Florida Trips Magazine™ Feature Story
St. Augustine Lighthouse
St. Augustine, Florida
by SueAnn Carpenter
Photo ©2012 Bob Carpenter
The historically
significant St. Augustine lighthouse is one of the more popular tourist
attractions, although compared with other structures in a city founded nearly
450 years ago, it is almost contemporary.
From early occupation,
there were lighted towers on the colony’s coast to benefit seafaring vessels,
but invaders burned the first array of wooden structures, and a later coquina
spire fell into the sea when the tide washed out the foundation. Still, the
present lighthouse, dating back to only 1874, correlates to the triumphs,
thrashings, and ultimate achievements in the overall history of St. Augustine.
Currently there is an
audio/self-guided tour of the lighthouse and grounds with twenty points of
interest to ponder along the way. It goes quickly until you come to the
lighthouse itself. 219 cardiac-threatening steps of spiral stairs that seem to
wind forever reach the beacon that juts 165 feet into the salt air—visible for
25 nautical miles.
Of course, once at the
top, the view is breathtaking. The scene is of the entire area including
Anastasia Island, the Intercoastal Waterway,
Vilano Beach and the historic downtown. It worked to a great advantage during
WW II as a Coast Guard facility for detecting German U-boats that slithered
along the Florida coast.
At its exceptional height,
it’s not surprising that birds occasionally fly into the light—to their own
demise, and that of the glass windows. At least one time, the projection lens was even damaged by a winged
marauder. The lens is a Fresnel designed by the French in the early 1800’s. It
rotates by clockworks that at one time had to be wound by hand. It wasn’t until
1936 that hand power was replaced by an electric motor.
Originally too, the light
was a mere flame, not electrified, and every few hours, night and day, the
light keeper carried a five-gallon container of fuel-oil up the twisting stairs
to keep the flame burning.
In 1955 the operation was
automated, and one might think that the new system made the caretaker’s task
easier, but that is when the lighthouse poltergeist became active—living up to
the ethereal reputation of this old city. Perhaps the spirit didn’t like the
change, or maybe the new energy interfered with its own.
Due to the hardships in a
new world—disease, famine, war, shipwrecks—there were untold numbers of
unprepared-for-deaths in this old city. Granted, disembodied spirits are not
recognized by everyone, but in St. Augustine they seem to be accepted as ordinary
as well as benign. There can be exceptions however, and few have posed the
threat of the lighthouse specter.
There was a series of
failures when the all-important automatic beacon stopped turning, and the
caretaker in the middle of the night climbed the stairs to investigate. Several
times he reported hearing footsteps clanking behind him on the metal steps, and
never was there a valid reason for the power failure. He would flick the switch
off and back on, restarting the motor that again ran perfectly. Then, seemingly
satisfied, the sabotage stopped as suddenly as it started, but there was no
question that shutting down the beacon was a danger to mariners.
The maritime hazard
ceased, but the activity only moved across the way to the keeper’s house—now
the museum. It has two floors of
seafaring artifacts and the history of the lighthouse, plus an interesting
story of the oldest port and shipbuilding along the coast.
In the after hours, the
museum docent told of seeing the shadowy image of a tall man who then
disappears as if dissolved by her gaze, and when the quarters were lived
in—until 1967—there were incidents of the inhabitants witnessing a woman in a
white lacey dress who would stand motionless for minutes, then simply fade
away. She is thought to be the daughter of a long-ago keeper of the flame who
drowned in the coastal waters.
In 1970 the keeper’s house
burned and remained a charred skeleton until the Junior Service League of St.
Augustine began restoring it in 1981—but it was not without occasion. During
the reconstruction, beams fell, tools disappeared, and a scaffold collapsed for
no reason. Thoroughly spooked, several workers quit and refused to go near the
place. It wasn’t finished until 1988.
In the gift shop,
lighthouse replicas and various maritime gifts are available, and though
visitors do not notice, the attendants in the shop say that strange things
happen almost daily. Items get moved about and often disappear for a time. It’s
nothing malicious—just a presence, they say.
The lighthouse location is
a fascinating place. It’s difficult to determine whether it’s the history or
the phantasmal influence that makes it so appealing, but there is an
opportunity starting this month that will help clarify any indecision. Every
Friday, Saturday and Sunday night at 7:30 pm there will be a “Dark of the Moon”
after-hours paranormal tour. The
exploration leads up the lighthouse corkscrew and through the keeper’s house
with the guides sharing tales and personal experiences. Reservations are
required, don’t forget your camera—they seem to record things the human eye
cannot. Brrrrr. October after all,
is the spooky month.
The St. Augustine
Lighthouse is located at 81 Lighthouse Avenue. Go to www.staugustinelighthouse.org
or call 904-829-0745 for more info.
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