Port Sulphur, Louisiana·plantation Woodland Plantation near Port Sulphur in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, represents a significant historical structure bearing the complex legacy of the antebellum South, with a detailed architectural record and a rich paranormal history that has generated considerable interest among investigators of Louisiana's haunted locations. The plantation was constructed during the pre-Civil War period when agricultural wealth derived from sugar cultivation and enslaved labor created an aristocratic planter class that built increasingly elaborate residential structures as expressions of economic power and social status. The main dwelling of Woodland Plantation exemplifies the architectural conventions of Louisiana plantation houses, featuring the characteristic design elements and spatial organization that reflected both practical agricultural operations and the hierarchical social structures of slavery-era society. The property contains multiple structures including support buildings, outhouses, and slave quarters that together comprise the physical plant of a functioning antebellum plantation, with these auxiliary structures representing the material conditions under which enslaved people were housed and compelled to labor. The plantation's documented history includes various ownership transfers and agricultural activities extending from its construction through the present era, with the building serving multiple functions depending on contemporary economic and social circumstances. However, Woodland Plantation has become particularly notable in paranormal investigation circles for the diverse range of supernatural entities reportedly inhabiting its spaces, with multiple distinct spirits having been identified and described by witnesses across several decades of paranormal documentation. Among the identified entities is the spirit of Braddish Johnson, an apparently prominent historical figure associated with the plantation whose apparition has been reported materializing in the main residence dressed in distinctive period clothing including striped pants and a silk hat, suggesting a figure of considerable social standing during his lifetime. Beyond the figure of Johnson, multiple other spirits have been identified as inhabiting the plantation, including the apparitions of a young boy, two women of unidentified identity, and a man whose historical associations with the property remain unclear. Additionally, many paranormal researchers have documented what they characterize as the presences of the ghosts of former enslaved people, suggesting that the profound trauma and suffering associated with slavery has generated supernatural manifestations that persist within the plantation structure. The paranormal activity manifests in diverse forms including the physical opening and closing of doors without apparent mechanical cause, the sudden ringing of a doorbell during night hours when no visitor could physically activate the mechanism, and the appearance of shadowy forms moving through rooms in patterns suggesting purposeful activity rather than random phenomena. The spirit presences are reportedly concentrated in a section of the plantation called Spirits Hall on the first floor, where visitors and investigators have reported encountering multiple entities in close temporal proximity, suggesting a location of particular spiritual density or intensity. The accumulated accounts of paranormal activity at Woodland Plantation have established it as a significant location for investigations into the intersection of historical trauma, slavery's moral catastrophe, and potential supernatural manifestations, with the spirits allegedly inhabiting the structure seeming to represent both individual entities tied to specific biographical histories and broader collective presences representing the collective suffering of the enslaved population.