Sad? It's reality. Humanity has existed for hundreds of thousands of years. It is literally impossible to look after every single person, in perpetuity. Communities die, cultures die, entire peoples die. Cemeteries are no exception to the passage of time. Archeologists make a living rediscovering these cultures and peoples. This isn't "sad", it's the natural process.
I love abandoned graveyards. They are beautiful and peaceful reminders of transience. We all get forgotten at some point. Only death makes life with living.
@@SkunkApe407Can you explain to me why murder is bad? I mean, animals kill each other in the wild all the time. And after all we’re just another animal right? So it shouldn’t be wrong for a person to kill another because after all, that’s just nature taking its course. Maybe the reason is actually because we’re not animals and we were created in the image of god. You will be judge for your awful treatment of people and the dead while you were on this earth if you believe in god or not. You’re headed for eternity in hell.
@@ShooterOnTheLedge we are 96% genetically identical to chimpanzees. If you think we're anything other than apes, you're an uneducated fool, and I want to sell you things.
You do realize that this is what has always happened to human remains, right? How else do you explain literally every archaeological find? People die and wind up forgotten. It's called reality.
@@MichelleJune67 the Great Pyramids of Giza and nearly every tomb in the Valley of the Kings was raided by grave robbers. Why would the graves of common folk be any different? Do the dead really need those trinkets any more than the living do? Is it better that a beggar starve, so that a corpse may molder in peace? I find it shameful that people revere the dead more than they care for the living.
Old graveyards are fascinating but sad in neglect. I wish people realized how much history is often in them. I've visited graves of some interesting and sometimes notable folks.
@@SkunkApe407 Ha!! So true. 164 years is but a blink in time when you really think about it. The real tragedy is the final resting place of these people has been left to be reclaimed by nature, in a seemingly prosperous community, in such a short amount of time.
@@Ockenblock77 if you look at history, the number of cultures that have risen and fallen, in the matter of a generation or two, is absolutely mind boggling. Chances are, the prosperous community nearby to this cemetery probably has very little, if any cultural relation to those buried within. Most of those folks probably don't have any relatives buried there. Not much reason to think about dead people you never knew.
This is not the exception, it's the rule. It's sad, but they're gone and we will all eventually be forgotten. Kudos to those that "rescue" and maintain these cemeteries.
I’m curious if you tend the graves of your relatives that are 100-200 years old? Families die out and no one is left. It’s a fact. Yes, it’s sad. All that’s left in the cemetery is their bones. Our soul or energy has moved on to a better place.
Yeah, it's a good thing the government takes care of our graveyards where I'm from because I'm not going to "maintain" a grave that's over 100 years old of some person I have no connection with except bloodline. They're dead, gone, it's over etc. Most graves are exhumed after the 30 year lease is up anyway. Nothing left but some fragments of a femur etc.
@@donnaboisen6003Not the point, we NY state as well as the local government can set aside funds to keep and maintain these burial sites. We got money for illegal aliens we have money to respect our own final resting places.
I don't think there are relatives who knows anything about these graves anymore and even if there are, they're just few who don't care about that because it's been over 100 years
Let's level set. Always informative, interactive, and intriguing. Mobile Instinct is the master of his craft and we are all blessed to be able to enjoy his work. Thank you so much. Stay safe and be well.
I can't believe people are happily buying condos there and don't give a shit about that graves and history and people who are buried there and possible creepiness about the crypts.
As a historian, I find this very sad. This is the only record that people have to find their long lost ancestors. These places need to be preserved for people who came after. Yes, now people opt for cremation, but please be sure to have your death recorded for people who come after you so they can look you up. It is crucial for people to be able to know where they come from, what their stories are and what their lives were like. I’m so thankful there are databases such as Ancestry. It gives a much needed reference for information. Great video as always!❤
I've only been into genealogy the last 10 years or so. My first thought was ancestry when I first saw this video. I think the best thing anybody could do right now is to document what headstones are left as best they can for findagrave as well as the other various genealogical databases.
These grave yards have long been abandoned. With no recent burials, there's no money for upkeep. Peoples families die off. There's really no one to look after the area
Here in STATEN ISLAND NY same thing ! There have been people who have volunteered to rescue these abandoned cemeteries. You do fantastic work, I wish I could accompany you. Excellent erudite videos!
Chris I've watched every one of your videos since you began. You never disappoint. Is why I renew my Patreon every year. Thanks for keeping us informed and entertained
My 1st Chris video was the Girl Scout Murders Camp yrs ago & took notice right away just how calm/soothing it was to listen to him been here ever since.
I just found your channel a couple of days ago and I like the way you present. It feels like I'm exploring with you and I like the ambience you include. Thanks for doing this!
A lot of times in these old graveyard those mausoleum looking things are actually the old town morgue in the winter months before refrigeration. They would have to wait until the bodies thaws to prep them for burial.
