Grant-Humphreys Mansion Video Tour
Step back into the early 1900s through this video tour of the elegant Grant-Humphreys Mansion!
MyWeddingInColorado.com Wedding Venue of the Month
presents Grant Humphreys Mansion, Denver Colorado for the Colorado Wedding Venue of the Month! Go to myweddingincolorado.com for more information about this lovely historical wedding place.
The George Schleier Mansion 1887 Denver Colorado USA
recorded on November 25, 2015
Moving Image Archive Serge de Muller
Violent Colorado Boulevard and Wealthy Cherry Creek
A small video capturing one small segment along one of Denver's most violent and dangerous streets for pedestrians. Specifically, this video documents an unsafe intersection at Bayaud and Colorado Blvd. It also invites viewers into the gaps (ongoing for years and years) around the journey and experience of people (who depend on/take transit, walk, roll) getting into one of Denver's wealthiest neighborhoods, Cherry Creek.
It's time for the residents, developers, and community organizations within Cherry Creek to better witness, experience, mobilize and invest serious dollars (and pressure) on the City of Denver (connecting streets) and the State of Colorado (Colorado Blvd itself) towards community safety and access.
Learn more about Pedestrian Dignity: intrinsicpaths.com/pedestrian-dignity
Learn more about becoming an Intrinsic Paths Patron to directly support each and every video, article, and walking experience made in moving Pedestrian Dignity forward: patreon.com/intrinsicpaths
The Wild Christmas Reindeer
Join Claire Lanier from the History Colorado State Historical Fund at the Grant-Humphreys Mansion in Denver, Colorado as she tells a tale of a small boy and a wild reindeer right before Christmas. Can Santa help?
Episode 34: The Croke-Patterson Mansion
Jack’s back and this time he’s taking us inside one of the most infamous haunted houses in Colorado, the Croke-Patterson Mansion. This mansion’s original owner wouldn't even spend the first night after its construction. That didn't stop Jack and his friend from venturing in to shoot some footage for a school project. But don’t take our word for it, lend us your ears, At the Fire.
Haunted Denver
The Mile High City is one of the nation's most haunted city.
The SpiritChasers Investigate the Croke-Patterson Mansion
Our experience investigating the infamous Croke-Patterson Mansion.
Ghosts of Denver's Haunted Tivoli Brewery
This video covers the haunted locations on Auraria campus, home to the University of Colorado in Denver, The Metropolitan State College of Denver (MSCD) and the Community College of Denver. The old Tivoli Brewery has been renovated and houses the Student Union. However, some of the old residents may have stuck around. The Tivoli is the home of the MSCD Crytpo Science Society, a student organization that investigates the paranormal. These are their findings.
This was part of my 2008 Denver public television show, Phenomena Television.
Music excerpt: Ghost Processional royalty free music by Kevin MacLeod
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Weister-Nat Sound-The Lumber Baron
From KMGH-TV, all rights reserved.
Editor: Brian Weister
Photog: Greg Versphol
Greg actually found this story and asked me to help with it, which was cool. I field produced and edited, and man is this place haunted. Batteries were dying in the middle of the shoot and all sorts of creepy stuff was going on in there. Nice piece that aired on the Halloween after it was shot (shot on Friday, Oct 13th).
Denver haunted! Ghost. Find Denver Haunted Houses.
- Hollywood haunted!
Ghost Denver
Find Haunted Houses, Ghosts, Ghost Towns, Haunted Hotels, Haunted Places in the United States.
Bradmar Tudor Manor
Grant Humphreys
Molly Brown House
The Denver Courthouse
The Strada Building
Union Train Station
HauntedHouses.com features photos, history and trivia on haunted houses Denver and hotel haunting, Real ghost towns and more,
ALL officially designated as HAUNTED!
Visit now.
Haunted Hotel in Denver's Historic Five Points 2014
A haunted hotel is above the Cervantes Masterpiece Ballroom in Five Points. Take a guided tour with the ghostly bell-hop to experience live thrills in this historic abandoned building right on Welton Street.
