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The ghost visit takes guests to the city's most haunted spots right in the center of downtown, where the Tequesta Indians lived when the Spanish Conquistadors arrived...

Search ghosts with the Ghosts, Mysteries & Legends tour of Old Fort Lauderdale, www.fortlauderdaleghosttours.com, Fort Lauderdale's premier ghost tour. Ghost Guides introduce visitors and residents to Fort Lauderdale's "other night life" while they go along the banks of the New River in the city's historic district. Be taught more on our partner link - Click here: https://www.facebook.com/public/andrew-byer/.

The cat visit takes visitors to the city's most haunted places right in the center of downtown, where the Tequesta Indians lived if the Spanish Conquistadors came and where the city as we know it today began.

The tour's chief ghost guide, Christian Rieger, says, "We focus our tour in the location where Fort Lauderdale started as a contemporary town where the Flagler railroad came through in 1896. This riveting https://www.crunchbase.com/person/andrew-byer/ link has several compelling warnings for where to engage in it.

"The freeze of 1895 that killed the citrus trees through central Florida, caused Henry Flagler to give his Florida Eastcoast Railroad from Palm Beach to what is today Miami.

The city's first hotel, built because the railroad's coming through, was built next to the tracks at the river. Historians say that it is this region, where we have our cat shopping, that the city, as we know it today, began."

Cat tour guides, wearing a, top hat and holding a, tell stories of the varied New River, trading posts and 100 year-old mansions. Could be the Ghost Train that speeds quietly over the tracks the practice that caused the death 500 people in the Labor Day Hurricane of 1935? Some natives who claim to own seen it think therefore. If you know any thing, you will maybe need to research about https://www.quora.com/profile/andrew-byer.

Visitors on the visit will find the secret of the person in the white wedding dress and why she stands alone on the deck of the city's oldest standing hotel building. Courses also tell tales of Seminole Indians that still haunt the water, the spirits of early settlers, and the haunts of a favorite restaurant.

"It is very good family entertainment," claims Rieger, "something for the family to accomplish after dinner besides watch television in the college accommodation. Additionally, it works perfect for local families, because ghost trips really are a intelligent way of presenting local history to children a way of creating history interesting and simple to hear to."

Your digital camera is brought by "and. We have had many visitors who have photographed numerous images in the character world."

For more info, contact 954 523 1501or admin@fortlauderdaleghosttours.com.
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