunnels, odd objects left behind—anything that makes you stop and wonder what really happened there.
Here are some of the most surprising finds.
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Interesting Newel Post. Seems To Have A Candy Dish On Top. Thoughts??
Was for the "calling cards" I.em the cards everybody carried around to give to the butler to announce their visit.
We All Know What This Is, Right?
Boot scraper
These are outside lots of houses in the town near where I live, my children know what they are for and mimic scraping their shoes on them
Found In The Attic Of A Condo That Was Once A Very Old High School
Window openers, sometimes they were used to open the transom above the old doors
This Is Interesting. It Appears To Be Attached To The Wall
You can sit down and take your shoes and boots off, after hanging up your coat and hat
Those were the days
That is beautiful a good clean polish up and you got yourself a gorgeous antique coat n hat rack n chair !! And worth a fortune to !
These Little Doors Are Located In The Rooms Of An Early 1900s House. Any Idea What These Are For?
People put them in for their cats to be able to get to the cat box and other areas of the house without the heat, leaving the room. They want the door closed and the heat in
Any Idea What The Holes Are In This Old Rustic Door?
those would be musket balls. You can see the powder burn in some top ones
Imagine Having A Manhole Cover Under Your Floor In The Hallway
It used to be an old cistern with water in it. Lotta old houses have them.
Anyone Know What This Is??
Yes we had one for our cellar, to tell us the light were on downstairs.
Typical Radiator But Does Anyone Know What This Feature Is For?
It warms things. That's pretty much it.
This Walkway Is To A House From The 1930s. Why Do You Think It's Like This?
It's a driveway with steps between the tire treads. Used to see that quite a bit.
Old House Mystery. This Is Located At The Corner Of The Baseboards In An Old House. Looks Like It's Been Painted Over A Lot. Any Ideas What This Is?
It’s a damper for an old gravity furnace. I’d remove it, clean it up, polish it and reinstall it. It would be a lovely talking point! I’ll bet it’s a beautiful brass piece.
Man, some people just love love love to paint over every damned thing, don’t they? Really cool metal fixtures, solid wood furniture with beautiful grain, brick fireplaces, you name it. If it’s beautiful all by itself, they’ll slap a thick coat of the cheapest, worst, and ugliest paint they can find over it and totally ruin it.
What Is This Mechanism In The Floor. Seems To Have Rollers And A Chain
for a chandelier so you can lower it for repair and cleaning
Lowering a chandelier? The Brits on here can only see one image right now.
Do You Know What Kind Of Stairs These Are?
These are Witches Stairs. Supposedly Witches couldn't climb these types of stairs.
Found Inside The Wall. Guess Which Room
These double edge razor blades were found in the bathroom wall. Way back when, the medicine cabinets had a slot in back. It was purposely put there to dispose the old blades which just fell into the wall.
What Are These Slots In The Side Of An Old Stone House Next To A Window?
For shooting rifles through
Hanging Up Over The Doorway Of An Older House. What Is It??
An old glass fire extinguisher filled with Carbon Tetrachloride. Very dangerous.
Mounted In The Bedroom Of An Old House.wh Knows What This Is?
Old tie holder.
Coat Rack?? What Do You Think?
In the 1970s they were called valets—men hung their suit jackets on them when they came home from work and put their pocket contents in the little tray.
Who Knows What This Is? Located In The UK
Digby Lock-Up, also known as the Pepperpot, located in Digby, Lincolnshire. It is a Grade II listed building with historical significance.
Originally a 17th-century wellhead, it is made of limestone and stands 2 meters high.
It may have been used as a lock-up for petty criminals or drunks, especially during the Napoleonic Wars.
I hope it has air holes on the other side somewhere O_O otherwise looks like it might get awfully stuffy in there. EDIT: I suppose, during the time period that these would have been in use, people probably DGAF about human rights violations like "dude is going to suffocate if you lock him in there overnight" :/
If You've Seen Our Video On Crooked Chimneystl Then You Might Know What These Windows Are Called
Witches window. They believed witches couldn't turn and fly through them when they were opened.
Old House Mystery. Found During A Kitchen Renovation. Any Ideas What It Is??
Old wood stove plate lifter
I remember my grandmother using one of those. The stove plates were cast iron, and you lifted them to put more wood on the fire.