Haunted Places In Colorado
A guide to some of the most well known haunted locations in Colorado, USA. If you have visited any of these locations, feel free to comment below with your .
The top ten most haunted places in the state of Colorado. This huge swath of land is heavily populated by ghosts and spirits!
real haunted houses :The Molly Brown House, Denver, Colorado ~ Home of .
Looking for a thrill on Halloween? Visit one of the 10 most haunted places in the United States! How many of these places have you heard of? Support us by .
Haunted Cemetery in Colorado
Haunted Graveyard with ghosts & Spirits..?
Ghost hunters Colorado: SEE More at is This Graveyard..?
LOCATION: Riverside Historical Cemetery - Denver, Colorado
Denver's Oldest Cemetery - Riverside Cemetery is the longest continually operating cemetery in Denver, and one of the most significant historical resources in Colorado. Noting the importance of the 77-acre site, the cemetery was designated a National Historic District in 1992. Now surrounded by the gritscape of a disparate industrial district, partly in the City and County of Denver and partly in Adams County, the cemetery is in a state of rapid decline.
Haunted Graveyard with ghosts & Spirits..?
Riverside Cemetery occupies a 77-acre site between Brighton Boulevard and the east bank of the South Platte River, approximately 4 miles down stream from downtown Denver, Colorado.
The majority of Riverside Cemetery lies within Adams County, Colorado, however the rest of the cemetery, the cemeteries' entrance and administration building, are within the City and County of Denver.
Riverside Cemetery originally was the property of the Riverside Cemetery Association from its founding in 1876 until 1900 when the association's assets were transferred to the Fairmount Cemetery Association (presently known as Fairmount Cemetery Company). In late 2000, Fairmount Cemetery Company along with members of the community founded the Fairmount Heritage Foundation to be a educational resource for the community and to protect and preserve the heritage of both the company's properties: Riverside Cemetery and Fairmount Cemetery.
The volunteers of this foundation staff the Riverside Cemetery Office on Tuesdays and Thursdays and organize events and preservation projects for the cemeteries.
History
When first opened, the graveyard's secluded location on the banks of the South Platte River and the surrounding greenery made it a popular choice for wealthy families; the opening of the Burlington Railroad in the 1890s changed this, spurring industrial growth in the neighborhood, and some families chose to have their relatives' remains exhumed and reburied elsewhere. Prominent people continued to be interred there, with ornate headstones to mark their graves; however, the proportion of unmarked graves rose dramatically, as counties from all over the state sent the bodies of their impoverished dead citizens there.
Riverside remained the area's most significant cemetery until the mid-20th century, and retains importance for scholars studying in the early history of Denver, as the city kept no systematic death records until 1910.
Today, the neighborhood has become a largely industrial area, surrounded by a gas station, smokestacks, train tracks, and an industrial park, a few blocks from Interstate 70. It remains a minor tourist attraction; in 2001, 3,000 people went on walking tours of the site.
The cemetery's final grave site was assigned in July 2005; the management company, Fairmount Cemetery Inc., indicated that they would not accept further burials after that, because they were losing money on each sale.
They have also stopped watering and cut back drastically on services, claiming that their $2.1 million endowment, which generated roughly $62,000 per year in interest, was not enough to water the property and properly maintain all the graves; their records show that they lost $159,000 in 2003. They still employ two groundskeepers to pick up trash, but have had to refuse offers of maintenance help from volunteers due to liability issues. In 2005, Fairmount approached the city government and requested they take over operation of the cemetery; however, the city were forced to decline due to lack of funds.
Local residents, concerned by the dying trees and grass and generally poor state of the cemetery, formed a group, Friends of Historic Riverside Cemetery, to bring public attention to the issue. They requested the assistance of a local Orthodox church whose founders are buried there; Fairmount indicated that they would be willing to transfer the endowment and operations of the cemetery to a group that could provide an additional trust of $1 million to cover operating expenses.
