Adventure is Out There | Episode 6: A Weekend in Baltimore ♡
Churches, cemeteries, catacombs...oh my! Welcome to Adventure is Out There, a series where I take you on my various adventures around the United States! In this episode, my sister, her daughter, and I travel to Baltimore, Maryland to see my brother get married to his beautiful bride! It was wonderful seeing my family and getting to meet the new members of the family. Also, I think they chose the coolest wedding venue EVER! Who doesn't think getting married at the church where Edgar Allan Poe is buried is the coolest wedding venue?! Totally Goth.
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Places Featured:
⚰ Westminster Burying Ground and Catacombs
⚰ Polish Home Club
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Green Family - Memorial Video
In memory of Darian F. Green and his mother Dolores T. Green.
*****Darian Frank Green*****
44, of Westminster, died Wednesday, Feb. 5, 2014, at Carroll Hospice's Dove House.
Born Sept. 9, 1969, in Westminster, he was the son of Dolores Watroba Green, of Westminster, and the late Douglas Garland Green.
A lifelong resident of Carroll County, he was formerly a welder at General Dynamics and ASC. He enjoyed fishing, especially the Starner's Dam area of the Monocacy River; and watching football and baseball.
He was known for his outgoing personality.
Surviving, in addition to his mother, are sons Kyle and Dalton Green, and their mother Carol Green, all of Woodbine; brothers and sister-in-law Doug and Tami Green, of Finksburg, and Denny Green, of Westminster; three nieces; and many friends.
A celebration of life will be held at a later date.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be sent to Carroll Hospice's Dove House, 292 Stoner Ave., Westminster, MD 21157.
Cremation services were provided by Fletcher Funeral & Cremation Services in Westminster.
Online condolences may be offered at fletcherfuneralhome.net.
Sign this guest book online at carrollcountytimes.com. - See more at:
*****Dolores Theresa Green*****
79, of Westminster, died Wednesday, March 26, 2014, at Carroll Hospital Center.
Born Aug. 1, 1934, in Baltimore, she was the daughter of the late Lillian Glass and Frank Watroba. She was the wife of the late Douglas Garland Green Sr.
Before retiring she worked for the State of Maryland and at Telemechanique. She enjoyed cooking.
Surviving are sons and daughter-in-law Douglas G. Green Jr. and wife Tami, of Finksburg, and Dennis M. Green, of Westminster; a sister, Theresa Swan, of Baltimore; grandchildren Jenna Wilmot and husband Chris, of Cockeysville, Kyle Green and Dalton Green, both of Woodbine, Lisa Staley and husband Ryan, and Janice Stencil and husband Mike, all of Westminster; and four great-grandchildren.
She was predeceased by a son, Darian F. Green; and a brother, Sonny Watroba.
Friends may call from noon until the time of the funeral services, 2 p.m. Sunday at Fletcher Funeral & Cremation Services, 254 E. Main St., Westminster. Interment will follow in Patapsco Cemetery.
Online condolences may be offered at fletcherfuneralhome.net.
Sign this guest book online at carrollcountytimes.com. - See more at:
Abandoned Fort Armistead exploration in Baltimore Maryland
We explore the now abandoned Fort Armistead in Balitmore Maryland which is not far from the main road. Place is not covered in graffiti and trash and it is being taken back by nature.
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Druid Ridge Cemetery Pikesville, Maryland
Druid Ridge Cemetery in Pikesville, Md. Cemetery is home of the infamous Black Aggie graves.
Ep 4 - FRIDAYS IN THE GRAVEYARD - Captain Jobey Emmons - Whatcoat Cemetery, Snow Hill, MD
FRIDAYS IN THE GRAVEYARD. I love a graveyard, don't you?
In this episode, Mindie Burgoyne talks about the graves of Jobey Emmons and his son, Martin at Whatcoat Cemetery in Snow Hill, Maryland
Mindie Burgoyne recounts the story of a Snow Hill sea captain, Jobey Emmons, who owned and operated a schooner named Arabella. Captain Emmons lived in Snow Hill on the Pocomoke River where he docked the Arabella. In 1887, Jobey took his 9-year-old son, Martin on a trip up the Chesapeake Bay to Baltimore. On the return trip, they docked in Pocomoke City and there was an accident that took both of their lives. They are buried in Whatcoat Cemetery not far from where they lived.
#FridaysintheGraveyard
#chesapeakeghosts
Mindie Burgoyne is the owner of Chesapeake Ghost Tours, which operates eleven year-round ghost walks and 5 bus tours on the Eastern Shore of Maryland.
