
Shocking Finds in the Graveyard
7 videos
Updated 9 months ago
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🎃 "Skull in the Open! Flo, Brittan & Lisa @ the Hormann Mausoleum - FOTF Field Team! (22Oct2024) Faces of the Forgotten
Tales from the GraveyardOriginal YouTube Source Video: https://youtube.com/watch?v=txFsjWgu5ew18 views -
"Killernan Old Burial Grounds, County Clare, Ireland! Coffin & Bones on Display!" (2Nov2024) Grave Visitations
Tales from the Graveyard"Killernan Graveyard, West Clare, Ireland" ☆A Grave Visitations Video☆ ☆YouTube Source Channel: https://youtube.com/@GraveVisitations ☆Original Source Video: https://youtube.com/watch?v=kuzWxls3Ukg&t=1488s ☆Cemetery Info Blog: https://dyingtogetin.com/killernan-graveyard-west-clare-ireland/54 views -
"Can't Believe They Are Open! The Best Compilation!" (15Dec2022) Serenity Sue
Tales from the GraveyardOriginal Video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=dxwYvtUXMGk&t=1165s&pp=ygVBQ2FuJ3QgQmVsaWV2ZSBUaGV5IEFyZSBPcGVuIHwgVGhlIEJlc3QgQ29tcGlsYXRpb24uIFNlcmVuaXR5IFN1ZSA%3D5 views -
"London's Derelict Cemetery with Bones & Coffins on Display" (22June2022) Dead Good Walks
Tales from the GraveyardJoin me for a walk around West Norwood Cemetery - The Greek Enclosure! We'll peek through mausoleum doors and have a look back in time at the late 1800s where time has stood still for for the people who reside in them. I read a news article a year or so ago saying human remains could be seen poking out of coffins, so I'm heading there to see for myself. Opened as the South Metropolitan Cemetery in 1837, West Norwood Cemetery is one of the Magnificent Seven cemeteries of London and is said to hold the finest collection of sepulchral monuments in the capital. There are 65 Grade II Listed monuments in West Norwood Cemetery. The Greek Enclosure is most impressive of all. Original Source Video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=mOnDjg2BF-0&t=632s21 views -
"Exploring Forest Home Cemetery: FINDING HISTORY & BONES!" (3Sep2023) Middle Aged Bald Guy
Tales from the GraveyardContent Creator: "Middle Aged Bald Guy" Today's adventure takes us to Forest Home Cemetery located only several miles west of Chicago. This massive cemetery was once an Indian burial ground and goes back centuries. The first non-Native American was buried here in the 1830's. Of course, with a cemetery this old and this big, you're bound to come across some interesting things and, indeed, I did. I found a very old mausoleum that had been desecrated by grave robbers many decades ago. Unfortunately, they didn't care about the body that was in there and there's skeletal remains scattered about. I also found another mausoleum whose remains can be seen inside a cracked and broken coffin. Plus, the monument to the Haymarket riots, the monument for the International Order of Odd Fellows, and much more. So please join me as we explore Forest Home Cemetery. Original Source Video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ScNml7WhG7A&pp=ygVASSd2ZSBuZXZlciBzZWVuIGEgY2VtZXRlcnkgbGlrZSB0aGlzISBMYWVrZW4gQ2VtZXRlcnkgfCBCcnVzc2Vscw%3D%3D48 views -
"Coffin Exploded In Mausoleum - REMAINS EXPOSED - YOU WON'T BELIEVE IT!" (11Feb2024) GV
Tales from the Graveyard"Grave Visitations" Exploring Mausoleums In this Cemetery When I Came Across This One that had remains exposed and body parts everywhere. A sure sign of exploding coffin syndrome. Original Source Video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=W1WCPWC8STA4 views -
"A Grim find on a Snowy Walk @ Mount Jerome Cemetery: Parts 1&2" (Dec2022) Dead Good Walks
Tales from the GraveyardMount Jerome Cemetery & Crematorium (Irish: Reilig Chnocán Iaróm) is situated in Harold's Cross on the south side of Dublin, Ireland. Since its foundation in 1836, it has witnessed over 300,000 burials. Originally an exclusively Protestant cemetery, Roman Catholics have also been buried there since the 1920s. The name of the cemetery comes from an estate established there by the Reverend Stephen Jerome, who in 1639 was vicar of St. Kevin's Parish. At that time, Harold's Cross was part of St. Kevin's Parish. In the latter half of the 17th century, the land passed into the ownership of the Earl of Meath, who in turn leased plots to prominent Dublin families. A house, Mount Jerome House, was constructed in one of these plots, and leased to John Keogh. In 1834, after an aborted attempt to set up a cemetery in the Phoenix Park, the General Cemetery Company of Dublin bought the Mount Jerome property, "for establishing a general cemetery in the neighbourhood of the city of Dublin". The first official burial happened on the 19th of September 1836. The buried deceased were the infant twins of Matthew Pollock. The cemetery initially started with a landmass of 26 acres and grew to a size of 48 acres in 1874. In 1984, burial numbers were falling, thus the Cemetery was losing revenue and began to deteriorate. A crematorium was needed to regain revenue and deal with plant overgrowth on the estate. The Funerary Chapel in the cemetery was the first Puginian Gothic church in Dublin. It was designed by William Atkins. In 2000, Mount Jerome Cemetery established its own crematorium on the site. Original Source Video: Part1: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=xqC4MP5KjUc&t=240s&pp=ygU9QSBncmltIGZpbmQgb24gYSBzbm93eSB3YWxrIGluIE1vdW50IEplcm9tZSBDZW1ldGVyeSB8IFBhcnQgMg%3D%3D Part2: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=CmVouFMZPNQ&t=853s&pp=ygU9QSBncmltIGZpbmQgb24gYSBzbm93eSB3YWxrIGluIE1vdW50IEplcm9tZSBDZW1ldGVyeSB8IFBhcnQgMg%3D%3D19 views