Lincoln Ghost Walk
The Original Lincoln Ghostwalk. Scary dark gate. After the ghost story nobody dares to walk through.
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Lincoln's Ghost Train | Behind the Haunting #007
In this live video we will dive deep into the paranormal claims and reports about the ghostly apparition of the entire train that was used to transport President Abraham Lincoln from Washington D.C. back to Springfield, Ill. a.k.a. Lincolns Ghost Train (1865).
There are varying accounts of spectral funeral train sightings (Lincolns Ghost Train) of the old Union silently traveling through the night. Those who have seen the vision report that they have seen a train car draped in black housing a casket surrounded by mourners guarded by skeletal remains dressed in blue uniforms. The smoke stacks billow and bells clang but not of this time and place. A popular version of this story is one that has been retold many times stemming from a quote in the Albany Evening Times. This version is taken from The Pittsburgh Press (1978).
The train (Lincolns Ghost Train) always appeared in Albany on April 27th, the anniversary of its first passing. Track walkers and section hands would sit along the railroad tracks in the early evening of the fateful day and wait for the ghost train to come into view. At midnight—always at midnight—the engine would emerge from the darkness, moving silently down the track with black crepe flowing from its sides and emitting faintly audible sounds of funeral music.
The phantom train (Lincolns Ghost Train) would glide over a black carpet that appeared to cover the tracks, while spectral solders in blue uniforms, of the Union army trotted along side it. As the apparition moved down the tracks, it would fade from view over some phantom horizon
PANICd Paranormal History Videos - Our Haunted Travels is a series of paranormal history videos that we provide the history of the location, the ghost stories and folklore, the paranormal claims, our personal experiences, and why we believe the location could be haunted. Be sure to follow along with our adventures where we feature a new location we have visited each week at:
Ghost Stories and Folklore are paranormal history videos that will cover the paranormal claims at the particular locations. On occasion, we may deviate from a location and provide some sort of creepy pasta or urban legend video. These videos are narrated by our mascot Boris to add that special creepy effect to the videos. So sit back, listen, and enjoy. You can see the complete catalog of Ghost Stories and Folklore Videos we have at:
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What Booth Said After He Killed Lincoln
John Wilkes Booth certainly saw himself as a dramatic figure in history. Upon shooting Lincoln, he jumped onto the stage and condemned his victim in Latin.
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From the Show: LINCOLN'S LAST DAY
Clinton Road - The Most TERRIFYING Road in America?
Legends of abandoned druid temples, phantom headlights, and ghost children all surround Clinton Road in New Jersey. It's widely regarded as the most terrifying road in America, so we decided to check it out in the middle of the night and find out for ourselves.
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Great Mistakes at Lincoln Cathedral
Lincoln Cathedral is one of wonders of the pre-Modern world, even though it looks like it does largely because bits of it kept falling down: this video was similarly no mean feat to put together. There's loads of eccentricities and so much downright weirdness at this amazing building, and I tried to squeeze as many in as I could without it being a mere checklist of wonky arches. I also do an appalling Frenchman impression, make fun of YouTube's ads, and close on a self-indulgent musical number I just pray is funny enough to inflict on all of you. But all that fluff probably took less time to film and edit then the research I did to establish an accurate caption for the vault in Neuötting that is on screen for about half a second.
Here's some sources for you (some of which you can probably see on the confused sixth-former's desk). It's not even every book I own that mentions Lincoln, but instead the ones that most influenced what I say.
Medieval art and architecture at Lincoln Cathedral, eds T.A. Heslop and V. Sekules, British Archaeological Association Conference Transactions, 1986 (especially papers by P. Kidson and R. Gem)
S. Harrison, The original plan of St Hugh's Choir at Lincoln Cathedral reconsidered in the light of new evidence, Journal of the British Archaeological Association 169 (2016).
J. Foyle, Lincoln Cathedral: The Biography of a Great Building, Scala 2015.
P. Frankl rev. P. Crossley, Gothic Architecture, Yale 2000.
C. Wilson, The Gothic Cathedral, Thames & Hudson 1990, rev. 2000.
P. Draper, The Formation of English Gothic, Yale 2006.
P. Frankl, 'The Crazy Vaults of Lincoln Cathedral', The Art Bulletin, 35:2 (1953).
N. Pevsner, J. Harris, N. Antram, Lincolnshire, The Buildings of England, Yale 1989.
My reconstructions (e.g. the Romanesque cathedral, St Hugh's apse) are generally an amalgam of what is presented in these above sources, with many of the choices made for visual clarity (e.g. the clerestory on Harrison's axial chapel, although perhaps closer to the surviving Corona chapel at Canterbury, obscures the apse itself so I gave it an ambulatory-height roof).
