Cassadaga, Florida

Cassadaga (a Seneca Indian word meaning "Water beneath the rocks") is a small unincorporated community located in Volusia County, Florida, United States, just north of Deltona. It is especially known for having many psychics and mediums, and has consequently been named the "Psychic Capital of the World".[1][2]

Cassadaga

Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp
Nickname(s): 
"Psychic Capital of the World"
Cassadaga
Location in Volusia County and the state of Florida
Coordinates: 28°57′59″N 81°14′09″W
Country United States
State Florida
CountyVolusia
Established1894
Founded byGeorge Colby
Time zoneUTC-5 (EST)
  Summer (DST)UTC-4 (EDT)
ZIP code(s)
32706
Area code(s)386
Websitewww.cassadaga.org
Historic Southern Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp

History of Cassadaga

The Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp began circa 1875, when the Southern Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp Meeting Association was founded by George P. Colby, from Pike, New York,[2] a trance medium who traveled to many different states, giving readings and seances. He was well known and in his travels was referred to as the "seer of spiritualism." Colby attended summer Spiritualist Camp meetings at Lily Dale, New York, the town adjacent to Cassadaga, New York that would lend its name to the Florida community.[3]

Colby worked with several spirit guides who would give him knowledge. One of his spirit guides was a Native American named Seneca,[2] who had manifested to Colby during a seance in Lake Mills, Iowa. According to Colby, Seneca had instructed him to travel south to Florida, where he eventually arrived at a place called the Blue Springs Landing, near Orange City, Florida. According to Colby, the area that Seneca had led him to was the same area that Colby had seen during the seance in Iowa.

Colby had arrived in Florida in 1875, and on December 18, 1894, the charter was granted to form The Southern Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp Meeting Association.[2] Later, on January 3, 1895, Colby had signed a warranty deed to the association for thirty-five acres.[3][2] The people who came to the Spiritualist Camp in the early days of its formation were affluent and well educated. The association later received additional acreage that expanded the camp to the current fifty-seven acres.[2]

The Cassadaga Camp today

Today, the Camp features the Cassadaga Hotel, a central auditorium, The Colby Memorial Temple, a community library, the Caesar Forman Healing Center, a Camp bookstore, a welcome center, and the Andrew Jackson Davis Educational building, used for musical performances and gatherings.[4] Nearby is Colby-Alderman Park.

The principles of spirituality that are taught by the people at Cassadaga state, "Spiritualism has no dogma or creed, just a simple set of nine principles to help guide our lives".[4] According to the teachings of spiritualism, it is the "science, philosophy, and religion based upon the principle of continuous life".[4] On March 14, 1991, the Southern Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp was declared a U.S. Historic District. The Cassadaga Spiritualist Camp is a federal tax-exempt church currently governed by a board of trustees.

  • Bright Eyes has an album called Cassadaga, which features the town in the lyrics of the single "Four Winds".
  • Tom Petty's song "Casa Dega" alludes to psychics
  • Gemma Hayes has a song entitled "Lucky One (Bird of Cassadaga)" on her debut album "Night On My Side"
  • Stanley Elkin's novel George Mills takes place partially in Cassadaga.
  • Served as the inspiration for the town called Grange in the Carl Hiaasen novel Lucky You.
  • Investigated in the 2008 BBC documentary Around the World in 80 Faiths (Episode 5, Faith #43)
  • The town is briefly mentioned in the 2009 movie Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant .
  • Featured in the August 2010 episode of The Glades on the A&E Network
  • Parts of the town were featured in the film Dunsmore released in 2003 and directed by Peter Spirer.
  • The film Cassadaga is set in and took its inspiration from the town's history.
  • Cherie Priest's novel "Brimstone" is largely set in Cassadaga in the 1920s.
  • Freakylinks episode "The Harbingers", aired January 5, 2001, was set in Cassadaga, FL. after being alluded to in a book called 'The Harbingers' under the alias "Valley Vista".
  • The Amy Hempel story “Cloudland” takes place, in part, in Cassadaga.
  • The town is mentioned in the Heather Graham novel "Unhallowed Ground" chapter 10, ISBN 978-1-61523-612-1
gollark: i.e. not a Python program being buggy and definitely not Python itself
gollark: > OpenShot Library (libopenshot) is a powerful, cross-platform open-source C++ video editing library, dual-licensed under the LGPL version 3.0 and available under a commercial license. Multi-threaded, cross-platform, and feature rich video editing API. Also, bindings available for Python, Ruby, and other languages.> C++
gollark: Low-level systems stuff. JS is probably more appropriate for this, even, as it actually has resizable arrays natively.
gollark: The "lib" prefix makes it sound like a native library.
gollark: "Libopenshot" isn't Python, I'm pretty sure?

See also

References

  • Guthrie, John J. Jr., Phillip Charles Lucas, and Gary Monroe (editors). 2000. Cassadaga: the South’s Oldest Spiritualist Community. Gainesville, FL : University Press of Florida.

Notes

  1. Quoted from "Visiting The Psychic Capital Of The World", Bill Geist, CBS Sunday Morning, December 30, 2007.
  2. Balogh, Christopher (2013-01-29). "Inside Cassadaga, the Psychic Capital of the World". Vice. Retrieved 2019-02-22.
  3. Cassadaga, Florida Yesterday and Today by Elizabeth Owens, 2001
  4. Cassadaga, Spiritualist Camp Guide Book, Calendar/ Directory Annual Program, 2007 -2008

Cassadaga (Florida) travel guide from Wikivoyage

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.