Yet again a great video. I don't think any of us realise just how much work and time goes into producing a 15 - 20 min video but I for one want to say thank you for doing all of this for us. Each video is like taking a walk with a friend through some pretty amazing places. Just got to say it again Thank you Matt we really appreciate all you do.
I have spent many an hour in cemeteries and graveyards. Each one has a story to tell and can reveal SOO much history! They really provide a free education, some of them local and some of them National
Same. I've been drawn to them ever since I went to Kindergarten right next to an old burying grounds. The fence was right against the playground and I always wanted to wander in - the teachers even tried to make it scary so we wouldn't but I never found fear in it.
Just a thought: maybe the people you see aren't checking on you, maybe some of them are in the cemetery to do something they may not want anyone to see them doing and they drive around waiting for you to leave? I have also heard of people that eat lunch there because it's quiet and peaceful.
In the second mausoleum I saw something I'd never seen before: at the left side of one of the crypt fronts there is a crank or handle still in the round metal piece that looks something like the dial for a padlock or safe. Now I see how that the front of mausoleum crypts can be loosened and opened then tightened into place. I've seen mausoleums before but this is the first time I've seen that device kept in place. --Yesterday I watched a video of people exploring a mausoleum and there was so much profanity in just their casual conversation and apparently that's everyday, normal talk for those people. Thank you, Matt, for not being like them and for showing respect for the dead and for your viewers.
Hi Matt, very large cemetery with an eclectic mixture of gravesites and mausoleums. It seems to be well maintained. I comprehend why mausoleums are usually kept locked. It's for the same reason many houses of worship need to be. Thanks for sharing.
I recently found a little country cemetery the had a stone with a lady born in 1774! Imagine! She was born before the birth of this nation. It's in NW, Ohio. I figure she was possibly a settler. I know around here they were still fighting Indians in those days. The main families name is (believe it or not) Coffin. There's even an old country road around here named, 'Coffin Rd.' Been there many times. It's actually beautiful.
@@billdougan4022 Ironic! I knew this kid, when I was a kid, who's father died in a motorcycle crash. The family name is KILL! Not fooling! The kid grew up to be a mortician and open his own funeral home. "Kill" Mortuary/Funeral Services. How spooky is THAT crap! His business is in Ohio.
Definetly enjoying these cemetery videos. Those masoleums were awesome even though they weren't accessable. A very beautiful and well kept place this time around. Thanks for bringing us these awesome adventures. I look forward to them all. Stay safe.
Beautiful cemetery! Sorry the mausoleums were locked, but I think that is common now. Your photographer did such an awesome job on this one. I might have to watch it again! I agree with someone else who said they were living vicariously through you! Love your videos!!
Beautiful cemetery Matt! Its funny when I visit cemeteries I had people watching me well. I actually had this guy ask me if I needed help...I replied "No thanks just looking"...sounded like I was shopping or something right,🤣🤣 he kinda caught me off guard. Anyways, another great video as always..
Thought you might be interested in a little more information on those in that Mausoleum. I'm in the same state and do this type of exploring and love to find out back stories. The young man buried in the Mausoleum, J Lloyd Brown that died at 25 was killed in the Kingsland train wreck in 1910. The conductor of one of the trains didn't wait at a station for the other to pass causing 2 trains to ram head first into one another. One of the few survivors lived because he couldn't fit in the train and was standing on a back step. When he saw the approaching train he jumped off. 41 lives were lost. The gentleman that lived spoke to the Star and said "There was a splintering crash," Boyd told the paper, "a dull, grinding as wood and iron resolved themselves into a mass of wreckage and mingled themselves with human blood and flesh and bones. . . . There was a period of appalling stillness and then the shrieks and groans of the wounded and dying rose upon the air.". This is why I love visiting these places. Taking notes and looking up history you didn't know even existed. It then took me to Indiana's history of using these interurban trains to bounce between cities before automobiles took off. Thanks for the video and a trip in history!
Hello there I've just discovered your videos, well done from a fellow graveyard nut and mausoleum peeker! Just wondering the first big mausoleum that was locked, would that likely have been owned by one family or was it the original community mausoleum in the graveyard? :)
I like your videos. I constantly have dreams of cemeteries with gothic mausoleums - not very pleasant, but I have no idea why I dream about them. I also dream about old abandoned buildings that apparently my imagination devises completely. Anyway, thanks for posting these, they are fascinating.