Any Idea What This Wheel Is For? Located In An Old Farmhouse But Doesn't Appear To Currently Be Operating Anything
My Grandparents had a wheel with a sprocket on it on 1st floor. Sprocket had a chain that went thru floor to stoker in the basement. Turning the wheel caused coal to be fed to the stoker which increased the heat fed up thru floor registers warming the home.
Good grief, I don't even know what some of the switches in my house are for.
Old House Mystery. What Is This? Found Under Carpeting And Linoleum In A Bedroom Of An 1800s House
It is a hole to allow heat to pass from 1st floor to 2nd floor. I have one in my bedroom of my 200 year old house.
Mine is square and it constitutes the 'central heating' for the second floor. I put a little fan in it and it actually does help balance the house.
Anyone Know What This Is?
Antique door knocker.
What Is This? Sink Maybe??
It's a Laundry tub
Had one of those in our house growing up in Michigan in the 1960s, was next to where the washer and drying machine was. Was useful for pre scrubbing clothes before putting into the washing machine.
Found In An Old House. Do You Know What This Is?
This little device was a grocery list checker. Dates back to the 1920s and people kept it on the kitchen. Probably why these are found during kitchen renovations.
Old House Mystery - Why Is There A Pedal In The Bottom Of This Wall???
My old house in Utah had one for releasing coal down the chute
Any Ideas What This Is?? Pretty Sure It's Not A Well Or Septic
Old wine cellar of a long gone house
This Very Old Shoe Was Found In A Wall Near The Fireplace. Do You Know Why They Hid Shoes In The Walls? Specifically Why They Hid Them Near Fireplaces?
Often, when a house was being built, a family moving into the house would hide shoes in different places. There were children's shoes on the walls of the children's rooms, women's shoes next to the fireplaces and kitchens. Men's shoes were hidden in the attic. The purpose of these was to bring good luck to the house and drive away evil spirits.
Old House Mystery. Found During A Kitchen Renovation Of An Old House. Anyone Know What This Might Be?
Canning top. You can mark what you have canned.
Any Ideas What This Is For? Over A Door In A Really Old House
That is 100% for a Bracketed Kerosene Lamp
Not Too Old, But These Were For The House That Had Everything
This Item Was Found In The Basement Of An 1907 Home. Anyone Know What It Is?
For sterilizing preserving jars and bottles
Anti witch personal defence shield . . . . . LOTS of witches back then . . .you could never be too careful . . .
Anyone Know What This Is?
This is a Goffering Iron that was used to put ruffles in clothing
I've seen hand operated Goffering irons before, but not a pedal operated one - much easier to use I would imagine.
I Have No Idea. Hanging On A Radter In The Basement Of An Old House. Any Ideas What This Is??
An old razor sharpener
Another picture of one plus its box! It's for disposable razor blades. 480915969_...c62a46.jpg
1935 Silver Certificate $1 Bill Found During Renovations. Awesome Find!
Any Guess On What This Is?
We had one on our milk crate/ metal cooler left at the door. Its to let dairy delivery person know what you needed
This Is A Very Old Chandelier
Odd Space Found Behind Thus Metal Grate In The Basement. Anyone Have An Idea What It's For??
Air flow for old furnace
Old House Mystery In The Garage. Any Idea When This Space Would Be In The Garage Floor?? There Is A Small Cover For It But No Idea What It Was Used For
it was probably used for used oil. Back then you changed your own oil and disposed of it on your own. This hole would allow the oil to seep into the ground and it would go bye bye
Anyone Know What Type Of Phone This Is?
This is an A & B phone. You put in your dime and made the call. If they didn't answer you got your money back. Otherwise your money got deposited and you could continue your call
This one was from a town in Abertillery, Wales, so would originally have been a penny, not a dime. There were still one or two of these about in rural areas as late as the 1960s, but all had been replaced by the 1970s when the new decimal coinage came in, with a 2p and a 10p coin slot.
Found While Removing The Wallpaper. Any Idea What This Used To Be?
Dumb waiter or laundry chute
What Are These Old Pipes In The Backyard Of An Old Cottage?
Oil tank vents, it was common to have them barred in the yard to save on space in the basement.
Old House Mystery. Found In The Basement, What Is This???
If it’s in a very large home could it be a communications center for bells to call servants?
Some Kind Of Fireplace Insert Obviously But Looks Like An Incinerator
Coal heater.
Do You Know What This Is?
