so hang in there. I promise it'll be well worth it.

Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Working Really Hard.
Just so you all know I've been working really hard on this next post, Insane Asylums around the the world, you guys cant even imagine how many abandoned Asylums, Hospitals, and sanitariums there are in this world. It will be a little longer than I thought to get all of the information just right, and collect all the pictures needed hopfully I can get some with a ghost in there for you, fingers crossed.
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Most Haunted Islands
kalaupapa, Hawaii is a small unincorporated community on the island of Molokaʻi in the u.s. state of Hawaii.
The village is the site of a former settlement for leprosy patients. The original leper colony was first established in kalawao in the east, opposite to the village corner of the peninsula. It was there where Father Damien settled in 1873. Later it was moved to the location of the current village, which was originally a Hawaiian fishing village. The settlement was also attended by Mother Marianne Cope, among others. At its peak, about 1,200 men, women, and children were in exile in this island prison. The isolation law was enacted by king kamehamea V and remained in effect until 1969, when it was finally repealed. Today, about fourteen former sufferers of leprosy (which is also known as Hansen's Disease) continue to live there. The colony is now part of kalaupapa National Historical Park.
Shortly before the end of mandatory isolation in 1969, the state legislature considered closing the facility entirely. Intervention by interested persons, such as entertainer Don Ho and TV newsman Don Picken, resulted in allowing the residents to remain there for life. The opponents to closure pointed out that, although there were no active cases of leprosy in existence, many of the residents were physically scarred by the disease to an extent which would make their integration into mainstream society difficult if not impossible.

Hart island is a small island in New York City, the island has been used as a union civil war prison camp, Lunatic Asylum, Tuberculosis sanatorium, Potters field, a boys reformatory, and a Nike Missile base.
Hart island is a small island in New York City, the island has been used as a union civil war prison camp, Lunatic Asylum, Tuberculosis sanatorium, Potters field, a boys reformatory, and a Nike Missile base.
Prison
Hart Island was a prisoner of war camp for four months in 1865. 3,413 captured Confederate soldiers were housed on the island. 235 died in the camp, and their remains, along with those of Union soldiers buried there, were moved to Cypress Hills cemetery, Brooklyn in 1941.
At various times, the Department of Correction has used the island for a prison, but it is currently uninhabited. Access is controlled by the Department of Correction. However a bill (0848) transferring jurisdiction to the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation was introduced on April 30, 2012. The Hart Island Project testified in favor of this bill on September 27, 2012. Bill 803 requires the Department of Correction to post its database of burials on-line. Bill 804 requires the Department of Correction to post its visitation policy on-line.
Cemetery
Hart Island is the location of a 101-acre (0.41 km2) potters field for New York City, the largest tax-funded cemetery in the world. Burials on Hart Island began during the American Civil War. Hart Island was sold to New York City in 1869. The city then began using it as a cemetery when a 24-year-old woman named Louisa Van Slyke was the first person to be buried in the island's 45-acre (180,000 m2) public graveyard. Burials of unknowns were in single plots, and identified adults and children were buried in mass graves. In 1913, adults and children under five were buried in separate mass graves. Unknowns are mostly adults. They are frequently disinterred when families are able to locate their relatives through photographs and fingerprints kept on file at the Office of the Medical Examiner. Adults are buried in trenches with three sections of 48 individuals to make disinterment easier. Children, mostly infants, are rarely disinterred and are buried in trenches of 1,000.
Hart Island's southern end continued to accommodate the living up until Phoenix House moved in 1976. In 1977, the island was vandalized and many burial records were destroyed by a fire. Remaining records were transferred to the Municipal Archives in Manhattan. People were quarantined there during the 1870 yellow fever epidemic and at various times Hart Island has been home to a women's lunatic asylum (The Pavilion, 1885), a tubercularium, delinquent boys, and during the Cold War, Nike missiles.
More than one million dead are buried there—now approximately 1,500 a year. One third of them are infants and stillborn babies - which has been reduced from one half since children's health insurance began to cover all pregnant women in New York State. In 2005 there were 1,419 burials in the potter's field on Hart Island, including 826 adults, 546 infants and stillborn babies, and 47 burials of dismembered body parts. The dead are buried in trenches. Babies are placed in coffins of various sizes, and are stacked five coffins high and usually twenty coffins across. Adults are placed in larger pine boxes placed according to size and are stacked three coffins high and two coffins across. Burial records on microfilm at the Municipal Archives in Manhattan indicate that babies and adults were buried together in mass graves up until 1913 when the trenches became separate in order to facilitate the more common disinterment of adults. The potter's field is also used to dispose of amputated body parts, which are placed in boxes labeled "limbs". Ceremonies have not been conducted at the burial site since the 1950s, and no individual markers are set except for the first child to die of AIDS in New York City who was buried in isolation. In the past, burial trenches were re-used after 25–50 years, allowing for sufficient decomposition of the remains. Currently, historic buildings are being torn down to make room for new burials.
