South Carolina is home to the number one city in the U.S. and Canada, ranked in the 2017 Travel & Leisure World’s Best Awards – and we couldn’t be prouder of the Palmetto State’s oldest city, Charleston. Founded in 1670 as “Charles Town,” the city has grown exponentially over the centuries to become not only a favorite destination for visitors but also the city of choice for many Americans living the dream of relocating somewhere beautiful. But Charleston may have a dirty little secret that’s often overlooked: a legendary haunted park in South Carolina is hiding there in plain sight.
Times were very different during the Colonial Period and just beyond in Charles Town.
Library of Congress/Wikimedia And this spot along South Battery now known as White Point Garden had a very different purpose than it does today.
Today, visitors and locals alike head here in droves.
sfgamchick/Flickr Now one of the prettiest and most well-known greenspaces in Downtown Charleston, White Point Garden offers shady paths covered in canopies of Spanish moss-covered old Oak trees.
It’s picture perfect.
mogollon_1/Flickr No, really. It’s the perfect spot for photos. And people even get married in the bandstand located in the middle of this serene park along the Charleston Harbor.
Numerous monuments and memorials have been erected at White Point Garden over the last century and a half.
ATOMIC Hot Links/Flickr Many of the monuments are dedicated to battles fought both home and abroad. This one is for the Second South Carolina Regiment, Army of the Revolution, June 17, 1775.
Here’s another.
The_Loup_Garou/TripAdvisor It’s a monument with a bronze of General Moultrie, another battle hero.
Visitors of the park love the cannons.
TheLoupGarou/TripAdvisor Many people can’t resist climbing up on the old relics so they can pose for the perfect photo.
For sure, the various monuments, statues and cannons give this old park a military theme.
ImmaBeGoin/TripAdvisor However, there’s one unassuming monument that sticks out like a sore thumb. And it’s that monument that marks the sinister history of this perfectly peaceful place along Charleston’s battery.
It’s this one. A monument dedicated to the pirate Stede Bonnett.
Google Street View The monument stands in the Northeast corner, and possibly the least traveled corner of the park. On it, is a commemoration statement saying Bonnett and 29 of his men, that’s 30 pirates in all, were hanged in this very park, their bodies buried in the marsh beyond the low water mark right next to this park. What?
Further, if this was Charles Town’s “hanging ground,” then they weren’t the only ones hanged here in this beautiful space (shown here more than 100 years later, in 1900 long after the last public hanging).
Henry de Saussure Copeland/Flickr The website DeathPenaltyUSA.org lists the names, offenses and dates of nearly 200 hangings that occurred in what is now Charleston between 1718 and 1849. Considering the era in which these hangings occurred, it stands to reason that they were likely very public displays.
Two people were listed as having been gibbeted.
College of Charleston Gibbetted? Really?
Gibbeting was more commonly used in England but made its way across the Atlantic and into Charles Town.
The Pirates Own Book, by Charles Ellms/Wikimedia The practice of gibbeting involved hanging the dead or dying body of a criminal in a cage-like encasement and leaving them there to decay on display for all to see in order to deter others from committing a crime. The two “gibbetted” people listed on the website DeathPenaltyUSA.org’s list of hangings in Charleston were executed for murder.
It’s hard to digest that this beautiful natural landmark in Charleston was once the site of at least 30 hangings - as clearly proclaimed by the Stede Bonnett monument in the park.
jaytelcom/TripAdvisor But the likelihood of this spot being the site of nearly 200 public hangings and that nearly 200 souls passed here is staggering. Take just about any tour in Charleston and you’ll hear the tales of how White Point Garden along Charleston Harbor is haunted. People report seeing everything from apparitions to orbs and have experienced cold spots. Legend has it that the pirates haunt this spot and are looking for their ship to return. But we say, there are more than just the ghosts of departed pirates in this park.
What do you think?