For more information on ghost tours and ghost walks in the Chesapeake region go to
Music by Kevin MacLeod
50 Creepiest Burial Grounds Ever
From graveyards haunted by the ghost of a dead girl to popular suicide destinations we count 50 of the creepiest burial grounds throughout the world
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Planet Dolan PTY LTD and Danger Dolan™ have made reasonable inquiries within the timeframe available to identify the source of any images used and attribute the source accordingly.
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Henryton Hospital - Mariottsville, Maryland
- I will be uploading some videos within the next few weeks from various cameras, some current, and some older, to see what works and what doesn't. If enough people 'subscribe', I will continue uploading, and making more new ones. Please feel free to add comments or recommendations. I have 1000's of pics and lots of video, and I'm always getting more. This video was made quickly as a basic test. Thanks!!
Hampstead's 'Bypass Babies'
The Maryland State Highway Administration recently enlisted the help of students from Hampstead Elementary School and Sandymount Elementary School to name the 40 goats that are being used to keep vegetation under control on the Hampstead Bypass - Maryland Route 30 in Carroll County. The kids named the herd the 'Bypass Babies'. The vegetation control helps with habitat for the threatened Bog Turtle. American Chestnut Trees were also recently planted along the bypass in an effort to bring back these precious trees that were wiped out by blight more than a century ago.
The Bible: Is it Inspired? - B. B. Warfield
Is the Bible inspired of God or the mere words of men? B. B. Warfield elucidates the answer to this question.
All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness 2 Timothy 3:16
The Inspiration of the Bible - B.B. Warfield
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The Inspiration and Authority of the Bible, by Benjamin B. Warfield
The Person and Work of the Holy Spirit, by Benjamin B. Warfield
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Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield (November 5, 1851 February 16, 1921) was the principal of Princeton Seminary from 1887 to 1921. Some conservative Presbyterians consider him to be the last of the great Princeton theologians before the split in 1929 that formed Westminster Seminary and the Orthodox Presbyterian Church.
Warfield was born near Lexington, Kentucky on November 5, 1851. His parents were William and Mary Cabell (Breckinridge) Warfield, originally from Virginia and quite wealthy. His maternal grandfather was the Presbyterian preacher Robert Jefferson Breckinridge (1800-1871), the son of John Breckinridge, a former United States Senator and Attorney General. Warfield's uncle was John C. Breckinridge, the fourteenth Vice President of the United States, and a Confederate general in the American Civil War.
For a short time in 1876 he preached in Presbyterian churches in Concord, Kentucky and Dayton, Ohio as a supply pastor — the latter church calling him to be their ordained minister (which he politely refused). In late 1876 Warfield and his new wife moved to Germany where he studied under Ernst Luthardt and Franz Delitzsch. Warfield was the assistant pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Baltimore, Maryland for a short time. Then he became an instructor at Western Theological Seminary, which is now called Pittsburgh Theological Seminary. He was ordained on April 26, 1879.
In 1881 Warfield wrote a joint article with A. A. Hodge on the inspiration of the Bible. It drew attention because of its scholarly and forceful defense of the inerrancy of the Bible. In many of his writings, Warfield attempted to demonstrate that the doctrine of Biblical inerrancy was simply orthodox Christian teaching, and not merely a concept invented in the nineteenth century. His passion was to refute the liberal element within Presbyterianism and within Christianity at large.
Throughout his life, he continued to write books and articles, which are still widely read today (and listened to!).
If such be the value and use of doctrine, the systematic theologian is preeminently a preacher of the gospel; and the end of his work is obviously not merely the logical arrangement of the truths which come under his hand, but the moving of men, through their power, to love God with all their hearts and their neighbors as themselves; to choose their portion with the Saviour of their souls; to find and hold Him precious; and to recognize and yield to the sweet influences of the Holy Spirit whom He has sent. . . . For this he needs to be suffused at all times with a sense of the unspeakable worth of the revelation which lies before him as the source of his material, and with the personal bearings of its separate truths on his own heart and life; he needs to have had and to be having a full, rich, and deep religious experience of the great doctrines with which he deals; he needs to be living close to his God, to be resting always on the bosom of his Redeemer, to be filled at all times with the manifest influences of the Holy Spirit. The student of systematic theology needs a very sensitive religious nature, a most thoroughly consecrated heart, and an outpouring of the Holy Ghost upon him, such as will fill him with that spiritual discernment, without which all native intellect is in vain. He needs to be not merely a student, not merely a thinker, not merely a systematizer, not merely a teacher — he needs to be like the beloved disciple himself in the highest, truest, and holiest sense, a divine.