Those open vaults might have been relocated. Also as coffins decompose over time, the plot will fall in somewhat. I used to work at a funeral home that a friend used to own till her passing. It is sad to see a cemetery in such bad condition considering what many families paid for the plots, vaults etc....as for me, I plan on just being a shake & bake...much cheaper.
For the illegible gravestones, try doing rubbings -- lay tissue paper over the markings & rub over the paper with charcoal or graphite (should be cheap at any decent art supply store). Rubbings will usually bring out the carvings fairly clearly.
When I was in junior high school there was a cemetery that was right next to our school that we frequently would go over and have lunch in until I started working in the cafeteria. The oldest part of the cemetery was right up against our fence which was easy to walk around and then the fence that was separating the funeral home itself from the little Trail which is now a paved trail was probably only half as old as a cemetery which was easily a hundred years old at the time and that was 50 years ago
Everything goes in cycles and circles. You are conceived and are made of materials your mother consumed. You are born into the world and consume and grow and become more of what is consumed. You live, you die, and your body returns to the ground from which it ultimately came. Plants, animals, bugs, and such come along and make use of your leftover materials. They live and die and are returned to nature. Eventually, your body becomes a part of nature again, where pieces of what was once you will find its way into other life. Birth comes from death, and death comes from birth. Whenever it's my time to go, I want my body to be donated to plants to feed them ad help them grow. I want to become part of the trees and plants and maybe someday end up supporting other life.
This is the inscription on the one you couldn't read with the bust of George on it.( In Memoriam George W. ray D.D. Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of (?) of the State of New York and W.M. of Excelsior Lodge No. 195 who died at sea April 15th 1866 aged 40 Years)
It's very beautiful. Nice to see people are trying to hopefully keep it from completely growing over. It seems creepy but I think it could be a nice place to take a quiet walk
Thanks for posting this and bringing awareness to this problem. I have ancestors buried in a very small cemetery called Castle Cemetery (Newburgh, Indiana). Castle Cemetery is neglected too. I live far away from southern Indiana which is the location of Castle Cemetery and I don’t know what can be done to respect the cemetery and the Castles who were residents of Indiana in the early 1800s.
I love exploring old cemeteries. Once at an old farm in North Carolina there was a small cluster of old trees with maybe 15 or 20 graves of confederate soldiers. All had been dug up and according to the people at the farm, it was a soybean farm, the belt buckles, caps etc stolen. There were pieces of wooden coffins and bones all around. One gravestone read something like “Pvt Jones, 103rd Tennessee Volunteers killed at Antietam”. I was really tempted to take it but finally listened to my brain and thought really bad karma for the rest of your life. This was before cell phones so I didn’t get any photos.
I lived next to a cemetery for 2 years! They were the best,quiet neighbors. The dead can’t hurt you,it’s the living you have to be careful of!! Looks like it’s been completely vandalized. Very sad. There’s no more bodies in those graves. The wooden coffins and the bodies have disintegrated long ago,and gone back to the soil.
i saw in another video about cemeteries where if you take a flashlight, even in daylight, and shine it at a angle close to the grave stone the shadow from the light makes its easier to read writing on tombstones FYI.
All my family are in the same cemetery. This cemetery backs up to a fence where houses are and people live. I don't think I could have one in my backyard! I plan on being cremated to be with my husband.
I was recently in Portugal. There is a cemetery in Lisbon that dates back to the earthquake in the early 1700s. The ground there is solid rock and its not practical to dig 6ft to bury someone. so, the thousands of graves are all above geound and the tombs are all in various states of care with a lot of them being destroyed with skeletons falling out of them. Bones everywhere. young and old. ...The only part i found disturbing were the very small bones falling out of very small caskets. .....amazing site and history there for sure.
I’d personally take the cracked concrete plaques home, stick them together and engulf them in resin, with a bolt anchor running into the resin so it can be attached to the remains of the structure. The bolt would not touch the plaque itself incase of forces.
Went to abandoned mount moriah in Philadelphia years back. It’s a huge cemetery and at the time it was almost entirely overgrown and in many cases vandalized. They’ve since been cleaning it up but it was in pretty bad shape. I remember a tomb being cracked open from the 1800s and seeing the skeleton laying there. I went back a few years later and it was totally gone. Another cool thing about that cemetery was all the old garden roses that people planted at the gravesites in Victorian times. Those roses became massive overgrown bushes. They were literally everywhere. I suspect many of them would have been rare varieties and no longer seen today. Really interesting place.
Creamation is my family’s go to. My husband’s ashes are in a beautiful clock and when I pass I will be put in with him. This way it can be passed down to future generations. Or if the kids want to they can spread our ashes somewhere. I never have wanted to be buried and forgotten.
I had a house that abutted a city cemetery. It was a newer one put in as residents expanded outward, in New Bedford, to be exact. Pine Grove Cemetery. Never felt creeped out by it, nor did my two boys. It was a place of peacefulness, full of birdsong and busy squirrels. I do like looking at old cemeteries. They're full of history.
