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Haunted Florida Love Stories
Haunted Florida Love Stories
Haunted Florida Love Stories
Ebook210 pages6 hours

Haunted Florida Love Stories

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The author and folklorist examines Florida’s history through the lens of haunting tales of love.

Wide eyes, sweaty palms and a racing heart. Are these the tell-tale marks of a love story or a haunted tale? If the story is set in Florida, there’s a good chance it’s both. From the infamous Bellamy Bridge to a haunted lighthouse in Key West, love is in the air—but it isn’t always a good thing. Author and folklorist Christopher Balzano follows lingering campus whispers and trails that vanish into the swamp to track down the urban legends and ghostly lore of Sunshine State love affairs that live on even after death.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 14, 2017
ISBN9781439671115
Haunted Florida Love Stories
Author

Christopher Balzano

An Adams Media author.

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    Haunted Florida Love Stories - Christopher Balzano

    1

    TWO DIFFERENT KINDS OF LOVE AT FORT DESOTO

    Some places don’t stand a chance. They have their foundations under dark clouds, and in Florida, those kinds of clouds can appear out of nowhere and signal a torrential downpour. They are places where you look back with the fortune of hindsight and wonder what people were thinking even trying to create something there. You could have told them they were wrong to even think about it, and each moment can be seen as part of a curse leaving its breadcrumbs in history. Even in those places, love finds a way to make itself seen. Even in the darkest sea, a fisherman and a mother can shuffle the way we think.

    Fort DeSoto Park in St. Petersburg has just about everything to be considered haunted. The name itself might be cursed, if you believe in that kind of thing. The fort, as well as the nearby county and countless other businesses and attractions in Florida, is named for Hernando DeSoto, a Spanish explorer who made it to Florida in 1539. His primary motivation was to clear land for the Spanish and find potential sources of money, especially gold. While he was not as vicious as his predecessor, Pánfilo de Narváez, his men were not afraid to clash with the natives, and his exploits are directly linked to the decimation of the Tocoboga and Western Timucua tribes. Florida is not always an easy place to balance history, and DeSoto is considered a hero and trailblazer and tyrant. He and other conquistadors not only ravaged the living but also disturbed many of the ceremonial and burial mounds in the process of their exploring.

    The main armament at Fort DeSoto in Fort DeSoto Park.

    In fact, Fort DeSoto is not the first encampment in that area with that name and not the only one with a haunted history. The town of Brooksville, well known for several of its own ghost stories and dark history, established Fort DeSoto in 1840. Increased tension between Floridians and Native Americans and the Seminole War made it important to secure that part of the state with force. The base, however, failed. The town had built it on limestone, and after it was up and running, they found it impossible to get water from the ground. It was abandoned only a few years later, maybe the first sign of a potential curse.

    Another sign more directly related to the destruction of the mounds involves the area leading to Fort DeSoto called Tierra Verde. Once the home to several mounds, they were plowed through when successful businessman Fred Berlanti purchased the land in 1959. Although he was warned that they had discovered relics and should stop building, he told his crews to ignore what they had found and press on. According to The Tampa Triangle by Bill Miller, after that, Berlanti’s other businesses started to fail. He took a private flight to Miami to try to stop the bleeding, and his plane was mysteriously struck out of the sky. Someone who acted as a witness reported that a blue light rose from a lake like a hand, held the plane frozen in the air and then broke it apart, like a cheap Christmas ornament.

    Matters were not better for the fort itself. It was the military outpost that could never seem to get it right. During the Civil War, it was suggested as a place of defense for the Confederacy, who dumped the idea. In 1890, a new Fort DeSoto was established on the coast to defend Tampa Bay against attacks. Even during its construction, there were issues, as the state-of-the-art design met with technical problems and then had to replace the planned concrete with shells during construction because of delays. These shells were most likely discarded remnants of the mounds the original settlers found, like building the disturbed sacred ground right into the structure.

    To the south, Egmont Key, another paranormal hot spot and the birthplace of many of the legends of the coast via its lighthouse keeper, was the primary fortification, with DeSoto acting as a backup during the Spanish-American War. It was the little brother who was constantly being made fun of and never saw any action. It fired its guns only in practice but never in battle, and the people who were forced to serve there had to deal with diseases like yellow fever, intense heat and humidity, insects and the idea that they were probably not going to see much action. When one health commissioner sent a letter detailing the horrors at DeSoto, the federal government’s solution was to send them beer to help ease their pain.

    From its founding until it was decommissioned in 1923, the base never engaged in military action or was given much thought. Other regiments were sent to the train and quickly left, and with each shift in military policy, fewer and fewer troops were left there. In 1914, it was primarily used as a hunting ground for the Egmont Key soldiers. The land has been a preserve, a bomb testing ground, a weigh station for military surplus and a stop to get to the boat to tour another, better place. It’s the fort that never knew its purpose. That is except for as a spot to bring the sick and dead.

    The grounds of Fort DeSoto, where the ghosts of soldiers, children and Native Americans are seen.

