0:00:03.103,0:00:08.612 A family in Wisconsin was surprised to find a fully stocked bomb shelter in their yard. 0:00:08.612,0:00:12.026 The Zwick family lived in their home in Neenah for more than a decade 0:00:12.026,0:00:17.450 aware of a strange metal door in their backyard, and they didn't open the door until 2010. 0:00:17.450,0:00:19.428 Like a scene from Lost, a mysterious ladder 0:00:19.428,0:00:22.685 led down the hole into the darkness. 0:00:22.685,0:00:26.560 Climbing down the ladder the Zwicks found a Cold War era bomb shelter 0:00:26.560,0:00:30.454 stocked with enough provisions to last a family for two weeks. 0:00:30.454,0:00:34.539 The 80 square foot shelter contained goods from the era of JFK. 0:00:34.539,0:00:36.472 Although the shelter itself was flooded, many 0:00:36.472,0:00:41.118 supplies were still in excellent shape, despite decades of storage. 0:00:41.118,0:00:44.058 Ken Zwick and Carol Hollar-Zwick were astounded by 0:00:44.058,0:00:48.948 the stock of vintage goods marking a unique era in America. 0:00:55.316,0:00:59.842 And Frank Pansch, a medical doctor, was the previous owner of the home. 0:00:59.842,0:01:01.759 He built the shelter in 1960 when 0:01:01.759,0:01:06.891 Americans and Russians were living under the constant threat of nuclear war. 0:01:06.891,0:01:09.092 Fallout shelters were meant to protect families from 0:01:09.092,0:01:12.588 fallout created by atomic blasts, not the explosions. 0:01:12.588,0:01:17.526 The shelter is located about 200 miles from Chicago, and 100 miles from Milwaukee, 0:01:17.526,0:01:22.082 the two nearby cities targeted by the Soviet Union. 0:01:22.082,0:01:26.082 The family donated all the items to the Neenah Historical Society.