It does seem so odd to have the houses right there. Granted, I love cemeteries, and wouldn't mind the view at all. I would probably try to upkeep some of the area in my spare time.
3:58 George W. Ray d. 16 April 1866, age 40 Apparently he was a Grand Master of the Free and Accepted Masons (based on what little I could read, and the Masonic symbol on the upper portion of the headstone).
We grew up in a neighborhood of 25 houses built around an old Gimbel estate. There were two old cemeteries dating back to the 1800’s. One was right in a friends backyard. They didn’t seem to mind. It was set far enough back from their patio. At least no one could ever build behind them. 👻
where are these 'disturbing remains'? man, i hate click-bait and i never fail to give a thumbs down when i get suckered into it, and this is no different. you didn't have to get a thumbs down, but you titled it what you did so you earned it.
Most interesting. Grim as it is, the remains of these graves such as they are, constitute a more concrete memorial of their occupants than the millions lost at sea or dumped into mass burial trenches during war and epidemic, with no record of who they were.
Thats a very interesting fact about William Few. I live just outside of Augusta Georgia, where his body is now buried. There are roads and other things with his name on them around here.
There’s something beautiful about a cemetery being reclaimed by nature. We like to think we bury our loved ones and they’ll be there forever, but nothing lasts forever. Our bodies are to return to dust as surely as we came from it, and even our stone and steel eventually crumbles. It’s a perfect allegory for the futility of all our vast ambitions.
Does the City of Beacon or the community at large have nothing left over for their past citizens? What do the neighbours think, living in those townhouses? Looks more like human vandalism, than animals running away with bones… 😡 So sad. Respect the dead. RIP (Time for a good clean up.)
Ever hear of the Poltergeist curse as in what happened to many of the people involved with that movie? I would be scared shitless to mess around with someones remains I bet many who have vandalized or stolen bones have had less than pleasant lives almost like good luck just keeps fleeing from them.
When you walk thru an old cemetery, speak the names of the dead aloud. They are then "Remembered". Most names have not been spoken aloud for years, decades, even centuries.
It is amazing how often cemeteries are moved. I was at a meeting about the train tracks in my city and the plans to make it a quiet zone. I saw a photo of the crossing from the 1900s and there was a cemetery where now a 3 family house sits. I kept looking at the photo and I was like, where is that cemetery ??!!! They said they moved it in the early 1900s and built a couple houses where the cemetery was. Except no one had any information on where the remains went. I really think they just took the stones and left the bodies and built on top of it. I really do The church was actually right across the street and still is there today and has been the town library since the fifties maybe further back than that So that church and the other church on the other side of the street and the cemetery for both of those that took up a city block were sold to the city and I spent a good amount of time trying to find where they moved the graves and I talked with the Catholic church and they had no records of that cemetery and no records of anybody that was buried there despite it being the primary cemetery for the city from when it started There was another cemetery in the city across the river and I know for a fact that they built a house right on top of where the cemetery used to be and when they were digging in the basement they hit the gravestones and the bodies It just is mindblowing that the people are forgotten and no one cares about the remains just the property because it becomes valuable In the New York metro area the cemeteries are completely full and it is a big business paying families to have their relatives remains dug up and cremated in order to get that burial plot to sell for a new burial.
It's heartbreaking really because all people want to do is build houses and play grounds I think some of these people don't think of the history and what they are doing, they don't really care, it's all about money. And it's heartless. 😟.
That's why I believe the most practical thing is leaving a will specifying one's desires to be cremated. Who do we think we are to ask those who come after us to look after a tombstone (which is none of what we were in life) for more than a few years? I have lost track of relatives gone around 30 years ago and whatever they may have left lives in my memory, not in some forgotten unkempt place seldom visited.
The people in those condos ought to adopt that cemetery and get together to clean it up, reset headstones and remove all of the debris. It would be a nice community project for them.
We have a super old cemetery where I live. It has been vandalized for so many years that most of the head stones have been lost. It is one of if not the oldest cemetery in that county. There are no records to use to try and restore it.
I’m sorry. I had to comment. I’m a serial urban explorer. I love decay, ruins, history. I also love to use the word I. But I must admit, this channel is awesome!
We used to walk past a stand of trees on the way to our shooting spot. Pretty thick undergrowth. Never checked it out. Once, by coincidence, I flew over this spot at about 6,000 ft. Noticed that tree stand was perfectly circular. Went back and found a family cemetery with the circular stacked limestone wall gone, except for some of the foundation. Only two tombstones were upright. We uprighted the others that we saw and secured them. Only a few were decipherable. This family occupied the area from late 18th to very early 20th century as far as we could tell. We reported it to the the University. The lady said thanks and hung up.
Man, imagine that creepy joint at night! Gadzooks. The cemetery that my Father is buried at looked a mess last time I was there, which was many years ago, I need to go back there, it’s in a not too nice part of the city, a hood. I ain’t scared, haha. Nice work!
