27:34 8 have 500 videos of fairies they are transparent
@patwestergard42522 күн бұрын
Gorgeous! Beautifully done.
@LHPDocumentariesКүн бұрын
@@patwestergard4252 Thanks a lot!
@jamesross17998 күн бұрын
It's a travesty that it's no longer an Inn we used to call in for a half sometimes on the way to or from Filey or Scarborough in the 80s 90s . My grandad a ww2 vetran knew about the chair and feard it although it was in the museum by the time he took me .
@LHPDocumentaries6 күн бұрын
Fantastic! Thanks for sharing. I also think it's a real shame that it's no longer the same old coaching inn that I know from my youth. I used to go up to Allanbrooke Barracks with my dad a lot when I was a kid, and I always enjoyed seeing the inn (and the noose outside) when passing by! It's not the same anymore sadly.
@jamesross17998 күн бұрын
I remember my grandad telling me about aircrew who sat in the chair "always going missing on there next opp" during ww2. I've seen the bloody thing and I wouldn't sit in the bugger 😐
@Giggan-h2r18 күн бұрын
Very interesting! Subbed
@LHPDocumentaries17 күн бұрын
Thanks a lot!
@thirdratecontent58518 күн бұрын
When you showed the drovers road the journey said it would take 3hr 33mins by foot 😂 Fascinating investigation
@LHPDocumentaries18 күн бұрын
I found that quite amazing too! This was one of my favourite pieces I've worked on this year, finding her grave was the icing on the cake!
@thirdratecontent58519 күн бұрын
Thank you for taking the time to make this well made and exhaustive documentary 👍
@LHPDocumentaries18 күн бұрын
Thanks a lot!
@kingofdrawing569619 күн бұрын
That was wonderful ! Put it in a MUSEUM
@LHPDocumentaries21 күн бұрын
This is one of my earliest videos, previously uploaded on my old channel. This is why it's not as high quality as later productions and has content I have later repeated in other videos. I feel like I want to remake this one day.
@viprip122 күн бұрын
Another amazing video, you speak so beautifully about the nostalgia and love of decaying seaside towns.
@LHPDocumentaries21 күн бұрын
@@viprip1 Thanks a lot! I have always felt drawn to these kind of places in some way, and enjoy thinking about their history and meaning
@darrelhill975423 күн бұрын
went in 70s and 80s and later to bognor went few years ago not the same prefer old style
@LHPDocumentaries20 күн бұрын
I definitely prefer the old style too! Thanks for watching!
@viprip124 күн бұрын
This was a brilliant video, really well researched and edited!
@LHPDocumentaries24 күн бұрын
Thanks a lot! Glad you enjoyed it!
@juliecavanagh739925 күн бұрын
I'm from Cleveland, Ohio, United States and I love Lake Erie in Winter. It's as if Nature is reclaiming it for a time. If you can brave the cold winds, you are treated to intensely moody skies, dominating waves, and a timeless emptiness. There's something primordial and pure about it. Yet, also dangerous. Thank you for another great video!
@LHPDocumentaries25 күн бұрын
Primordial and pure is a perfect way to describe the mood of these places! Not so long back I sat out as the sun went down in one of these seaside resorts, and the whole place seemed deserted apart from the gulls. It was literally like going into another world, and it was strange to imagine that somewhere out to sea, ships were moving unseen in the gloom. Lake Erie looks like an amazing place!
@LeviMacdonald-b7cАй бұрын
Looks like thirsk as some good shop's and outdoor market.my favourite 😍 I SEE a HERON shop 😊u can't go wrong with that
@LeviMacdonald-b7cАй бұрын
Yes it's at thirsk museum. Since 1978.as you'll have more information than me being from the area. It says the museum opens in March 2025. So I'm hopefully going to Visit. When it opens for visitors 🙌 Very spooky 😱 you wouldn't want to sit in that 🪑 would you. Enjoyed watching your video«👀 Ps« Wouldn't mind a copy of your Book. An interesting story 📚 🤔 I bet it's a Killer Read
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
Thank you very much! Yeah the museum has closed for winter now, but when you do visit it might be worth doing the World of James Herriott too, as it is only just across the road from the museum (great historical scenes all about thirsk and north yorkshire) Thirsk is a nice town and will be even better if you visit on a market day, plenty of great local produce available!
@kevinswain4441Ай бұрын
Growing up in the 70s & 80s visiting a lot of the camps over the years with my parents. I was on the front cover of the butlins weekly magazine. Watching new videos of Bognor with the big white tent does not look the same and I don't think i would enjoy a visit. Ah memories .... I now live the other side of the world to Butlins I dont think I will ever see a camp again..... Thank you for the memories and putting the video up. As my wife (Kiwi) would say Hi-De-Hi campers
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
Thanks a lot, glad you enjoyed it! I also don't really like the modern design with the big tent etc. It's too different from the spirit of the original Butlins for me, although I'm glad they still have some of the things that make it great (redcoats and colourful kids shows etc) Glad to hear this video brought back some memories!
