Difference between revisions of "Portal:Featured Video Of The Week"

From Asylum Projects
Jump to: navigation, search
 
(358 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{videoheader}}
 
{{videoheader}}
{| style="margin:8px 0 0 0; width:100%; background:none; border-spacing: 0px;"
+
{| style="margin:8px 0 0 0; width:10VeB0%; background:none; border-spacing: 0px;"
<div style align=center><youtube v="PFXYGDZpjjs" /></div>
+
<div style align=center>{{#ev:youtube|Z1MdDA4uuJs}}</div>
|}
+
|}<center>The following fifteen-minute video documentary, created by SBS Dateline, is about New York City's Hart Island, the history of the structures on it, and its massive potter's field, where over 700,000 people have been buried since 1868. It also features a few women who have worked to visit their stillborn children buried on the island. These women and others have been working to make the island more accessible to those visiting the grave site. </center></div>
<div style align=center>The [[Woodville State Hospital]] cemetery remains in a wooded area of the property. A memorial, erected in 1987, stands at the entrance to the cemetery, showing the dates of the cemetery as 1867-1949. The graves do not have names, but are numbered with markers approximately 10" tall, in neat rows in numerical order. </div>
+
<div style align=right>[[:Category:Articles With Videos|Other Articles With Videos]], [[Main Page/Future Featured Nominations|Future Featured Videos]].
 
{{videofooter}}
 
{{videofooter}}

Latest revision as of 05:37, 26 May 2024

Featured Video

The following fifteen-minute video documentary, created by SBS Dateline, is about New York City's Hart Island, the history of the structures on it, and its massive potter's field, where over 700,000 people have been buried since 1868. It also features a few women who have worked to visit their stillborn children buried on the island. These women and others have been working to make the island more accessible to those visiting the grave site.