Because of the number of weekly interments made at the potter's field and the expense to the taxpayers, these mass burials are straightforward and conducted by Rikers island inmates. Those interred on Hart Island are not necessarily homeless or indigent, as hearsay has it, but people who could either not afford the expenses of private funerals or who were unclaimed by relatives who are frequently not notified within a two-week period. Approximately fifty percent of the burials are children under five who are identified and died in New York City's hospitals. The mothers of these children are generally unaware of what it means to sign papers authorizing a "City Burial." These women as well as siblings often go looking many years later. Many others have families who live abroad or out of state and whose relatives search for years. Their search is made more difficult because burial records are currently kept within the prison system. An investigation into the handling of the infant burials was opened in response to a criminal complaint made to the New York State Attorney General's Office on April 1, 2009.
In 2009 the digital mapping of grave trenches using the Global Positioning System was started. In 2013 the New York City of the Department of Correction created a searchable database on its website of the people buried on the island starting in 1977 and it contains 66,000 entries.
A Freedom of information Act request for 50,000 burial records was granted the Hart Island Project in 2008. The 1403 pages provided by the Department of Correction contain lists of all burials from 1985-2007. A second FOI request for records from September 1, 1977 to December 31, 1984 was submitted to the Department of Correction on June 2, 2008. New York City has located 502 pages from that period and they will soon be available to the public. A lawsuit concerning "place of death" information redacted from the Hart Island burial records was filed against New York City on July 11, 2008 by the Law Office of David B. Rankin. It was settled out of court in January 2009. Only private addresses are now redacted from publicly available records, according to the NYC tax code. On May 10, 2010, New York Poets read the names of people buried and located through the Hart Island Project.
The New York department of transportation runs a single ferry to the island from the Fordham Street pier on City Island. Prison labor from Rikers Island is used for burial details, paid at 50 cents an hour. Inmates stack the pine coffins in two rows, three high and 25 across, and each plot is marked with a single concrete marker. The first pediatric AIDS victim to die in New York City is buried in the only single grave on Hart Island with a concrete marker that reads SC (special child) B1 (Baby 1) 1985. A tall white peace monument erected by New York City prison inmates following World War II is at the top of what was known as "Cemetery Hill" prior to the installation of the now abandoned Nike Missile Base at the northern end of Hart Island.
The Jewish playwright, film screenwriter, and director Leo birinski was buried here in 1951, when he died alone and in poverty. The American novelist Dawn Powell was buried on Hart Island in 1970, five years after her death, when the executor of her estate refused to reclaim her remains. Academy Award winner bobby Driscoll was also buried here when he died in 1968 because no one was able to identify his remains when he was found dead in an East village tenement. His daughter, Aaren Keely, submitted a poem in his memory to the Hart Island Project.
Boys' workhouse
In the late 19th century Hart Island became the location of a boys' workhouse which was an extension of the prison and almshouse on Blackwell's Island, now Roosevelt island. There is a section of old wooden houses and masonry institutional structures dating back to the late 19th and early 20th centuries that have fallen into disrepair. These are now being torn down to provide new ground for burials. Military barracks from the Civil War period were used prior to the construction of workhouse and hospital facilities. None of the original Civil War Period buildings are still standing. In the early 20th century, Hart Island housed about two thousand delinquent boys as well as old male prisoners from Blackwell's penitentiary. This prison population moved to Rikers Island when the prison on Welfare island (formerly Blackwell's Island) was torn down in 1936. Remaining on Hart Island is a building constructed in 1885 as a women's insane asylum, the Pavilion, as well as Phoenix House, a drug rehabilitation facility that closed in 1976.
Missiles
The island has defunct Nike Ajax missile silos, battery NY-15 that were part of the United States Army base Fort solcum from 1956–1961 and operated by the army's 66th Antiaircraft Artillery Missile Battalion. Some silos are located on Davids island. The Integrated Fire Control system that tracked the targets and directed missiles was located in Fort Slocum. The last components of the missile system were closed in 1974.
Deadmans island is south of Stanley's park in coal harbor Vancouver, British Colombia. it has been a battle site, a native tree burial cemetery, its been used for squatters and the smallpox epidemic, today it is used as a Naval Reserve.
One of Vancouver's first white settlers, John Morton, visited the island in 1862. Morton discovered hundreds of red cedarboxes lashed to the upper boughs of trees and one had evidently fallen and broken to reveal a jumble of bones and a tassel of black hair. The island was the tree-burail grounds. Undeterred, Morton took a fancy to the island and attempted to acquire it. He changed his mind when Chief Capilano pointed out that the island was "dead ground" and was a scene of a bloody battle between rival tribes in which some two hundred warriors were killed. It's said that "fire-flower" grew up at once where they fell, frightening the foe into retreat. The macabre name of the island is thought to reflect this history.
Settlers continued to use the island as a cemetery prior to the 1887 opening of Mountain View cemetery. Between 1888 and 1892, Deadman Island became a quarantine site for victims of a smallpox epidemic and burial ground for those who did not survive.
One of Vancouver's first white settlers, John Morton, visited the island in 1862. Morton discovered hundreds of red cedarboxes lashed to the upper boughs of trees and one had evidently fallen and broken to reveal a jumble of bones and a tassel of black hair. The island was the tree-burail grounds. Undeterred, Morton took a fancy to the island and attempted to acquire it. He changed his mind when Chief Capilano pointed out that the island was "dead ground" and was a scene of a bloody battle between rival tribes in which some two hundred warriors were killed. It's said that "fire-flower" grew up at once where they fell, frightening the foe into retreat. The macabre name of the island is thought to reflect this history.