@rockabilly375Ай бұрын
Thank you for this. Heartbreaking. Barry Island camp in the early 80's was the best place in the world for me out of all the camps. Sadly missed. Its tough to visit Barry Island now its gone. But I do.
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
@@rockabilly375 Thanks for watching! I personally never knew Barry Island with Butlins (we went to Pwllheli and Skegness from the North ), but have always loved Barry each time I've visited. That said, I do wonder sometimes what it must have been like when Butlins was there, and it's sad to think of all that has been lost.
@rockabilly375Ай бұрын
@LHPDocumentaries It really did feel like you actually were away from the rest of the world. I think the combination of a compact camp, yet with all the Butlins attractions combined with the bonus of the pleasure park on the seafront which was fantastic and themed, so two funfairs. You also had Dai Woodhams scrapyard full of rusting steam locomotives to explore if you nipped over the fence. Absolutely fabulous. Plus amusement arcades inside the camp and out. My parents took us to most of the camps, but Barry Island was my favourite.
@dizzydevil547Ай бұрын
A FANTASTIC VIDEO! ..I do have to ask (as im of the older generation (ish) i have Never been to a butlins camp ( SHAME ON ME!) But i was born 1970 so missed the heyday of butlins BUt there were STILL a lot of the sites operating back then when i was a kid (just mum and dad could't afford it at the time and then when my youger brother and sister arrived it was totaly out of reach ..so yes we had BnB in blackpool , or a caravan park for a weeks holiday even in the 80s (mum was the only one that had been abroad to spain on a works trip/ holiday at that point) we didnt get abroad till the 90s AND as a full family including myself till 2001 ! (i maty add 1st AND only time i went on a holiday abroad with them ( i was 21 and hated the whole 2 weeks in benidorm! ) anyhow im digressing lol ( im from the north so tend to ramble and go of topic ) in the VID as no one seems to have mentioed it is that a young Des O'connor @ 5:34 ? i know he started of in the holiday camps along with a lot of other classic entertainers be it butlins, pontins , warners etc! 😉
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
Thanks a lot, really glad you enjoyed it! It is indeed a young Des O'Connor on that image, back from when he worked as a Red Coat in the late 50s. We also never had abroad holidays when I was a child until much later in life. The holidays were always Butlins, Flamingo Land caravans, things like that. Looking back on it, I think I was actually pretty lucky to have seen these things before they all vanished!
@EyeAmYou42Ай бұрын
How beautiful! There should be fairy forests everywhere with cafes and museums. What a magical idea! 🧚♂️💫
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
@@EyeAmYou42 I think that would actually be amazing! Thanks for watching!
@juliecavanagh7399Ай бұрын
Every time someone says to me, "I'd really like to get into your head", I reply, "Bring some breadcrumbs. And a weapon." LOL Great video, thank you!
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
Thanks! Something interesting happened when I was filming this actually. When I visited the huge ancient oak tree, I was thinking about what I would say about Norse Gods etc in the video. On the way back to my car, a mother and child were walking on the footpath, the only other people I saw all day. The little girl ran off and the mother called her back - and her name was Freya - just the like Norse Goddess. It was really quite a strange synchronicity!
@juliecavanagh7399Ай бұрын
@@LHPDocumentaries Wow! I love that!
@ButterflyFairy33Ай бұрын
This is amazing! Really made me smile and warm my heart, which is what memories are made of!
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
@@ButterflyFairy33 Thanks a lot!
@jeffpertz5080Ай бұрын
You're a fantastic poet. That was a lovely documentary! I remember your deep knowledge of the Thoth deck in regards to Tarot. I would love to see a documentary about the true function of Tarot. Much love to you sir.
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
@@jeffpertz5080 Thanks a lot, really glad you enjoyed it! I've been thinking about how to tackle Thoth tarot in terms of a documentary, it's a big topic and although I have got some ideas of how to do it, it'll take a lot of working out. However, I do think it's a great idea and will definitely look at this at some point!
@jeffpertz5080Ай бұрын
Take your time and thank you for everything you do.
@James-e9p6xАй бұрын
My mother loves to tell the story of how my great-grandfather's friend Billy asked him to become partners with him in a little seaside amusements business. He declined the offer because it sounded too much like hard work, but I'm sure you can guess what Billy's full name turned out to be!
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
Wow that's amazing! One of those "what could have been" moments for sure. Thanks for sharing!