Robert Pittman/Flickr Did you know about the sinister past of this popular spot in Charleston? Or that evidence suggests that nearly 200 people were center stage for public hangings here?
We’d love to know about your experiences at this haunted park in South Carolina. Did you get an eerie feeling if and when you visited White Point Garden? Let us know in the comments.
Library of Congress/Wikimedia
And this spot along South Battery now known as White Point Garden had a very different purpose than it does today.
sfgamchick/Flickr
Now one of the prettiest and most well-known greenspaces in Downtown Charleston, White Point Garden offers shady paths covered in canopies of Spanish moss-covered old Oak trees.
mogollon_1/Flickr
No, really. It’s the perfect spot for photos. And people even get married in the bandstand located in the middle of this serene park along the Charleston Harbor.
ATOMIC Hot Links/Flickr
Many of the monuments are dedicated to battles fought both home and abroad. This one is for the Second South Carolina Regiment, Army of the Revolution, June 17, 1775.
The_Loup_Garou/TripAdvisor
It’s a monument with a bronze of General Moultrie, another battle hero.
TheLoupGarou/TripAdvisor
Many people can’t resist climbing up on the old relics so they can pose for the perfect photo.
ImmaBeGoin/TripAdvisor
However, there’s one unassuming monument that sticks out like a sore thumb. And it’s that monument that marks the sinister history of this perfectly peaceful place along Charleston’s battery.
Google Street View
The monument stands in the Northeast corner, and possibly the least traveled corner of the park. On it, is a commemoration statement saying Bonnett and 29 of his men, that’s 30 pirates in all, were hanged in this very park, their bodies buried in the marsh beyond the low water mark right next to this park. What?
Henry de Saussure Copeland/Flickr
The website DeathPenaltyUSA.org lists the names, offenses and dates of nearly 200 hangings that occurred in what is now Charleston between 1718 and 1849. Considering the era in which these hangings occurred, it stands to reason that they were likely very public displays.
College of Charleston
Gibbetted? Really?
The Pirates Own Book, by Charles Ellms/Wikimedia
The practice of gibbeting involved hanging the dead or dying body of a criminal in a cage-like encasement and leaving them there to decay on display for all to see in order to deter others from committing a crime. The two “gibbetted” people listed on the website DeathPenaltyUSA.org’s list of hangings in Charleston were executed for murder.
jaytelcom/TripAdvisor
But the likelihood of this spot being the site of nearly 200 public hangings and that nearly 200 souls passed here is staggering. Take just about any tour in Charleston and you’ll hear the tales of how White Point Garden along Charleston Harbor is haunted. People report seeing everything from apparitions to orbs and have experienced cold spots. Legend has it that the pirates haunt this spot and are looking for their ship to return. But we say, there are more than just the ghosts of departed pirates in this park.
Robert Pittman/Flickr
Did you know about the sinister past of this popular spot in Charleston? Or that evidence suggests that nearly 200 people were center stage for public hangings here?
For more haunted places in the Palmetto State, take a drive down South Carolina’s most haunted road – after dark.
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Address: 2 Murray Blvd, Charleston, SC 29401, USA
The OIYS Visitor Center
Haunted Park in South Carolina November 08, 2021 Tori Jane What are some creepy places in South Carolina? South Carolina is an old state, and old states usually have their fair share of eerie, haunted, or otherwise creepy places scattered throughout. South Carolina is, of course, no different; some of our favorite creepy places in South Carolina include the South Carolina Lunatic Asylum (yes, they used to actually title things like that), haunted old plantations like the Baynard Plantation and Rose Hill Plantation. We’re also big fans of haunted roads, like the Seven Devil’s Bridge in Woodruff, and bridges like the Crybaby Bridge in Anderson. South Carolina’s dense forests and woodlands lend a particularly creepy vibe to the state; should you know where to go, you’ll find that it’s a delightfully eerie state to explore. Check out this list for more of our favorite creepy places in South Carolina! What’s the story behind White Point Garden in South Carolina? White Point Garden is located in Charleston and rests on the tip of the state’s peninsula. It’s had a couple of names, such as South Bay and White Point; over the decades it’s changed, ebbed, and flowed, with plenty of modernizations in the last several decades. White Point Garden has become a repository of sorts for relics and memorials and, oh, yeah – pirates were hanged here. At least two of them – Stede Bonnet and Blackbeard himself – are said to still haunt this place. Sometimes, people have frantically reported a body hanging from a tree in the garden only for it to disappear, having been only an apparition. Ghostly faces peer at guests from the trees. It’s a lovely place to be during the day, but at night it becomes a whole new monster. Some folks have been so creeped out by experiences here that they refused to return, night or day. We can’t really say we blame them, though.