Haunted St Elmo Colorado
Haunted Ghost Town of St. Elmo Colorado. St. Elmo, Colorado is one of the states best-preserved, and most haunted, ghost towns. A quick blooper near the end.
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Please watch: The Bazaar of Bad Dreams Mile 81 Part 1
Check Out My Video
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Denver Haunted Houses - The Reinke Brothers Haunted Mansion
Hollywood with DenverHauntedHouses.com interviews Greg at The Reinke Brothers Haunted Mansion.
The Ghosts Haunted Cemetery
Haunted Graveyard with ghosts & Spirits..?
Ghost hunters Colorado: SEE More at is This Graveyard..?
LOCATION: Riverside Historical Cemetery - Denver, Colorado
Denver's Oldest Cemetery - Riverside Cemetery is the longest continually operating cemetery in Denver, and one of the most significant historical resources in Colorado. Noting the importance of the 77-acre site, the cemetery was designated a National Historic District in 1992. Now surrounded by the gritscape of a disparate industrial district, partly in the City and County of Denver and partly in Adams County, the cemetery is in a state of rapid decline.
Haunted Graveyard with ghosts & Spirits..?
Riverside Cemetery occupies a 77-acre site between Brighton Boulevard and the east bank of the South Platte River, approximately 4 miles down stream from downtown Denver, Colorado.
The majority of Riverside Cemetery lies within Adams County, Colorado, however the rest of the cemetery, the cemeteries' entrance and administration building, are within the City and County of Denver.
Riverside Cemetery originally was the property of the Riverside Cemetery Association from its founding in 1876 until 1900 when the association's assets were transferred to the Fairmount Cemetery Association (presently known as Fairmount Cemetery Company). In late 2000, Fairmount Cemetery Company along with members of the community founded the Fairmount Heritage Foundation to be a educational resource for the community and to protect and preserve the heritage of both the company's properties: Riverside Cemetery and Fairmount Cemetery.
The volunteers of this foundation staff the Riverside Cemetery Office on Tuesdays and Thursdays and organize events and preservation projects for the cemeteries.
History
When first opened, the graveyard's secluded location on the banks of the South Platte River and the surrounding greenery made it a popular choice for wealthy families; the opening of the Burlington Railroad in the 1890s changed this, spurring industrial growth in the neighborhood, and some families chose to have their relatives' remains exhumed and reburied elsewhere. Prominent people continued to be interred there, with ornate headstones to mark their graves; however, the proportion of unmarked graves rose dramatically, as counties from all over the state sent the bodies of their impoverished dead citizens there.
Riverside remained the area's most significant cemetery until the mid-20th century, and retains importance for scholars studying in the early history of Denver, as the city kept no systematic death records until 1910.
Today, the neighborhood has become a largely industrial area, surrounded by a gas station, smokestacks, train tracks, and an industrial park, a few blocks from Interstate 70. It remains a minor tourist attraction; in 2001, 3,000 people went on walking tours of the site.
The cemetery's final grave site was assigned in July 2005; the management company, Fairmount Cemetery Inc., indicated that they would not accept further burials after that, because they were losing money on each sale.
They have also stopped watering and cut back drastically on services, claiming that their $2.1 million endowment, which generated roughly $62,000 per year in interest, was not enough to water the property and properly maintain all the graves; their records show that they lost $159,000 in 2003. They still employ two groundskeepers to pick up trash, but have had to refuse offers of maintenance help from volunteers due to liability issues. In 2005, Fairmount approached the city government and requested they take over operation of the cemetery; however, the city were forced to decline due to lack of funds.
Local residents, concerned by the dying trees and grass and generally poor state of the cemetery, formed a group, Friends of Historic Riverside Cemetery, to bring public attention to the issue. They requested the assistance of a local Orthodox church whose founders are buried there; Fairmount indicated that they would be willing to transfer the endowment and operations of the cemetery to a group that could provide an additional trust of $1 million to cover operating expenses.
