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An independent documentary film titled The Haunting of Fox Hollow Farm also explores the crimes and the possibility of hauntings on the grounds of Baumeister's former estate. [33] ID featured the case again on the series True Nightmares, in October 2015. [34] The Crime Junkie podcast released an episode on Baumeister on March 4, 2018. [35]
Foxholes is an eastern suburb of Hertford, Hertfordshire, England. It is situated to the north of the older Foxholes Farm, which over the years has served as the headquarters for the regional Eastern Hertfordshire Archaeological Group, which works in close collaboration with the Hertford Museum . [ 1 ]
The spatha was a type of straight and long sword, measuring between 0.5 and 1 metre (20 and 40 inches), with a handle length of between 18 and 20 centimetres (7 and 8 inches), in use in the territory of the Roman Empire during the 1st to 6th centuries AD.
Foxholes is a civil parish in the former Ryedale district of North Yorkshire, England. It contains three listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England . Of these, one is listed at Grade II*, the middle of the three grades, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade.
Two hamlets, Exceat and Foxhole, are in the park, along with a small group of cottages on the cliff edge (known as the coastguard cottages) – these are mostly kept as holiday homes. [citation needed] Next to the Friston Forest car park, Exceat is a group of farm buildings with facilities and a café. There is also a tiny old shepherd's caravan.
St Mary's Church is a closed Anglican church in Foxholes, North Yorkshire, a village in England. A church was built in Foxholes in the Norman period. It was restored or rebuilt in about 1777. [1] In 1848, it was described as "an ancient structure, consisting of a nave and chancel separated by a fine Norman arch". [2]
Foscot is a hamlet in the Cotswolds in the Evenlode valley.It falls within Idbury civil parish, in the West Oxfordshire District, about 5 miles (8.0 km) southeast of Stow-on-the-Wold in neighbouring Gloucestershire, and 1.7 miles (2.7 km) from Kingham.
1640 The farmhouse is in gritstone with massive quoins and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and four bays.On the front is a doorway with a chamfered quoined surround and a shouldered lintel with initials and the date, and to the south is a doorway with a quoined surround, an architrave, and a pointed head.