Mysterious Grave Cages from the 1800s

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  • @doug3959
    @doug3959 3 роки тому +66

    Those are known as mortsafes... popular in Scotland when cadavers were in short supply. The poor folks used mortsafes while the rich built mausoleums to keep granny in the ground.

    • @chriswinchell1570
      @chriswinchell1570 3 роки тому +5

      Mortsafes. That’s great. I’ll remember that till the day I need one.

    • @julieinsley7654
      @julieinsley7654 3 роки тому +4

      That was some useful information hun thanks

  • @johanna7254
    @johanna7254 3 роки тому +29

    I remember first seeing these "mort safes" on Caitlin Doughty's channel. Fascinating! Really cool cemetery!

    • @julienielsen3746
      @julienielsen3746 3 роки тому

      Really? I don't remember seeing them on her channel.

  • @crossarmkid42
    @crossarmkid42 3 роки тому +4

    If a witch or vampire can free itself from a buried coffin and tunnel through 6 feet of dirt; I'm pretty sure a flimsy metal cage isn't going to stop them...

  • @spookygirl7761
    @spookygirl7761 3 роки тому +22

    N New Mexico. You see alot of cages at the cemeteries. It's for the coyotes, to keep them from digging the corpse up.

  • @bethpeters3187
    @bethpeters3187 3 роки тому +25

    This is first I've ever seen this. Really interesting. They seem more needed in today's times with the stuff I see people are capable of.

    • @70applejack
      @70applejack 3 роки тому +1

      People are more evil than ever.

    • @julieinsley7654
      @julieinsley7654 3 роки тому

      I found this information interesting..

  • @spencerspence1678
    @spencerspence1678 3 роки тому +15

    Can you imagine being a medical student and after Uncle Fred's funeral, he's your next mid term.

  • @johndavies9270
    @johndavies9270 3 роки тому +17

    These used to be fairly common in Great Britain as well as in other countries, particularly near cities which had a medical college. I'm from the English West Midlands, where at one time the 'resurrection men' had a roaring trade, often in cahoots with local sextons and undertakers. A couple of years back, when an abandoned non-conformist graveyard in West Bromwich was being cleared for building a new road, a number of these were unearthed, as well as several coffins filled with bricks or scrap iron. The BBC News report said that this was to fool the resurrection men. Not likely! It was to fool the relatives - the dear departed had been removed before leaving the undertaker's premises, and the bricks etc were to make up the weight!

    • @351clevelandmodifiedmotor4
      @351clevelandmodifiedmotor4 3 роки тому

      It all sounds a bit silly eh, they should just make it highly ileagal to tamper with or steal a body,. Like give them 10 year prison sentence if caught ,

  • @wildgirl484
    @wildgirl484 3 роки тому +1

    Im from Armagh, Pennsylvania and there was some in a small graveyard. Its been awhile since i been in Armagh so not sure it there are still up but the kind of scared me as a kid they was from the 1800s

  • @NeilRoy
    @NeilRoy 3 роки тому +19

    I used to love walking in graveyards and reading the tombstones. I once seen some tombstones with the picture of the person embedded into the stone, which I thought was an interesting idea. I would always wonder about the life of the person buried there. What was it like? What was their happy moments etc... so many stories out there, so many people just like us. Our time is coming and someone may someday be standing on our grave, wondering what our life was like...

    • @pugsunset1
      @pugsunset1 3 роки тому +3

      Check out Faces of the Forgotten, he has lots of videos with the people's pictures on them.

    • @akashdas9292
      @akashdas9292 3 роки тому +2

      I also have the same feeling although I live far far away from you guys and from a totally different culture. Europe really fascinates me.

    • @wsg4847
      @wsg4847 3 роки тому +2

      "There comes a time when all graves go unvisited." - Conan O'Brien

    • @sd906238
      @sd906238 2 роки тому +2

      Seen the same thing in a graveyard in South Carolina. One that we looked at was for a soldier that was killed on a troopship that was sailing to Europe during WWI. He wasn't a relative but we still paid our respects to him.

    • @NeilRoy
      @NeilRoy 2 роки тому +1

      @@sd906238 Ironically, and sadly, my wife died three months after I made that comment. I didn't expect her to go so fast, she had cancer for only four months. :(

  • @realname2158
    @realname2158 3 роки тому +5

    Thanks for the actual factual explanation. Many would play up the whole vampire myth to attract more views but you did an outstanding job in this video.