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Please watch: A Call to Separation - A. W. Pink Christian Audio Books / Don't be Unequally Yoked / Be Ye Separate
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Places to see in ( New Orleans - USA ) St Louis Cathedral
Places to see in ( New Orleans - USA ) St Louis Cathedral
The Cathedral-Basilica of Saint Louis, King of France, also called St. Louis Cathedral, is the seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans and is the oldest cathedral in what would become the United States. The first church on the site was built in 1718; the third, built in 1789, was raised to cathedral rank in 1793. The cathedral was expanded and largely rebuilt in 1850, with little of the 1789 structure remaining.
Saint Louis Cathedral is in the French Quarter of New Orleans, Louisiana, United States, on the Place John Paul II (French: Place Jean-Paul II), a promenaded section of Chartres Street (rue de Chartres) that runs for one block between St. Peter Street (rue Saint-Pierre) on the upriver boundary and St. Ann Street (rue Sainte-Anne) on the downriver boundary. It is located next to Jackson Square and facing the Mississippi River in the heart of New Orleans, situated between the historic buildings of the Cabildo and the Presbytère.
Three Roman Catholic churches have stood on the site since 1718, when the city was founded. The first was a crude wooden structure in the early days of the French colony. As the French were Catholic, their church was prominently located on the town square. Construction of a larger brick and timber church was begun in 1725 and was completed in 1727. Along with numerous other buildings, the church was destroyed in the Great New Orleans Fire (1788) on Good Friday, March 21, 1788. The cornerstone of a new church was laid in 1789 and the building was completed in 1794. In 1793 Saint Louis Church was elevated to cathedral rank as the See of the Diocese of New Orleans, making it one of the oldest cathedrals in the United States. In 1819, a central tower with the clock and bell was added.
Saint Louis Cemetery is known as the burial place of Voodoo priestess Marie Laveau; her tomb attracts hundreds of pilgrims every year. The cemetery is also the burial place of various prominent New Orleans residents, including Étienne de Boré, Homer Plessy, Bernard de Marigny, Benjamin Henry Latrobe (architect of the first American Cathedral in Baltimore and the US Capitol), Barthelemy Lafon, Paul Morphy, and Ernest Nathan Morial.
( New Orleans - USA ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting New Orleans . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in New Orleans - USA
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Creepy College or Hell House in Maryland
BY THE WAY WE LOVE TO GET HATED ON BY REAL GHOST HUNTERS LOL WE ARE NOT GHOST HUNTERS & WE DO NOT INTENED TO EVER BE READ THE DESCRIPTION AND YOU WILL ALREADY KNOW THIS
In Maryland there is not really anything to do except explore places. So I decided to start a collection of videos of place around my state that are considered Haunted.
I want to start it off with something many people in Maryland know about Creepy College.
This is a video showing what the Creepy College site looks like in the day time.
I have seen very little videos about this so I decided to take everyone to the actual place of where Creepy College once was.
We have had some scary shit happen to us, like cold spots in 85 degree weather where you can actually see your breath but only in one actual spot. We have been there when noone else was around and hear people (or was it?) walking through the pitch black without a flash light.
Creepy College is located in Baltimore County in Ilchester, Maryland. Many people know and have heard about creepy college and it always associated with 7 hills because that is the usual route to get to creepy college.
There is so many different stories about this place so I'll tell you what I was told.
Creepy college was once an all girls college where back in the early 19th century it was believed to be a spot where satanic pratices were done at. The story goes that in the old college the priest or nuns that ran it went crazy and ended up killing many of the girls that went to school there, many people heard that he took 5 bodies of the girls he killed and placed them in the shape of a pentagram.
After this happened the school was shut down and abandoned for many years then in 1998 or 1999 (or sometime not too long ago) on halloween night some kids burned it down and just a few years ago, it has to be about nomore than 2- 2 1/2 years ago it was torn down.
And oh yeah if I got some the history wrong or anything don't put up stupid comments trying to tell me, this is just for entertainment.
Soon to come, Fort Armstead!
Quades Store - St. Mary's County Maryland
To learn more about the people and places that make Maryland unique visit marylandlife.com Slideshow by Edwin Remsberg
WJZ BREAKING NEWS: Multiple People Shot Near Aberdeen, Maryland
Multiple police agencies are responding after reports of shots fired in Harford County, Maryland just south of Aberdeen.
United States Presidents and The Illuminati Masonic Power Structure
United States Presidents and The Illuminati Masonic Power Structure
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Edward VIII
Edward VIII (Edward Albert Christian George Andrew Patrick David; later the Duke of Windsor; 23 June 1894 -- 28 May 1972) was King of the United Kingdom and the Dominions of the British Empire, and Emperor of India, from 20 January 1936 until his abdication on 11 December 1936.
