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CONTENTS

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 * (Top)
 * 1History
 * 2The Castle
 * 3In popular culture
 * 4See also
 * 5References
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   * 5.1Bibliography
 * 6External links

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CORAL CASTLE

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Artificial limestone structure in Miami-Dade County, Florida, USA



United States historic place
Coral Castle
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
U.S. Historic district
Coral Castle (formerly known as Rock Gate)

Show map of FloridaShow map of the United StatesShow all
LocationUnincorporated Miami-Dade County, FloridaCoordinates25°30′1″N
80°26′42″W / 25.50028°N 80.44500°W / 25.50028; -80.44500Coordinates:
25°30′1″N 80°26′42″W / 25.50028°N 80.44500°W / 25.50028;
-80.44500Built1920Websitecoralcastle.comNRHP reference No.84000840[1]Added to
NRHPMay 10, 1984

Coral Castle is an oolite limestone structure created by the Latvian-American
eccentric Edward Leedskalnin (1887–1951). It is located in unincorporated
territory of Miami-Dade County, Florida, between the cities of Homestead and
Leisure City. The structure comprises numerous large stones, each weighing
several tons, sculpted into a variety of shapes, including slab walls, tables,
chairs, a crescent moon, a water fountain and a sundial.[2] It is currently a
privately operated tourist attraction. Coral Castle is noted for legends
surrounding its creation that claim it was built single-handedly by Leedskalnin
using reverse magnetism or supernatural abilities to move and carve the
stones.[3][4]


HISTORY[EDIT]

Coral Castle's own promotional material says Edward Leedskalnin was 26 years old
when he was suddenly rejected by his 16-year-old fiancée Agnes Skuvst in Latvia,
just one day before the wedding. Leaving for the United States, he came down
with allegedly terminal tuberculosis, but spontaneously healed, stating that
magnets had some effect on his disease.[citation needed]

He spent more than 28 years building Coral Castle, refusing to allow anyone to
view him while he worked.[contradictory] A few teenagers claimed to have
witnessed his work, reporting that he had caused the blocks of coral to move
like hydrogen balloons.[5][better source needed] The only advanced tool that
Leedskalnin spoke of using was a "perpetual motion holder".

Leedskalnin originally built a castle, which he named "Ed's Place", in Florida
City, Florida, around 1923. He purchased the land from Ruben Moser whose wife
had assisted him when he had another very bad case of tuberculosis.[6][7]
Florida City, which borders the Everglades, is the southernmost city in the
United States that is not on an island. At the time, it was an extremely remote
location with very little development. The castle remained in Florida City until
about 1936 when Leedskalnin decided to move and take the castle with him. Its
second and final location has the mailing address of 28655 South Dixie Highway,
Miami, FL 33033, which now appears within the census-generated overlay of
Leisure City but which is actually unincorporated county territory. He
reportedly chose relocation as a means to protect his privacy when discussion
about developing land in the original area of the castle started.[8] He spent
three years moving the component structures of Coral Castle 10 miles (16 km)
north from Florida City to its current location outside Homestead, Florida.

Leedskalnin named his new place "Rock Gate" after the huge rear swinging gate he
built into the back wall. He continued to work on the castle until his death in
1951. The coral pieces that are part of the newer castle, not among those
transported from the original location, were quarried on the property only a few
feet away from the castle's walls. The pool and the pit beside the southern wall
are quarries. The east and west quarries have been filled in.

At Florida City, Leedskalnin charged visitors ten cents apiece to tour the
castle grounds. After moving to Homestead, he asked for donations of twenty-five
cents, but let visitors enter free if they had no money. There are signs carved
into rocks at the front gate to "Ring Bell Twice". He would come down from his
living quarters in the second story of the castle tower close to the gate and
conduct the tour. He never told anyone who asked him how he made the castle. He
would simply answer "It's not difficult if you know how."

