Ever Heard The Tale Of The 'Volcano' In Wakulla County? By Arthur Kennerly Democrat Staff Writer Superstitions, vivid imagina- tions and strange misconcep- tions have helped create an as- sortment of weird tales and be- liefs about unexplained hap- pennings in the backcountry around Tallahassee. The baffling "volcano" of Wakulla County, however, re- mains at the top of the list of North Florida natural peculiar- ities that have fascinated Big Bend folks down through the years. The mysterious Wakulla County volcano probably never existed even though various persons for almost a century reported seeing smoke and fire coming from the region where it supposedly was located. For many years persons liv- ing in and around Tallahassee could stand on a high hill and look across the tree tops south- east of the town and see the thin, steady trail of smoke from the so-called volcano rising from the swampy forested sec- tion in the vicinity of the Wa- kulla - Jefferson - Leon county border junction. FIRST REPORTED The smoke was first reported back in the days when Forida was controlled by the Spanish. But it was not until after the War Between the States that folks began to think it came from a volcano. Many men made a hobby of trying to find the volcano. However, no one was ever suc- cessful. The smoke was visible until about 40 years ago. Sometime in the period just before World War I and the 1920's the undis- covered Wakulla volcano smoke disappeared. Writers, historians, and sci- tists, -- amateurs and profes- onals -- have long pondered over what created the smoke and why it eventually faded away. Some stick to the old story that a volcano actually existed. Back in the days of the Span- ish and when Florida was a territory of the United States, people thought the slender thread of smoke rising from the untrackable forests of Wakulla County marked the site of a hidden camp of pirates and smugglers. SLAVE HIDEOUT During the War Between the States it was popularly thought to be coming from a hideout for a colony of Confederate Army deserters and runaway slaves. After he war the vol- cano theory arose. Oldtime writers let the pos- sible existence of the volcano get the best of their imagina- tions. A Chicago newpaper man traveling through North Flor- ida in the 1889's was amazed by the miles and miles of unsur- veyed wilds of Wakulla County. And he said "It is in this im- penetrable jungle that the fa- mous 'Florida volcano' is sup- possed to exist, for a column of light hazy smoke or vapor may be seen rising from some por- tion of it .." In the late 1880's near the turn of the century, novelist Maurice Thompson described the volcano smoke at great length. In his novel "A Talla- hassee Girl" Thompson wrote that "whoever goes to Tallah- hassee will hear of the mysteri- ous smoke of Wakulla. It was first talked of in the early days when St. Marks was just be- ginning. Its apparent location is in the midst of a swamp... wherein grows every conceiv- able aquatic weed and grass and bush and tree . . . Every newspaper attache who hap- pens to get into Middle Florida feels it duty bound to write up the smoke phenomenon, but always at a distance and most- ly from hearsay-evidence ... SMOKE WAS THERE "And it is no hoax, no illu- sion, no creation of a vivid Southern imagination. The smoke is there. It has been noted and commented on for nearly 50 years...It is a per- manent and persistent mystery. It is the greatest physical phe- nomenon in Florida." William Wyatt wrote in 1935 in the Tallahassee Historical Society journal that 70 years ago visitors in Tallahassee went up in the Capitol dome (no longer allowed) to see the thin column of smoke rising above the trees. Wyatt claimed he explored the area where the smoke orig- inated and found a number of sink holes and 15-foot high piles of rock amid the swampy region. Geoloists told him the rock was not of volcanic origin. Farmers in the vicinity of Chairs, Capitola, and Baum reported they occasionally saw fire coming from the volcano area at night. One Capitola man claimed to discovered a hot spring near the area. Geologists disputed his claim, saying warm springs are usual- ly only found in oil-producing regions and that the Wakulla area was not oil country. Many explorers in the late 1800's and early 1900's attempt- ed to track down the origin of the smoke. Apparently none succeeded. 'DEVIL'S TAR KILN' Sailors used to say "the Old Man of the Swamp is smoking his pipe" when they saw the smoke from the coast. Negroes believed the smoke came from the "devil's tar kiln." But local crackers, wise in the ways of the woods, probably pegged it down correctly when they said the smoke came from some peat, muck and fallen trees that had become ignited and were smoldering peacefully deep in the untouched swamp. Dr. R. O. Vernon of the Flor- ida Geological Survey says the people who believe in the smol- dering muck fire theory are probably right. If they are right it will de- stroy some of the speculations many people have made on the existence of the fabled Wakulla volcano--and many eerie bed- time stories of the search for the elusive volcano will drop into oblivion