Edward was the eldest son of King George V and Queen Mary. He was created Prince of Wales on his sixteenth birthday, nine weeks after his father (who had been the previous Prince of Wales) succeeded his own father Edward VII as king. As a young man, he served in the British Armed Forces during the First World War and undertook several overseas tours on behalf of his father.
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Abandoned Maryland Escape Walkthrough
Abandoned Maryland Escape YouTube
Abandoned Maryland Escape Walkthrough
Abandoned Maryland Escape EightGames
Abandoned Maryland Escape
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Abandoned Maryland Escape Video walkthrough
Escape Game Eight Games
B.B. Warfield - The Bible, the Book of Mankind (Part 3 of 4)
A large video collection of classic hymns, contemporary Praise and Worship songs, and the works (audio books, devotional readings, and sermons) of men greatly used of God, such as: Charles Spurgeon, Jonathan Edwards, A.W. Tozer, A.W. Pink, John Owen, Oswald Chambers, Andrew Murray, E.M. Bounds, John Bunyan, George Whitefield, and many more, covering topics on many aspects of the Christian life. May your time spent here be blessed.
B.B. Warfield playlist:
Thank you to for use of this audio. Please visit their website for many other classic Christian works.
BB Warfield - The Bible, the Book of Mankind (Part 3 of 4)
Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield (November 5, 1851 February 16, 1921) was the principal of Princeton Seminary from 1887 to 1921. Some conservative Presbyterians consider him to be the last of the great Princeton theologians before the split in 1929 that formed Westminster Seminary and the Orthodox Presbyterian Church.
Warfield was born near Lexington, Kentucky on November 5, 1851. His parents were William and Mary Cabell (Breckinridge) Warfield, originally from Virginia and quite wealthy. His maternal grandfather was the Presbyterian preacher Robert Jefferson Breckinridge (1800-1871), the son of John Breckinridge, a former United States Senator and Attorney General. Warfield's uncle was John C. Breckinridge, the fourteenth Vice President of the United States, and a Confederate general in the American Civil War.
For a short time in 1876 he preached in Presbyterian churches in Concord, Kentucky and Dayton, Ohio as a supply pastor — the latter church calling him to be their ordained minister (which he politely refused). In late 1876 Warfield and his new wife moved to Germany where he studied under Ernst Luthardt and Franz Delitzsch. Warfield was the assistant pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Baltimore, Maryland for a short time. Then he became an instructor at Western Theological Seminary, which is now called Pittsburgh Theological Seminary. He was ordained on April 26, 1879.
In 1881 Warfield wrote a joint article with A. A. Hodge on the inspiration of the Bible. It drew attention because of its scholarly and forceful defense of the inerrancy of the Bible. In many of his writings, Warfield attempted to demonstrate that the doctrine of Biblical inerrancy was simply orthodox Christian teaching, and not merely a concept invented in the nineteenth century. His passion was to refute the liberal element within Presbyterianism and within Christianity at large.
Throughout his life, he continued to write books and articles, which are still widely read today (and listened to!).
If such be the value and use of doctrine, the systematic theologian is preeminently a preacher of the gospel; and the end of his work is obviously not merely the logical arrangement of the truths which come under his hand, but the moving of men, through their power, to love God with all their hearts and their neighbors as themselves; to choose their portion with the Saviour of their souls; to find and hold Him precious; and to recognize and yield to the sweet influences of the Holy Spirit whom He has sent. . . . For this he needs to be suffused at all times with a sense of the unspeakable worth of the revelation which lies before him as the source of his material, and with the personal bearings of its separate truths on his own heart and life; he needs to have had and to be having a full, rich, and deep religious experience of the great doctrines with which he deals; he needs to be living close to his God, to be resting always on the bosom of his Redeemer, to be filled at all times with the manifest influences of the Holy Spirit. The student of systematic theology needs a very sensitive religious nature, a most thoroughly consecrated heart, and an outpouring of the Holy Ghost upon him, such as will fill him with that spiritual discernment, without which all native intellect is in vain. He needs to be not merely a student, not merely a thinker, not merely a systematizer, not merely a teacher — he needs to be like the beloved disciple himself in the highest, truest, and holiest sense, a divine.
- B. B. Warfield
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: A Call to Separation - A. W. Pink Christian Audio Books / Don't be Unequally Yoked / Be Ye Separate
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
What about Homewood? New revitalization efforts underway
Crime here is the highest in Pittsburgh, and incomes are well below the regional average. It has bullet holes and blight, and it's the home of violent gangs -- but also working families who want a better neighborhood. Subscribe to WTAE on YouTube now for more:
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