A Victorian era wooden toilet
I'm not sure that's an actual toilet. I believe it's a "commode table" from the 70's. So named because of its resemblance to the toilet, but used as a side table in a living room.
Anyone Know What This Item Is Circled In Red? Found Inside A Wall During Renovations Of An Old House
I'm thinking it was a cover for a latch on a pocket door
Who Knows What This Is?
This is an antique fireplace spit. My understanding is that most old homes had these and were used for cooking.
Anyone Know What Type Of Outlet This Is??
I think that is a receptacle for a Toa intercom station. Early versions had 4 pins; later versions had 2 pins.
Found At An Old House. It's Round And All Glass. Any Ideas What This Is?
Very old telegraph wire insulator
What Is This?? Sticking Out Of The Baseboard Of An Old House
Gas line that is capped and shut off valve.
I Know It's A Switch But Why In The Bathroom And For What? Looks Specific
Immersion heater. The thing Dad always used to say "Don't you be leaving that immersion heater on! I'm not made of money"
Found In The Attic Of An Old House. Any Idea What It Is?
I believe it’s a Yacouba Double Spoon - a symbol of hospitality in traditional African art. It represents 2 very distinct universes that are opposite.
The text is horribly written but here's a more in-depth explanation: https://www.african-arts-gallery.com/african-art/Usual-items-african-art/Dan-Wakemia-double-spoon/11885
This Is Located On A Narrow Door To The Balcony Of A Late 1800s House. The Knob Moves Up And Down. Any Ideas What It's For?
Its an old style door lock for young children
I will never understand what's going on in the mind of someone who just paints over those cute, beautiful, quirky little beauties you find in any old house. (It took me forever to strip layers of paint off my indoor wood and brass door handles 🤬. Cretins. Looking at this offends me as much as looking at my mistreated door handles for the first time back then.)
Who Knows What This Area Is To The Left Of The Door?
Coal bin
Depends on the area of the house, I guess. My great grand parents stored coals in bins similar to this BUT the front side was open (which made it easier to shovel out the coal into pails, you don't have to lift the fork each time over an obstacle. I shovelled for them.) // THESE kind of bin (with a front barrier) they used for storing potatoes. My dad , in a family of five (with three hungry teenage boys) told me, in the 1950-ies /Middle Europe his family used up to several hundreds of pounds of potatoes each winter. that their garden gave plus bought the rest but only once a year.
Located On The Basement Ceiling And Making A Humming Noise. Any Ideas???
Probably your doorbell power transformer
Found Hanging On A Lower Level Wall In A Late 1800s Home
Counterweight for a window or sliding door.
Located In The Basement Of An Old House. Any Ideas What This Might Be?
The image shows a Buffalo Forge No. 418 Post Drill Press, an antique tool typically used in woodworking and blacksmith shops, especially in areas without electricity.
Any Idea What This Might Be? Located In The Basement Of An Old House
It was a Landry rack for blanket, and large items, at least that's what my Granny used the one in our basement for.
Found Inside The Wall Of An Old House. Any Ideas Of What It Could Be?
That’s a ballast for a window
Any Know What This Is? Old Tool Found In An Old House
This tool was used to tighten the ropes on old beds.
Anyone Know What This Is?
Railroad Bridge.
We had land on two sides of the track. Ours was tall enough that we used it as a cattle pass.
This Old Brick Was Found During Renovations Of An 1800s Home. Not Sure How Animal Prints Got In The Brick
Does this person not know how bricks are made? XD Bricks are still usually made of clay (with other materials mixed in) that are then (usually) kiln-dried. So, bricks are soft-ish and impressionable until they are dried. A cat clearly walked across this brick while it was still soft, probably while it was air-drying before being fired in a kiln.
What Do You Think? Part Of An Old Foundation?
A home made septic tank
Do We Know What This Is?
If it's on a chimney, it's to remove ash. If it's near the front door, it's for milk deliveries
We had one of these for the chimney. I remember cleaning it when I was a kid!
Anyone Know What This "Pipe" Might Be Coming Out Of The Wall?
Old gas pipe for a gas lamp
Who Knows What This Is?
Boot scrapper. Sometimes there were grates in front of the door to scrap boots off. The mud would fall under porch
Oldest Support Columns I Have Ever Seen
Ever See A Glass Mailbox Before? This Is Really An Antique And A Pretty Nice One
They were common in the U.S. in the middle 20th century. So you could see at a glance if you had maìl.