    From 1889 to 1937, the land also acted as a quarantine station for people looking to enter Tampa Bay and, if rumors are to be believed, for soldiers serving in the area who showed symptoms of disease. Originally under the umbrella of the Hillsborough County Board of Health, the number of people who ended up there grew, and buildings were constructed, moved in from other places or converted to suit the needs of a growing outbreak. Housing patients who had yellow fever was the primary focus of the hospital, and the heat and insect population did little to help those infected. In fact, it may have increased the number of fatalities and the spread of the fever.

    In 1980, Fort DeSoto was home to another tragedy on a much larger scale. The Skyway Bridge runs across Tampa Bay and connects St. Petersburg and is one of the most beautiful and intimidating bridges to cross in Florida. What you see today is not the original structure, which was taken down in 1993. On the morning of May 9, 1980, freighter MV Summit Venture ran into a microburst, which rendered the radar useless and lowered visibility to nearly zero as it made its way into the bay. It crashed into the bridge, destroying 1,200 feet of it and sending a Greyhound bus and several other cars into the water. The accident killed thirty-five people, most of whom were housed in locations throughout Fort DeSoto during rescue and recovery and autopsy, mainly in the hospital that no longer stands on the property. The bridge has also been the site of numerous suicides and has its own hauntings attached to it.

    In more modern times, the fort has had a sort of revival. There is now a state park, a historical section marking the importance of the fort to the coast and numerous charters that cast off from the location. Like most coastal towns, it is also a great place to fish if you know the right spots. There are several great locales to cast a line if you are a single lady. You might just leave with dinner for the night and a ghost for a date.

    A good-looking man has been known to walk the area and approach women who are fishing by themselves. He often has a pole and gives them advice on how to catch the best fish. He might talk to them but is sometimes just seen wading out into the water or waving hello. The ladies are usually responsive to him. He’s lean and muscular, with messy black hair and dark sunglasses. Then, the reports say, he will just not be there the next moment. His pole, sometimes stuck into the water or leaning up against something, will also be gone. Bill Miller claims that the ghost is that of Daulton Gray, a local who was well known in the community who was shot and killed in 1994. He was known as a man without a care in the world and a flirt, and descriptions of the ghost fit the descriptions of Gray. According to The Tampa Triangle and other online sources that might just be echoing Miller, the ghost is known to look for a date after the toll in an area known as Bunces Pass Bridge and near Potter’s Peer Bait Shop, where Gray is said to have worked for a time.

    The dock—one of the places Daulton is said to try to pick up ladies.

    Now known as Fort DeSoto Fishing Pier, Bait, and Tackle, the shop will not confirm if Gray ever worked there or if his ghost is something spoken about by locals. The new owners have never heard the legend before, and one young lady even said, I was told to say Daulton never worked here, perhaps due to the popularity of Miller’s book and stories it spawned. One interesting thing to note is that Miller describes Gray as looking casual and talking, but some recent stories online say he is looking for a specific woman, although the reports never mention her name. Perhaps a woman he loved has since died, and he is trying to find her.

    Foundation of the old hospital, where the mother is said to be looking for her children.

    On the other side of the spectrum is a very different kind of love. According to university professor, artist and paranormal investigator Brandy Stark, one of the saddest ghosts might be that of a grieving mother still looking for her children. When more of the base opened for quarantine duty, different buildings were used to house people with different conditions and different levels of yellow fever. Due to the quick spread of the sickness, people could be moved swiftly from one building to another, and families would be separated as the fever progressed. According to a story Stark was told, one mother was taken away from her children, and they ended up dying without her. When she heard of their deaths, her crying could be heard throughout the base. People have reported still hearing her crying and screaming as she searches the grounds for her kids. Some have even caught her voice on tape whispering about her sadness.

    Things are like that at Fort DeSoto. There have been so many lives taken there that no one can quite tell who the people are. For example, in the main part of the fort, people have seen glowing lights and figures described as having a light around them who simply disappear. They are not in uniform, so they could be anyone from the history of the location. The laughing children who people talk about could be the old echoes of the Tocoboga or the Seminoles or the voices of yellow fever victims who met their end on the property. There have been figures on the beach who appear one moment and then dissolve as they walk into the water. There is even a kite flyer who can’t seem to get his kite in the air and then disappears. People have also seen spirits climbing the stairs, looking confused at the cars in the parking lot and strolling the pathways on top of the base and near the armaments. Some say that they see Native Americans dressed in very little clothes, soldiers in uniform and people wearing modern clothing. Take your pick on the story that led to these spirits being trapped at the base.

    One of the more widely talked about legends involves a soldier who comes out of the bay. He is soaking wet and rises out of the water and then walks into the fort. While no soldiers ever died in combat here, it is unclear if any of them ever succumbed to yellow fever or another of the diseases they complained about over the years. It does seem odd that the soldier comes out of the water, though. None of the military records tell of a soldier drowning.

    The battery is where the angry ghosts are more common. The little rooms, made of

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