When they discovered what was hidden behind the metal door in the garden of their new home, they were taken aback. They’d learn a lot of terrifying information about the location in question.
After their family had grown up, Ken and Carol Zwick, an American couple, purchased a new home where they could raise their child in a comfortable environment. They noticed the large metal door in the garden, but they were not interested in exploring it at the time.
They had just purchased a new home, but they were not in a hurry to see what was hidden behind the garden’s metal door! Their shock at the finding rendered them speechless.
They decided to see what was behind the metal door in the backyard ten years after they had relocated. And their shock at the finding rendered them speechless.
They had just moved into their new home, but they were not in a hurry to investigate what was behind the metal garden door! Their shock at the finding rendered them speechless.
They chose to open the metal door in the garden 10 years after purchasing the house. They came upon a site that had been created by the previous owner in 1960. It’s the year of President John F. Kennedy’s election, and America is on the verge of nuclear Armageddon.
The pair discovered a massive stairway going to a lengthy room after opening the heavy metal door.
Behind the metal garden entrance, they discovered
It really was a bunker. And it wasn’t at all empty, as the new owners had assumed. According to Perfect Media, there were a lot of ancient stuff here that hadn’t been manufactured in years.
There were enough provisions for a family to survive for at least two weeks.
Clothing, lamps, batteries, and even cutlery were discovered. They even discovered some really old candies that had not been produced in a long time. The family packed up their items and donated them to the Neenah History Society after they recovered from their shock.
“It allowed us to experience what it was like to live in 1960 in real-time. It felt as though they were all in the same room, and then they were summoned to the shelter “Jane Lang, director of the Neenah History Society, expressed her thoughts.