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Florida's Haunted History
Jonathan Dickinson State Park
The Ghost of Trapper Nelson

VINCE "TRAPPER" NELSON, WILDMAN OF THE LOXAHATCHEE
Between Hobe Sound and Tequesta, Florida lies Jonathan Dickinson State Park. This historic 11,500 acre site located in Martin County was named after Jonathan Dickinson, a Quaker merchant who was shipwrecked in 1696, with his family and others on the Florida coast near the present-day park, however Vince “Trapper” Nelson’s story started far away in another state. He was born in either 1908 or 1909 to poor Polish parents in Trenton, NJ. While still a teenager in order to escape an unhappy home life after his widowed father remarried, he left home with his step-brother Charles, and they hobo’d across the United States, riding the freight trains out west. They ended up in Mexico, and were jailed for allegedly gun-running but were eventually freed. They took to the rails again and Nelson made money by gambling with the other bums. By the late 1920s they stopped their wandering and set up camp in an area just north of Jupiter. By then his brother and him had also changed their difficult to pronounce surname to Nelson.
Vince Nelson with his step-brother Charlie and a friend John Dykas hunted and trapped animals, however this partnership came to an abrupt end on December 17th, 1931 when Charles Nelson shot John Dykas in the back with a shotgun after an argument, and Trapper ended up testifying against his brother even though he was absent when the murder took place. Charlie was sentenced to life imprisonment at Raiford Prison by Judge C. E. Chillingworth. He was paroled in the 1950s, just in time to be briefly considered a suspect in the killing of Judge Chillingworth, who it turned out, was killed by the henchmen of another judge. The reason he became a suspect was on the day he was sentenced he threatened to come back and kill Trapper and the judge.
After Charlie’s conviction, Trapper who was 24 years old found himself without money and partners. After returning to Trenton, NJ for a year and working on a dairy farm he returned to South Florida.
He retreated deeper into the woods, and kept trapping animals and selling furs and pelts, He took over an abandoned hunter’s cabin which sat on land which could only be accessed by boating up the river. It was during these years of the Great Depression that he was able to buy large tracts of acreage which went up for sale at tax auctions.
Tourists from West Palm Beach eventually wound up at his camp, and initially he showed visitors around for free, but realizing there was money to be made he started Trapper Nelson’s Zoo and Jungle Garden where he sold souvenirs and let the visitors see all the wildlife he kept caged on the grounds. During this time he lived the frontier life without any running water or electricity and eating the animals he trapped, however he knew that tourists would appreciate some niceties and he set up picnic tables, cabins and grills. He became quite a celebrity, known as the Wildman of the Loxahatchee, and his zoo became a regular stop for tour boats. Movie stars including Gary Cooper visited Trapper Nelson’s camp. Trapper also romanced the West Palm Beach socialites who were smitten with the strapping wild man who wrestled alligators.
War raged in Europe during these years, however WWII got in the way of Trapper's best laid plans, and in 1942 he married waitress Lucille Gee to avoid the draft, which didn’t work because he was drafted anyway. After tearing a leg muscle while training in Texas he returned to Florida, and found Lucille was cheating on him. They divorced and she went on to marry four more times. He was posted to Camp Murphy right next to where he lived and served as an MP. After the end of the war, he became more of a recluse.
By the 1950s Trapper Nelson had bought more land, but had also grown more mistrustful of strangers and the government. Health inspectors insisted he had to install bathrooms at the camp, and he did so, but not to the satisfaction of the inspector who in 1960 forced him to close his zoo. His source of income dried up and he was forced to borrow money in order to pay the taxes on all the land he owned. He discouraged visitors coming to the camp and posted signs warning them away as well as always carrying a 12 gauge shotgun with him.
It was also during these years that he developed stomach pains, but his distrust also extended to physicians and he wouldn’t go seek out medical help, even though by the time he died an acquaintance claimed that a doctor had prescribed painkillers for him.
Friends had to let him know ahead of time if they would be visiting, otherwise they would only see him once per week when he came to town to pick up mail at the post office.