I am also , no funeral or any service, I have told my friends and family if you want to give me something give it to me while I am alive, so we can share the enjoyment 😊 ❤
It’s criminal that the local town let it get this bad. I grew up next to a cemetery like this in Maine with tombstones going back to the late 1700s. That cemetery is kept in order by the city.
I've never really understood why people have a difficult time with cemeteries it's not like the people are going to come up out of the ground and come after you if they could get out of the box they still have to dig up 6 ft of dirt and if they're able to do all that they're going to get you wherever you are.
@@seren4740 So true. In fact, on many old headstones from that era contain an epitaph “As you are now, so once was I. As I am now, so you must be …”. That always gave me chills! I'm sure this cemetery contains this epitaph several times, but time and acid rain has left the stones unreadable.
We had a long neglected cemetary in Southern Illinois. It was fascinating. I was a kid then, maybe 45 years ago, and would just explore this stuff. Thinking of the cycle of life and death, while I was where deceased bodies were. The tombstones, if you could read them (erosion and age) told their own stories. It was creepy, silent, and captivating, all at the same time. Ghosts and spirits coming out at night? That kind of thing. Hey, I was only like 12 then. Interesting was some of the graves were the "six foot under" thing. The others were these stone or concrete above-ground box things, which contained the coffin. One site like that had the lid partially removed, like from a grave robber or vandal. I did peek inside. Nothing, just full of grass and weeds. Was there a body there?? Whoa...
That's so sad to see historical cemeteries not being taken care of. Awesome editing as well as the video Chris.
Sad? It's reality. Humanity has existed for hundreds of thousands of years. It is literally impossible to look after every single person, in perpetuity. Communities die, cultures die, entire peoples die. Cemeteries are no exception to the passage of time. Archeologists make a living rediscovering these cultures and peoples. This isn't "sad", it's the natural process.
I love abandoned graveyards. They are beautiful and peaceful reminders of transience. We all get forgotten at some point. Only death makes life with living.
@@SkunkApe407Can you explain to me why murder is bad? I mean, animals kill each other in the wild all the time. And after all we’re just another animal right? So it shouldn’t be wrong for a person to kill another because after all, that’s just nature taking its course. Maybe the reason is actually because we’re not animals and we were created in the image of god. You will be judge for your awful treatment of people and the dead while you were on this earth if you believe in god or not. You’re headed for eternity in hell.
@@ShooterOnTheLedge we are 96% genetically identical to chimpanzees. If you think we're anything other than apes, you're an uneducated fool, and I want to sell you things.
@@ShooterOnTheLedge Judge not, lest ye be judged likewise, according to thine own measure.
I saw a video on this a few years ago.. so disturbing how bones are left exposed and no one cares..human decency has gone out the window.. so sad!
You do realize that this is what has always happened to human remains, right? How else do you explain literally every archaeological find? People die and wind up forgotten. It's called reality.
@@SkunkApe407 I understand natural decay happen but these tombs were 100% broken into. That is what is shameful.
@@MichelleJune67 the Great Pyramids of Giza and nearly every tomb in the Valley of the Kings was raided by grave robbers. Why would the graves of common folk be any different? Do the dead really need those trinkets any more than the living do? Is it better that a beggar starve, so that a corpse may molder in peace? I find it shameful that people revere the dead more than they care for the living.
@@SkunkApe407Soy take, the looters will piss on your grave.
Nothing is Taboo anymore
Love walking thru cemeteries, wondering what they all did for a living.
Used to be a load of factories in Beacon
Old graveyards are fascinating but sad in neglect. I wish people realized how much history is often in them. I've visited graves of some interesting and sometimes notable folks.
There is a Patton couple buried by Catawba River in S.C in a very old cemetery. Their death dates are in the 1780's.
It's about showing the dead respect.
Dead is dead. People forget about those who die. The best that can happen to you after death is slow decomposing.
That’s kinda weird
Why doesn’t that church take care of the cemetery. At least remove the trees. Their will be lots of sink holes.
We will always support this channel. The content on here are the best of quality.
The cemetery time forgot. Thanks for sharing. Keep up the good work my friend.
You realize that archaeology is literally based on forgotten burial sites, right?
@@SkunkApe407 Ha!! So true. 164 years is but a blink in time when you really think about it. The real tragedy is the final resting place of these people has been left to be reclaimed by nature, in a seemingly prosperous community, in such a short amount of time.
@@Ockenblock77 if you look at history, the number of cultures that have risen and fallen, in the matter of a generation or two, is absolutely mind boggling. Chances are, the prosperous community nearby to this cemetery probably has very little, if any cultural relation to those buried within. Most of those folks probably don't have any relatives buried there. Not much reason to think about dead people you never knew.
This is not the exception, it's the rule. It's sad, but they're gone and we will all eventually be forgotten. Kudos to those that "rescue" and maintain these cemeteries.