When asked why he had built the castle, Leedskalnin would vaguely answer it was
for his "Sweet Sixteen". This is widely believed to be a reference to Agnes
Skuvst (often misspelled as "Scuffs"). In Leedskalnin's own publication A Book
in Every Home, he implies his "Sweet Sixteen" was more an ideal than a reality.
According to a Latvian account, the girl existed, but her name was actually
Hermīne Lūsis.[9]

When Leedskalnin became ill in November 1951, he put a sign on the door of the
front gate "Going to the Hospital" and took the bus to Jackson Memorial Hospital
in Miami. He suffered a stroke at one point, either before he left for the
hospital or at the hospital. He died twenty-eight days later of pyelonephritis
(a kidney infection) at the age of 64. His death certificate noted that his
death was a result of "uremia; failure of kidneys, as a result of the infection
and abscess".[10]

While the property was being investigated, US$3,500 (equivalent to $36,539 in
2021) was found among Leedskalnin's personal belongings. He had made his income
from conducting tours, selling pamphlets about various subjects (including
magnetic currents) and the sale of a portion of his 10-acre (4.0 ha) property
for the construction of U.S. Route 1.[8] As he had no will, the castle became
the property of his closest living relative in the United States, a nephew from
Michigan named Harry.[11]

Coral Castle's website reports that the nephew was in poor health and he sold
the castle to an Illinois family in 1953. However, this story differs from the
obituary of a former Coral Castle owner, Julius Levin, a retired jeweler from
Chicago, Illinois. The obituary states Levin had purchased the land from the
state of Florida in 1952 and may not have been aware there was even a castle on
the land.[12]

The new owners turned it into a tourist attraction and changed the name of Rock
Gate to Rock Gate Park, and later to Coral Castle.[13]

In January 1981, Levin sold the castle to Coral Castle, Inc., for US$175,000
(equivalent to $521,605 in 2021).[14] The company retains ownership today.

In 1984 the property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[1]
It was added under the name of "Rock Gate", but the name on the list was changed
to "Coral Castle" in 2011.[15]

The stone sign just inside the property that says "Adm. 10c Drop Below" is not
original to Coral Castle. Leedskalnin made this sign and placed it in front of
his earlier location at Florida City when he was tired of giving a "free show"
to visitors who were careless and trampled his shrubbery. This sign was donated
by the owners of Ed's Place and placed here in subsequent years.[citation
needed]


THE CASTLE[EDIT]


A view from within Coral Castle

The Thirty Ton Stone

The grounds of Coral Castle consist of 1,100 short tons (1,000 t) of stones in
the form of walls, carvings, furniture, and a castle tower. Commonly mistakenly
believed to be made of coral, it is actually made of oolite, also known as
oolitic limestone. Oolite is a sedimentary rock composed of small spherical
grains of concentrically layered carbonate that may include localized
concentrations of fossil shells and coral. Oolite is found throughout
southeastern Florida from Palm Beach County to the Florida Keys.[16] Oolite is
often found beneath only several inches of topsoil, such as at the Coral Castle
site.

The stones are fastened together without mortar. They are set on top of each
other using their weight to keep them together. The craftsmanship detail is so
fine and the stones are connected with such precision that no light passes
through the joints. The 8-foot (2.4 m) tall vertical stones that make up the
perimeter wall have a uniform height. Even with the passage of decades the
stones have not shifted.

Among the features and carvings are a two-story castle tower that served as
Leedskalnin's living quarters (walls consisting of 8-foot-high pieces of stone),
an accurate sundial, a polar telescope, an obelisk, a barbecue, a water well, a
fountain, celestial stars and planets, and numerous pieces of furniture. The
furniture pieces include a heart-shaped table, a table in the shape of Florida,
twenty-five rocking chairs, chairs resembling crescent moons, a bathtub, beds,
and a throne.

With few exceptions, the objects are made from single pieces of stone that weigh
on average 15 short tons (14 t) each. The largest stone weighs 30 short tons
(27 t) and the tallest are two monoliths standing 25 ft (7.6 m) each.

A 9-short-ton (8.2 t) revolving 8-foot tall gate is a famous structure of the
castle, documented on the television programs In Search of...[5] and That's
Incredible!.[17] The gate is carved so that it fits within a quarter of an inch
of the walls. It was well-balanced, reportedly so that a child could open it
with the push of a finger. The mystery of the gate's perfectly balanced axis and
the ease with which it revolved lasted for decades until it stopped working in
1986. In order to remove it, six men and a 50-short-ton (45 t) crane were used.
Once the gate was removed, the engineers discovered how Leedskalnin had centered
and balanced it. He had drilled a hole from top to bottom and inserted a metal
shaft. The rock rested on an old truck bearing. It was the rusting out of this
bearing that resulted in the gate's failure to revolve. Complete with new
bearings and shaft, it was set back into place on July 23, 1986.[18] It failed
in 2005 and was again repaired; however, it does not rotate with the same ease
it once did.