Abraham Lincoln's long goodbye
Following the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, the president's remains made what was probably the most extraordinary train journey in American history, home to Springfield, Illinois. Robert Reed wrote about the 1,700-mile train ride witnessed by millions, and which was commemorated on its 150th anniversary with a special recreation, as Martha Teichner reports.
A 48 hour guide to Lincolnshire
Travel Journalist, Trisha Harbord, is taking us on another 48 hour guide. This time she is going back to her home county of Lincolnshire to give us a tour only a local could.
Cosford RAF Museum - Haunted Avro Lincoln
The RAF Museum at Cosford houses hundreds of aircraft, but only one gets ghost hunters reaching for their notebooks. Avro Lincoln RF398 is as likely to be visited by paranormal investigators as aircraft enthusiasts! After a few of the stories came to light, a BBC team moved in to find out what all the fuss was about.
Brian Redfern is one of many visitors to wonder if they'd seen a ghost in the Avro Lincoln After all, it wasn't merely the insistence of ghost hunters that suggested the aeroplane is haunted. Many staff have experienced strange goings on near and in the aircraft. In 1991, the BBC's Gwyn Richards investigated the bomber aided by paranormal investigator Ivan Spenceley. As well as listening to archived audio recordings and some of the first hand stories, the pair spent a couple of nights inside the aircraft, armed with recording equipment. They captured a number of mechanical sounds... sounds (it was claimed) that were difficult to attribute to either the building cooling down or the aircraft settling.
In trying to identify some of the strange sounds, Gwyn and Ivan took an ex Lincoln air crew to visit the infamous aircraft and introduced them to a few of the recorded noises. Phil Pritchett, Gareth Lewis and Peter Palma even claimed to be able to identify a few of the individual sounds - attributing them to actions that would be tyically carried out by a pilot and his crew in preparation for (and during) flight.
The first known incident involving the plane occurred when, in 1980, a member of the museum's staff was locking the hangar for the night. Looking back he believed that he saw someone move in the old aircraft and so he switched the lights back on. Having searched all the corners of the aircraft he turned to switch the lights off again when a cloudy thing appeared. Later that week a mechanic was working alone on the Lincoln. He felt around in the dark for a spanner which had just fallen, when it felt as if it was thrust into his hand.
Could it be the ghost of 'Master Pilot' Hiller who loved the aircraft and was at the controls for its last ever flight in 1963. It's said that Hiller promised to haunt his baby. Hiller was killed near Cosford in an air crash not long after the Lincoln's last flight. More recently the secretary to the museum society was busy preparing a notice board about the Lincoln when she heard her name being called. Thinking it was one of the museum staff calling her for a cup of tea she looked toward the Lincoln, then towards the door but saw no one. To this day she will not enter the hangar alone.
The story is also told about an electrician working 15 feet above the ground when he suddenly fell. He remembers thinking this is it because he had already injured his spine in a similar fall from another aeroplane. But instead of hitting the concrete floor with expected force, he floated to a stop as if, he said, some invisible force had prevented his fall from being fatal. Very few claim to have seen the ghost, and those who have, say he is in the gun-turret at the rear, or in the navigator's seat in the cockpit.
Artifacts brought together 150 years after Abraham Lincoln assassination
Lincoln's assassination came just five days after Robert E. Lee surrendered at Appomattox. The ceremony signaled the end of the bloody civil war that had consumed Lincoln’s presidency. His death rocked the nation. Bill Plante reports from inside Ford’s Theatre in Washington, where the deadly shot was fired.
Zak Bagans of Ghost Adventures Takes ET on a Tour of his Haunted Museum (EXTENDED CUT)
Zak Bagans gives Kevin Frazier a tour of The Haunted Museum in Las Vegas, including the chilling history behind each room. Catch Ghost Adventures Saturdays on the Travel Channel.
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Lincoln wont let his Mamma pack his cape away | ENGLISH BULLDOG
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When the British burned the White House
Two hundreds years ago British forces attacked the Washington, D.C., and torched its landmarks. Mo Rocca goes back in time to one of the most devastating days in U.S. history.
I Can Prove This Ghost Caught On Tape Is A Hoax
I think it's bullshit, and here's why!
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Ghosts of Highway 20 - COMPLETE SERIES
Episodes 1-5 of the Ghosts of Highway 20 series as one long video.