All we are is dust in the wind...
I think it's poetic to see trees growing from the graves. It's like the occupant was reborn as a tree.
And once, those folks were just like we are now. It's sad how easily we seem to be able to forget our past relatives.
I’m curious if you tend the graves of your relatives that are 100-200 years old? Families die out and no one is left. It’s a fact. Yes, it’s sad. All that’s left in the cemetery is their bones. Our soul or energy has moved on to a better place.
Yeah, it's a good thing the government takes care of our graveyards where I'm from because I'm not going to "maintain" a grave that's over 100 years old of some person I have no connection with except bloodline. They're dead, gone, it's over etc. Most graves are exhumed after the 30 year lease is up anyway. Nothing left but some fragments of a femur etc.
@@donnaboisen6003Not the point, we NY state as well as the local government can set aside funds to keep and maintain these burial sites. We got money for illegal aliens we have money to respect our own final resting places.
I don't think there are relatives who knows anything about these graves anymore and even if there are, they're just few who don't care about that because it's been over 100 years
I love old cemeteries. I'd like to live near one. But it's very sad to see a small part of history destroyed.
Ooww
Let's level set. Always informative, interactive, and intriguing. Mobile Instinct is the master of his craft and we are all blessed to be able to enjoy his work. Thank you so much. Stay safe and be well.
I can't believe people are happily buying condos there and don't give a shit about that graves and history and people who are buried there and possible creepiness about the crypts.
As a historian, I find this very sad. This is the only record that people have to find their long lost ancestors. These places need to be preserved for people who came after. Yes, now people opt for cremation, but please be sure to have your death recorded for people who come after you so they can look you up. It is crucial for people to be able to know where they come from, what their stories are and what their lives were like. I’m so thankful there are databases such as Ancestry. It gives a much needed reference for information. Great video as always!❤
As a historian, how do you and other historians account for the lost records of who is buried here? It wasn’t that long ago. Just wondering.
@@realcecewilsonIt’s the responsibility of the cemetery managers to keep records of who all is buried in a cemetery.
I've only been into genealogy the last 10 years or so. My first thought was ancestry when I first saw this video. I think the best thing anybody could do right now is to document what headstones are left as best they can for findagrave as well as the other various genealogical databases.
These grave yards have long been abandoned. With no recent burials, there's no money for upkeep.
Peoples families die off. There's really no one to look after the area
Sad to see nobody takes care of these forgotten beautiful places just lost in time and taken over by nature’s grasp
Here in STATEN ISLAND NY same thing ! There have been people who have volunteered to rescue these abandoned cemeteries. You do fantastic work, I wish I could accompany you. Excellent erudite videos!
The same in queens right off of Liberty Ave near the college campus and off the lefferts bound A train
Old cemeteries don't creep me out, I wish that was my backyard!
🤠👍
Thanks for showin us Chris!
Chris
I've watched every one of your videos since you began. You never disappoint. Is why I renew my Patreon every year. Thanks for keeping us informed and entertained
My 1st Chris video was the Girl Scout Murders Camp yrs ago & took notice right away just how calm/soothing it was to listen to him been here ever since.
This is by far my favorite RUclips channel. Can’t get enough of it.👍🏾
I just found your channel a couple of days ago and I like the way you present. It feels like I'm exploring with you and I like the ambience you include. Thanks for doing this!
And he has a huge stick between his legs.
A lot of times in these old graveyard those mausoleum looking things are actually the old town morgue in the winter months before refrigeration. They would have to wait until the bodies thaws to prep them for burial.
Those open vaults might have been relocated. Also as coffins decompose over time, the plot will fall in somewhat. I used to work at a funeral home that a friend used to own till her passing. It is sad to see a cemetery in such bad condition considering what many families paid for the plots, vaults etc....as for me, I plan on just being a shake & bake...much cheaper.
Yeah. Starting to come around to cremation in my later years. You can't take it with you.
Match prices went up.😳
Same here with my hubby and myself. Cremation and then scattering our ashes.
The first vault he looked in had bones, not sure about the others.
I plan to be cremated for sure!
For the illegible gravestones, try doing rubbings -- lay tissue paper over the markings & rub over the paper with charcoal or graphite (should be cheap at any decent art supply store). Rubbings will usually bring out the carvings fairly clearly.
Thanks for the interesting walk through the history. Peace and quiet day....😊
Very nice video. Old cemeteries are so fascinating and cannot be forgotten.
When I was in junior high school there was a cemetery that was right next to our school that we frequently would go over and have lunch in until I started working in the cafeteria. The oldest part of the cemetery was right up against our fence which was easy to walk around and then the fence that was separating the funeral home itself from the little Trail which is now a paved trail was probably only half as old as a cemetery which was easily a hundred years old at the time and that was 50 years ago
We’re all living zombies. We need to get over our fear of death and embrace and respect it.
