Steubenville Ohio
Steubenville, Ohio, the county seat of Jefferson County, is located along the Ohio River. The city's name is derived from Fort Steuben, a 1786 fort that sat within the city's current limits and was named for German-Prussian military officer Baron Friedrich Wilhelm von Steuben. Today, a replica of the fort is open to the public.
This is Video One of a two-part series on Steubenville Ohio.
To see Video Two, Fort Steuben, please go to:
For more videos of the local Ohio area
National Museum of the United States Air Force, Part 1
National Museum of the United States Air Force, Part 2
National Museum of the United States Air Force, Part 3
General Sherman House in Lancaster, Ohio
Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum, Part 1
Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum, Part 2
Athens County Historical Museum in Athens, Ohio
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Exploring a Millionaire's Abandoned Mansion - PA (Built in 1906)
Video exploring an abandoned mansion built in 1906. Has been left vacant for 10 years, but was recently purchased and will soon be restored.
More videos on TUC Extras Channel:
Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum Ohio Part 1
Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum in Pickerington, Ohio
The American Motorcycle Heritage Foundation (AMHF), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, tax-exempt foundation, was created in 1982 to recognize, record and preserve our motorcycling heritage. Direction of the AMHF is provided by an elected volunteer board.
This is part one of a two part series on the Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum
Part 2 can be seen at:
For more videos of the local area
National Museum of the United States Air Force, Part 1
National Museum of the United States Air Force, Part 2
National Museum of the United States Air Force, Part 3
General Sherman House in Lancaster, Ohio
Athens County Historical Museum in Athens, Ohio
Steubenville, Ohio
Fort Steuben in Steubenville, Ohio
For more of our travel videos, please go to
Please email us at FreeTravelWithUs@gmail.com with any helpful suggestions on how we can do a better job documenting our travels and getting the word out about our website. Thanks!
If you are enjoying the videos, please help us continue by letting your friends know about them and subscribe to our channel so we can meet the new “1,000” subscriber requirements.
Stockbridge, Massachusetts
Stockbridge, Massachusetts
March 31, 2018
Beautiful Cemetery in Europe
Free video about St. John's Cemetery. This free video was created for you by and can be used for free under the creative commons license with the attribution of epSos.de as the original author of this St. John's Cemetery video.
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The St. John's Cemetery is a world famous cemetery in Nuremberg with historical, artistically valuable Bronzeepitaphien designed, culturally and historically situated significant (standardized) grave stones and grave Insert famous Nuremberg from four centuries. Because of the many rose bushes he is also called Rose Cemetery. Due to the historical sights of St. John's Cemetery is a world famous tourist destination in the context of a cemetery tourism and a station within the Historical Mile of Nuremberg.
The cemetery is located west of Nuremberg city wall in St. Johannis, which was incorporated in 1825. In the midst of the cemetery is originally from the 13th century St. John's church. On the eastern edge is the round wood Schuher -Kapelle (1513-1515), the Beheim Hans the Elder attributed. The former cemetery of the old settlement locust was about the 10th / 11th Century created. Nucleus of the later St. John's Cemetery was 1234 Siechkobel (Aussätzigenhaus) for lepers. For 1395 there the plague cemetery was consecrated with Stephen Chapel (later Holzschuherkapelle).
At Nuremberg, the dead, the two parishes were buried in the Middle Ages in the cemeteries, St. Sebald and St. Lorenz surrounded them. During the great plague of the late Middle Ages, the Council said in 1518 but any funeral on these old cemeteries within the city walls. For the Parish of St. Lawrence was near the Spittlertor Rochusfriedhof created. The Sebalder citizens were buried in the St. John's Cemetery, which existed since the 13th century. There was the Leprösenfriedhof behind the church since 1518 and also the cemetery.
From the city to the cemetery leads Nuremberg Way of the Cross with seven stages: 1506-1508 by Adam Kraft created. Today at the crossroads only copies of these works are situated. The original stations are located in the Germanic National Museum in Nuremberg, the Crucifixion in the Holy Spirit hospital and burial in the Holzschuherkapelle.
The St. John's Cemetery is in the 13th century in the former north-western suburb of St. Locust at the former St. John Siechkobel emerged around - the oldest surviving dating from the year 1238. Later, the area has grown together with an adjacent plague cemetery and several expansion areas. In the 16th century, when the Council officially banned burials within the city walls, the St. John's Cemetery burial place for the dead of Sebalder half of the city was, whereas the Rochusfriedhof Lorenzer state.
In the Middle Ages it shifted the funeral in the area of the church building. Man leaning based on the Germanic-Celtic tradition burial as well as cremation from a pagan. In many religions, the cemetery is a sacred place. In Christianity it is traditionally consecrated by the responsible minister. This ritual meaning of the cemetery has produced a number of taboos, moral obligations and laws. A cemeteries Catholics are called also campossantos, since in Pisa, when in compliance with hygiene authority ordered to close the cemetery, which was built in the thirteenth century within the city, the ground was covered with a layer of land, which the Pisan galleys had brought from the holy places of Jerusalem.
Then, by donating some powerful cemetery in which were built were erected altars and chapels for funeral ceremonies and devotions however observed civil laws prohibiting buried in town. One of the oldest still in use in the Netherlands are other cemeteries Moscowa in Arnhem and Cemetery and Old Oak Dunes in The Hague. The Hague cemetery is already in the 14th century named as parish cemetery in documents.
By extension, the cemetery is any public and sacred ground where, after a ceremony, we bury the dead of the same human group or individual graves lignagières where their memory is generally marked by a monument, symbols or inscriptions. General Cemetery term eventually encompass the field of funeral and cemetery. A cemetery or graveyard is where lie the bodies of the dead. Depending on the culture of the place, the bodies can be left in a coffin or simply can be enclosed in cloth or animal fat. Then be buried underground, placed in a vault or other grave. The word comes from the Greek cemetery koimetérion meaning bedroom, since according to Christian belief, the cemetery we went to sleep until the time of the resurrection.
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Beautiful Cemetery
This is a beautiful cemetery in the lovely Montevideo, Uruguay.
Goodbye WV Steel Corporation Building
Old WV Steel Corporation building being demolished. They moved out of town years ago. This was one of two large industrial sites left in the Charleston city limits.
Graveyard Beauty - Cemeteries of Tavistock, Devon, UK.
Exploring old churches and cemeteries is something I love to do. Some find them morbid creepy places but I feel quite the opposite. Churches and graveyards can tell you so much about the social history of the local area, and older ones in particular are filled with beautiful monuments and memorials, and are also often a haven for wildlife and insects.
This is a film I took of two cemeteries in Tavistock, Devon.
The old Victorian cemetery.
The main cemetery which is still used for interment.
The memorial for Harry Rogers who was 19 when he lost his life in the Titanic disaster.
Apologies for the dodgy camera work. I filmed it on an iPhone which is a bit of a pain to hold steady.
I had to replace the audio as most of it was filled with wind and traffic noise, even through neither was that loud at the time of recording.