Settlers continued to use the island as a cemetery prior to the 1887 opening of Mountain View cemetery. Between 1888 and 1892, Deadman Island became a quarantine site for victims of a smallpox epidemic and burial ground for those who did not survive.
Okinawa island, Japan. The time when human beings first appeared in Okinawa remains unknown. Since that time, there have probably been immigrants from China, Japan, Australia, and elsewhere.
Okinawa midden culture or shell heap culture is divided into the early shell heap period. In the former, it was a hunter-gatherer society, with wave-like opening Jomon pottery. In the latter part of Jomon period, archaeological sites moved near the seashore, suggesting the engagement of people in fishery. In Okinawa, rice was not cultivated during the Yayoi period but began during the latter period of shell-heap age. Shell rings for arms made of shells obtained in the sakishima islands, namely Miyakojima and yaeyama islands, were imported by Japan. In these islands, the presence of shell axes, 2500 years ago, suggests the influence of a southeastern-Pacific culture.
After the midden culture, agriculture started about the 12th century, with the center moving from the seashore to higher places. This period is called the gusuku period. Gusuku is the term used for the distinctive Okinawan form of castles or fortresses. Many gusukus and related cultural remains in the Ryukyu Islands have been listed by UNESCO as World Heritage sites under the title Gusuku Sites and Related Properties of the Kingdom of Ryukyu. There are three perspectives regarding the nature of gusukus: 1) a holy place, 2) dwellings encircled by stones, 3) a castle of a leader of people. In this period, porcelain trade between Okinawa and other countries became busy, and Okinawa became an important relay point in eastern-Asian trade. Ryukyuan kings, such as shunten and Eiso, were considered to be important governors. An attempted Mongolian invasion in 1291 during the Eiso Dynasty ended in failure. Hiragana was imported from Japan by Ganjin in 1265.Noro, female shaman or priests (as in shintoism), appeared.
In 1429, King Shō Hashi completed the unification of the three kingdoms and founded one Ryūkyū Kingdom with its capital at Shuri Castle. The Chinese Ming dynasty sent 36 families from Fujian at the request of the Ryukyuan King. Their job was to manage maritime dealings in the kingdom in 1392 during the Hongwu Emperor's reign. Many Ryukyuan officials were descended from these Chinese immigrants, being born in China or having Chinese ancestors. They assisted in the Ryukyuans in developing their technology and diplomatic relations.
In the 17th century, the kingdom was both a tributary of China and a tributary of Japan. Because China would not make a formal trade agreement unless a country was a tributary state, the kingdom was a convenient loophole for Japanese trade with China. When Japan officially closed off trade with European nations except the Dutch, Nagasaki and Ryūkyū became the only Japanese trading ports offering connections with the outside world.
In 1879, Japan annexed the entire Ryukyu archipelago. Thus, the Ryūkyū han was abolished and replaced by Okinawa Prefecture by the Meiji government. The monarchy in shuri was abolished and the deposed king Shō Tai (1843–1901) was forced to relocate to Tokyo.
Hostility against mainland Japan increased in the Ryūkyūs immediately after its annexation to Japan in part because of the systematic attempt on the part of mainland Japan to eliminate the Ryukyuan culture, including the language, religion, and cultural practices.
The island of Okinawa was the site of most of the ground warfare in the battle of Okinawa during World War II, when American Army and Marine Corps troops fought a long and bloody battle to capture Okinawa, so it could next be used as the major air force and troop base for the planned invasion of Japan. During this 82-day-long battle, about 95,000 imperial Japanese Army troops and 12,510 Americans were killed. The Cornerstone of peace at the Okinawa Prefecture Memorial Peace Park lists 149,193 persons of Okinawan origin - approximately one quarter of the civilian population - who either died or committed suicide during the Battle of Okinawa and the Pacific War.
During the American military occupation of Japan (1945–52), which followed the Imperial Japanese surrender on September 2, 1945, in Tokyo bay, the United States controlled Okinawa Island and the nearby Ryukyu islands and islets. These all remained in American military possession until June 17, 1972, with numerous u.s. Army, u.s Marine Corps, and u.s Air Force bases there.
Ellis island, New Jersey. was the gateway for millions of immigrants to the United States as the nation's busiest immigrant inspection station from 1892 until 1954. The island was greatly expanded with land reclamation between 1892 and 1934. Before that, the much smaller original island was the site of Fort Gibson and later a naval magazine. The island was made part of the statue of Liberty National Monument in 1965, and has hosted a museum of immigration since 1990. Long considered part of New York, a 1998 United States Supreme Court decision found that most of the island is in New Jersey. The south side of the island, home to the Ellis island immigrant hospital, is closed to the general public and the object of restoration efforts spearheaded by save Ellis island.
Monday, October 20, 2014
Top Best Haunted Attractions Around the U.S
All websites will be posted underneath the name of the Haunted attraction, so you can see what days they are opened and their times, always you can buy tickets.