@ButlinsHistoryАй бұрын
Well done, nice to see the younger generation interested in the Butlins history. 😊
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
Thank you very much!
@juliecavanagh7399Ай бұрын
Thank you for another incredible documentary!
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
Thanks! This one was interesting to make, meeting the farmer was a real treat, he had invited me back another time as well to see more of the area. What I can remember most about filming this though was the gas lamps in the old house - the paraffin aroma and strange hypnotizing effect of them was amazing, it was so strange to imagine people with this lighting full time.
@aoilpeАй бұрын
I’ve been in Blackpool last June for 5 nights and a visit to Pleasure Beach (a 5min walk) and had a really good time there. Sure , the problems are visible when you quit the Promenade- even the seaside has a lot of vacancies and abandonment - but never the less you can have a good time in Blackpool ! Greetings from🇨🇭
@juliecavanagh7399Ай бұрын
So magical! Thank you for the incredible documentaries! And thank you for preserving and sharing the treasure of Great Britain's history and folklore. You deserve an OBE for your work!! The BEST on KZbin, hands down ❤
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
Thank you so much! This is actually one of my own personal favourite videos I have worked on, simply due to actually finding her grave. I was pretty stunned when I figured out what was written on it (A Thousand Ages in thy sight are like an evening gone), it was definitely quite a moment for me! The flowers I left on her grave were bought from the nearby town after finding the grave, and I went back to film it. I just felt like I had to leave something there, as at the time I didn't actually think I'd ever really find it!
@juliecavanagh7399Ай бұрын
@@LHPDocumentaries Oh the flowers were the sweetest touch! I wonder if her spirit was with you, as you walked her same steps, and maybe she guided you to it. Either that or the fairies did...
@juliecavanagh7399Ай бұрын
Wonderful documentary, and such beautiful footage! Thank you for researching and creating this for us. (and thanks for including the map visuals too!)
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
Thanks a lot! I always feel there is something fascinating about Holy Wells, and there are so many of them dotted around in the hills and villages, they must have been of huge importance. Whenever I find one, I want to stop and rest for a while beside it.
@-WillAlone-Ай бұрын
Idiots and imbecile as a medical term is wild.
@-WillAlone-Ай бұрын
People who abuse their Authority like that are the absolute worst!
@Jonah-n9dАй бұрын
Born in Blackpool 1960, left in 1980 and never went back except to visit family. I worked on the Golden Mile for a few years selling Rock on the stalls as a teenager and on the Pleasure Beach. This was fascinating, I didn't know half of it, thank you.
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
Thanks a lot! Glad you enjoyed it!
@RebeccaTurner-ny1xxАй бұрын
The standard response to KZbin videos of local history: "Life was so much better then... 13,500 years ago... nobody was 'woke' and the UK hadn't been overrun by disgusting foreigners..."
@KezziaCrossleyАй бұрын
Such a great documentary! I’m so glad you came up on my feed !! Can’t wait for more 😊
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
@@KezziaCrossley Thanks a lot!
@juliecavanagh7399Ай бұрын
You do wonderful work, thank you!!
@elip4854Ай бұрын
Good stuff, LHP! I’ve never heard of a Brownie before. Maybe I need to leave some treats out to get my dishes washed.
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
@@elip4854 Thanks for watching! Wouldn't it be amazing if it actually worked - leave out a saucer of milk and the house cleans itself!
@joannaem-tr1dmАй бұрын
Very nice and emotional video
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
Thanks!
@seagypsiesbellydancers3047Ай бұрын
I never knew about the Elk, excellent documentary
@clonmany1000Ай бұрын
You should look at researchers like Jacques Vallee,John Keel and Joshua Cutchin ..there's a connection between the fay and the later UFO/Alien abduction phenomenon. Good to see you back,I loved your old churches blogs...any chance you could repost,and do more?
@LHPDocumentariesАй бұрын
Thanks a lot, I'll definitely take a look. This connection between Fae and UFO phenomena is fascinating. I will definitely be doing more content where I visit old churches, sometimes as part of a wider topic but also probably sometimes about the churches themselves, as so many are full of rich history and folklore. Thanks for watching!
@peeweepixie36552 ай бұрын
This is really good!
@LHPDocumentaries2 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@jonjon90472 ай бұрын
I’m in touch with James Holmes descendants who live in Canada now. Lovely people and very knowledgeable about the events Thirsk.
@LHPDocumentaries2 ай бұрын
Wow that's amazing! I found out about these events completely by chance, when finding Lotties grave, but have never forgotten it since (and I'm from Thirsk!). It's a very interesting part of railway history. Thanks for watching!
@jonjon9047Ай бұрын
@ I live halfway to Easingwold. We should do a video together sometime.