I agree. It's a very natural and unavoidable event. Why do we dread something which is as certain as breathing, eating and sleeping?
Everything goes in cycles and circles. You are conceived and are made of materials your mother consumed. You are born into the world and consume and grow and become more of what is consumed. You live, you die, and your body returns to the ground from which it ultimately came. Plants, animals, bugs, and such come along and make use of your leftover materials. They live and die and are returned to nature. Eventually, your body becomes a part of nature again, where pieces of what was once you will find its way into other life. Birth comes from death, and death comes from birth. Whenever it's my time to go, I want my body to be donated to plants to feed them ad help them grow. I want to become part of the trees and plants and maybe someday end up supporting other life.
Very nice video. I’ve always liked walking around cemetery’s reading the inscriptions and wondering what they were like during their lives.
This is the inscription on the one you couldn't read with the bust of George on it.( In Memoriam
George W. ray
D.D. Grand Master
of the Grand Lodge of (?)
of the State of New York
and W.M. of Excelsior Lodge No. 195
who died at sea April 15th 1866
aged 40 Years)
It's very beautiful. Nice to see people are trying to hopefully keep it from completely growing over. It seems creepy but I think it could be a nice place to take a quiet walk
People don't respect the living or the dead. So sad. I wonder what these people buried here would think about today's world
i too like walking through cemeteries looking at how old they are. thank you for showing this one in New York
Thanks for posting this and bringing awareness to this problem. I have ancestors buried in a very small cemetery called Castle Cemetery (Newburgh, Indiana). Castle Cemetery is neglected too. I live far away from southern Indiana which is the location of Castle Cemetery and I don’t know what can be done to respect the cemetery and the Castles who were residents of Indiana in the early 1800s.
I love exploring old cemeteries. Once at an old farm in North Carolina there was a small cluster of old trees with maybe 15 or 20 graves of confederate soldiers. All had been dug up and according to the people at the farm, it was a soybean farm, the belt buckles, caps etc stolen. There were pieces of wooden coffins and bones all around. One gravestone read something like “Pvt Jones, 103rd Tennessee Volunteers killed at Antietam”. I was really tempted to take it but finally listened to my brain and thought really bad karma for the rest of your life. This was before cell phones so I didn’t get any photos.
How awful that those graves were desecrated. People's greed and lack of decency is unbelievable.
@diannelavoie5385 sounds like the people at the farm where the ones digging an looting it lol
Very interesting video. Nicely done.
nice video again chris keep it up bro
A really good video. Thank you. I enjoy walking through old cemeteries.
Pretty cool that you covered some local history for my area.
4:09 The Square and Compasses sign which means he was a member of Masonic lodge.
I lived next to a cemetery for 2 years! They were the best,quiet neighbors. The dead can’t hurt you,it’s the living you have to be careful of!!
Looks like it’s been completely vandalized. Very sad.
There’s no more bodies in those graves. The wooden coffins and the bodies have disintegrated long ago,and gone back to the soil.
i saw in another video about cemeteries where if you take a flashlight, even in daylight, and shine it at a angle close to the grave stone the shadow from the light makes its easier to read writing on tombstones FYI.
All my family are in the same cemetery. This cemetery backs up to a fence where houses are and people live. I don't think I could have one in my backyard! I plan on being cremated to be with my husband.
I was recently in Portugal. There is a cemetery in Lisbon that dates back to the earthquake in the early 1700s. The ground there is solid rock and its not practical to dig 6ft to bury someone. so, the thousands of graves are all above geound and the tombs are all in various states of care with a lot of them being destroyed with skeletons falling out of them. Bones everywhere. young and old. ...The only part i found disturbing were the very small bones falling out of very small caskets. .....amazing site and history there for sure.
I love abandoned graveyard videos. Thanks!
As Sonny and Cher said in their song years ago " And the beat goes on ."
I’d personally take the cracked concrete plaques home, stick them together and engulf them in resin, with a bolt anchor running into the resin so it can be attached to the remains of the structure. The bolt would not touch the plaque itself incase of forces.
Went to abandoned mount moriah in Philadelphia years back. It’s a huge cemetery and at the time it was almost entirely overgrown and in many cases vandalized. They’ve since been cleaning it up but it was in pretty bad shape. I remember a tomb being cracked open from the 1800s and seeing the skeleton laying there. I went back a few years later and it was totally gone.
Another cool thing about that cemetery was all the old garden roses that people planted at the gravesites in Victorian times. Those roses became massive overgrown bushes. They were literally everywhere. I suspect many of them would have been rare varieties and no longer seen today. Really interesting place.
Creamation is my family’s go to. My husband’s ashes are in a beautiful clock and when I pass I will be put in with him. This way it can be passed down to future generations. Or if the kids want to they can spread our ashes somewhere. I never have wanted to be buried and forgotten.