Insanitarium, Pison, Alabama: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_pinson_Alabama_insanitarium
Fairbanks Asylum, Fairbanks, Alaska: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_fairbanks_Alaska_fairbanks_asylum
AZ field of screams, Glendale Arizona: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_glendale_Arizona_az_field_of_screams_
The Torture chamber, Benton, Arkansas:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_benton_Arkansas_the_torture_chamber
Fear overload scream Park, San Leandro, California:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_san_leandro_California_fear_overload_haunted
City of the Dead Haunted House, Henderson, Colorado:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_houses_in_denver_colorado_city_of_the_dead_haunted_house
Dark Manor Haunted House, Norwich, Connecticut:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_norwich_Connecticut_dark_manor_haunted
The Haunted Barn N Trail, Camden Wyoming, Delaware:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_camden_wyoming_Delaware_the_haunted_barn
Legends A Haunting at Old Town, Kissimmee, Florida:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_kissimmee_Florida_legends_a_haunting_6606
Netherworld Haunted House, Norcross, Georgia:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_norcross_Georgia_netherworld_haunted_house
Haunted Stadium, Aiea, Hawaii:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_aiea_Hawaii_haunted_stadium
Dr. Slaughters House of Terror, Idaho Falls, Idaho:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_idaho_falls_idaho_dr__slaughter_s_house_of_terror
Statesville Haunted Prison, Crest Hill, Illinois:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_crest_hill_Illinois_statesville_haunted_prison
Haunted Hotel 13th Floor, Huntington, Indiana:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_huntington_Indiana_haunted_hotel_13th
Tormented Souls Haunt, Madrid, Iowa:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_madrid_iowa_tormented_souls_haunt
Zombie Toxin, Junction City, Kansas: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_junction_city_Kansas_zombie_toxin
Sinister Tombs Haunted House, Eastview, Kentucky: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_eastview_Kentucky_sinister_tombs_haunted
The 13th Gate, Baton Rouge, Louisiana: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_baton_rouge_Louisiana_the_13th_gate
Destination Haunt, Lebanon, Maine:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_lebanon_Maine_destination_haunt
Bennett's Curse, Jessup, Maryland:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_jessup_Maryland_bennett_curse_hauntedwww_bennettscurse_com
The Darkness, Saint Louis, Missouri:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_saint_louis_Missouri_the_darkness
The Haunting of Barrett Park, Leominster, Massachusetts:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_leominster_Massachusetts_the_haunting_of
Phobia House, Plainwell, Michigan:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_plainwell_Michigan_phobia_house
Erebus, pontiac, Michigan:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_pontiac_Michigan_erebus_haunted_attraction
Fright Farm Haunted House, Maplewood, Minnesota:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_maplewood_Minnesota_fright_farm_haunted
Bailey Haunted Firehouse, Meridian, Mississippi:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_meridian_Mississippi_bailey_haunted_firehouse
Dr. Slaughters Horror Hospital, Havre, Montana:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_havre_montana_dr__slaughter_s_horror_hospital
Haunted Hollow, La Vista, Nebraska:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_la_vista_Nebraska_haunted_hollow
Hotel Fear, Las Vegas, Nevada:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_n_las_vegas_Nevada_hotel_fear
Fright Kingdom, Nashua, New Hampshire:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_nashua_New_Hampshire_fright_kingdom_50
Haunted Overload, Leo, New Hampshire:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_lee_New_Hampshire_haunted_overload
Destination Haunt, Lebanon, New Hampshire:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_lebanon_Maine_destination_haunt
Haunted scare House, Wharton, New Jersey:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_wharton_New_Jersey_haunted_scarehouse
Bamboo Gardens, southampton, New Jersey:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_southampton_New_Jersey_bamboo_gardens_walk
The Haunted scarecrow, Albuquerque, New Mexico:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_albuquerque_New_Mexico_the_haunted_scarecrow
Headless Horsemen Hayrides & Haunted House, Ulster Park, New :
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_ulster_park_New_York_headless_horseman_hayrides
Camp Fear, Hiddenite, North Carolina:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_hiddenite_North_Carolina_camp_fear
Nightmare on Elm street, kindred, North Dakota:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_kindred_North_Dakota_nightmares_on_elm
The Dent schoolhouse, Cincinnati, Ohio: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_cincinnati_Ohio_the_dent_schoolhouse
Wells Township Haunted House, brilliant, Ohio:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_brilliant_Ohio_wells_township_haunted
The Fear Experience Haunted House, Cleveland, Ohio:
http://www.hauntworld.com/cleveland_haunted_houses
The Trail of Fear, Lawton, Oklahoma:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_lawton_Oklahoma_the_trail_of
FrightTown, Portland, Oregon:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_portland_Oregon_frighttown
The bates Motel & Haunted Hayride, Glen Mill, Pennsylvania:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_glen_mills_Pennsylvania_the_bates_motel
Factory of Terror, Fall Rivers Massachusetts:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_fall_river_massachusetts_Massachusetts_factory_of_terror
scream Acres Haunted House, bishopville, South Carolina:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_bishopville_South_Carolina_scream_acres_haunted
Terror in The Dark, Rapid City, South Dakota:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_rapid_city_South_Dakota_fairgrounds_terror_in
Dead Land, Lebanon, Tennessee:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_lebanon_Tennessee_dead_land
Cutting Edge Haunted House, Fort Worth, Texas:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_fort_worth_Texas_cutting_edge_haunted
Castle of Chaos, Taylorsville, Utah:
http://www.hauntworld.com/http_www_castleofchaos_com
Haunted Hunt Club Farm, Virginia beach, Virginia:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_virginia_beach_Virginia_haunted_hunt_club
Confront your Fears, Vancouver, Washington:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_vancouver_Washington_confront_your_fears
The Asylum, Weston, West Virginia:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_weston_West_Virginia_the_asylum
Mars Haunted House, Milwaukee, Wisconsin:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_milwaukee_Wisconsin_mars_haunted_house
burial Chamber Haunted Complex, Neenah, Wisconsin:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_neenah_Wisconsin_burial_chamber_haunted
Insanitarium, Pison, Alabama: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_pinson_Alabama_insanitarium