Anyone Kniw What This Contraption Might Be? It's On The Bottom Of Every Door In An 1890s House
I think it's a door closer
Anyone Know What Thus Is?
This is an old intercom system
Any Clues On What This Feature Is Located Outside The Window Of An Old Stone House
This is a urinal shelf
Someone please tell us why a urinal would be sitting on a shelf like that.
Anyone Want To Guess What This Is?
This is a light switch
Old-style rotary switch. It was spring-loaded internally. Turn the k**b far enough, and it will 'snap' to the opposite state, on or off. Turn it in the same direction until you get to the state you want. We had some of those at home.
Any Ideas On What This Might Be? In A Doorway Of An Old House
Damper for old stove. It would have a chain that would go to the basement where the stove was located
Yep. My grandmother's house had one of these for the furnace, functional and in use.
Ever Seen This Before? Each Cutout In The Floor Has A Piece Of Clear Glass That You Can See Through To The Basement. This Is In An Old Victorian
To let light into the basement.
Ever See An Electric Socket Like This One??
Yes I used very long time ago this 2 pin 5amp socket are British standard
This Is Located In A Yard Of An Old House. Never Seen One Before. Any Ideas Of What It Is?
It's an old boiler!!
Found In A Late 1800s House. Any Ideas?
Gas light, those had a globe sometimes that fit inside those protruding arms
What Is This Thing? Located On An Old Countertop Of An Old House
An anchor for something like a meat grinder
Old House Mystery. What Kind Of Outlet Is This??
Grounding outlet for antenna
Found In An Old House. Anyone Know What This Is??
I believe it is telephone wiring
Could be telephone wiring but given the switches & the apparent gauge of the wires, it *might* be power for whatever. Remember, a lot of very old houses predated electrification, and electricity was retrofitted to existing structures, often in a very haphazard manner - my childhood home, for example. Wires (and plumbing) would be run up along walls, on the surface, because inside walls were *not* hollow 2x4 framed-and-studs construction like we use now. There was *no* way to run things *through* the walls. Pipes just hung out there, visible to all. Wiring would be routed through some afterthought surface channel on the face of the wall. Several of our rooms had one of those rotary switches on the wall, as seen in another entry in this list, with wiring molding coming up from the floor, then going up to the ceiling, to a central fixture with a socket for a light bulb. For anything else, we'd put an adapter in with outlets for plugs and a bulb socket, with extension cords hanging down.
What Is This?? On The Front Door Of A Late 1800s Home
Mailbox door
Yep. Usually a bank of these in the lobbies of old apartment buildings. Go up to *your* box, dial in your combination, and pick up your mail. EDIT: I should add, since this is in a front door, rather than an apartment house lobby, it probably allowed a postman (who would have had the combination) to pick up outgoing mail and/or deposit incoming mail.
Ok It's An Outlet. But For What??
Tandem parallel plug. It’s a normal 2 prong 120volt outlet. However in the early days before plugs were standardized there was a double flat configuration. That’s it. Some will say it’s a 240 outlet. It’s not However todays 15 amp 240 volt outlet plug like for an ac unit shares the same double flat configuration with a ground pin of course.
What's This? Locates On An Outside Wall Of An Older House
Security system, have one in my home that still works. It's loud as hell.
Do You Know What This Is?
This was a Servants call bell
Any Ideas What This Feature Is? It's On A Wooden Beam In A Late 1700s House
I'm thinking for an indoors drying
clothes rack. Used more in winter
months when you needed to dry
your coat, hat, socks, etc.
Do You Know What This Outlet Is For? Typically Used For Two Applications
220 volt heavy amp rating. Used for electric ranges and clothes dryers.
This Interesting Lever Is In A House Dating Back To The Early 1920s. Any Ideas On What It's For?
Damper for the heat
What Are These Mysterious Slots That Appear To Be Cut Into This Older Stone Home??
This looks like it was constructed as a barn or stable. That being the case, those slits are for ventilation.
Has to do with archery so the archer can send arrows out with some cover. Not relevant anymore but neat.
Those are vents and not archery slits. Wrong shape for archery; you'd only be able to shot out at 90° to the building front.
Secret Space Found In The Garage Of An Older Home. I Wonder What This Was For??
Inspection pit for a car.
What Is This In The Corners Of The Baseboards?