Coral Castle remains a popular tourist attraction. Books, magazines, and
television programs speculate about how Leedskalnin was able to construct the
structure and move stones that weigh many tons. Claims that nobody had ever seen
Leedskalnin at work and that he levitated his stones have been
repudiated.[citation needed] Orval Irwin reportedly witnessed him quarry his
stones and erect parts of his wall, and illustrated the methods in his book Mr.
Can't Is Dead.[19] The Nemith Film Collection produced a short film documentary
in 1944 of him at work[contradictory]. Coral Castle's website states that, "If
anyone ever questioned Ed about how he moved the blocks of coral, Ed would only
reply that he understood the laws of weight and leverage well."[8] He also
stated that he had "discovered the secrets of the pyramids", referring to the
Great Pyramid of Giza.[20]

 * The Coral Castle
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 
 * 


IN POPULAR CULTURE[EDIT]

 * Coral Castle is sometimes referred to as Florida's Stonehenge.[21]
 * The 1958 film The Wild Women of Wongo used Coral Castle as the set for the
   dragon-god temple.[22]
 * The lunar scenes of the 1961 film Nude on the Moon were shot in Coral
   Castle.[23]
 * In the 1966 children's musical film Jimmy, the Boy Wonder, Coral Castle was
   used as a backdrop in several scenes.
 * "The Castle of Secrets" is an episode of Leonard Nimoy's program In Search
   of... (1976–1982) that includes a dramatization of Leedskalnin moving the
   stones with minimal effort.[5]
 * On June 20, 2014, the History Channel aired a segment about Coral Castle in
   the Ancient Aliens series (Season 2, Episode 8), "Mysterious Structures".[24]
 * Billy Idol's 1986 song "Sweet Sixteen" was inspired by the story of
   Leedskalnin and Coral Castle.[25][26]
 * John Martin's book, Coral Castle Construction,[27] released in November 2012,
   describes how Ed Leedskalnin built his structure based on fundamental
   engineering principles.
 * In the video game Fortnite, a location named Coral Castle exists. It is
   unknown if it is in reference to the real-life Coral Castle. In August 2020,
   the company that owns Coral Castle sued Epic Games for trademark
   infringement.[28]
 * In the novel The Island of Eternal Love, by Cuban-American author Daína
   Chaviano, a whole chapter ("Very close to my heart") is dedicated to the
   history of Coral Castle and his builder Edward Leedskalnin.[29]


SEE ALSO[EDIT]

 * Ferdinand Cheval, a French postman who built Le Palais idéal, a similar stone
   castle
 * Simon Rodia, an American construction worker who built Watts Tower
 * Bishop Castle, a one-man construction project near Rye, Colorado.


REFERENCES[EDIT]

