Some of us vaguely remember the field trip we took to Pea Patch Island to see Fort Delaware. The reason for the field trip is hazy to me because all I can remember is how we were eaten alive by mosquitoes in the humid weather. We sat there watching horrible reenactments of the Civil War after an hour drive and 15 minute ferry ride. To me, the most interesting part of the trip wasn’t the ferry we took (although that was pretty fun from what I remember); it was how creepy Fort Delaware looked.

This Pennhurst-esque fort does not only have historical value but also has supernatural value.
In 1846 , Fort Delaware was originally built to be what it was called- a fort. After an attack on Fort Mifflin during the Revolutionary War, Pennsylvania realized that they needed a fort farther away from Philadelphia which was a major city. They found the perfect haven in the middle of the Delaware River- Pea Patch Island. Fort Delaware served its purpose as a harbor defense system until the Civil War. The Fort transitioned into a prison for captured soldiers of the South.
Fort Delaware, now turned prison, held a total of 33,000 prisoners. This “prison- camp” did not have the conditions to hold and sustain a large number of people. The cells were poorly heated. The food rations were abysmal- a small piece of bread, a small chunk of beef, and if they were lucky tasteless corn soup. The malnourished prisoners succumbed to the guards maltreatment for the slight chance of food.
“Not long after my arrival I heard a cry “Rat call! Rat call!” I went out to see what this meant. A number of prisoners were moving and some running up near the partition, over which a sergeant (sic) was standing and presently he began throwing rats down. The prisoners scrambled for the rats like school boys for apples, none but some of the most needy prisoners, and the needy were the large majority, would scramble for these rats. Of course but few were lucky enough to get a rat. The rats were cleaned, put in salt water a while and fried. Their flesh was tender and not unpleasant to the taste.”-Captain John S. Swann, a prisoner in Fort Delaware during the Civil War
The horrible, unhygienic conditions of Fort Delaware killed almost 2,500 people. The maltreatment of the dead prisoners is the reason why people think Fort Delaware is haunted. There have been countless reports and pictures of ghosts roaming the fortress. Go into Fort Delaware with a camera and return with 10 ghost friends.
Who would have thought that our school would take us to one of the most haunted places in Delaware for a fun educational 2nd grade field trip?
Here’s a link to a 360 tour of Fort Delaware just so you can relive the memory and see if it was a creepy as you remember it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Uwg5_Zrn3A