  • @bluelava4282
    @bluelava4282 3 роки тому

    Thanks Mobile Instinct…….. especially your details, very well done……

  • @SlimshadyVictoria
    @SlimshadyVictoria 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you...very informative!

  • @billphillips5006
    @billphillips5006 3 роки тому +2

    If you were going to dig down for the body....how would this stop you at all? Does it go deeper then 6ft?

  • @apfelschorle28
    @apfelschorle28 3 роки тому +2

    Thanks Chris, i'm always enjoying your videos!!! 👍 Greetings from germany

  • @Ganiscol
    @Ganiscol 3 роки тому +50

    Interesting, wasnt aware of this method to protect against "body snatchers" - the more you know! 💫

    • @deborahbaker4770
      @deborahbaker4770 3 роки тому +3

      Check out Faces Of The Forgotten on UA-cam he definitely has a lot of interesting fact’s of Cemetery’s and the people buried in them.

    • @lizbradford7706
      @lizbradford7706 3 роки тому

      @@deborahbaker4770 love him as well forgotten faces amazing history

  • @kilterkaos1
    @kilterkaos1 3 роки тому +3

    I didn’t know they existed until your video. Interesting!

  • @bobbiejeanraper5156
    @bobbiejeanraper5156 3 роки тому +1

    Wow very interesting. Had never heard of this. Thanks for the video.

  • @patmccamy4126
    @patmccamy4126 3 роки тому

    I know all about this. Still interesting that you found the actual items intact!! Thanks for that!!!! Have to keep those bodies safe! Pat

  • @lizbradford7706
    @lizbradford7706 3 роки тому

    Just love these wee videos and the history behind them I’m from Scotland av never seen the gages but will be looking now

  • @fallingstar6792
    @fallingstar6792 3 роки тому

    I enjoy videos like this. Hope you post more grave videos. Enjoy the stories and history

  • @taffykins2745
    @taffykins2745 Рік тому

    Thank you. Very informative video. 😊

  • @theirishprincess7110
    @theirishprincess7110 3 роки тому +1

    Very interesting, Chris. Also noticed your wearing a Cubs hat. :) You must be a fan.

  • @RandySchartiger
    @RandySchartiger 3 роки тому +3

    interesting stuff thank you for sharing!

  • @EssenceOfChicagolandAreas
    @EssenceOfChicagolandAreas 3 роки тому

    Pennsylvania is one place I had not explored yet with my videos. You have a very interesting video here man good production. Thanks for sharing

  • @tamitoohey2392
    @tamitoohey2392 3 роки тому

    Interesting story! Great lunch idea!! Awesome shirt!!!

  • @bonemachine1975
    @bonemachine1975 3 роки тому +2

    I was unaware of body thief cages. Interesting. Thanks

  • @hh7407
    @hh7407 2 роки тому

    Those are beautiful because it is ornate and wrought iron and someone could plant a climbing rose on it so it could cover it beautifully.

  • @lablackzed
    @lablackzed 3 роки тому +1

    Seen these in old cemeteries in the UK .

  • @monkeybusiness1999
    @monkeybusiness1999 3 роки тому +1

    Super interesting. Maybe look into Sarah Ann's life & history? You might find forgotten stories about her that led to this cage. The church, local historical society or library could have records.

  • @stephanie_a333
    @stephanie_a333 3 роки тому +1

    I learned something new, thank you Chris. I would like to have one to grow vineing flowers upon. I think the design would make a beautiful framework and allow breezes to waft fragrance freely.

  • @Hugginsince79
    @Hugginsince79 3 роки тому +2

    I just learned about grave torpedo's yesterday. Crazy how grave robbers were so popular.

    • @EssenceOfChicagolandAreas
      @EssenceOfChicagolandAreas 3 роки тому

      What's that grave torpedo? How did you learn about it yesterday? Were you searching for it?

  • @samanthab1923
    @samanthab1923 3 роки тому +8

    I also read that the family who had them were known iron workers.

