Florida has no shortage of quirky landmarks, but few compare to the stone courtyard built by Edward Leedskalnin. Working entirely on his own, Ed carved and moved enormous blocks of coral rock, some weighing several tons, using methods he never explained and never demonstrated publicly. You see, Ed only worked under the cloak of darkness, seriously, with no one ever witnessing how he managed to move such heavy boulders.
Leedskalnin didn’t just build it once, he built it twice. He first created his stone garden in Florida City during the 1920s, then later relocated the entire layout to a new property in the 1930s, transporting the blocks and rebuilding each section by hand one by one. The version near Homestead is the one he rebuilt in the 1930s, and it still operates as a landmark today.
The story takes a turn when you get to his inspiration. Ed’s entire project was tied to his unrequited love for a girl named Agnes Scuffs, who ended their engagement the day before they were supposed to be wed. She moved on, and he kicked rocks, well, in this case, moved rocks… for the rest of his life. Decades later, Billy Idol used Ed's story as inspo for his song Sweet Sixteen and even filmed his music video there at Coral Castle giving the landmark a place in pop-culture history.
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