Haunted Places in Buras, Louisiana

    Haunted Places in Buras, Louisiana

    1 haunted location

    LouisianaBuras
    Fort Jackson – battlefield

    Fort Jackson

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    Buras, Louisiana·battlefield

    Fort Jackson occupies a strategic Mississippi River position downstream from New Orleans in Louisiana's bayou landscape. The fortified installation defended against military threats and controlled commerce through one of North America's most economically significant waterways. Located at Buras, Louisiana, within the delta region, the fort's architecture reflects nineteenth-century military engineering designed to resist artillery bombardment. The fortification's history extends to Spanish colonial occupation. The Spanish constructed Fort San Felipe in 1792 to control the lower Mississippi. Following the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, the United States assumed control. American construction of Fort Jackson commenced in 1822, with completion and occupation in 1832. The fort incorporated advanced military engineering principles with massive earthwork fortifications and casemate structures providing defensive positions. For its first three decades as an American installation, Fort Jackson served peacefully as a coastal defense facility. The permanent garrison and logistical infrastructure supported Gulf region military operations. However, isolation, challenging bayou environmental conditions, garrison confinement, and separation from broader society created monotonous and psychologically demanding existence for stationed personnel. The Civil War transformed Fort Jackson into intense military conflict and human suffering. When the Confederacy seceded in 1861, Confederate forces took control and prepared defenses. The fort served as crucial position protecting New Orleans approaches from the Gulf. The climactic Battle of Forts Jackson and St. Philip occurred when Union naval forces under Admiral David Glasgow Farragut launched massive assault on the fortifications defending the river approach. Union victory resulted, collapsing Confederate southern Louisiana defense. Casuality figures from the Battle of Forts Jackson and St. Philip rank among the most significant of any Civil War coastal operation. Over a thousand soldiers and sailors died during battle, with additional hundreds wounded or captured. Massive casualties resulted from artillery bombardment, naval combat, hand-to-hand combat within casemates and ditches, and modern weapons against static positions. This violent death concentration created profound trauma and psychological intensity imprinting paranormal effects persisting over 160 years. Principal paranormal phenomena at Fort Jackson include apparitional sightings of Confederate soldiers, often appearing as full-body apparitions dressed in period military uniforms. These apparitions appear most frequently during evening and nighttime hours, sometimes marching in formation. Auditory phenomena include sounds of mortar fire, gunshots, and weapons discharge. Most remarkably, visitors report distinctive burning gunpowder odors, suggesting the battle's violent intensity imprinted within location. Accounts describe a young woman's apparition singing on fort grounds, appearing less frequently than soldier apparitions but consistently reported. Identity and historical context remain unclear. Some researchers speculate she was a camp follower whose death during battle or war period resulted in manifestation. From 1978 to 1989, the fort housed a cult organization led by Louis Hubert Casebolt, known as the Velaashby. The cult's presence created additional historical complexity and unknown paranormal consequences. The fort currently operates as historical site with periodic paranormal investigation activities, remaining one of Louisiana's most recognized paranormally active Civil War sites.

    Phantom Smells
    Apparitions
    Full-Body Apparitions
    Unexplained Sounds