The OIYS Visitor Center
Haunted Park in South Carolina
November 08, 2021
Tori Jane
What are some creepy places in South Carolina? South Carolina is an old state, and old states usually have their fair share of eerie, haunted, or otherwise creepy places scattered throughout. South Carolina is, of course, no different; some of our favorite creepy places in South Carolina include the South Carolina Lunatic Asylum (yes, they used to actually title things like that), haunted old plantations like the Baynard Plantation and Rose Hill Plantation. We’re also big fans of haunted roads, like the Seven Devil’s Bridge in Woodruff, and bridges like the Crybaby Bridge in Anderson. South Carolina’s dense forests and woodlands lend a particularly creepy vibe to the state; should you know where to go, you’ll find that it’s a delightfully eerie state to explore. Check out this list for more of our favorite creepy places in South Carolina! What’s the story behind White Point Garden in South Carolina? White Point Garden is located in Charleston and rests on the tip of the state’s peninsula. It’s had a couple of names, such as South Bay and White Point; over the decades it’s changed, ebbed, and flowed, with plenty of modernizations in the last several decades. White Point Garden has become a repository of sorts for relics and memorials and, oh, yeah – pirates were hanged here. At least two of them – Stede Bonnet and Blackbeard himself – are said to still haunt this place. Sometimes, people have frantically reported a body hanging from a tree in the garden only for it to disappear, having been only an apparition. Ghostly faces peer at guests from the trees. It’s a lovely place to be during the day, but at night it becomes a whole new monster. Some folks have been so creeped out by experiences here that they refused to return, night or day. We can’t really say we blame them, though.
The OIYS Visitor Center
The OIYS Visitor Center
South Carolina is an old state, and old states usually have their fair share of eerie, haunted, or otherwise creepy places scattered throughout. South Carolina is, of course, no different; some of our favorite creepy places in South Carolina include the South Carolina Lunatic Asylum (yes, they used to actually title things like that), haunted old plantations like the Baynard Plantation and Rose Hill Plantation. We’re also big fans of haunted roads, like the Seven Devil’s Bridge in Woodruff, and bridges like the Crybaby Bridge in Anderson. South Carolina’s dense forests and woodlands lend a particularly creepy vibe to the state; should you know where to go, you’ll find that it’s a delightfully eerie state to explore. Check out this list for more of our favorite creepy places in South Carolina!
What’s the story behind White Point Garden in South Carolina?
White Point Garden is located in Charleston and rests on the tip of the state’s peninsula. It’s had a couple of names, such as South Bay and White Point; over the decades it’s changed, ebbed, and flowed, with plenty of modernizations in the last several decades. White Point Garden has become a repository of sorts for relics and memorials and, oh, yeah – pirates were hanged here. At least two of them – Stede Bonnet and Blackbeard himself – are said to still haunt this place. Sometimes, people have frantically reported a body hanging from a tree in the garden only for it to disappear, having been only an apparition. Ghostly faces peer at guests from the trees. It’s a lovely place to be during the day, but at night it becomes a whole new monster. Some folks have been so creeped out by experiences here that they refused to return, night or day. We can’t really say we blame them, though.