Fairbanks Asylum, Fairbanks, Alaska: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_fairbanks_Alaska_fairbanks_asylum
AZ field of screams, Glendale Arizona: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_glendale_Arizona_az_field_of_screams_
The Torture chamber, Benton, Arkansas:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_benton_Arkansas_the_torture_chamber
Fear overload scream Park, San Leandro, California:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_san_leandro_California_fear_overload_haunted
City of the Dead Haunted House, Henderson, Colorado:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_houses_in_denver_colorado_city_of_the_dead_haunted_house
Dark Manor Haunted House, Norwich, Connecticut:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_norwich_Connecticut_dark_manor_haunted
The Haunted Barn N Trail, Camden Wyoming, Delaware:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_camden_wyoming_Delaware_the_haunted_barn
Legends A Haunting at Old Town, Kissimmee, Florida:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_kissimmee_Florida_legends_a_haunting_6606
Netherworld Haunted House, Norcross, Georgia:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_norcross_Georgia_netherworld_haunted_house
Haunted Stadium, Aiea, Hawaii:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_aiea_Hawaii_haunted_stadium
Dr. Slaughters House of Terror, Idaho Falls, Idaho:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_idaho_falls_idaho_dr__slaughter_s_house_of_terror
Statesville Haunted Prison, Crest Hill, Illinois:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_crest_hill_Illinois_statesville_haunted_prison
Haunted Hotel 13th Floor, Huntington, Indiana:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_huntington_Indiana_haunted_hotel_13th
Tormented Souls Haunt, Madrid, Iowa:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_madrid_iowa_tormented_souls_haunt
Zombie Toxin, Junction City, Kansas: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_junction_city_Kansas_zombie_toxin
Sinister Tombs Haunted House, Eastview, Kentucky: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_eastview_Kentucky_sinister_tombs_haunted
The 13th Gate, Baton Rouge, Louisiana: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_baton_rouge_Louisiana_the_13th_gate
Destination Haunt, Lebanon, Maine:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_lebanon_Maine_destination_haunt
Bennett's Curse, Jessup, Maryland:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_jessup_Maryland_bennett_curse_hauntedwww_bennettscurse_com
The Darkness, Saint Louis, Missouri:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_saint_louis_Missouri_the_darkness
The Haunting of Barrett Park, Leominster, Massachusetts:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_leominster_Massachusetts_the_haunting_of
Phobia House, Plainwell, Michigan:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_plainwell_Michigan_phobia_house
Erebus, pontiac, Michigan:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_pontiac_Michigan_erebus_haunted_attraction
Fright Farm Haunted House, Maplewood, Minnesota:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_maplewood_Minnesota_fright_farm_haunted
Bailey Haunted Firehouse, Meridian, Mississippi:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_meridian_Mississippi_bailey_haunted_firehouse
Dr. Slaughters Horror Hospital, Havre, Montana:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_havre_montana_dr__slaughter_s_horror_hospital
Haunted Hollow, La Vista, Nebraska:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_la_vista_Nebraska_haunted_hollow
Hotel Fear, Las Vegas, Nevada:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_n_las_vegas_Nevada_hotel_fear
Fright Kingdom, Nashua, New Hampshire:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_nashua_New_Hampshire_fright_kingdom_50
Haunted Overload, Leo, New Hampshire:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_lee_New_Hampshire_haunted_overload
Destination Haunt, Lebanon, New Hampshire:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_lebanon_Maine_destination_haunt
Haunted scare House, Wharton, New Jersey:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_wharton_New_Jersey_haunted_scarehouse
Bamboo Gardens, southampton, New Jersey:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_southampton_New_Jersey_bamboo_gardens_walk
The Haunted scarecrow, Albuquerque, New Mexico:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_albuquerque_New_Mexico_the_haunted_scarecrow
Headless Horsemen Hayrides & Haunted House, Ulster Park, New :
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_ulster_park_New_York_headless_horseman_hayrides
Camp Fear, Hiddenite, North Carolina:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_hiddenite_North_Carolina_camp_fear
Nightmare on Elm street, kindred, North Dakota:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_kindred_North_Dakota_nightmares_on_elm
The Dent schoolhouse, Cincinnati, Ohio: http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_cincinnati_Ohio_the_dent_schoolhouse
Wells Township Haunted House, brilliant, Ohio:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_brilliant_Ohio_wells_township_haunted
The Fear Experience Haunted House, Cleveland, Ohio:
http://www.hauntworld.com/cleveland_haunted_houses
The Trail of Fear, Lawton, Oklahoma:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_lawton_Oklahoma_the_trail_of
FrightTown, Portland, Oregon:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_portland_Oregon_frighttown
The bates Motel & Haunted Hayride, Glen Mill, Pennsylvania:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_glen_mills_Pennsylvania_the_bates_motel
Factory of Terror, Fall Rivers Massachusetts:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_fall_river_massachusetts_Massachusetts_factory_of_terror
scream Acres Haunted House, bishopville, South Carolina:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_bishopville_South_Carolina_scream_acres_haunted
Terror in The Dark, Rapid City, South Dakota:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_rapid_city_South_Dakota_fairgrounds_terror_in
Dead Land, Lebanon, Tennessee:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_lebanon_Tennessee_dead_land
Cutting Edge Haunted House, Fort Worth, Texas:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_fort_worth_Texas_cutting_edge_haunted
Castle of Chaos, Taylorsville, Utah:
http://www.hauntworld.com/http_www_castleofchaos_com
Haunted Hunt Club Farm, Virginia beach, Virginia:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_virginia_beach_Virginia_haunted_hunt_club
Confront your Fears, Vancouver, Washington:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_vancouver_Washington_confront_your_fears
The Asylum, Weston, West Virginia:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_weston_West_Virginia_the_asylum
Mars Haunted House, Milwaukee, Wisconsin:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_milwaukee_Wisconsin_mars_haunted_house
burial Chamber Haunted Complex, Neenah, Wisconsin:
http://www.hauntworld.com/haunted_house_in_neenah_Wisconsin_burial_chamber_haunted
Friday, October 3, 2014
Best Halloween Movies For Children
So we all know that Halloween is just as much for the children as it is for the Adults, so here is a list of Halloween Movies for children to watch.