In July 1968, after he failed to show up for a meeting with a friend John Dubois, the same came to the camp and found Trapper dead from a shotgun blast to his stomach area. Eventually his death was ruled a suicide, but the locals felt dismayed that foul play was so easily dismissed. He had other trappers in the area that he didn’t get along with, there were others who wanted his land, in other words he had enemies, including his step-brother Charles who had promised retribution when he was sentenced for killing John Dykas.
Eventually in 1970, the State of Florida paid $1.3 million to his nephew in order to purchase 857 acres of Trapper’s properties and add it to Jonathan Dickinson State Park. Trapper’s ashes were scattered on the Loxahatchee River.
Between Hobe Sound and Tequesta, Florida lies Jonathan Dickinson State Park. This historic 11,500 acre site located in Martin County was named after Jonathan Dickinson, a Quaker merchant who was shipwrecked in 1696, with his family and others on the Florida coast near the present-day park, however Vince “Trapper” Nelson’s story started far away in another state. He was born in either 1908 or 1909 to poor Polish parents in Trenton, NJ. While still a teenager in order to escape an unhappy home life after his widowed father remarried, he left home with his step-brother Charles, and they hobo’d across the United States, riding the freight trains out west. They ended up in Mexico, and were jailed for allegedly gun-running but were eventually freed. They took to the rails again and Nelson made money by gambling with the other bums. By the late 1920s they stopped their wandering and set up camp in an area just north of Jupiter. By then his brother and him had also changed their difficult to pronounce surname to Nelson.
Vince Nelson with his step-brother Charlie and a friend John Dykas hunted and trapped animals, however this partnership came to an abrupt end on December 17th, 1931 when Charles Nelson shot John Dykas in the back with a shotgun after an argument, and Trapper ended up testifying against his brother even though he was absent when the murder took place. Charlie was sentenced to life imprisonment at Raiford Prison by Judge C. E. Chillingworth. He was paroled in the 1950s, just in time to be briefly considered a suspect in the killing of Judge Chillingworth, who it turned out, was killed by the henchmen of another judge. The reason he became a suspect was on the day he was sentenced he threatened to come back and kill Trapper and the judge.
After Charlie’s conviction, Trapper who was 24 years old found himself without money and partners. After returning to Trenton, NJ for a year and working on a dairy farm he returned to South Florida.
He retreated deeper into the woods, and kept trapping animals and selling furs and pelts, He took over an abandoned hunter’s cabin which sat on land which could only be accessed by boating up the river. It was during these years of the Great Depression that he was able to buy large tracts of acreage which went up for sale at tax auctions.
Tourists from West Palm Beach eventually wound up at his camp, and initially he showed visitors around for free, but realizing there was money to be made he started Trapper Nelson’s Zoo and Jungle Garden where he sold souvenirs and let the visitors see all the wildlife he kept caged on the grounds. During this time he lived the frontier life without any running water or electricity and eating the animals he trapped, however he knew that tourists would appreciate some niceties and he set up picnic tables, cabins and grills. He became quite a celebrity, known as the Wildman of the Loxahatchee, and his zoo became a regular stop for tour boats. Movie stars including Gary Cooper visited Trapper Nelson’s camp. Trapper also romanced the West Palm Beach socialites who were smitten with the strapping wild man who wrestled alligators.
War raged in Europe during these years, however WWII got in the way of Trapper's best laid plans, and in 1942 he married waitress Lucille Gee to avoid the draft, which didn’t work because he was drafted anyway. After tearing a leg muscle while training in Texas he returned to Florida, and found Lucille was cheating on him. They divorced and she went on to marry four more times. He was posted to Camp Murphy right next to where he lived and served as an MP. After the end of the war, he became more of a recluse.
By the 1950s Trapper Nelson had bought more land, but had also grown more mistrustful of strangers and the government. Health inspectors insisted he had to install bathrooms at the camp, and he did so, but not to the satisfaction of the inspector who in 1960 forced him to close his zoo. His source of income dried up and he was forced to borrow money in order to pay the taxes on all the land he owned. He discouraged visitors coming to the camp and posted signs warning them away as well as always carrying a 12 gauge shotgun with him.
