Bark Peelers' Festival 2012
The annual Bark Peeler's Festival held at the PA Lumber Museum in Galeton, Potter County, PA. Featuring photos of the Frog Jumping and Cross Cut competition, plus video of Greased Pole and Birling Competition.
SMALL TOWN FRANKLIN PA A RIDE THRU DOWNTOWN
Joe and Robyn Kellert - Coudersport, Pennsylvania
A wedding video celebrating the beautiful wedding of Joe and Robyn Kellert. The wedding was held at the Pennsylvania Lumberman's Museum on September 17, 2016.
Music Credits:
Train - Marry Me 2009-2011 Sony Music Entertainment
Christina Perri - Thousand Years 2011 Atlantic Records
Uncle Kracker - Smile 2010 Atlantic Records
This music is not owned by us. All rights are retained by all copyright owners.
Abandoned Pennsylvania Mansion Historical Before and After
Urban Exploration : Abandoned Mansion CLICK SHOW MORE TO READ HISTORY AND DISCLAIMER
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The wait is over. Many of you have wondered what this once beautiful abandoned Pennsylvania Mansion once looked like and here is your chance to take a step back in time. All these photos of the house, Bella Vista, were emailed to me by Joe Hodges and his mother, Rose Marie. Joe is Dr. Dimedio grandson and his mother is Dr. DiMedio daughter of course. I spent a couple days talking to them through email about these pictures and they wanted me to share them with all of you. I would like to really Thank Joe and his Mom Rose Marie for allowing me to share these pictures. This house was for sure a beautiful place to live. For complete history on the house and pictures, visit my website or facebook. Links are above. If you have not seen the first video I did, click on my name and it on my channel or click on the video at the end of this video. Enjoy!
Disclaimer: Exploring Abandoned Structures can be dangerous and you could be trespassing. You could get a fine, get hurt, get sick, and/or get arrested. Therefore I CAN NOT be held responsible for your actions if you do choose to enter an abandoned site. I am not providing this video to show people where and how to get to these places. This video is meant to give my viewers the feel of an abandoned structure safely in their home plus provide some history. Just don't do it. If you choose to ignore this disclaimer, you are taking full responsibility for your actions!
Music for Manatees Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
US Senator Pat Toomey holds Town Meeting in Coudersport, PA (Part 1 of 2)
US Senator Pat Toomey holds Town Meeting in Coudersport, PA (Aug.31, 2011)
galeton PA diamond hwy soundtrack
I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (
Cure for Cabin Fever - Elk Country Visitor Center
Bennezette, PA, Elk Country Visitor Center
Bucksgahuda and Western
The B&W got started in 1966 when the Bauer brothers of St. Marys, PA, purchased a German-built steam locomotive through an advertisement in Trains magazine, and shipped the engine from Germany through Philadelphia to St. Marys. The first 15 feet of track were laid here just before the locomotive arrived, and the original engine house had to be built around the engine! After reconditioning this first locomotive, other equipment, rails, ties, and supplies were acquired over the years, notably in 1981 when the Joyce National Powder Co. of Eldred (PA) donated the entire plant railroad. With this additional equipment, interest in the project continued to grow and something new is added every few years. The large enginehouse was first constructed in 1983 and enlarged twice; the bridge built in 1985, the loop of track finished in 1986, and the turntable and water tower were added in 1992. In 1993, we were fortunate to acquire a diesel-electric locomotive and a Shay-type steam locomotive, also in recent years two additional enginehouse buildings and a 60’ standard gauge boxcar were added for additional storage. The last few years have also seen construction of a quarter-mile branch line on the original St.Marys and Southwestern Railroad grade.
While some cars have been built new in our shop, most of the equipment preserved here was previously used for hauling gunpowder, dry paint pigments, tanning hides, pulpwood, or similar commodities during processing. Otto was originally used for dockside switching and road repair projects. Shay locomotives, with their gear driven wheels that provide ample power at the expense of speed, were commonly used in construction and on logging railroads. Some industrial plants use diesel-electric locomotives similar to #2 today, although the versatility of trucks and forklifts has allowed rubber-tired vehicles to assume many of the functions previously handled by plant railroads.
Rails, ties, and other track parts were obtained from a variety of sources. Of particular note are the various types of switch stands in use, mostly of the high-level type not commonly seen today. Switch stands from the Wellsville, Addison, & Galeton, PS&N, New York Central, and mining railroads are all in use. Whistle posts and other signs have come from the Baltimore & Ohio, Pennsylvania, and PS&N railroads.
Cherry Springs State Park
Cherry Springs State Park is a 106-acre (43 ha) Pennsylvania state park in Potter County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. The park was created from land within the Susquehannock State Forest, and is on Pennsylvania Route 44 in West Branch Township. Cherry Springs, named for a large stand of Black Cherry trees in the park, is atop the dissected Allegheny Plateau at an elevation of 2,300 feet (701 m). It is popular with astronomers and stargazers for having some of the darkest night skies on the east coast of the United States, and was chosen by the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) and its Bureau of Parks as one of Twenty Must-See Pennsylvania State Parks.
The earliest recorded inhabitants of the area were the Susquehannocks, followed by the Seneca nation, who hunted there. The first settlement within the park was a log tavern built in 1818 along a trail; the trail became a turnpike by 1834 and a hotel replaced the tavern in 1874, then burned in 1897. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries the old-growth forests were clearcut; the state forest was established in 1901 and contains second growth woodlands. Cherry Springs Scenic Drive was established in 1922, and the Civilian Conservation Corps built much of Cherry Springs State Park during the Great Depression, including a picnic pavilion listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). An annual Woodsmen's Show has been held in the park each August since 1952.
This video is targeted to blind users.
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