How Did One Man Build The Coral Castle Alone?

By | November 15, 2018

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Coral Castle (Photo by Hoberman Collection/UIG via Getty Images)

In Florida’s Miami-Dade County, there sits an unusual structure known as the Coral Castle. The building, comprised entirely of blocks of stone weighing several tons each, was built by one man who worked alone, often at night, without using heavy cranes. A group of teenage boys spying on him once reported that he levitated the stones into place. The builder himself, an eccentric Latvian-American named Edward Leedskalnin, even claimed to have used magnets to get the job done. So what is the secret of the Coral Castle’s construction? What is the story behind this odd tourist attraction?

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Ed Leedskalnin and his Coral Castle

Leedskalnin Built His Castle After Being Dumped By His Teenage Fiancée

Ed Leedskalnin started working on the construction of his Coral Castle as a way to heal his broken heart. Leedskalnin, then 28, was set to marry his 16-year-old sweetheart, Agnes Skuvst, in his native Latvia. But on the day of their wedding, she abruptly called off the engagement. The spurned Leedskalnin left his country and moved to the United States, settling in southern Florida. He immediately got to work building a castle from the limestone and coral rocks nearby. This was in 1923. He continued to work on his castle until his death, 28 years later. If anyone asked him why he built his castle, he would always answer that it was for his “Sweet Sixteen.”