Ghosts Haunted Cemetery Denver
Haunted Graveyard with ghosts & Spirits..?
Ghost hunters Colorado: SEE More at is This Graveyard..?
LOCATION: Riverside Historical Cemetery - Denver, Colorado
Denver's Oldest Cemetery - Riverside Cemetery is the longest continually operating cemetery in Denver, and one of the most significant historical resources in Colorado. Noting the importance of the 77-acre site, the cemetery was designated a National Historic District in 1992. Now surrounded by the gritscape of a disparate industrial district, partly in the City and County of Denver and partly in Adams County, the cemetery is in a state of rapid decline.
Haunted Graveyard with ghosts & Spirits..?
Riverside Cemetery occupies a 77-acre site between Brighton Boulevard and the east bank of the South Platte River, approximately 4 miles down stream from downtown Denver, Colorado.
The majority of Riverside Cemetery lies within Adams County, Colorado, however the rest of the cemetery, the cemeteries' entrance and administration building, are within the City and County of Denver.
Riverside Cemetery originally was the property of the Riverside Cemetery Association from its founding in 1876 until 1900 when the association's assets were transferred to the Fairmount Cemetery Association (presently known as Fairmount Cemetery Company). In late 2000, Fairmount Cemetery Company along with members of the community founded the Fairmount Heritage Foundation to be a educational resource for the community and to protect and preserve the heritage of both the company's properties: Riverside Cemetery and Fairmount Cemetery.
The volunteers of this foundation staff the Riverside Cemetery Office on Tuesdays and Thursdays and organize events and preservation projects for the cemeteries.
History
When first opened, the graveyard's secluded location on the banks of the South Platte River and the surrounding greenery made it a popular choice for wealthy families; the opening of the Burlington Railroad in the 1890s changed this, spurring industrial growth in the neighborhood, and some families chose to have their relatives' remains exhumed and reburied elsewhere. Prominent people continued to be interred there, with ornate headstones to mark their graves; however, the proportion of unmarked graves rose dramatically, as counties from all over the state sent the bodies of their impoverished dead citizens there.
Riverside remained the area's most significant cemetery until the mid-20th century, and retains importance for scholars studying in the early history of Denver, as the city kept no systematic death records until 1910.
Today, the neighborhood has become a largely industrial area, surrounded by a gas station, smokestacks, train tracks, and an industrial park, a few blocks from Interstate 70. It remains a minor tourist attraction; in 2001, 3,000 people went on walking tours of the site.
The cemetery's final grave site was assigned in July 2005; the management company, Fairmount Cemetery Inc., indicated that they would not accept further burials after that, because they were losing money on each sale.
They have also stopped watering and cut back drastically on services, claiming that their $2.1 million endowment, which generated roughly $62,000 per year in interest, was not enough to water the property and properly maintain all the graves; their records show that they lost $159,000 in 2003. They still employ two groundskeepers to pick up trash, but have had to refuse offers of maintenance help from volunteers due to liability issues. In 2005, Fairmount approached the city government and requested they take over operation of the cemetery; however, the city were forced to decline due to lack of funds.
Local residents, concerned by the dying trees and grass and generally poor state of the cemetery, formed a group, Friends of Historic Riverside Cemetery, to bring public attention to the issue. They requested the assistance of a local Orthodox church whose founders are buried there; Fairmount indicated that they would be willing to transfer the endowment and operations of the cemetery to a group that could provide an additional trust of $1 million to cover operating expenses.
Hebrew Cemetery, Leadville, Colorado
In 1880, the Hebrew Benevolent Association established the Hebrew Cemetery in the southwest corner of Leadville’s Evergreen Cemetery. When the town’s overall population began to decline in 1893, burials at the cemetery dwindled.
The Temple Israel Foundation acquired the title to the cemetery in 1993, ending a long period of neglect. Since 1994, the Denver chapter of B’nai B’rith has led volunteer efforts each June to maintain the grounds and replace markers. Since then, the cemetery was reconsecrated and began holding Jewish burials again in 2001.