Firstly interments for mausoleums, burials for graveyards, the “ green doors are subject to “ Verdigris “ from the Latin for Green as the doors are usually brass or copper
I could not see the name for the circle of headstones. The Dutch used to bury their dead on a mound with the gravestones in a circle around the mound almost like a fort.
Your videos are great. I really enjoyed the video where you were looking for Cinderella‘s grave. I really enjoyed and the quality of your videos. I did subscribe to your channel my questions, thanks for all your work and showing of the old gravestone I’ve always been intrigued by that., thanks again.
I just started watching your channel and not sure if you go all over the country but my family is buried in Mt. Carmel Cemetery in Hillside, Illinois and its filled with mausoleums and very old headstones, plus tons of Chicagoland history. Plus it had a mausoleum for bishops which is all pretty cool to check out. Ohh and before i forget two headstones that have some fun history behind them.. One is the Italian Bride story and the rotating headstone.. Hopefully you check it out.. Let me know..
@@539Productions trust me....you will love it. There is a grave of a little girl...Emogene[?] Winter...she was 3 when she died....her picture on the grave looks like shes watching you walk by....I always stop and say hi. I find the whole place so calm and inviting. There are some SWEET mausoleums there. My favorite is the Raymond one. He was a wholesale grocer back in the day downtown. Also...in the Haymarket area there are some beautiful Historic buildings
They are called "public" and "private" mausoleums, and the vaults are called "crypts". People aren't buried in them, they are "entombed". The act or state of a casket or urn being placed or stored in a vault, tomb, crypt or niche (in a columbarium) is called "interment".
That grave stone Crupy at I:39 seems real close to the road. When new grave is put in here, they rut and damage 200 feet of graves getting to the new concrete vault grave site.
Very enjoyable! The oldest cemetery I've seen is in Shepherdstown WV on land of an old church. A Revolutionary soldier is interred there, along with a few other people from the time and the small place was being tended by a relative of his when I visited. She had to do it because the new owners of the church were letting it go wild. The J. Lloyd Brown in the mausoleum died in a train wreck of a broken neck age 25. There is a great cemetery close to the Guadalupe River State Park in Texas. Many of the graves are young people who died in the 1918 flu epidemic. Many have welded iron markers.
You have to turn those handles on private mausoleums if by some chance they were unlocked solely pulling on the handle would not open it. Unlocking it lets you turn the handle that actually opens the door.
If you get a chance to visit Virginia let me know. I have several cemeteries with family history that are beautiful and of great historical significance.
If you check out a wonderful beautiful grave. Go to sioux falls south dakota. We been rated at one of the most beautiful graveyards with many old old stones very big ones.
they save ground and these are really nice,mid west is so green,lived in Arkansas for 2.5 years Boston mountains, green but just to many bugs and cooperheads
The urns go in what is called a Columbardia. The Large outdoor single and double spaces are call “Community Mausoleums” they are sold to individuals that want above ground interment but can’t afford a private companion mausoleum. There is a nomenclature that explains the names of the mausoleums. These Mausoleums are purchased and maintained by a trust fund that eventually runs out. With some advance research that can be done on the internet. It is very easy to gain entry simply by asking.. I found out bescause I recently purchase a personal Mausoleum, so I did a lot of research prior to spending my money. If you want to learn more make an appointment at a newer cemetery, they would be happy to give you their pitch.... More damage is done by trespassers like yourself that don’t personally know the deceased... Other are so bold or agressive they go as far as even picking locks and sometime breaking glass to get a closer look.. If you paid 200k for a four person stand alone mausoleum would you want a blogger violating you family members rest? Trying doors to see if any are accidentally left unlocked. Im glad mine has security camera that summons the security gaurds to see if my designated family member is making an appropriate visit... As soon as you are on the sidewalk to aprivate Mausoleum...You are Trespassing... Humans have a natural fascination with death and the deceased. And don’t ever bother to try and research the People that have passed on... Your’e a nice guy, stop trespassing and ash for an invitation... Some cemeteries give inside mausoleum tours. Stop trespassing it’s illegal in most states and you could get invited if you just asked.... Let the Dead Rest.
If you don't have no family buried leave that Mausoleum alone and trying to get into their that's is a burial sanctuary do you go up to normal Graves start digging them up no don't try to go into these mausoleums okay the film them but don't try to get into them something really bad could happen like somebody could catch you are there might be a spirit in that mausoleum
You can't even walk around in your own cemetery in broad daylight without somebody following you which is really invading your privacy. I could see if you're doing something wrong like doing drugs or drinking or starting a fire like they do in our cemetery. They need to check up on it in the night too.