I had a house that abutted a city cemetery. It was a newer one put in as residents expanded outward, in New Bedford, to be exact. Pine Grove Cemetery. Never felt creeped out by it, nor did my two boys. It was a place of peacefulness, full of birdsong and busy squirrels. I do like looking at old cemeteries. They're full of history.
It does seem so odd to have the houses right there. Granted, I love cemeteries, and wouldn't mind the view at all. I would probably try to upkeep some of the area in my spare time.
3:58 George W. Ray d. 16 April 1866, age 40
Apparently he was a Grand Master of the Free and Accepted Masons (based on what little I could read, and the Masonic symbol on the upper portion of the headstone).
A good example of what has happened to the country, goodbye America😢
I would love it! This is awesome. All the old ones need tending. So many go to rubbish.
Awesome video once again sir. Thank you .
But why on earth would someone build condos next to a cemetery? You wake up in the morning sitting on your balcony staring at tombstones. So creepy.
We grew up in a neighborhood of 25 houses built around an old Gimbel estate. There were two old cemeteries dating back to the 1800’s. One was right in a friends backyard. They didn’t seem to mind. It was set far enough back from their patio. At least no one could ever build behind them. 👻
I'd be sayin "morning all" every morning, no lie!
🤠👍
@@JohnShinn6078 😆👋
Sad n lonely
RIP 🙏.
Thank you for sharing ur youtube
I wish you would have kept the camera on a lot more clearly marked headstones so I could read them!
Thanx for another great video
Shawna from Canada
At some point we’ll all end up this way, forgotten
Number of people that have died since the beginning of time. We're probably walking on graves every day and don't even know it.
where are these 'disturbing remains'? man, i hate click-bait and i never fail to give a thumbs down when i get suckered into it, and this is no different. you didn't have to get a thumbs down, but you titled it what you did so you earned it.
Most interesting. Grim as it is, the remains of these graves such as they are, constitute a more concrete memorial of their occupants than the millions lost at sea or dumped into mass burial trenches during war and epidemic, with no record of who they were.
What a shame. These are someones families! Ty for sharing
Thats a very interesting fact about William Few. I live just outside of Augusta Georgia, where his body is now buried. There are roads and other things with his name on them around here.
It's abandoned now, but at one time, people were dying to get in there.
Good quiet neighbors. No complaints.
This is so sad this is these people resting place
Very interesting adventure 👍👍👍
THANK YOU CHRIS,SAFE TRAVELS
4:05
Looks like George Veira?
And also said that he was a masonic Grandmaster.
There’s something beautiful about a cemetery being reclaimed by nature. We like to think we bury our loved ones and they’ll be there forever, but nothing lasts forever. Our bodies are to return to dust as surely as we came from it, and even our stone and steel eventually crumbles. It’s a perfect allegory for the futility of all our vast ambitions.
I appreciate how the guy making this video has some class and doesn't go digging through the mausoleum.
Very interesting but also extremely disturbing. Tfs
So sad this cemetery is no longer maintained. 🙏
A lot of early history in this cemetery. So sad it’s been neglected and in such bad shape.
Carol Ann go to the light! 0:28
reminded me of my childhood in Minsk, climbed through the forest like Rambo
0:45 the woody tree.😆
And contrary to what everyone believes these folks will NEVER be forgotten🙏🏻🙏🏻
"Show me your cemeteries and I will show you the character of your community...." Benjamin Franklin
All of us will end up in a place that eventually will become forgotten.
Does the City of Beacon or the community at large have nothing left over for their past citizens? What do the neighbours think, living in those townhouses? Looks more like human vandalism, than animals running away with bones… 😡 So sad. Respect the dead. RIP (Time for a good clean up.)
Ever hear of the Poltergeist curse as in what happened to many of the people involved with that movie?
I would be scared shitless to mess around with someones remains I bet many who have vandalized or stolen bones have had less than pleasant lives almost like good luck just keeps fleeing from them.
They used real skeletons on the movie it’s why I brought it up.
When you walk thru an old cemetery, speak the names of the dead aloud. They are then "Remembered". Most names have not been spoken aloud for years, decades, even centuries.
It is amazing how often cemeteries are moved.
I was at a meeting about the train tracks in my city and the plans to make it a quiet zone.
I saw a photo of the crossing from the 1900s and there was a cemetery where now a 3 family house sits.
I kept looking at the photo and I was like, where is that cemetery ??!!!
They said they moved it in the early 1900s and built a couple houses where the cemetery was.
Except no one had any information on where the remains went.
I really think they just took the stones and left the bodies and built on top of it.
I really do
The church was actually right across the street and still is there today and has been the town library since the fifties maybe further back than that
So that church and the other church on the other side of the street and the cemetery for both of those that took up a city block were sold to the city
and I spent a good amount of time trying to find where they moved the graves and I talked with the Catholic church and they had no records of that cemetery and no records of anybody that was buried there despite it being the primary cemetery for the city from when it started
There was another cemetery in the city across the river and I know for a fact that they built a house right on top of where the cemetery used to be and when they were digging in the basement they hit the gravestones and the bodies
It just is mindblowing that the people are forgotten and no one cares about the remains just the property because it becomes valuable
In the New York metro area the cemeteries are completely full and it is a big business paying families to have their relatives remains dug up and cremated in order to get that burial plot to sell for a new burial.