1. Hocus Pocus: Made in 1993. After three centuries, three witch sisters are ressurected in Salem Massachusetts on Halloween night, and it is up to two teenagers, a little girl and an immortal cat to put an end to the reign of terror.
2. Ernest Scared Stupid: Made in 1991. After a misunderstanding, Ernest P Worrell unleashes an evil troll on Halloween.
3. Beetlejuice: Made in 1988. A recently deceased couple contract the services of a bio-exorcist in order to remove the obnoxious new owners that live in there house.
4. Corpse Bride: Made in 2005. When a shy groom practices his wedding vows in the inadvertent presence of a deceased young woman, she raises from the grave assusming he has married her.
5. Casper: Made in 1995. A paranormal expert and his daughter bunk in an abandoned house populated by 3 mischevious ghost and one friendly one.
6. It's The Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown: Made in 1966. The peanuts gang celebrates Halloween, while Linus waits for the Great Pumpkin.
7. Ghostbusters: Made in 1984. Three unemployed parapsychology professors set up shop as a unique ghost removel service.
8. The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad: Made in 1949. Two animated adaptions of the legend of sleepy hollow, and the wind in the willows.
9. Monster House: Made in 2006. Three teens discover that their neighbors house is really a living, breathing, scary, monster.
10. Monsters, Inc.: Made in 2001. Monsters generate their city's power by scaring children, but they are terribly afraid themselves of being contaminated by children, so when one enters monstropolis, top scarer sully finds his world disrupted.
11. Scared Shrekless: Made in 2010. Shrek gets in the Halloween spirit by challenging his fairytale friends to come up with scary stories for a contest, but the gang learn they'll have to spend the night in Lord Farquaads haunted castle before the winner is named.
12. Frankenweenie: Made in 2012. Young Victor conducts a science experiment to bring his dog sparky back to life, only to face unintended, sometimes monstrous consequences.
13. Hotel Transylvania: Made in 2012. Dracula, who operates a high end resort away from the human world, goes into overprotective mode when a boy discovers the resort and falls for the counts teenaged daughter.
14. ParaNorman: Made in 2012. A misunderstood boy takes on ghost, zombies, and grown-ups to save his town from a centuries old curse.
15. Alvin and The Chipmunks Meet Frankenstein: Made in 1999. While the Chipmunks are working at the amusement park, Majestic Movie Studios, in a singing attraction. Little do they know that the real Dr. Frankenstein are in a new attraction called, "Frankenstein's Castle". After Alvin drives a crazy bus ride, they miss their next performance and get locked in the park after closing time. Dr. Frankenstein figures that the castle isn't scary enough and re-creates the real Frankenstein and after the monster finds the boys, it starts a wild and wacky adventure!.
16. Alvin and The Chipmunks Meet the Wolfman: Made in 2000. It's the Chipmunks' third and final full-length feature! Alvin is struggling with nightmares of werewolves. Alvin believes that the new next-door neighbor Mr. Talbot is a werewolf. Of course, no one believes him. Meanwhile, the boys are working on the school production of Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde. When Alvin blows up the school auditorium, he is expelled from the production. Theodore is put in to rise his lack of confidence. Alvin and Simon are trying to discover the secret of Mr. Talbot. Will the play go as planned or will the Chipmunks mess it up?! And is Mr. Talbot a werewolf?
17. Scooby Doo on Zombie Island: Made in 1998. The gang reunite and visit moonscar island, a place with a dark secret. Daphne wants more than just a guy in a costume and gets more than she bargained for.
18. Bedknobs and broomsticks: Made in 1971. An apprentice witch wants to use her powers to contribute to the English war effort against the Nazis… plus a trip to the cartoon Island of Naboombu and a Harryhausen-esque army of armor brought to life by substitutiary locomotion.
19. The Nightmare Before Christmas: Made in 1993. Is it a Christmas movie or is it a Halloween movie? Lets just say its both, so sit back and enjoy.
20. Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of The Were-Rabbit: Made in 2005. English inventor Wallace and his trusted canine companion, Gromit, have a thriving varmint-elimination service. Wallace has a potential paramour in wealthy client Lady Tottington. Unfortunately, the slick-talking hunter Victor Quartermaine also has designs on the lady, and he’s not giving up easily. When a giant rabbit terrorizes the townsfolk, another dimension is added to the existing competition between Wallace and Victor, and the outcome will be the talk of the town!.
21. The Scream Team: Made in 2002. Restless ghosts with unfinished Earthly business are sentenced to a small New Hampshire town until they can deem themselves worthy to enter heaven. The Carlyle children discover a slew of good-intended, yet misguided ghosts who just need a little direction.
22. Twitches: Made in 2005. "Twitches" refers to "twin witches," with the belief that when the twins pool their resources together, their witchly abilities become significantly stronger. Such is the case of Alex and Camryn (the Mowry twins) who are separated at birth, but are unexpectedly reunited on their 21st birthday. The sisters soon discover their unique powers and set about working their magic and fulfilling their destiny.
23. Don't Look Under the Bed: Made in 1999. Frances McCausland, a normal, highly-intelligent teenager, finds herself in the center of the strange goings-on, and fair or not, she becomes the focal point for most of the town's suspicions regarding the unusual happenings.
24. Tower of Terror: Made in 1997. Steve Guttenberg portrays a former distinguished reporter who fell on hard times and now toils for a sleazy tabloid. His fortunes begin looking up after stumbling across a 1939 episode in which five people mysteriously disappear while in a luxury hotel elevator during a lightning storm. Buzzy Crocker (Guttenberg) and his niece Anna (Kirsten Dunst) become involved through a chance encounter with Abigail Gregory (Amzie Strickland), an older sister of one of the victims. Abigail claims to know the "real" story behind the incident, and her version intrigues Buzzy and Anna; so much that they attempt to recreate the decades-long mystery in hopes of solving it.
25. Something Wicked This Way Comes: Made in 1983. A traveling carnival comes to town, and like most small-town kids, Will and Jim can't wait to go see everything the sideshows have to offer. And also, like many small-town kids, the boys are unable to control their enthusiasm and curiosity, so they sneak into the carnival and make some terrifying discoveries.
The owner of the carnival is the aptly-named Mr. Dark, whose fancy is evilly seducing carnival-goers with the lure of fulfilling their darkest desires. The film is very dark, very un-Disney-like, and delves deeply into the age old good vs. evil issue, and the powerful influence that greed can hold over the best of us.
1. Hocus Pocus: Made in 1993. After three centuries, three witch sisters are ressurected in Salem Massachusetts on Halloween night, and it is up to two teenagers, a little girl and an immortal cat to put an end to the reign of terror.
2. Ernest Scared Stupid: Made in 1991. After a misunderstanding, Ernest P Worrell unleashes an evil troll on Halloween.
3. Beetlejuice: Made in 1988. A recently deceased couple contract the services of a bio-exorcist in order to remove the obnoxious new owners that live in there house.
4. Corpse Bride: Made in 2005. When a shy groom practices his wedding vows in the inadvertent presence of a deceased young woman, she raises from the grave assusming he has married her.
5. Casper: Made in 1995. A paranormal expert and his daughter bunk in an abandoned house populated by 3 mischevious ghost and one friendly one.
6. It's The Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown: Made in 1966. The peanuts gang celebrates Halloween, while Linus waits for the Great Pumpkin.
7. Ghostbusters: Made in 1984. Three unemployed parapsychology professors set up shop as a unique ghost removel service.
8. The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad: Made in 1949. Two animated adaptions of the legend of sleepy hollow, and the wind in the willows.
9. Monster House: Made in 2006. Three teens discover that their neighbors house is really a living, breathing, scary, monster.
10. Monsters, Inc.: Made in 2001. Monsters generate their city's power by scaring children, but they are terribly afraid themselves of being contaminated by children, so when one enters monstropolis, top scarer sully finds his world disrupted.
11. Scared Shrekless: Made in 2010. Shrek gets in the Halloween spirit by challenging his fairytale friends to come up with scary stories for a contest, but the gang learn they'll have to spend the night in Lord Farquaads haunted castle before the winner is named.
12. Frankenweenie: Made in 2012. Young Victor conducts a science experiment to bring his dog sparky back to life, only to face unintended, sometimes monstrous consequences.
13. Hotel Transylvania: Made in 2012. Dracula, who operates a high end resort away from the human world, goes into overprotective mode when a boy discovers the resort and falls for the counts teenaged daughter.
14. ParaNorman: Made in 2012. A misunderstood boy takes on ghost, zombies, and grown-ups to save his town from a centuries old curse.
15. Alvin and The Chipmunks Meet Frankenstein: Made in 1999. While the Chipmunks are working at the amusement park, Majestic Movie Studios, in a singing attraction. Little do they know that the real Dr. Frankenstein are in a new attraction called, "Frankenstein's Castle". After Alvin drives a crazy bus ride, they miss their next performance and get locked in the park after closing time. Dr. Frankenstein figures that the castle isn't scary enough and re-creates the real Frankenstein and after the monster finds the boys, it starts a wild and wacky adventure!.