 1.  ^ Jump up to: a b "National Register Information System – Coral
     Castle (#84000840)". National Register of Historic Places. National Park
     Service. March 13, 2009.
 2.  ^ "Coral Castle Review and Ratings of Sights in Miami". The New York Times.
     Frommer's Review
 3.  ^ Radford, Benjamin. "Mystery of the Coral Castle Explained". Live Science.
     Retrieved August 27, 2017.
 4.  ^ Stollznow, Karen (January 1, 2010). "Coral castle: fact and folklore".
     Skeptical Inquirer. Archived from the original on May 26, 2012. Retrieved
     October 15, 2017.
 5.  ^ Jump up to: a b c "The Castle of Secrets (a.k.a. Coral Castle)". In
     Search of... Season 5. Archived from the original on July 9, 2014.
     Retrieved November 2, 2015.
 6.  ^ "City of Florida City". City of Florida City. Archived from the original
     on October 6, 2007. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
 7.  ^ "City History". City of Florida City. Archived from the original on
     October 25, 2015. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
 8.  ^ Jump up to: a b c "Who's Ed?". Coral Castle. Retrieved October 9, 2010.
     Ed was a very private person and when he heard about a planned subdivision
     being built near him he decided to move to Homestead and in 1936 bought 10
     acres of land.
 9.  ^ Stollznow, Karen. "Coral Castle Fact and Folklore", Skeptical Inquirer
     January/February 2010, pp. 49–53
 10. ^ "Coral Castle: The Mystery of Ed Leedskalnin and his American Stonehenge
     by best-selling author Rusty McClure and Jack Heffron".
     Coralcastlebook.com. Archived from the original on May 17, 2014. Retrieved
     May 19, 2014.
 11. ^ William Stansfield. "The Enigma of Coral Castle". Skeptic. 12 (2).
     Chapter: Ancient and Modern Megaliths.
 12. ^ "Julius Levin obituary". Chicago Sun-Times. April 14, 1990. Archived from
     the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved August 20, 2008.
 13. ^ "Coral Castle". SouthFlorida.com. Archived from the original on July 16,
     2011. Retrieved July 20, 2008.
 14. ^ "Warranty Deed for Coral Castle". County Records. Miami-Dade County
     Clerk. Archived from the original on December 14, 2007. Retrieved August
     20, 2008.
 15. ^ Recent Listings April 15, 2011, National Park Service, April 2, 2010.
     Accessed June 11, 2011.
 16. ^ Miami Limestone, Florida Department of Environmental Protection
 17. ^ "That's Incredible!". That's Incredible!. March 3, 1980.
 18. ^ 9 Ton Gate. November 22, 2006. Archived from the original on November 13,
     2021. Retrieved May 19, 2014 – via YouTube.
 19. ^ Irwin, Orval M. (1996). Mr. Can't is Dead: The Story of the Coral Castle.
     Homestead, FL. OCLC 45263633.
 20. ^ Radford, Benjamin (March 28, 2006). "The Mysterious Coral Castle: A
     Fanciful Myth". Live Science & Skeptical Inquirer. Retrieved August 20,
     2008.
 21. ^ Jeff Klinkenberg. Florida's Stonehenge is Coral Castle in Homestead,
     Tampa Bay Times, February 1, 2013
 22. ^ "The Wild Women of Wongo : George R. Black : Free Download & Streaming :
     Internet Archive". Retrieved May 19, 2014.
 23. ^ Beldin, Fred. "Nude on the Moon (1960)". AllMovie. Retrieved November 28,
     2016.
 24. ^ "S. 8, E. 2, Mysterious Structures". History Channel. Archived from the
     original on March 20, 2020.
 25. ^ Billy Idol – Sweet Sixteen Live. Archived from the original on April 24,
     2020. Retrieved July 26, 2016 – via YouTube.
 26. ^ "Preview Billy Idol's Candid Memoir 'Dancing With Myself'". Rolling
     Stone. September 25, 2014. Retrieved July 6, 2017.
 27. ^ John Martin (2012). Coral Castle Construction: How One Man Created a
     Megalithic Wonder. ISBN 978-0988429703.
 28. ^ Carpenter, Nicole (August 14, 2020). "Florida's Stonehenge is suing Epic
     Games over Coral Castle". Polygon. Retrieved October 6, 2021.
 29. ^ Chaviano, Daína (2008). The Island of Eternal Love (1st ed.). New York:
     Riverhead Books, Penguin Group. pp. 173–177. ISBN 978-1-59448-992-1.


BIBLIOGRAPHY[EDIT]

 * "Mark". Weird US at Florida's Coral Castle. Weird NJ & KPI. Archived from the
   original on November 13, 2021. Retrieved November 2, 2015.
 * "The Secrets of Coral Castle". About.Com. We may never know the answer.
   Leedskalnin took his secrets with him to his grave in 1951.
 * "Coral Castle Code". Jon and Nina De'Pew. Archived from the original on May
   21, 2008. Retrieved May 21, 2008. Self-purported derivation of Edward
   Leedskalnin's book Magnetic Current
 * Leedskalnin, Edward. Magnetic Current (Illustrated). Scrbd.
 * Dunning, Brian (April 14, 2009). "Skeptoid #149: Coral Castle". Skeptoid.
 * Martin, John (2012). Coral Castle Construction: How One Man Created a
   Megalithic Wonder. ISBN 978-0988429703.
 * McClure, Rusty; Heffron, Jack (2009). Coral Castle: The Mystery of Ed
   Leedskalnin and His American Stonehenge. Dublin, OH: Ternary Publishing.
   ISBN 978-0984213214. OCLC 456174764.


EXTERNAL LINKS[EDIT]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coral Castle.
 * Official website
 * Skeptic Magazine article
 * Coral Castle aerial photographs



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