Perhaps its intention is to prevent you from pushing furniture into the corner so the house gets proper ventilation and minimizes mold.
What's This?? Found In A Dirt Basement Floor
The servants area must have been in the basement. Definitely knob and tube doorbell!
Who writes this stuff!? The pair of tubes are lightning arresters for telephone wiring.
Anyone Know What This Is? Found In The Basement Of A House Built In 1882
Boiler or wood/coal stove
Got a kick at how the comments tried to relate all of them to witches :)
None of these are creepy. None sure why the moderators changed the title to this hours after the original posting.
And now they’ve changed it again to “disturbing things”. What’s the deal?
Load More Replies...Oh, man... Such an emotional ride on this list! I'll be 71 soon, and our family farm was *way* behind the times. I grew up using farm equipment from the 30s and 40s, our farmhouse will soon be 200 years old, and my parents and grandparents still had a *LOT* of this stuff, active and in use. This list brought back an absolute FLOOD of long-buried memories, like going back to a home I never thought I'd ever see again. For reference, I'm a life-long science fiction fan, with a degree in Comp Sci, and I've been working in IT for just under half a century. I just started a new job as a server admin! So, yeah, my life has extended much farther into the past and into the future than I have any right to have participated in. Thank you for helping me dust off my memories and my heritage!
The only disturbing thing here are the stupid titles of these posts, writers are not even trying, just copying from reddit...
Interesting stuff here but f**k sakes bp I had a scam telus ad pop up 4 times scrolling this one article. How desperate are you to just totally ruin this site? I wonder how many of the older or more gullible people gave information to that scam website thinking telus just picked them to win an iPhone or Amazon gift card?
Apparently architects of old studied structural integrity and general witch prevention prior to certification. Such a cool list, thank you for sharing it!
My house is 130 years old and my parents bought it in 1952. My dad renovated it over the years so anything he may have found is long gone. My parents weren't sentimental and just got rid of things which ticked me off to no end growing up. I've never found anything mysterious, hidden or old here at all.
Is there a box I can click that goes back and up votes ever witch mention?
Great pictures, but I weep for the lack of historical or deductive reasoning.
Some of the entries that were originally at the top of the list had explanations as part of the entry that referenced witches. Windows to stop witches from entering, etc. And some Pandas ran with it and turned it into a gag, and it snowballed from there. Just Pandas with senses of humor having fun.
Load More Replies...Got a kick at how the comments tried to relate all of them to witches :)
None of these are creepy. None sure why the moderators changed the title to this hours after the original posting.
And now they’ve changed it again to “disturbing things”. What’s the deal?
Load More Replies...Oh, man... Such an emotional ride on this list! I'll be 71 soon, and our family farm was *way* behind the times. I grew up using farm equipment from the 30s and 40s, our farmhouse will soon be 200 years old, and my parents and grandparents still had a *LOT* of this stuff, active and in use. This list brought back an absolute FLOOD of long-buried memories, like going back to a home I never thought I'd ever see again. For reference, I'm a life-long science fiction fan, with a degree in Comp Sci, and I've been working in IT for just under half a century. I just started a new job as a server admin! So, yeah, my life has extended much farther into the past and into the future than I have any right to have participated in. Thank you for helping me dust off my memories and my heritage!
The only disturbing thing here are the stupid titles of these posts, writers are not even trying, just copying from reddit...
Interesting stuff here but f**k sakes bp I had a scam telus ad pop up 4 times scrolling this one article. How desperate are you to just totally ruin this site? I wonder how many of the older or more gullible people gave information to that scam website thinking telus just picked them to win an iPhone or Amazon gift card?
Apparently architects of old studied structural integrity and general witch prevention prior to certification. Such a cool list, thank you for sharing it!
My house is 130 years old and my parents bought it in 1952. My dad renovated it over the years so anything he may have found is long gone. My parents weren't sentimental and just got rid of things which ticked me off to no end growing up. I've never found anything mysterious, hidden or old here at all.
Is there a box I can click that goes back and up votes ever witch mention?
Great pictures, but I weep for the lack of historical or deductive reasoning.
Some of the entries that were originally at the top of the list had explanations as part of the entry that referenced witches. Windows to stop witches from entering, etc. And some Pandas ran with it and turned it into a gag, and it snowballed from there. Just Pandas with senses of humor having fun.
Load More Replies...
