Haunted Key West Fort
The Construction Begins!
A couple months ago I called up and volunteered for the Haunted key West Fort out at Fort Zachary Taylor. I’ve always had a huge halloween party every year, and now that I’d moved to Key West and knew virtually no one, a party was of the question so I needed an outlet for my Halloween fun!
Frank Everhart Jr. is the master of ceremonies for this haunt, and this is the 8th year for the event which is open during the week of Fantasy Fest leading up to Halloween night. When he’s not building Haunted Houses, Frank runs the Magic Bar at Schooner Wharf Bar on the Key West Marina. Frank is a very interesting guy, a real showman, and he has more energy than the energizer bunny. He never stops.
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| First Day – Unloading | Lots of Coffins! |
I used to think our Halloween Parties in Orlando were a big production, but that was until Frank took me to the warehouse in the old Navy Galley building near the fort where he stores all of his props and materials for the Haunted Fort. Woah. You could fill 5 two-car garages with this stuff, maybe more.
The first 3 days were spent hauling pre-made black visquine walls and lumber from storage to the fort. Once that was finished, the wall construction began. The staging area at one end of the fort where the tools and saw horses and such were set up was also walled in. This area becomes the prop, makeup and costume area after construction is finished.
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| Frank and His Phone.. a Love Affair | Walls waiting to be Erected |
Yesterday the navy sent over a group of volunteers to help for the day and and they helped to wrap up the 5-day wall construction phase, and today we’re moving on to hauling props from storage and setting up all of the rooms.
In true KW fashion, all of this project is done with donations and barter, there’s no real budget to speak of, so most of the props and materials have seen many years of service, and are in a state of serious disrepair. All of this only adds to the grunge factor though, and makes everything a little more creepy than if it was all new.
The volunteers are all good old KW locals, and they are all rich characters, and they all have nicknames.. like Flash, and Moose. There are those who work really hard, and some who like to stand around and watch, but then I found that to be true even in Orlando when I was setting up for my parties; people want to be involved in the spectacle even if it is just watching, and thats cool, moral support is important too.
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| A Past Patron |
Frank Never Stops
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I’ll drop another post with more pictures in a week or so when things are a bit more fleshed out, until then… I’m OUT!
Categories: Key West Events Tags: Fantasy Fest, Fort Zachary Taylor, Halloween, Haunted Fort Zach
Fort Zachary Taylor Photos
Some more Photos from Fort Zachary Taylor
FortZach (69 photos)
19 August 2009
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Note: To see the pictures in the original Picasa album, click here
Categories: Detritus Tags: Civil War, Fort Zachary Taylor, Photos, State Park
Fort Zachary Taylor
(305) 292-6713 - www.fortzacharytaylor.com
I’ve always been a big fan of old war forts.
I’ve visited Fort Pulaski in Savannah, the Castillo de San Marcos in St. Augustine, Fort Jefferson in the Dry Tortugas, and now this one here in Key West. Out of the four I’ve visited, Fort Zach is probably the least interesting, (Ft Jefferson wins hands down!), but it’s the closest to me (biking distance), so it earns points in my book! Just because it’s not the most interesting though doesn’t mean it’s not still a blast to visit.
I will give fort Zach props in one other area as well, it’s the least busy of all the other forts.. with Castillo de San Marcos probably being the most visited I’ve seen. You can wander around fort Zach with relative freedom, and with little disturbance from groups of school children and gaggles of sweaty tourists all bustling for the best photos.
Fort Zach is a 3-sided fort with barracks buildings blocking off the back side of the parade grounds at the center. Two of the sides are pretty much locked up and unavailable for sightseeing due in part i’m sure to the state of disrepair the fort has fallen into. it’s just not safe to go in those wings. Strangely enough, the one wing of the fort you can wander in freely appears to be the oldest, and constructed of all original brick work. I guess they knew what they were doing back in 1845! The other two wings were rebuilt at some point with reinforced concrete, and we all know what salt water does to iron rebar in concrete.. I don’t know how they will keep it form disintegrating completely at some point in the future.
A brief history
Construction began in 1845, and was completed in 1860. The fort was named after president Zachary Taylor in 1850 after his sudden death in office.
Originally the fort was 3 stories tall, but in 1889 the top two levels were demolished to make way for more modern weapons. Too bad! It would have been much more impressive if it were still intact. I can’t find a photo from way back then, but I was able to dig up a painting. (to the left).
In the early days of the Civil war in 1861 the fort was seized by Union forces under the command of Captain John Milton Brannan, preventing it from falling into Confederate hands. During this point the fort was primarily used to threaten blockade runners. The fort saw heavy use again in the late 1890′s during the Spanish-American war.
In 1948 the Army, having no more need of it, turned the fort over to the U.S. Navy. In 1968 a team of volunteers began excavating the abandoned areas of the fort, finding the largest collection of Civil War Cannons in the nation. When the top two stories were demolished and two of the wings filled in, they had used the old cannons as filler! Fort Taylor was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971, and designated a National Historic Landmark in 1973.
Originally the fort sat out in the ocean and was accessed by a 1000′ causeway, but due to the filling in of the areas around it to build the State Park, the fort is now landlocked. The mote was added in 1989 to give visitors a better sense of what it looked like originally.
When can I move in?
I wandered around in here for about an hour and a half. It’s not nearly as large as some of the other forts I’ve visited, and like I said, there’s not much to see in the two closed off wings, but the remaining red-brick construction barrel-vault wing is a very cool thing indeed. You can really get a sense of creeping claustrophobia in some of those dark small rooms. The lack of other visitors just makes it all the more creepy… I absolutely loved it.
You can really get a sense of what it must have been like huddled up inside here while cannons boomed and gunfire raged. The latrine is an interesting place to visit in the far back of the right wing. It was so dark I couldn’t get a good photo, but back in the day I guess the latrines were flushed by the ocean waves.. interesting!
They’re currently rebuilding the roof and renovating the old barracks on the back side of the parade grounds, so I wasn’t able to get in there to take photos, but I was heartened to see some renovation efforts. Maybe they won’t let this old treasure fall apart after all. I’ll definitely have to go back when it’s done and get some pix.
Up top
The view from the top is very nice, you can look out to the shipping channel that runs into Key West bight. The cruise ships go right by here too, and if you’re lucky one will rumble past when you’re up top.. I’m still amazed at how huge those things are!.. it’s quite a sight.
You can see where all the cannons were attached and check out some of the half-excavated old civil War cannons buried in the concrete foundations of the newer part of the fort. You also have a pretty cool view of backside of Fort Zach Beach and the Submarine port at the Truman Annex.
For the week preceeding Halloween during Fantasy Fest, the fort becomes a haunted house with a Civil War and Haunted Key West theme. Definitely something worth checking out. Check out the Haunting of Fort Zachary Taylor website.
Categories: Cool Places Tags: Cannon, Civil War, Fort Zachary Taylor







