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Haunted Travels: Saint Petersburg, Florida

It should be no surprise that the state known for its bizarre stories and strange occurrences has its fair share of hauntings and horrors. There’s even a Horror Guide to Florida (reviewed here previously as Shadows Over Florida). There are plenty of places there that could be haunted (surely Disney World must have its share) or hide mysterious creatures (who knows what’s out there in the Everglades?) but Saint Petersburg, which is sort of between Tampa and Sarasota, also has its fair share of spirits.  Brandy Stark, a paranormal investigator, ghost tour guide, academic, artist, and the author of Supernatural Saint Petersburg and Paranormal Pinellas (click here to see it on Amazon) has some history and haunts for Saint Petersburg and Pinellas, for spooky places you can visit on your haunted travels.

 

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Cover art for Supernatural Saint Petersburg and Paranormal Pinellas

Saint Petersburg, Florida, is called the Sunshine City, but where there is sunshine there also must be shadows.  This moderate sized artsy city has a history dating back to the 1800s when it was a sleepy little fishing village.   A sister settlement to the military/industrial based city of Tampa, it was John Williams who saw the potential of the area.  He snagged a partner with Peter Demens, a Russian immigrant who owned the Orange Belt Railway system, and the two decided to make the area a tourist destination.  Demens named the land after his hometown in Russia, and Williams, who owned 1600 acres which he purchased for $1.25 a piece, built the city’s first hotel, the Detroit.  Williams named it for his own hometown in Michigan.

 

Williams also built the first wooden house in St. Petersburg.  Though he only lived in the building from 1891 until his death in 1892, his spirit is still attached to the place.  When I do my ghost tours, I like to say that I met Mr. Williams.  The date was April 4, 2004 and I was doing an interview with some students from the University of South Florida.  The building had a reputation for its haunting so we agreed to meet there, especially since the old homestead had been relocated to the St. Petersburg campus in 2000 and was utilized as office space.   As I waited for the students I decided to scan the area with my electromagnetic field  (EMF) meter. haunted chair

 

To my surprise, I got a sudden reading, followed by what I perceived as a male voice murmuring behind me.   I turned but found myself alone.  I followed up with a few snapshots from my digital camera and saw an odd circular ball of energy in one of the chairs behind me.  Above the chair was a portrait of Mr. Williams which I later learned was no coincidence.  The date that I was there was his birthday!  I’m not sure what he said to me, but I hope he enjoyed my company for a little while that day.

 

In downtown, just off of Beach Drive, is the legendary Comfort Station 1, built by the city in the 1920s.  The architect, Henry L. Taylor, also drew up the plans for the Vinoy hotel, another haunted hot spot, and for St. Mary’s Cathedral.  The restroom was hailed nationally for its unique style; the octagonal brick building sits on a small plot of land next to the bay.  It also has the dubious honor of being haunted.  Rumors are that a female presence wearing black Patton leather shoes manifests in the women’s side of Comfort Station 1. She sometimes engages in a conversation from another stall until the visitors discover that they are alone in the room.  One person reported hearing singing as she walked by at 7 in the morning and checked the area – no one was present.  The spectre, who is identified as Myrtle or Eloise, is sometimes a bit of a prankster.  One lady said that she saw someone reflected in the mirror behind her but when she turned, no one was there.  Another report says that the ghost appeared as a floating head in a toilet, quickly vanishing once seen.

 

The most famous haunted spot is undoubtedly the Vinoy Hotel.  Opened in 1925, the hotel has long had a reputation for ghosts.  One, the “Nefarious Gentleman,” resides on the 5th floor.  I have had an engagement with him just once when I stayed in the reportedly haunted room there.  The one night stay was a birthday gift and I was delighted to finally check this off of my list of places to investigate. A paranormal TV show had been in years prior and I knew that they had determined that one of the closet doors opened on its own.  Rumors also abounded that the bathroom faucets turned on by themselves.  The ghost particularly dislikes baseball players and the room was avoided by any in-town sports guests.  Delighted to have a king-sized bed all to myself, I prepared for a luxurious night of sleep.  Instead, I was kept awake most of the night by the sensation that someone was watching me, and that a figure was pacing from the bathroom to the left side of my bed to stop by the closet door.  The sensation of movement, back and forth, made for a sleepless night.  A sound recording caught swishes of movement (shuffling sounds), even when I had left the room for a time with the door locked behind me. photo of St. Petersburg Art Lofts studios

 

Finally, for those interested in the arts, I might suggest the building that houses my art studio:  ArtLofts.  Located as the second floor to Florida Craftart on Central Avenue and 5th Street North, the structure was built in 1916.  It housed  Rutland’s department store for nearly 70 years before that closed and the building was converted into an art center.  I have encountered unexplained noises, with and without guests, in the odd hours of the evening.  I’ve surveyed the building for the past 3 years and gotten odd images on infrared video and sounds on recording.  Artists have told me various stories of their encounters.  Some believe that a few of the former employees are still watching over the place, keeping it, and the artists, safe.