If you're crazy about mausoleums you should visit "la recoleta" cemetery in Buenos Aires Argentina, crazy place it is, like a small city full of houses of dead people with incredible architecture and art
Beautiful cemetery. I love cemeteries, and I love making rubbings of grave stones and monuments. Have you ever visited Cave Hill in Louisville, KY? It is in my hometown and was designed by Frederick Law Olmstead who designed New York's Central Park. Cave Hill is very historic. You will find the graves of Colonel Harlan Sanders of Kentucky Fried Chicken fame as well as Muhammad Ali. There are also graves of many Confederate warriors from both sides of the war.
Your not the only person to wonder cemeteries, and most people purposely try not to be noticed in respect of anyone visiting. You never park next to anyone if you can prevent it, nor act like you are observing them. Cemetary etiquette 101.
Thanks Matt for another very interesting video about another the Mysterious Mausoleums at Old Graveyard in the Country grave yards are kind a creepy but I really enjoyed this video. and I can't wait to see your next video and God Bless you and thanks again.
I wish they would put sidewalks in graveyards I always feel uncomfortable trying to walk thru them thinking I'm stomping on top of peoples graves I never know exactly where to walk
Unfortunately that handle was copper and can be worth a few bucks. Copper does that when it mixes with the outside elements it's called verdigris. We live in a sad world where drug addicts have been known to go into cemeteries and steal copper flower vases or anything copper even the plate on top of someones grave.
Matt ck this out. The Chase Family Crypt, Barbados, the Caribean. Thomas Chase was laid to rest in the family crypt in 1831. It haddn't been opened since the death of 2 yr old Mary Ann Chase in 1808. Then the death of Charles Brewster Ames, 11 yrs. old in 1816. Each time the crypt was opened the coffens were found all moved about,,,no shins of breaking into the crypt. It took 8 men to move Thomas Chase's heavey coffen. The vault was checked for secret passages but none were found. Sand was placed on the ground to see if foot prints could be found but no footprints were ever found. No tampering of the seal of the crypt eighter. In 1819 the gov. of Barbados ordered the tomb investigated. ALL the coffens were strewn about all over the place, some standing vertically and another was found up the stairs to the door. No foot prints were seen in the sand. The gov. ordered the coffens to be buried else where & the crypt remains abandoned to this day.
That train whistle in the background evoked a memory in me of the cross-country trips our family would take. This looked to be a better maintained cemetery than the others you have filmed. Also I don’t know why, but the song, “Will The Circle Be Unbroken,” came to mind when I saw those gravestones in a circle around the center one. It’s a very old song I can remember being sung when I was small.
The term is ENTOMBMENT or in a cremation, INURNMENT when in a mausoleum. The "spaces" in which they are laid to rest are known as CRYPTS or NICHES, respectively. Good to know when doing cemetery videos in the future.
This is the first video I've seen by this fellow. However, after checking out a couple more I find the content a bit interesting as I am a adent taphophile, (a person who enjoys spending time in cemeteries). However, If I could forward one very important bit of advice? Would someone PLEASE get the message to this fellow to PLEASE Blow his nose? The nasal, whiney delivery is almost more than one can bear. Thank you and have a superb day!
Yet again a great video. I don't think any of us realise just how much work and time goes into producing a 15 - 20 min video but I for one want to say thank you for doing all of this for us. Each video is like taking a walk with a friend through some pretty amazing places.
Just got to say it again Thank you Matt we really appreciate all you do.
Thank you, Lyn! It can be a lot of work, but worth creating it to share with awesome people like you!
I have spent many an hour in cemeteries and graveyards. Each one has a story to tell and can reveal SOO much history! They really provide a free education, some of them local and some of them National
I could wander thru old cemeteries all day!
Me too, they are all unique. You wonder about the lives of those buried. And old cemeteries, have amazing trees, and vegetation.
@@sharonmullins1957 u understand
Hbbu
I filmed a lot of cemeteries.... even an abandoned one.
Same. I've been drawn to them ever since I went to Kindergarten right next to an old burying grounds. The fence was right against the playground and I always wanted to wander in - the teachers even tried to make it scary so we wouldn't but I never found fear in it.