  • @jamiescountryliving
    @jamiescountryliving 2 роки тому

    Wow very interesting. Thank you very much

  • @truthbydesign5146
    @truthbydesign5146 3 роки тому +1

    The excellent Cinemax TV series “The Knick,” based on a New York hospital at the turn of the century (1900) , actually had the buying of cadavers as one of its plot points. The hospital would pay $25 to $75 per cadaver, for the cutting edge surgeons to practice new techniques. That was a LOT of money back then, so there was quite a shortage of fresh cadavers.

  • @JoshuaMuse
    @JoshuaMuse 3 роки тому +1

    Glad you put this back up.

  • @shaygetz52
    @shaygetz52 3 роки тому +6

    Personally...I preferred the grave mines that were used for awhile.
    Dr. : "Igor..."
    Igor: "That's 'Eye-gor'..."
    Dr.: "Ok, Eyegor...watch out for the..." BOOM!!

    • @unrulyjulie4382
      @unrulyjulie4382 3 роки тому +2

      Gotta watch out where the brain comes from...pass on Abbey Normal's. 😊

  • @wendyjohnson8639
    @wendyjohnson8639 3 роки тому +1

    There's a dead body farm in Texas it's use for forensic science it very intense you should look into that. This is a great find I learned something new today.

  • @jerrymeeuwse859
    @jerrymeeuwse859 3 роки тому +1

    I once read this practice was used to keep animals/people off the fresh dirt and seed. Once new grass had established itself they would remove the cage. The cages were owned by the cemetery they said. Some cages were just left in place because the maintenance men, ( grave diggers) were lazy.
    No idea if it's true, just something I read somewhere.

  • @ShadowRhapsody81
    @ShadowRhapsody81 3 роки тому +1

    Hmm could see those being erected due to folk-lore reasons (vampires, witches, ect), but also for more practical reasons, such as discouraging organ-harvesting for black-market, and to help prevent graves from 'floating away' if heavy rains/flooding happen.

  • @ericmcquiston9473
    @ericmcquiston9473 3 роки тому +4

    Great story and video Chris ! I guess they won’t be cutting the grass inside them until it grows through the top.

  • @oilersridersbluejays
    @oilersridersbluejays Рік тому

    I live in rural Saskatchewan and there is a lot of German settlement in this area and throughout rural Saskatchewan in general, I myself being of German origins.
    Here, the prairies were homesteaded mostly from the 1900s to early 1930s. In areas of German settlement, old graves up until the 1930s sometimes have a wooden fence around them. Sometimes they have a gate, and are sometimes locked. I always thought it was peculiar. I don’t think it was ever a thing with Mennonite or Hutterite graves (that I know of, as I’m neither) but they seemed fairly common in Lutheran (which I am) and Catholic graveyards. It seems especially common with Germans who came from Russia (Bessarabian, Black Sea, and Volga Germans), although it is also seen with some who were “Home Germans” (Germans directly from Germany).
    I’ve never really delved into it or have it a lot of thought until now. Perhaps it’s a German version of a mortgage, although I would highly doubt it as it would be rather easy to break into, and isolated rural prairie cemeteries sometimes up to a hundred or so miles from any sort of city with nothing but rifle carrying farmers nearby would be the last place anyone would want to grab a cadaver, nor was grave robbing a thing by this time.
    It could purely have been elaborate decorations. I should point out that they didn’t seem too overly common, but was they mostly seemed to have been constructed with wood (and probably poplar wood which is poor quality), they probably have rotted over the last 90 to 110 years.
    If anyone knows which I’m referring to, give me a reply here. I really haven’t seriously researched this and would like to know more about it.
    Also, big fan of the channel and your newest subscriber!

  • @Supercell725
    @Supercell725 3 роки тому

    Very interesting video young man

  • @JChrisTurner1234
    @JChrisTurner1234 3 роки тому

    Great treat to find a new video. Hope this finds you doing well, Chris. Enjoyed this very much, as usual. Hope you enjoyed your garlic bread.

  • @tashasmith6179
    @tashasmith6179 3 роки тому +2

    I clicked on this real quick because I didn't want it to disappear like the other one lol. Very interesting.
    Have you heard about the abandoned mausoleum in Rhode Island? I hope you or Lamont can go there and do a story on it. It's a very interesting story. There was a news outlet about it but I think it would be fantastic if one of y'all could do the story on it. I mentioned it to Lamont on his live stream the other day but he probably didn't see it.
    "HEY, YOU GUYS!!!" I love the Goonies.😃

  • @neilurwin9670
    @neilurwin9670 3 роки тому

    Another Good Video All The Best.

