Beach goers to Coquina Beach on Anna Maria Island in Florida claim to have seen the ghost of a man wandering in the sand. Said to be one of the victims when a ship wrecked, he is said to be on the lookout for his ship mates. 

Florida’s Gulf Coast is no stranger to ghost stories. From pirate curses to haunted inns, this sun-drenched paradise hides its darkness well. But ask the locals near Anna Maria Island, and they’ll tell you there’s something different about Coquina Beach. Something older. Something that still walks the shore after dark.

Read More: Check out all ghost stories from USA

Coquina Beach, on the southern end of Anna Maria Island Florida, is an old style Florida beach on the Gulf of Mexico. With tall pine trees lining the beach. This isn’t the Florida of postcard sunsets and seashell souvenirs. This is a place where the past refuses to be buried by the tide.

Coquina Beach on Anna Maria Island Florida
Jim Mullhaupt/Flickr

The Man in Black Roaming Coquina Beach

Midnight swimmers claim to have heard voices whispering on the darkened beach. There are also tales of the ghost of an old man wandering the beach, looking confused. He has been seen roaming the beach, from the Long Boat Key Bridge to the Three Piers Beach. 

This elderly man or figure dressed in black is one of the most persistent legends on Coquina Beach involving a ghostly figure in black clothings. Sometimes he is known as the Man in Black or the Black Phantom. 

Disappearing Footprints and Phantom Voices

Beyond these apparitions, Coquina Beach is home to subtler haunts. Visitors have reported footprints in the sand that appear with no one around to make them, cold spots even on sweltering summer nights, and the inexplicable scent of salt and woodsmoke where no fire has burned.

Some claim to hear voices in the darkness — hushed conversations, ghostly cries, or the unmistakable call of a ship’s bell lost to the waves decades ago. During heavy storms, the wind seems to carry old sea shanties, sung in languages long abandoned to history.

Beach Mound
b-cline/Flickr

A Shoreline Stained by Shipwrecks

Now, who would be the one to haunt Coquina Beach? Stretching along the southern tip of Anna Maria Island, Coquina Beach was once a notorious graveyard for ships. Treacherous currents, sudden storms, and hidden sandbars made this stretch of coast perilous for sailors navigating the Gulf of Mexico.

Wrecks were common, and with them came loss of life and the desperate cries of men swallowed by the surf. Some say the remains of long-forgotten ships still lie buried beneath the sands, their rusted ribs exposed by heavy storms.

Some have speculated that the man dressed in black was one of eight crewmen on the sunken cargo steamer the Regina in 1940, and has been looking for a long lost friend.

There also used to be a hotel at the southern end of the beach. It was torn down and made into a public picnic area. Could the ghosts have something to do with the old hotel?

The Gulf’s Forgotten Watchers

Coquina Beach might look like a postcard-perfect escape by day, but those who know its history understand it’s a place where the past hangs thick in the salt air. 

Manatee County marine rescue chief Jay Moyles, who is in charge of the lifeguards at Coquina Beach, said he’s heard of the “man in black” apparition over the years, but none of the lifeguards have reported to him that they saw anything resembling the figure. And no member of the public has ever reported a “man in black” walking on Coquina Beach, and then disappearing into the water.

Still, the local legends claim he has turned up multiple places along the beach. Shipwrecked sailors, lost lovers, and mournful spirits linger here, bound to a shore that remembers every tragedy.

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References:

https://eu.palmbeachpost.com/story/entertainment/local/2015/10/26/is-this-florida-beach-haunted/7545695007

Haunted Anna Maria Island | AMI FL BLOG

5 Haunted Places to See in Siesta Key and Sarasota | Local Activities | Crescent Royale Condominiums

Sunday Favorites: Haunting the Shores of Anna Maria – The Bradenton Times

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