Just a thought: maybe the people you see aren't checking on you, maybe some of them are in the cemetery to do something they may not want anyone to see them doing and they drive around waiting for you to leave? I have also heard of people that eat lunch there because it's quiet and peaceful.
:)
I've seen several people go jogging in them. I'm one of those people that explorers them and also has eaten several lunches in them as well!
In the second mausoleum I saw something I'd never seen before: at the left side of one of the crypt fronts there is a crank or handle still in the round metal piece that looks something like the dial for a padlock or safe. Now I see how that the front of mausoleum crypts can be loosened and opened then tightened into place. I've seen mausoleums before but this is the first time I've seen that device kept in place. --Yesterday I watched a video of people exploring a mausoleum and there was so much profanity in just their casual conversation and apparently that's everyday, normal talk for those people. Thank you, Matt, for not being like them and for showing respect for the dead and for your viewers.
Nice spot there, very interesting! Thanks so much, Andrew!
I hate it when, people disrespect the dearly departed!!! They even steal from their, resting place. 😥
Matt your site is addictive...years ago....group of us did "rubbings" in ancient Louisiana cemeteries...keep up the GREAT work!
I've done that as well! Headstone rubbing are cool i even framed one have it hanging in my house
Hi Matt, very large cemetery with an eclectic mixture of gravesites and mausoleums. It seems to be well maintained. I comprehend why mausoleums are usually kept locked. It's for the same reason many houses of worship need to be. Thanks for sharing.
I recently found a little country cemetery the had a stone with a lady born in 1774! Imagine! She was born before the birth of this nation. It's in NW, Ohio. I figure she was possibly a settler. I know around here they were still fighting Indians in those days. The main families name is (believe it or not) Coffin. There's even an old country road around here named, 'Coffin Rd.' Been there many times. It's actually beautiful.
Wow!
Wow iam in Ohio but in the north east up near Cleveland I'd like to know where that be a sight to see
I was in East Tennessee about 25 years ago and the calendar on the wall was sponsored by Deadman Funeral home. How ironic.
@@billdougan4022 Ironic! I knew this kid, when I was a kid, who's father died in a motorcycle crash. The family name is KILL! Not fooling! The kid grew up to be a mortician and open his own funeral home. "Kill" Mortuary/Funeral Services. How spooky is THAT crap! His business is in Ohio.
Definetly enjoying these cemetery videos. Those masoleums were awesome even though they weren't accessable. A very beautiful and well kept place this time around. Thanks for bringing us these awesome adventures. I look forward to them all. Stay safe.
Beautiful cemetery! Sorry the mausoleums were locked, but I think that is common now. Your photographer did such an awesome job on this one. I might have to watch it again! I agree with someone else who said they were living vicariously through you! Love your videos!!
Certainly a beautiful Cemetery! Finally!! Thanks so much for sharing Matt!!
That was a really tall memorial marker. I do love the old cemeteries.
Beautiful cemetery...please stay safe ..
The structure at 2:26 is a very cool columbarium. That's your new word of the day. LOL!
Beautiful cemetery Matt! Its funny when I visit cemeteries I had people watching me well. I actually had this guy ask me if I needed help...I replied "No thanks just looking"...sounded like I was shopping or something right,🤣🤣 he kinda caught me off guard. Anyways, another great video as always..
Lol, same with me at times when I film
Made me laugh! We must have same interest.
I love to walk in to cemetery's because it gives me peace. I loved my friend.
A little trivia: the mausoleum-type structures that are designed to hold urns of cremated remains are called columbariums.
Hmmmm? Didn't know that. Thank You
Paul Bishop s?
Columbariums, that makes sense, thanks for sharing Paul Bishop! 👍😄
Thank you
Good work, beautifully maintained. Great adventure! I found my spots! ;-)
Thought you might be interested in a little more information on those in that Mausoleum. I'm in the same state and do this type of exploring and love to find out back stories. The young man buried in the Mausoleum, J Lloyd Brown that died at 25 was killed in the Kingsland train wreck in 1910. The conductor of one of the trains didn't wait at a station for the other to pass causing 2 trains to ram head first into one another. One of the few survivors lived because he couldn't fit in the train and was standing on a back step. When he saw the approaching train he jumped off. 41 lives were lost. The gentleman that lived spoke to the Star and said "There was a splintering crash," Boyd told the paper, "a dull, grinding as wood and iron resolved themselves into a mass of wreckage and mingled themselves with human blood and flesh and bones. . . . There was a period of appalling stillness and then the shrieks and groans of the wounded and dying rose upon the air.".
