

"It was all of what you would expect to find in a 1960s fallout shelter. "It was Hawaiian Punch," Hollar-Zwick said. The boxes' contents were in pristine condition.Ī few boxes bore labels suggesting they might contain explosives, so agents from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives responded to investigate, but nothing dangerous was inside. When the Zwicks unlocked the heavy, metal hatch, they found watertight Army surplus boxes floating in 5 feet of water that had seeped into the shelter. "We assumed it was just this empty space," Hollar-Zwick said. What they didn't know - and wouldn't discover until they ventured into the shelter more than a decade later - was that the previous homeowner stocked the bunker with food and survival supplies in 1960. When Ken Zwick and Carol Hollar-Zwick bought their home in 1999, they knew the backyard contained an underground fallout shelter built during the height of the Cold War.

Watch Video: Wisconsin family finds fallout shelter fully stocked