16. Alvin and The Chipmunks Meet the Wolfman: Made in 2000. It's the Chipmunks' third and final full-length feature! Alvin is struggling with nightmares of werewolves. Alvin believes that the new next-door neighbor Mr. Talbot is a werewolf. Of course, no one believes him. Meanwhile, the boys are working on the school production of Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde. When Alvin blows up the school auditorium, he is expelled from the production. Theodore is put in to rise his lack of confidence. Alvin and Simon are trying to discover the secret of Mr. Talbot. Will the play go as planned or will the Chipmunks mess it up?! And is Mr. Talbot a werewolf?
17. Scooby Doo on Zombie Island: Made in 1998. The gang reunite and visit moonscar island, a place with a dark secret. Daphne wants more than just a guy in a costume and gets more than she bargained for.
18. Bedknobs and broomsticks: Made in 1971. An apprentice witch wants to use her powers to contribute to the English war effort against the Nazis… plus a trip to the cartoon Island of Naboombu and a Harryhausen-esque army of armor brought to life by substitutiary locomotion.
19. The Nightmare Before Christmas: Made in 1993. Is it a Christmas movie or is it a Halloween movie? Lets just say its both, so sit back and enjoy.
20. Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of The Were-Rabbit: Made in 2005. English inventor Wallace and his trusted canine companion, Gromit, have a thriving varmint-elimination service. Wallace has a potential paramour in wealthy client Lady Tottington. Unfortunately, the slick-talking hunter Victor Quartermaine also has designs on the lady, and he’s not giving up easily. When a giant rabbit terrorizes the townsfolk, another dimension is added to the existing competition between Wallace and Victor, and the outcome will be the talk of the town!.
21. The Scream Team: Made in 2002. Restless ghosts with unfinished Earthly business are sentenced to a small New Hampshire town until they can deem themselves worthy to enter heaven. The Carlyle children discover a slew of good-intended, yet misguided ghosts who just need a little direction.
22. Twitches: Made in 2005. "Twitches" refers to "twin witches," with the belief that when the twins pool their resources together, their witchly abilities become significantly stronger. Such is the case of Alex and Camryn (the Mowry twins) who are separated at birth, but are unexpectedly reunited on their 21st birthday. The sisters soon discover their unique powers and set about working their magic and fulfilling their destiny.
23. Don't Look Under the Bed: Made in 1999. Frances McCausland, a normal, highly-intelligent teenager, finds herself in the center of the strange goings-on, and fair or not, she becomes the focal point for most of the town's suspicions regarding the unusual happenings.
24. Tower of Terror: Made in 1997. Steve Guttenberg portrays a former distinguished reporter who fell on hard times and now toils for a sleazy tabloid. His fortunes begin looking up after stumbling across a 1939 episode in which five people mysteriously disappear while in a luxury hotel elevator during a lightning storm. Buzzy Crocker (Guttenberg) and his niece Anna (Kirsten Dunst) become involved through a chance encounter with Abigail Gregory (Amzie Strickland), an older sister of one of the victims. Abigail claims to know the "real" story behind the incident, and her version intrigues Buzzy and Anna; so much that they attempt to recreate the decades-long mystery in hopes of solving it.
25. Something Wicked This Way Comes: Made in 1983. A traveling carnival comes to town, and like most small-town kids, Will and Jim can't wait to go see everything the sideshows have to offer. And also, like many small-town kids, the boys are unable to control their enthusiasm and curiosity, so they sneak into the carnival and make some terrifying discoveries.
The owner of the carnival is the aptly-named Mr. Dark, whose fancy is evilly seducing carnival-goers with the lure of fulfilling their darkest desires. The film is very dark, very un-Disney-like, and delves deeply into the age old good vs. evil issue, and the powerful influence that greed can hold over the best of us.
26. Scooby Doo and the Goblin King: Made in 2008. scooby doo and shaggy must go into the underworld ruled by the Goblin king in order to stop a mortal named the amazing krudsky who wants power and is a threat to their pals.
27. Scooby Doo and the Reluctant Werewolf: Made in 1988. shaggy is turned into a werewolf and its up to scooby, scrappy and his girlfriend to help him win the contest.
28. Scooby Doo and the Ghoul School: Made in 1988. scooby doo and the gang visited a haunted school after all the girls had been kidnapped, its up to scooby and the gang to save them.
29. The Witches: Made in 1990. A young orphaned boy goes to live with his grandmother in an english hotel, where a group of witches plot to turn all children into mice.
30. The Neverending Story: Made in 1984. Kids who could do without vampires and other played out Halloween monsters will find a lot to like in this mystical adventure film based on the popular novel.
27. Scooby Doo and the Reluctant Werewolf: Made in 1988. shaggy is turned into a werewolf and its up to scooby, scrappy and his girlfriend to help him win the contest.
28. Scooby Doo and the Ghoul School: Made in 1988. scooby doo and the gang visited a haunted school after all the girls had been kidnapped, its up to scooby and the gang to save them.
29. The Witches: Made in 1990. A young orphaned boy goes to live with his grandmother in an english hotel, where a group of witches plot to turn all children into mice.
30. The Neverending Story: Made in 1984. Kids who could do without vampires and other played out Halloween monsters will find a lot to like in this mystical adventure film based on the popular novel.
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