This is why I love visiting these places. Taking notes and looking up history you didn't know even existed. It then took me to Indiana's history of using these interurban trains to bounce between cities before automobiles took off. Thanks for the video and a trip in history!
Nick, I believe his son - Frank Brown was on the train with him and was killed too... Not sure how old Frank was.
Well now thats a history lesson behind a name!
Beautiful cemetary.thanks Matt for sharing. Stay safe.
Hello there I've just discovered your videos, well done from a fellow graveyard nut and mausoleum peeker! Just wondering the first big mausoleum that was locked, would that likely have been owned by one family or was it the original community mausoleum in the graveyard? :)
Hey Elaine M :)
This cemetery was really nice. Great vlog, Matt. 👍❤
Good work dude. I live in Toledo and really enjoyed tour of Woodlawn cemetery.
Good video! Yes, I like to see the pictures of the interned. Just adds to the history and the ability to celebrate who they were.
Thank you Matt. Wonderful cemetery and very well taken care of. ❤️ the music.
I like your videos. I constantly have dreams of cemeteries with gothic mausoleums - not very pleasant, but I have no idea why I dream about them. I also dream about old abandoned buildings that apparently my imagination devises completely. Anyway, thanks for posting these, they are fascinating.
Those sound like some crazy dreams! Mine can get kinda strange too!
Wow, sounds creepy! :)
tanks for filming so well. i get motion sickness from so many of these vids I cant watch them long, never has happened on your channel. TY
Happy to hear it! Thanks so much!
Amazing video. Thank you for doing what you do.
Firstly interments for mausoleums, burials for graveyards, the “ green doors are subject to “ Verdigris “ from the Latin for Green as the doors are usually brass or copper
Beautiful. I love cemeteries
I could not see the name for the circle of headstones. The Dutch used to bury their dead on a mound with the gravestones in a circle around the mound almost like a fort.
What a beautiful place! Stay safe😉
7:32, The symbol is the Order of United American Mechanics, number is lodge number. Some similarities to Free Masons.
Enjoyed the explore!
:)
Your videos are great. I really enjoyed the video where you were looking for Cinderella‘s grave. I really enjoyed and the quality of your videos. I did subscribe to your channel my questions, thanks for all your work and showing of the old gravestone I’ve always been intrigued by that., thanks again.
Thank you!!
I just started watching your channel and not sure if you go all over the country but my family is buried in Mt. Carmel Cemetery in Hillside, Illinois and its filled with mausoleums and very old headstones, plus tons of Chicagoland history. Plus it had a mausoleum for bishops which is all pretty cool to check out. Ohh and before i forget two headstones that have some fun history behind them.. One is the Italian Bride story and the rotating headstone.. Hopefully you check it out.. Let me know..
Hi Matt just found this one ! Brilliant......Hi from Ireland
Nice cemetery. If you ever get to Nebraska...you gotta check out Wyuka Cemetery in Lincoln. SEVERAL famous headstones.... beautiful as well....
Thanks! I stayed the night in Lincoln not to long ago, I'll check it out next time!
@@539Productions trust me....you will love it. There is a grave of a little girl...Emogene[?] Winter...she was 3 when she died....her picture on the grave looks like shes watching you walk by....I always stop and say hi. I find the whole place so calm and inviting. There are some SWEET mausoleums there. My favorite is the Raymond one. He was a wholesale grocer back in the day downtown. Also...in the Haymarket area there are some beautiful Historic buildings
Why don't you say where these places are? Where is this?
I was going to ask the same question....
I always say what city and/or state. :)
100 hundred times agree. People in the surrounding areas or visiting may want to see them. Go back and tell us where theses are.
Fairview cemetery IN.
All u do is go to grave locator web sites with. Ame from stone it tell u exactly where he is
Very interesting cemetery. Always surprises me how elaborate or large some of the older stones are. Keep Safe ❤Keep Well ❤
Do you ever get to Indiana or Ashland Ky some very interesting grave markers
They are called "public" and "private" mausoleums, and the vaults are called "crypts". People aren't buried in them, they are "entombed". The act or state of a casket or urn being placed or stored in a vault, tomb, crypt or niche (in a columbarium) is called "interment".
That grave stone Crupy at I:39 seems real close to the road. When new grave is put in here, they rut and damage 200 feet of graves getting to the new concrete vault grave site.
