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Ghost Tours in St. Augustine

Ancient City Tours

By Erin Thursby, published Oct 07, 2008
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One of the scariest things you'll learn about St. Augustine is that whatever pleasant little brick street you're walking down, you're probably stepping on somebody's gravesite. Indian burial grounds, cemeteries that have graves beyond their walls and hospitals that basically buried their dead in the street are just a few of the graves you'll walk over. Simply put, St. Augustine is brimming with the dead.

You'll get the skinny on the scary in St. Augustine with the Ancient City Tours.

If you want to know which romantic St. Augustine Bed and Breakfast has a history of hauntings and was formerly a mortuary, which cemetery someone actually died in, or what busy restaurant has a ghost in the ladies room, this is the tour to take. My tour guide was Melissa Tomasino, who most often dresses as the "lady in white" a famed St. Augustine ghost. By day, Melissa's an accountant. By night, she takes her guests on a spine tingling tour of St. Augustine's ghostly hotspots.

We visited a number of old cemeteries, though we couldn't go in the gates. Tolomato Cemetery has a number of spirits that sometimes come out to play when the tours come by. The well-known Lady in White, buried in her gown just before her wedding day, is known to haunt the cemetery and two houses nearby. Judge John B. Stickney is known to still be looking for his body parts in the Huguenots cemetery, as a result of a sleeping grave digger who was assigned to dig up his body for shipment and drunken pranksters, who smashed the good Judge's head just to steal his gold teeth.

Some of the interesting tales told on the tour aren't about ghosts, but rather about something related to death or St. Augustine history. You'll learn about the exploding Bishop, who was placed in a nearly airtight metal coffin with a glass window, for about two weeks in the heat of the summer, so that everyone would have a chance to travel to view him. He took the opportunity to explode in the middle of his memorial service (as a result of the decay gasses building up in his coffin). As prestigious as he apparently was in life, people always talk more about what happened to him afterwards.

Ghost Tours in St. Augustine
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Very well written

Posted on 10/08/2008 at 1:10:00 PM

 
Your well-written story is quite scarey as you told of your tour of ghost sites. Thanks for sharing it with me...

Posted on 10/08/2008 at 7:10:50 AM

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