Casablanca inn, St. Augustine
Casablanca inn is a lovely setting right on Matanzas Bay in
Old St. Augustine. In the 1920s it was a hotbed for smugglers
(rumrunners). The innkeeper was a young woman who would provide protection
for the smugglers from federal agents in return for a fee. She would
signal the rumrunners at sea by waving a lantern if it wasn't safe, and they
would keep going up the coast. The rumrunners would board at the inn and
sold their liquor there. She fell in love with one of the smugglers,
but tragically he was killed in a storm at sea. One guest had the TV turn
on and off, then on. The night innkeeper thought he heard something
above his head - loud footsteps and doors closing on the floor over him, but
that section was unoccupied. When he went upstairs to investigate, the
room was empty, but he felt a presence. People at another inn across the
way have seen a lantern on the widow's walk. The inn is run by
Jackie O'Sullivan and she offers 20 rooms and suites. the main House is
mostly suites, and the Coach House has 8 additional rooms. The rates range
from just under $150 to about $240, and include a two course breakfast, and
afternoon homemade cookies. Six of the suites are anniversary/honeymoon
suites, and have no TV or phone. There is no smoking, and children must be
age twelve or over. the inn is at 24 Avenida Menendez, St. Augustine, Fla.
phone, 1-800-826-2626.
web site:
Casablanca
Inn

St. Augustine Light House and
Museum, St. Augustine, FL
The light house tower and the keeper’s house are both
open as a museum. Workers have
heard footsteps going up and down the tower stairs.
In the house, a man in Victorian work clothes, and a young girl have been
seen. The second floor gallery and
the basement are supposed to be hot spots.
The light house was featured on a Discovery channel show, Real
Ghosthunters. It is located off A1A South – turn onto Old Beach Road.

The Herlong Mansion, Micanopy, FL
This stately looking mansion is in a small town 12 miles
south of Gainesville. Around the
turn of the century Mrs. Natalie Herlong inherited a house, which she and her
husband enlarged and built around. She
willed the house to her six children, but only her daughter, Inez, could afford
it and she bought out her siblings. She
was working on restoring the house but died on the second floor before
renovations were complete. Inez is said to haunt the room in which she died.
Workmen who stayed there during their restoration work heard the door to a
second floor bedroom open, and then footsteps in the hallway when no one is
there. Guests in the haunted room
have described strange things with the door, the lights, and the radio.
Two guests reported sightings. The
inn is a no-smoking establishment. 402
N.E. Cholokka Blvd, Micanopy, FL 1-800-437-5664
Fort Clinch State Park, Amelia Island, FL
This park covers eleven hundred acres on Florida’s
east coast north of Jacksonville. Fort
Clinch was a fort during the civil war, though not completely built and
continued to be used as a military station after the war.
By 1898 the fort was deemed not needed and troops stationed there were
removed. The state of Florida
bought it in 1935. Staff and volunteers who have stayed there overnight have
heard footsteps, seen ghosts in civil war uniforms, seen a woman in white (like
a nurse), and have heard the wail of a baby coming from the southwest tunnel.
The last may be from the late twenties, when a homeless family lived
there for a few months and while there lost a baby girl.
From May-Labor Day candlelight tours are led on Saturday evenings, and
garrisons are held the first weekend of each month.
Reservations are required for the Sat. tours. Call 904-277-7274, The
park is off A1A with signs to direct you.

SW Florida International Airport. Fort Myers, FL
A
reader of this web page told me about this one….
Although the airport has only been around since the
eighties, it seems to be haunted. Sad
to say, several elderly travelers have expired while on the grounds of the
airport. Stranded travelers at
night have been targeted by a mischievous spirit who will ring each pay phone
along their path as they go by anywhere in the terminal. As expected, when picked up, no one is on the phone.
In the A concourse, at gate A-3, An elderly man in a trench coat has been
seen sitting in the waiting area. He gets up, walks to the ticket counter as if
to check on something, and then disappears into thin air. Janitors
have said that late at night in the men's’ room in the A Concourse they’ve
heard toilets flush and water running in the sinks, but on checking, all the
sinks are absolutely dry. The staff now tries to finish up in that area before
the last flight of the night. The
person who wrote me said that several of the airline workers and even police
officers have seen strange things at the airport but don’t like to talk about
them.
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