Haunted Places in Merritt Island, Florida

    Haunted Places in Merritt Island, Florida

    1 haunted location

    FloridaMerritt Island
    Georgiana Cemetery – cemetery

    Georgiana Cemetery

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    Merritt Island, Florida·cemetery

    Georgiana Cemetery, located on Merritt Island in Brevard County, Florida, represents one of the oldest continuously maintained burial grounds in the region, with documentation of interment dating back to the early nineteenth century, likely to approximately 1800 or earlier. The cemetery was established to serve the scattered communities of settlers, fishers, and agricultural workers who inhabited the barrier islands and coastal areas of what is now Brevard County during the early American period. The physical landscape of the cemetery is distinguished by Spanish moss-draped live oak trees, palmetto vegetation, and the characteristic flora and aesthetic of Florida's coastal regions, creating an atmosphere of deep historical continuity and natural beauty. The grave markers and monuments visible in the cemetery reflect centuries of regional cultural practices, including markers from the Spanish colonial period, the territorial period of early American expansion, and the nineteenth-century development of settlements on the island. The cemetery, also known locally as Crooked Mile Cemetery, has been maintained continuously despite changes in the surrounding landscape, the development of nearby areas, and the dramatic transformations wrought by twentieth and twenty-first century growth and change in the Space Coast region. The documented paranormal phenomena associated with Georgiana Cemetery focus significantly on the ghost of Ethel Allen, a woman murdered in 1934 under circumstances that remain incompletely documented in public historical records. The murder itself represented a tragic and violent disruption of life in the relatively small community of that era, and the identity, prosecution, and resolution of the crime remain historically obscure. Ethel Allen's violent death and subsequent burial in the cemetery appears to have created a spiritual attachment to the location, with her presence manifesting through various paranormal phenomena. The 1934 murder would have created immediate community trauma and social disruption in a way that would have left deep impressions on the survivors and witnesses to the events. The cemetery itself, as a place where the remains of Ethel Allen were interred, became the focal point for continued spiritual presence associated with her unresolved or traumatic death. Paranormal phenomena documented at Georgiana Cemetery through formal investigation and witness reports include apparitions of Ethel Allen, appearing in various locations throughout the cemetery grounds. Disembodied voices have been captured in audio recordings and reported by multiple independent investigators and visitors, with some accounts suggesting that Ethel Allen's voice can be distinguished among other vocal phenomena. Electronic voice phenomena, or EVP, has been documented using standard paranormal investigation audio equipment, with researchers capturing intelligible words and partial sentences that appear to originate from non-corporeal sources. Unexplained lights have been observed moving through the cemetery at night, distinct from any apparent external light sources and appearing to move with directional purpose. Unusual tactile sensations including touches and brushes have been reported by visitors walking through the cemetery, particularly near Ethel Allen's grave marker. The remarkable consistency of paranormal documentation at Georgiana Cemetery across multiple decades of investigation and the historical specificity of the phenomena to the individual victim of a violent crime suggests a strong and persistent haunting associated with unresolved trauma and the specific human being whose death created the spiritual phenomenon.

    Apparitions
    Light Anomalies
    Disembodied Voices
    EVPs