It was also during these years that he developed stomach pains, but his distrust also extended to physicians and he wouldn’t go seek out medical help, even though by the time he died an acquaintance claimed that a doctor had prescribed painkillers for him.
Friends had to let him know ahead of time if they would be visiting, otherwise they would only see him once per week when he came to town to pick up mail at the post office.
In July 1968, after he failed to show up for a meeting with a friend John Dubois, the same came to the camp and found Trapper dead from a shotgun blast to his stomach area. Eventually his death was ruled a suicide, but the locals felt dismayed that foul play was so easily dismissed. He had other trappers in the area that he didn’t get along with, there were others who wanted his land, in other words he had enemies, including his step-brother Charles who had promised retribution when he was sentenced for killing John Dykas.
Eventually in 1970, the State of Florida paid $1.3 million to his nephew in order to purchase 857 acres of Trapper’s properties and add it to Jonathan Dickinson State Park. Trapper’s ashes were scattered on the Loxahatchee River.
GHOST REVEAL
Like many ghost stories, it’s hard to pinpoint when paranormal activity is actually experienced by the living and when it started, but it is much more difficult when the location is a secluded state park. In 1994 a female park ranger said that she didn’t see anything but heard him trying to flirt with her and that he patted her on the rear. Two men who canoed to Trapper’s cabin was struck by an unseen person, and others have claimed to see him waving from the dock of his encampment.
Rose Watson, a local resident from the area, lives on the dirt road which Trapper used when he would come in for supplies, and claims she has seen him several times, and she should know as she was a small child when she would accompany her brother who was 20 years her senior to visit Trapper. She claims that she saw Trapper outside the rear sliding glass door of her home, trying to look in through the glass, and she also heard the sound of footsteps on the path he used for so many years.
Other witnesses claim that Trapper Nelson’s ghost points the finger at his brother Charlie as his killer, others describe where he warns visitors away from the Native American burial grounds.
Campers describe inexplicable noises from the underbrush as if someone is walking through it and the sound of far away voices. This has happened close to Trapper’s old cabin, and many claim this is Trapper Nelson checking on his traps.
Throughout the years after Trapper's death I am sure that many people had paranormal experiences which they just couldn’t account for, and decided to just not talk about their experiences, especially if they got a good scare.
It’s also important to remember that the area where Trapper John lived on also had it’s own rich history such as the Battle of Jupiter Inlet which occurred on January 15, 1838, between the Seminole Indians, Seminole Negro and the United States Navy, which could cast another layer of ghostly encounters.
Like many ghost stories, it’s hard to pinpoint when paranormal activity is actually experienced by the living and when it started, but it is much more difficult when the location is a secluded state park. In 1994 a female park ranger said that she didn’t see anything but heard him trying to flirt with her and that he patted her on the rear. Two men who canoed to Trapper’s cabin was struck by an unseen person, and others have claimed to see him waving from the dock of his encampment.
Rose Watson, a local resident from the area, lives on the dirt road which Trapper used when he would come in for supplies, and claims she has seen him several times, and she should know as she was a small child when she would accompany her brother who was 20 years her senior to visit Trapper. She claims that she saw Trapper outside the rear sliding glass door of her home, trying to look in through the glass, and she also heard the sound of footsteps on the path he used for so many years.
Other witnesses claim that Trapper Nelson’s ghost points the finger at his brother Charlie as his killer, others describe where he warns visitors away from the Native American burial grounds.
Campers describe inexplicable noises from the underbrush as if someone is walking through it and the sound of far away voices. This has happened close to Trapper’s old cabin, and many claim this is Trapper Nelson checking on his traps.
Throughout the years after Trapper's death I am sure that many people had paranormal experiences which they just couldn’t account for, and decided to just not talk about their experiences, especially if they got a good scare.
It’s also important to remember that the area where Trapper John lived on also had it’s own rich history such as the Battle of Jupiter Inlet which occurred on January 15, 1838, between the Seminole Indians, Seminole Negro and the United States Navy, which could cast another layer of ghostly encounters.
Source Historical Society of Palm Beach County
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