It's heartbreaking really because all people want to do is build houses and play grounds I think some of these people don't think of the history and what they are doing, they don't really care, it's all about money. And it's heartless. 😟.
That's why I believe the most practical thing is leaving a will specifying one's desires to be cremated. Who do we think we are to ask those who come after us to look after a tombstone (which is none of what we were in life) for more than a few years?
I have lost track of relatives gone around 30 years ago and whatever they may have left lives in my memory, not in some forgotten unkempt place seldom visited.
Imagine how spooky it is at night!😮
I fear the living more than the dead.
It only spooky to you because you watch movies and hear stories.
Boo!
I'm not afraid of the dead, I'm afraid of the living.
@@rickstanley4570 I’m afraid of the living dead.
The people in those condos ought to adopt that cemetery and get together to clean it up, reset headstones and remove all of the debris. It would be a nice community project for them.
We have a super old cemetery where I live. It has been vandalized for so many years that most of the head stones have been lost. It is one of if not the oldest cemetery in that county. There are no records to use to try and restore it.
This is why I'm not bothering with a funeral/burial, lol, 😂😂😂😂😂
I’m sorry. I had to comment. I’m a serial urban explorer. I love decay, ruins, history. I also love to use the word I. But I must admit, this channel is awesome!
I am in complete agreement ❤
What a fabulous old cemetery!!
It would be pretty cool having that next door. It’s it up to the church or the town to maintain these old cemeteries?
We used to walk past a stand of trees on the way to our shooting spot. Pretty thick undergrowth. Never checked it out. Once, by coincidence, I flew over this spot at about 6,000 ft. Noticed that tree stand was perfectly circular.
Went back and found a family cemetery with the circular stacked limestone wall gone, except for some of the foundation.
Only two tombstones were upright. We uprighted the others that we saw and secured them. Only a few were decipherable. This family occupied the area from late 18th to very early 20th century as far as we could tell. We reported it to the the University. The lady said thanks and hung up.
This is sad, I worked in a old cemetery for years. And it was sad that no one ever came to visit. These people did really did live at one time.
Man, imagine that creepy joint at night! Gadzooks. The cemetery that my Father is buried at looked a mess last time I was there, which was many years ago, I need to go back there, it’s in a not too nice part of the city, a hood. I ain’t scared, haha. Nice work!
This is so sad, but this is exactly why I’m going to be cremated and my ashes scattered. ❤
I am also , no funeral or any service, I have told my friends and family if you want to give me something give it to me while I am alive, so we can share the enjoyment 😊 ❤
It’s criminal that the local town let it get this bad. I grew up next to a cemetery like this in Maine with tombstones going back to the late 1700s. That cemetery is kept in order by the city.
I've never really understood why people have a difficult time with cemeteries it's not like the people are going to come up out of the ground and come after you if they could get out of the box they still have to dig up 6 ft of dirt and if they're able to do all that they're going to get you wherever you are.
Absolutely correct ❤
People are faced with the reality of their own future death in cemeteries.
@@seren4740 So true. In fact, on many old headstones from that era contain an epitaph “As you are now, so once was I. As I am now, so you must be …”. That always gave me chills! I'm sure this cemetery contains this epitaph several times, but time and acid rain has left the stones unreadable.
People don't like to think about death and their mortality.
Zombies invasion
That grave said the guy was born 1730 and died 1849.. He lived 119 years according to that
id love to have this as my backyard especially on Halloween
We had a long neglected cemetary in Southern Illinois. It was fascinating. I was a kid then, maybe 45 years ago, and would just explore this stuff. Thinking of the cycle of life and death, while I was where deceased bodies were. The tombstones, if you could read them (erosion and age) told their own stories. It was creepy, silent, and captivating, all at the same time. Ghosts and spirits coming out at night? That kind of thing. Hey, I was only like 12 then.
Interesting was some of the graves were the "six foot under" thing. The others were these stone or concrete above-ground box things, which contained the coffin. One site like that had the lid partially removed, like from a grave robber or vandal. I did peek inside. Nothing, just full of grass and weeds. Was there a body there?? Whoa...
Lamont would love that place
I sent him some pictures of it yesterday
@@MobileInstinct you guys do great videos together
@@MobileInstinctYou’re a good friend 😊
@@gokathygo they sure do. Wish both of them could do more vids together. Both Chris and lamont are absolutely the best at what they do!! 🥰🥰
@@trudiannross7676 I’m sure they’ll do more videos together, because the ones they did were so good.
I like that it's returning to nature. Ashes to ashes