  • @StephenAndrew777
    @StephenAndrew777 3 роки тому

    Goonies was definitely my favourite movie when I was little. That and pipi long stockings, but I had younger sisters. I couldn't help it.

  • @angelahartley3212
    @angelahartley3212 3 роки тому +3

    Very interesting! Thank you. I noticed on the first closeup headstone that someone named under the deceased was a consort. Do you know what that would imply? Thank you

    • @jerrymeeuwse859
      @jerrymeeuwse859 3 роки тому

      Consort, noun, a wife, husband, or companion. Or an associate.

  • @W.Y.W.H.40
    @W.Y.W.H.40 3 роки тому

    Very interesting video, I had no idea that there were any left at all. Great job and watch out for those witches.

  • @thosg1750
    @thosg1750 3 роки тому +2

    LOL garlic bread...great video interesting history lesson!

  • @rogerrendzak8055
    @rogerrendzak8055 3 роки тому +1

    Yes, but how secure (firm), are these? It looks like you can just lift the cages up, are they attached to the ground?

    • @NeilRoy
      @NeilRoy 3 роки тому +3

      I think he said they went into the ground a ways.

  • @julieinsley7654
    @julieinsley7654 3 роки тому +1

    I found this to be fascinating information tbh 👍

  • @march6693
    @march6693 3 роки тому

    Faces of the Forgotten just did a video on ‘Shattucks Grave Cemetery’ in Belvedere, Illinois, about these covered graves.

  • @nightshadekelly
    @nightshadekelly 3 роки тому

    Some cemeteries have cages over them because of people bodies being super radioactive. (most know is the radium girls) a few were even buried in led coffins

  • @erroleabrown4317
    @erroleabrown4317 3 роки тому +1

    Horrifying that people do such disrespectful things, but honestly the side of the grave would have been just as easy to break into, people never look beyond what they’re told it’s sad and dangerous

  • @vaccumsealed
    @vaccumsealed 3 роки тому

    Chris, you're always my boy with your cubs hat, but you trumped it with the goonies shirt. Heck yeah!

  • @dmmchugh3714
    @dmmchugh3714 3 роки тому +2

    I would think a vampire could get past the cage, considering a vampire has that "undead" thing going on.

  • @davideverdell9145
    @davideverdell9145 3 роки тому

    Really good run down ( from Australia)

  • @cj4688
    @cj4688 3 роки тому +1

    PLEASE go back to making longer 20-30min videos. They were so good.

  • @casselc9
    @casselc9 3 роки тому +18

    Love the goonies, awesome shirt

    • @rogerrendzak8055
      @rogerrendzak8055 3 роки тому +2

      @Ac1dra1ndrops. HEY, YOU GUYYYSSSSSS!!!! Yes, I spotted that too!

    • @gorillaau
      @gorillaau 3 роки тому

      It's still a good watch with a good fun plot line.

  • @andrew141
    @andrew141 3 роки тому

    Great video, hopefully Lamont would do his own video on this subject, it's interesting.

  • @Carolbearce
    @Carolbearce 3 роки тому +1

    Stealing new dead bodies was unfortunately very common. I had to check where you were. Yep, Pennsylvania. I knew there were these cages in this state.

  • @alleycat1117
    @alleycat1117 3 роки тому

    Those cages are in really good condition. Thanks for the video.

  • @TheMonkeyBizzness
    @TheMonkeyBizzness 3 роки тому

    Love the T-shirt!

  • @garygilbert1127
    @garygilbert1127 3 роки тому

    Where I live in Scotland the old graveyards have a small building to house the security guards/night watchmen but some still have caged or more commonly fenced burial plots, I'm not really sure but think the fenced plots were for well off families and as monuments for covenanters who were murdered, im not religious but if you don't know about the covenanters it's worth a read.

  • @sircampbell1249
    @sircampbell1249 Рік тому

    Yes body snatchers and in west when ground was frozen they lay coffin on top until spring when ground was thaw...