Very enjoyable! The oldest cemetery I've seen is in Shepherdstown WV on land of an old church. A Revolutionary soldier is interred there, along with a few other people from the time and the small place was being tended by a relative of his when I visited. She had to do it because the new owners of the church were letting it go wild. The J. Lloyd Brown in the mausoleum died in a train wreck of a broken neck age 25. There is a great cemetery close to the Guadalupe River State Park in Texas. Many of the graves are young people who died in the 1918 flu epidemic. Many have welded iron markers.
I am intrigue withabove and below our earth. Bless all.❤
Awesome place awesome job Matt
Dang I’m on duty at the hospital the next 3 days ,,,I’ll get caught up on Saturday with your channel
You have to turn those handles on private mausoleums if by some chance they were unlocked solely pulling on the handle would not open it. Unlocking it lets you turn the handle that actually opens the door.
Beautiful green country.
Again beautiful
Strange last names on some of those grave markers!!!!! Very well taken care of.
I really enjoy your vlogs, keep up the good work
Great video !
In the family area it was standard practice to use foot markers versus head stones. It appears to be foot stones.
If you get a chance to visit Virginia let me know. I have several cemeteries with family history that are beautiful and of great historical significance.
very cool video ! fear the living not the dead !
I loved that former mausoleum with the pictures that was my very favorite video ,,it was amazing and made it more personal
Great video's
If you check out a wonderful beautiful grave. Go to sioux falls south dakota. We been rated at one of the most beautiful graveyards with many old old stones very big ones.
they save ground and these are really nice,mid west is so green,lived in Arkansas for 2.5 years Boston mountains, green but just to many bugs and cooperheads
The urns go in what is called a Columbardia. The Large outdoor single and double spaces are call “Community Mausoleums” they are sold to individuals that want above ground interment but can’t afford a private companion mausoleum. There is a nomenclature that explains the names of the mausoleums. These Mausoleums are purchased and maintained by a trust fund that eventually runs out. With some advance research that can be done on the internet. It is very easy to gain entry simply by asking.. I found out bescause I recently purchase a personal Mausoleum, so I did a lot of research prior to spending my money. If you want to learn more make an appointment at a newer cemetery, they would be happy to give you their pitch.... More damage is done by trespassers like yourself that don’t personally know the deceased... Other are so bold or agressive they go as far as even picking locks and sometime breaking glass to get a closer look.. If you paid 200k for a four person stand alone mausoleum would you want a blogger violating you family members rest? Trying doors to see if any are accidentally left unlocked. Im glad mine has security camera that summons the security gaurds to see if my designated family member is making an appropriate visit... As soon as you are on the sidewalk to aprivate Mausoleum...You are Trespassing... Humans have a natural fascination with death and the deceased. And don’t ever bother to try and research the People that have passed on... Your’e a nice guy, stop trespassing and ash for an invitation... Some cemeteries give inside mausoleum tours. Stop trespassing it’s illegal in most states and you could get invited if you just asked.... Let the Dead Rest.
Be careful sometimes those watchers and followers may seal you into one of those tombs. Happened to a friend of mine.
If you don't have no family buried leave that Mausoleum alone and trying to get into their that's is a burial sanctuary do you go up to normal Graves start digging them up no don't try to go into these mausoleums okay the film them but don't try to get into them something really bad could happen like somebody could catch you are there might be a spirit in that mausoleum
What’s the history associated with craven ? Can I look it up ?
The movies!
You can't even walk around in your own cemetery in broad daylight without somebody following you which is really invading your privacy. I could see if you're doing something wrong like doing drugs or drinking or starting a fire like they do in our cemetery. They need to check up on it in the night too.
there is an even older cemitary on the other side of bluffton. its called the old bluffton cemitary. i think the newest grave is from the 30s
If you're crazy about mausoleums you should visit "la recoleta" cemetery in Buenos Aires Argentina, crazy place it is, like a small city full of houses of dead people with incredible architecture and art
Always wanted to visit Argentina!
Love it ty..amazing
Would like to know where your at or state.
Beautiful cemetery. I love cemeteries, and I love making rubbings of grave stones and monuments.
Have you ever visited Cave Hill in Louisville, KY? It is in my hometown and was designed by Frederick Law Olmstead who designed New York's Central Park.
Cave Hill is very historic. You will find the graves of Colonel Harlan Sanders of Kentucky Fried Chicken fame as well as Muhammad Ali. There are also graves of many Confederate warriors from both sides of the war.
