Daily Webhead: Looking for My Love at St Mary's Churchyard
My little Halloween video for this year. I love Halloween and I love the stillness of churchyards. This one is filmed at St. Mary's Churchyard in Bath, England.
St Marys Church Wedding service Bowden
Wedding of Natalie and James at St Marys Church in Bowden,Cheshire
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uk haunted church? saint mary madaline church
freaky real stuff not for under 9's
The Haunted Ruins - St Mary Avenbury
The haunted ruins of St Mary Avenbury in Herefordshire.
The bell of the church (now located in the church of St Andrew By the Wardrobe in London) was said to ring out to mark the passing of successive vicar's of Avenbury.
[Wikipedia] Church of St Mary the Virgin, Croscombe
The Anglican Church of St Mary the Virgin in Croscombe, Somerset, England, is primarily from the 15th and 16th centuries with 19th-century restoration. It has been designated as a Grade I listed building.It consists of a nave, chancel and has north and south aisles. The church is unusual in Somerset in having a spire, which rises above a three-stage tower which is supported by diagonal buttresses. St Mary's includes a peal of six bells, the earliest dated 1613, and an organ from 1837. In 1936 the spire was struck by lightning. Repairs entailed its complete removal and reconstruction.The Jacobean interior woodwork including the pulpit and rood screen are of national renown. The pulpit is decorated with the arms of Arthur Lake who was the Bishop of Bath and Wells in the 17th century.The churchyard contains war graves of four service personnel, one of World War I and three of World War II.The parish is part of the benefice of Pilton with Croscombe, North Wootton and Dinder within the Diocese of Bath and Wells.
St Mary's church, Burwell, Cambs
Out for walk on a sunny summer's day.....
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grave,gothic
The Demon of Haunted Queen Mary Castle
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Sam and Colby stay overnight at the haunted Queen Mary Castle in Scotland. Corey Scherer and Jake Webber perform a seance to explore the haunting behind the Castle and capture tons of paranormal/ghost evidence
of a demon.
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CREEPY HAUNTED CEMETERY 3AM CHALLENGE - St Mary’s Church, Reigate, England ????????
We went back to St. Mary’s church in Reigate, this time at night. It has been dubbed the most haunted church in Surrey, England.
There has been reports of people hearing a phantom choir at night when the church is locked & empty, a lady in a white dress that many people have seen, also a young girl dressed in 19th century clothes skipping though the graves.
For our day time video:
Daily Webhead: England... An Impression
An impression of my trip to England: Salisbury, Stonehenge, Bath, Avebury & Bristol. Look out for Gromit, cuz he might just pop-up when you least expect it.. :)
Ghost caught on tape Lacock England in creepy old cemetery 8 21 2009
Places to see in ( Painswick - UK )
Places to see in ( Painswick - UK )
Painswick is a town and civil parish in Gloucestershire, England. Originally the town grew on the wool trade, but it is now best known for its parish church's yew trees and the local Rococo Garden. The town is mainly constructed of locally quarried Cotswold stone. Many of the buildings feature south-facing attic rooms once used as weavers' workshops. Painswick stands on a hill in the Stroud district, overlooking one of the Five Valleys. Its narrow streets and traditional architecture make it the epitome of the English village.
There is evidence of settlement in the area as long ago as the Iron Age. This can be seen in the defensive earthworks atop nearby Painswick Beacon, which has wide views across the Severn Vale. The local monastery, Prinknash Abbey, was established in the 11th century. Painswick itself first appears in historical records in the Domesday Book of 1086, as Wiche, 'dairy-farm'. It continues to appear by this name into the thirteenth century. The form Painswik first appears in 1237, but must originate in the name of an earlier lord of the manor, Pain Fitzjohn (d. 1137). Pain was a common Anglo-Norman name (itself originating in paiën, Latin paganus, 'heathen').
During the first English Civil War (1642–45) Gloucester was a Parliamentarian stronghold of some strategic importance. Consequently, it was surrounded by forces loyal to the King. After the siege of Gloucester was broken on 5 September 1643, the Royalist army, which had been surrounding the city, encamped overnight at Painswick, with the King staying at Court House. Some damage was caused by the troops and a scar from two small cannonballs can still be seen on the tower of St. Mary's parish church.
The Church of England parish church of Saint Mary is a Grade I listed building. A priest in Painswick is noted in the Domesday Book and so it is assumed that there was also a church here at that time. Evidence suggests that it was built between 1042 and 1066 by Ernesi, a rich Anglo Saxon thegn who was then Lord of the Manor.
In the churchyard Painswick has a fine collection of chest tombs and monuments from the early 17th century onwards, carved in local stone by local craftsmen. The oldest tomb, with fossils on the top, is of William Loveday, Yeoman, dated 1623. Clifton-Taylor describes the churchyard, with its tombs and yews, as the grandest churchyard in England.
( Painswick - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Painswick . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Painswick - UK
Join us for more :
Burwell, St Mary's Church, UK. Bells - Sunday June 7th 2015
These were the bells of St Mary's recorded in our back garden.
St Michael's Church, Lyme Regis, Dorset.
Video of the 12th century St Michael's Church, Lyme Regis. You can read about it at
This is one of a series of Lyme Regis vid's I've posted - of the Cobb, Broad Street, the harbour and the east and west beaches..