 

If you come down this way, be sure to check out the SPIRITS of St. Petersburg website, www.spiritsofstpete.com, and if there are any questions give me a shout at brandybstark13@gmail.com.

 

 

 

 

 

Haunted Travels: Essex County, Massachusetts: Lovecraft Country

 

topographical map of essex county massachusetts by Henry Francis WallingIf you’re visiting Salem already, you can take your haunted travels further; it is a county seat for Essex County, Massachusetts, frequently referred to as “Lovecraft country” (not to be mistaken with the novel by Matt Ruff or the HBO show).  While not all of his tales were set here, many of horror master H.P. Lovecraft’s stories are set in the area, and while the locations and geography have been fictionalized and altered,  Marblehead, Salem, Gloucester, and Newburyport in particular have been suggested as inspirations for the towns of Kingsport, Arkham (home of Miskatonic University), Innsmouth, and Dunwich (although not necessarily in that order). In an article for The Toast, Rebecca Turkewitz writes:

 

 

Although Lovecraft’s towns and rivers have invented names and the geography is slightly altered, Lovecraft is adamant about the importance of his rural New England locations. He nestled his fictional towns, such as Arkham and Dunwich, in between real places, such as Newburyport and Plum Island. In his story “The Picture in the House,” Lovecraft describes the ghastly spell of the “ancient, lonely farmhouses of backwoods New England,” and the “elements of strength, solitude, grotesqueness and ignorance” which skulk there.

 

That Lovecraft mentions nonfictional places and place names in the same stories gives the reader a sense that it all could be real, and yet the fact that his imagined places are not quite analogues contributes to his creation of an uncanny atmosphere for the stories. Trying to identify exactly where they are can be difficult, as Lovecraft locatescover for The Shadow Over Innsmouth and Other Stories Arkham in different places in his stories. Luckily, there are fans of Lovecraft who have done the work of mapping out the inspirations and possible locations of his tales. Donovan Loucks of the H.P. Lovecraft Archive has researched Massachusetts sites tied into Lovecraft’s stories: while his short tour of Lovecraftian Massachusetts sites  includes Boston and Cambridge, most are in Essex County.

 

1920s Essex County and 2020s Essex County are very different places, as you can see in this Lovecraft lover’s 1997 journey, but bring your copy of The Shadow Over Innsmouth and imagine the geography and architecture of Essex County through a glass darkly.

 

 

Interested in Lovecraft-inspired fiction? Here’s a list of some relatively recent books that give his fiction a twist.

Haunted Travels: Salem, Massachussetts

photo of The House of Seven Gables, in Salem, Massachusetts,c. 1915, courtesy of the Detroit Publishing Co.

The House of Seven Gables in Salem, Massachusetts, c. 1915, courtesy of the Detroit Publishing Co. Available through the Library of Congress.

 

Most people who think of Salem, Massachusetts think of the infamous Salem Witch Trials (there’s a museum there, dedicated to the trials) and the city and its residents have definitely capitalized on that. There are additional museums, memorials, and tours of the area, including ghost walks, walking tours, food tours, and harbor cruises devoted to the topic. October includes two major festivals. Salem Haunted Happenings  is a celebration of Halloween that lasts the entire month, and Festival of the Dead focuses on spirits and the “mysteries of death”, witha Salem Witches’ Halloween Ball on October 30. Whether you’re visiting for a more secular celebration or something witchier, Salem has it for you, especially in October.

Salem is also the hometown of Nathaniel Hawthorne, best known for that required reading we all had to do in high school, The Scarlet Letter. Hawthorne also wrote The House of Seven Gables, named for a real place, the House of Seven Gables (which actually does not have seven gables, but does have some unique architectural features, according to Duncan Ralston, the author of Ghostland). It has also been a settlement house for immigrants and is now a historic site and community resource. The historic site does have tours, and it’s suggested you book in advance. A look at the website shows that it is not nearly as creepy-looking as you’d expect from a hundreds-year-old haunted house.

There are a couple of ghost tours that visit the house, the Requiem for Salem Walking Ghost Tour , and The Ghosts of Salem Walking Tour.

If you want to see more than the spooky side to Salem, it’s been around long enough that many other historical people and places are associated with it, but October is the time for haunted travels there.

For some books you can take along on your trip, check out this book list.