Donna Noe rubbing s damage gravestones just so you know
Hi Matt, were you okay as you seemed out of breath, had you been running off camera lol. Stay safe. x
The mic is a little bit strange on this camera and can amplify the breathing sounds sometimes. It's weird lol
Lol okay, as long as you're okay - that's what counts ;). x
Your not the only person to wonder cemeteries, and most people purposely try not to be noticed in respect of anyone visiting. You never park next to anyone if you can prevent it, nor act like you are observing them. Cemetary etiquette 101.
Ótimo vídeo.
Always interesting 👍👍👍
This place is beautiful
I love grave every time I see it
Need to come to New Orleans and do some wandering.
I liked it friend
Do you ever meter how many miles your walk, on a adventure.
I've done some vague calculations but I don't actively measure. It would be interesting to know though!
Just love these❤️❤️💋
Epic!👍🙋🕊️🧙🧚
Thanks Matt for another very interesting video about another the Mysterious Mausoleums at Old Graveyard in the Country grave yards are kind a creepy but I really enjoyed this video. and I can't wait to see your next video and God Bless you and thanks again.
I wish they would put sidewalks in graveyards I always feel uncomfortable trying to walk thru them thinking I'm stomping on top of peoples graves I never know exactly where to walk
Thanks
Unfortunately that handle was copper and can be worth a few bucks. Copper does that when it mixes with the outside elements it's called verdigris. We live in a sad world where drug addicts have been known to go into cemeteries and steal copper flower vases or anything copper even the plate on top of someones grave.
The soil of the Brown mausoleum has already started washing away. Won't be long until that thing falls slap apart.
Matt ck this out. The Chase Family Crypt, Barbados, the Caribean. Thomas Chase was laid to rest in the family crypt in 1831. It haddn't been opened since the death of 2 yr old Mary Ann Chase in 1808.
Then the death of Charles Brewster Ames, 11 yrs. old in 1816.
Each time the crypt was opened the coffens were found all moved about,,,no shins of breaking into the crypt.
It took 8 men to move Thomas Chase's heavey coffen. The vault was checked for secret passages but none were found.
Sand was placed on the ground to see if foot prints could be found but no footprints were ever found. No tampering of the seal of the crypt eighter.
In 1819 the gov. of Barbados ordered the tomb investigated.
ALL the coffens were strewn about all over the place, some standing vertically and another was found up the stairs to the door. No foot prints were seen in the sand.
The gov. ordered the coffens to be buried else where & the crypt remains abandoned to this day.
That train whistle in the background evoked a memory in me of the cross-country trips our family would take. This looked to be a better maintained cemetery than the others you have filmed. Also I don’t know why, but the song, “Will The Circle Be Unbroken,” came to mind when I saw those gravestones in a circle around the center one. It’s a very old song I can remember being sung when I was small.
....that song also came to mind too when I saw that big headstone..
What's the significance of 539?
Green burial, biocremation or traditional cremation are the way to go. 😎
The term is ENTOMBMENT or in a cremation, INURNMENT when in a mausoleum. The "spaces" in which they are laid to rest are known as CRYPTS or NICHES, respectively. Good to know when doing cemetery videos in the future.
I believe the term for the outside structure with small niches for ashes, is Columbarium.
HELP ME!! HOW DO YOU CLEAN TOOMBSTONES?? I KNOW U NEVER USE CLOROX!! WHAT DO U USE? THANK YOU IN ADVANCE! IT'S GRANITE!!!
Search for headstone restoration products, there are businesses that specialize in the sale and use.
Please respect folks requests and keep their space in their graves. Please do not vandalize graves.
4:02 why are U upset about locks? Stay out, plz.
btw, it is extremely rude to walk on graves
YOU I WANT TO HEAR YOU YAPPER ON OR READ THE STONES ,,,,,,READ THE STONES
I thought he would know more about burials then he seems to. He doesn't know what single and multiple columbarium is.
This is the first video I've seen by this fellow. However, after checking out a couple more I find the content a bit interesting as I am a adent taphophile, (a person who enjoys spending time in cemeteries). However, If I could forward one very important bit of advice? Would someone PLEASE get the message to this fellow to PLEASE Blow his nose? The nasal, whiney delivery is almost more than one can bear. Thank you and have a superb day!
It's probably just a guy smoking a joint on his lunch break
Welcome 123 THE LIGHT
BLUFFTON fairview!!