For the individual episodes, see this playlist:
Read the series at The Oregonian/OregonLive: oregonlive.com/ghostsofhighway20
Beginning in the late 1970s, a sinister presence cast a shadow over an isolated part of central Oregon. It lurked in the background, ignored or unnoticed. Women, often vulnerable or marginalized, were disappearing.
These are the stories of the ghosts of Highway 20.
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Watch The Oregonian/OregonLive's latest investigative documentary, No Mercy, at:
Ghosts in Lincoln Heights
NONE of these videos had editing to change the ghost etc. If you watched the othersiders first video on lhj, then ull know the chair. Look whats in store for you today...
Lincoln goes solo walking | ENGLISH BULLDOG
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Funeral March for Abraham Lincoln J.G. Barnard 1865
This funeral march written by John Gross Barnard was performed by the United States Marine Band during the funeral procession from the Executive Mansion to the Capitol for Abraham Lincoln on April 19, 1865. Arranged by Jari Villanueva for Wind Band.
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April 19, 1865 was a warm cloudless day in Washington DC as the funeral of Abraham Lincoln took place in the East Room of the Executive Mansion. This was to be the third of sad services held there since the beginning of the Lincoln administration. The first, in 1861, memorialized 24-year-old Colonel Elmer Ellsworth, a friend of the family who was killed at the beginning of the war in Alexandria, Virginia. The second, in 1862, was a particularly heart-breaking service for the president's 11-year-old son Willie.
At noon 600 specially invited guests were present for the service and listened to Dr. Phineas D. Gurley, pastor of the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, deliver the sermon.
“He is dead; but the memory of his virtues, of his wise and patriotic counsels and labors, of his calm and steady faith in God lives, is precious, and will be a power for good in the country quite down to the end of time.”
Following the service twelve Veteran Reserve sergeants carried the casket to the waiting horse drawn hearse that would bear the remains to the US Capitol.
It was to be the largest, most elaborate, procession ever held in Washington with military units, bands, clergy, congressional delegations, state officials, generals, and civilian mourners all moving to the slow steady pace of the funeral dirge. Indeed, many would recall the sound of the muffled drums heard that day for years. Thousands who had been waiting since dawn lined the Pennsylvania Avenue and watched from seats in buildings.
It is interesting to note that the scale of the procession would be almost equaled almost a century later when the remains of President John F. Kennedy were borne up the same avenue. Jacqueline Kennedy had requested the same type of funeral for her husband as had been held for the 16th president. We can all remember the sights and sounds that day in November, 1963
The procession started from the Executive Mansion at 2 pm and proceeded up Pennsylvania Avenue to the Capitol amidst the tolling of bells and the firing of minute-guns.
Among the military units was the US Marine Band playing a funeral march written for the occasion by John Gross Barnard, a general who served as Chief Engineer of the Department of Washington from 1861 to 1864, and as Chief Engineer of the armies in the field from 1864 to 1865. He was a distinguished scientist, engineer, mathematician, historian, author and musician.
The march is titled:
“Funeral March in Memory of the Abraham Lincoln: Played at the Obsequies of the President of the United States by the US Marine Band.”
The funeral march follows the standard format of dirges of the time (most notable are Webster’s Funeral March, Chopin’s Funeral March and March in Saul by Handel) written in minor keys (considered somber) and divided into eight measure phrases which makes it easy for the funeral cadence to be played underneath. This funeral march, like most written during this time, has a transition to a major key (happier sounding). This march goes to the relative major (D minor to D major) key.
Since no parts are extant from the US Band, I was asked to score the march for a modern symphonic band. I hoped to capture the somber drum beat and employed a chime to replicate the bells that tolled along the funeral route.
The procession arrived at the east side Capitol at 3 pm and the casket was taken up the steps into the Rotunda where Lincoln would lie in State until the early morning of the 21st when he would begin the long journey home by train.
“Bear him gently home”
A Tour of Lincoln Castle and Cathedral with Dan Snow
Blippi Tours the Chocolate Factory | Learn about Food for Children
After Blippi eats his vegetables Blippi takes a tour of the chocolate factory to see how some sweet treats are made. Make sure your child eats their healthy food first then they can watch the Blippi Chocolate Factory video so they can learn about all types of food for children. Blippi makes educational videos for toddlers and in this video your child will get to join Blippi in making some candy and chocolate! Watch more and subscribe to Blippi at
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Another Blippi video like this Blippi candy factory video be sure to watch the Blippi Ice Cream Truck video:
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