  • @penelope-oe2vr
    @penelope-oe2vr 3 роки тому +1

    There's more of these grave cages around the country than just these

  • @大疯狼
    @大疯狼 3 роки тому +2

    I'm pretty sure they are meant to deter grave-robbers: at least *I HOPE*

  • @brendakrieger7000
    @brendakrieger7000 3 роки тому

    Thank you very much🪦🪦

  • @clairexxx7473
    @clairexxx7473 3 роки тому +9

    I loved this, ive always been pretty interested in the history of body snatching. Im from Scotland, living in Australia just now, next time I'm home im gonna go look for some of those caged graves. Although in Edinburgh, Burke and Hare just straight out murdered people to then sell the dead bodies to the doctors for their anatomy lessons,so pretty much cutting out the middle man!🤣🤣 xx

  • @351clevelandmodifiedmotor4
    @351clevelandmodifiedmotor4 3 роки тому

    6:25 nope not for vampires lol,. And even if the cages were for keeping vampires in the ground. They could easily just dig around the cage right? Grave robbers could dig around the cage as well right?

  • @cathysummers7558
    @cathysummers7558 3 роки тому +1

    I heard because Vampire or to protect a body from being stoled. I enjoyed very much.

  • @gatorpics09
    @gatorpics09 3 роки тому +1

    Who built the cages, Joe?

  • @sarafinasegale8726
    @sarafinasegale8726 3 роки тому

    During this time period the stealing of clothes off those who were buried in high end garments was common...They were devised of garment type hangers..Thus to protect the clothes warn by the deceased....

  • @mignondehning2199
    @mignondehning2199 3 роки тому +5

    Graves like that are so awesome, although won't last long here in South Africa - that steel will be cut up and sold within seconds
    p.s. love your channel!

    • @EssenceOfChicagolandAreas
      @EssenceOfChicagolandAreas 3 роки тому +1

      That's hilarious

    • @EssenceOfChicagolandAreas
      @EssenceOfChicagolandAreas 3 роки тому

      I don't think you get a lot of money for that still.

    • @mignondehning2199
      @mignondehning2199 3 роки тому +2

      @@EssenceOfChicagolandAreas here in SA they'll sell anything even for two Rand

    • @EssenceOfChicagolandAreas
      @EssenceOfChicagolandAreas 3 роки тому

      @@mignondehning2199 I had a friend from South Africa a few years ago that was here for work. He told me of all the crazy stuff going on in South africa. People coming to White farm owners homes and causing harm to them

    • @EssenceOfChicagolandAreas
      @EssenceOfChicagolandAreas 3 роки тому +2

      @@mignondehning2199 I would really like to visit South Africa but I think it's pretty dangerous in many areas

  • @josephpadula2283
    @josephpadula2283 3 роки тому

    The metal is probably True Wrought iron.
    That is why it has not rusted.
    What is called wrought iron today is just steel an rusts easily.
    True Wrought iron is no longer made anywhere.
    Well in Williamsburg VA at the historical reenactment site they may make some.
    A company in the uK is a specialist in find it from old projects but it is expensive.
    I think one in US too.

  • @angiewanders7272
    @angiewanders7272 3 роки тому

    That's what I always thought! I've heard a lot of people say that.

  • @tennesseewoodsigns8637
    @tennesseewoodsigns8637 3 роки тому

    4:29 looks like 2 legs standing upper left.

  • @randallbates9020
    @randallbates9020 3 роки тому

    I have been to the actual grave of Mercy Brown in Exeter Rhode Island where it is said that vampire stuff really got busy, I don't know that for sure seeing I wasn't alive before the civil war, lol, but her grave is real and she was dug up by her family and was accused of being the undead. The actually cut out her heart and cooked and ate it if not mistaken, gross. The headstone near it says " I will be watching and waiting. " Everyone from my generation called that place Vampires grave. I have not lived there in a very long time so I don't know of the conditions there any longer I live in Arizona and won't be going back to check. Lol. Thanks for a neat video.

  • @GoodDayforDecay
    @GoodDayforDecay 3 роки тому

    Great video

  • @rorygalusha5549
    @rorygalusha5549 3 роки тому +1

    This reminds me of Burke and Hare.

  • @piratecove9450
    @piratecove9450 2 роки тому

    During those times, grave robbing was not an offence. The body/bodies had to be taken when naked, if taken still wrapped in a shroud it was considered as theft and a death penalty could be imposed.