Places to see in ( Westbury - UK )
Places to see in ( Westbury - UK )
Westbury is a town and civil parish in the west of the English county of Wiltshire, most famous for the Westbury White Horse. The most likely origin of the West- in Westbury is simply that the town is near the western edge of the county of Wiltshire, the bounds of which have been much the same since the Anglo-Saxon period.
Westbury is located in the far west of Wiltshire, close to the border with Somerset. It lies at the northwestern edge of Salisbury Plain, 18 miles (29 km) southeast of the city of Bath, approximately 5 miles (8.0 km) south of the county town of Trowbridge and 4.5 miles (7.2 km) north of the garrison town of Warminster. Other nearby towns and cities include Frome, Devizes, Salisbury and Bristol. Nearby villages include Bratton, Chapmanslade, Dilton Marsh, Hisomley, Edington, Upton Scudamore, North Bradley, Rudge, Standerwick, Hawkeridge, Heywood and Yarnbrook.
There are several suburbs including Frogmore, Bitham Park, the Meads and the Ham (all northside), Chalford, Leigh Park and Westbury Leigh (southside). Westbury Leigh is generally considered as a village separate to Westbury itself, though it has become contiguous with the town. Leigh Park is a district developed since the late-1990s that is contiguous with Westbury Leigh, and incorporates a large medical centre, a community hall and a Tesco Express store.
In the past, Westbury was sometimes known as Westbury-under-the-Plain to distinguish it from other towns of the same name. Westbury is nestled under the northwestern bluffs of Salisbury Plain, and it is there that the town's most famous feature can be seen: the Westbury White Horse. It is sometimes claimed locally that the White Horse was first cut into the chalk face as long ago as the year 878, to commemorate the victory of Alfred the Great over the Danes in the Battle of Eðandun (probably, but not certainly, at the nearby village of Edington). However, scholars believe this to be an invention of the late 18th century, and no evidence has yet been found for the existence of the horse before the 1720s. The form of the current White Horse dates from 1778, when it was restored. In the 1950s it was decided that the horse would be more easily maintained if it were set in concrete and painted white. The horse's original form may have been quite different from the horse seen today. One 18th-century engraving shows the horse facing to the right, but in its current form it faces to the left.
Westbury centres on its historic marketplace, with the churchyard of All Saints' Church (14th century) behind it. All Saints' has a heavy ring of bells, an Erasmus Bible, a 16th-century clock with no face constructed by a local blacksmith, and a marble bust of William Phipps by Robert Taylor. The west window of the church was donated by Abraham Laverton, who also built Prospect Square (1869) and the nearby Laverton Institute (1873), which he donated to a local charity, known today as the Laverton.
The A350 road passes through the town and a controversial Westbury Bypass was once proposed which would have reduced traffic in parts of the town but would have had a negative effect on the landscape on the east of the town. The eastern bypass scheme was eventually rejected after an Independent Planning Inquiry recommended against it in 2009. The town remains a bottleneck on the A350 route. The town is an important junction point on the railway network, as it lies at the point where the Reading to Taunton line, formng a link from London Paddington to Penzance, intersects the Wessex Main Line, linking Bristol and Bath Spa to Salisbury and Southampton. Westbury railway station is on the west of the town.
( Westbury - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Westbury . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Westbury - UK
Join us for more :
Aerial video of Saltford (North side), May 2015
The north side of Saltford filmed by Jon Godfrey from Tunnel House and St Mary's churchyard using a DJI Phantom 3 unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) at a height of 100m.
NOTE: To get the best view of this video and appreciate the level of detail, click on full screen mode (bottom RH corner) and select HD (1080P) in Settings.
Little albies grave,bath abbey cemetery, bath,uk
Whitcombe Church in Whitcombe, Dorset, England
Whitcombe Church in Whitcombe, Dorset, England was built in the 12th century. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building,[1] and is now a redundant church in the care of the Churches Conservation Trust.[2] It was declared redundant on 29 October 1971, and was vested in the Trust on 12 February 1973.[3]
The site of the church was used for worship in the Saxon era and there are fragments of two Saxon crosses. The nave of Whitcombe Church dates from the 12th century, with the chancel being added in the 15th. The tower was added in the late 16th century.[2]
The interior includes several wall paintings, including one of St Christopher, and a 13th-century Purbeck marble font.[2]
William Barnes the English writer, poet, minister, and philologist was the curate at Whitcombe from 1847 to 1852, and again from 1862 preaching his first and last sermons in the church.[2] He wrote over 800 poems, some in Dorset dialect and much other work including a comprehensive English grammar quoting from more than 70 different languages.
[Wikipedia] St Mary the Virgin's Church, Bathwick
The Church of St Mary the Virgin is located on Church Street (not Raby Place as Pevsner mentions, although the two are the same street) in Bathwick section of Bath, Somerset, England. The church is Anglican and located near Pinch's Sydney Place (1808) and Bath's famed Sydney Pleasure Gardens.
The church was constructed by the Pulteney family, who used it to replace the medieval parish church of St Mary's, Bathwick, known even in Georgian times as Bathwick Old Church. The churchyard is now part of Smallcombe Cemetery.
The Church of St Mary the Virgin was where the band Muse recorded the organ parts on their second studio album Origin of Symmetry.
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