  • @ronaldsmith6829
    @ronaldsmith6829 3 роки тому

    Yes, grave robbers were a problem for several hundred years. The Universities weren't very picky where they got their cadavers for the interns and students to work and practice on. The story Tale Of Two Cities deals with this in one of its central characters. So yes, people were justified in being concerned about weather they enjoyed their rest, in peace.

  • @gregggoss2210
    @gregggoss2210 3 роки тому

    What happened to the one you posted yesterday?

  • @tooge47
    @tooge47 3 роки тому

    there's one today on the west side of Zachary, LA

  • @351clevelandmodifiedmotor4
    @351clevelandmodifiedmotor4 3 роки тому

    5:50 it won't be for vampires lol. the cages are to keep Grave robbers from taking bodies

  • @mitch_2498
    @mitch_2498 3 роки тому

    i didnt know it was hppned there... i have no idea until i saw ur vid

  • @dfpytwa
    @dfpytwa 3 роки тому

    Some cemeteries have been known to fence off graves of people who were atheists or have committed mortal sins like openly engaging in witchcraft, satanic worship, suicide or particularly horrible crimes to prevent them from being buried on consecrated ground. A lot of those fences ended up being torn down over the years due to landscaping hazards but there were still some around in older graveyards in Indiana back when I was still there in the 80's and working part time for a funeral director. I remember a client of his whom he had a lot of trouble trying to have him buried in a family plot in a church run cemetery due to him committing a murder suicide. They finally allowed it but only if a small concrete wall was poured around his grave high enough to be visible but low enough that they could run a mower over it.

  • @cynthiacronin2794
    @cynthiacronin2794 3 роки тому +1

    Seems like people were creepy way back too.

  • @RobertW6924
    @RobertW6924 2 роки тому

    Nice shirt bro!!👕🧟‍♂️

  • @diegoflores9237
    @diegoflores9237 3 роки тому +1

    Very interesting

  • @lauratibbles6598
    @lauratibbles6598 3 роки тому +1

    This was very interesting

  • @scorpman300
    @scorpman300 3 роки тому

    at that time it was illegal to do any type of medical things to a dead body so grave robbing dead bodies was very wide spread and could make the person a nice pay. so yes grave robbing, vampire, and the fear of people rising from the grave were the main reasons for the cages. they are wide spread across Europe. from the looks of the grave markers on those other graves i would say that they did at one time have a cage over them. also iron worker would put them on their family graves on a more perminit basis.

  • @Rusty_Nickle
    @Rusty_Nickle 3 роки тому

    Definitely restored. They didn't have welders back then. And that isn't a blacksmiths weld at the peaks

  • @thepikachuoftexas3871
    @thepikachuoftexas3871 3 роки тому

    IM EARLY! BEST HISTORY AND ADVENTURE UA-camR EVER

  • @Susieq26754
    @Susieq26754 3 роки тому

    They are there to protect the grave from grave digging. Back in those days people would dig up graves and steal bodies and sell them to universities for experimentation. Also these grave diggers would steal jewelry.

  • @jessicahrutkay8113
    @jessicahrutkay8113 3 роки тому

    I love your shirt!!!

  • @IntrepidFraidyCat
    @IntrepidFraidyCat 3 роки тому +26

    I sort of like the look. It would make a nice trellis for a flowering vine. 🕴🕴🕴 You could have a nice green leafy canopy over you.⚰😜

    • @oldenweery7510
      @oldenweery7510 3 роки тому +3

      Now, that would be pretty. Nice thought!

  • @sandycheeks7865
    @sandycheeks7865 3 роки тому

    4:42 "did you see it?" The nude shadow figure in the graveyard.....

  • @ajlacostewm
    @ajlacostewm 3 роки тому +2

    Caged Graves were used on those they thought were witches, to imprison the soul.

    • @ryanscott2548
      @ryanscott2548 3 роки тому

      If you were thought to be a witch, you not burried in a cemetary but under a thorn patch...!

    • @ryanscott2548
      @ryanscott2548 3 роки тому

      There was a 20yo girl in australia i think a few years ago... and there was an old lady in Canada in the 1960s

  • @wms72
    @wms72 2 роки тому

    Garlic bread! LOL. Subscribed.