SHORTERS
WHARF LIGHT
DORCHESTER
COUNTY MARYLAND
Shorter's
Wharf is on the Blackwater River in the area of
Robbins
and Robbins Landing. The road leading there is Shorter's Wharf
Road.
It was along this road that a Seaford minister, Rev Robert Hurst,
on
his way to Shorter's Wharf community as he had done many tines,
just
as
the lights of the homes at the Wharf came into view, a bright light
suddenly
caught his eye, coming from the east it hit the rear of his car
and
as
he said “ grabbed hold “. Hurst hit the gas, but the light
stayed within
five
feet of his car. He could not outrun the light nor could he
shake it
off.
Then he stopped his car, and as quickly as the light approached ,
it
disappeared
into the woods.
The
Rev. Hurst had seen the Shorter's Wharf Light, also called
Cal's Light by locals.
Cal's
Light has a weird background , and a Shorter's Wharf
resident, Art Abbott , knew all about the light. He had seen it
hundred
of
times. His first look at the light was in 1920 when he was
17 years
old,
out duck hunting, at his duck blind at Swan Pond. It was getting
dark, I was gathering things to leave when I saw it about a mile
away. He ran,
but
could not get away from t he light as it moved with jet speed and
would 'strike' a few yards behind him. When he reached his boat
up the
creek,
got in, tuned to take another look, the light sat on the edge of
the creek bank, then 'went out'.
Art's
father, Carl , had been the first to be known to 'touch' the light.
It
was in 1917, he and Mack Willey were on the Blackwater River one
night
and ahead of them they both saw the light resting on the bank of
the
river, moving very slowly, like it was shivering. Soon the gap
between
the
men and the light closed in, Abbott reached our to grab it but
there was nothing to hold on to, it was a fog, neither hot nor
cold. That's why
the
local's call it Cal's, after Carl Abbott.
Abbott
saw the light many years later, and in his old age, on his
death
bed, the light, appeared less that a hundred feet from his
house,
bounced off the bow of his boat into the dark woods. Abbott died
soon
after.
The
Shorter's Wharf Light has been known to foretell death,
and
appears at Sandy Island Grave Yard when some one in the area
is
on their death bed. .
You
will not see the light during daylight, nor on the western side of
Shorter;s
Wharf Road..
It
is not a marsh gas light and why not ?
1938,
five hunters were on a marsh path walking in the early
morning
darkness , talking about the light, when all of a sudden someone
yells “there she is “ and for sure there it was, at the
mouth of Blackwater
River.,
the size of a basket ball, it was still. Then it bounced for a
few
seconds,
then came straight at the hunters fast as all hell was loose.
It
closed a 10 mile gap between the hunters in less than 10 seconds.
The
five
hunters were 400 yards from the woods when the light came past
them,
with
a six foot long blazing tail and dove into the woods to disappear..
Yes
sir, that light is there alright, no two ways about that.
Arthur
Abbott describes the light. At first sight it is small,
shaped like
a
ball, bounces a bit before it moves and darts away. The faster
it moved
the
brighter the light gets until it is blueish white. Going over the
marsh
it
appeared to be floating and had a orange harvest moon color. Of
all
the
places in the swamp for it to go, it has to come up to you. The only
time
` it
fly’s higher that 12 feet up is when its in the tree at the grave
yard. When
still
it has a jettery motion and never stays in one place very long.
No
one
had been hurt by the light as far as it is known.
Arthur
Abbott has told about one time he and another friend were going
across
the marsh at night and the light came at them, fast. When it
reached
them,
a few yards apart, it slowed to follow for at least 5 minutes.
1934,
Wilson Abbott, Arthur's brother, who lived a mile back off the
road,
had
seen the light many times, was on his deathbed, the light came
and
sat
on the sill several minutes. Wilson died shortly after.
In
September 1966 , 9 o'clock at night, the light predict another
death.
Several people traveling the Shorter's Wharf Road, while near
the
Sandy Island Graveyard, saw the light in the tallest tree there
for
nearly
a half and hour. At 11 o'clock that night, Dorothy Abbott,
a
Blackwarter
resident and Abbott relation, was killed in an auto accident at
Jacktown
intersection.
For
the past 100 years of history, it's noted, the Shorter Wharf
Light has
it
favorite “ haunts “. Seen at Piney Island, along the
Blackwater, it
shoots
across to Piney Landing, then to Wroten Graveyard, then to the
Sandy
Island graveyard and on up the Swan Road.
Mrs
Ted Abbott, has told of watching it for two hours bouncing on
Shorter's
Wharf
Bridge. She noted that whenever a car crossed the bridge , Cal's
Light
went out, but came back on as the car was over the bridge.
The
Robbins Back Landing incidence with Abbott his wife and two
friends,
waited there an hour and a half, no light. Just as the car
starter
turned
over, here comes the light, shoot out of darkness, right to the
car
door
handle, there it stayed as the auto tore out of this place.
The
Emerson Slacum story. Emerson, a grown man of strength, feared
neither
man nor beast, with a partner and his extra fine pack of dogs,
were
racoon hunting in the dark of night. They were on Sandy Island
near
the
graveyard, where everyone knows there is nothing there to harm you.
Off
they go, through the dark and the forest and undergrowth.
After a
few
minutes the dogs picked up a coon trail, running and barking
through
the
underbrush to a tree where they stopped and Slacum thought they
had
'treed'
a racoon, but none was found . This procedure was repeated
four
time
with 'no racoon'. What made the dogs, the best pack around these
parts,
act so wild. Then there it was, atop the tallest tree, the
bright light.
Slacum
and partner, dogs and all lost no time getting out of the marsh,
never to return lookin for racoons.
Marsh
gas, methane or phosphorous, car or boat lights, soneone with
a
search light, have all been ruled out. Whatever it is made of
continues
to
haunt and travel the marsh at Shorter's Wharf and if you want
to see it,
go
to Robbins Back Landing, the first left lane after crossing the
bridge
at
Shorter's Wharf, going towards Robbins and wait. If at firsts you
don't
see
it, come back until you do. It is there, the light, many “
things “ are
stranger
than science.
An
abstract from “ Between The Blackwater And The Nanticoke ',
the
history
and legend of Eastern Dorchester County, 1967 , by Bruce
Neal
Stump. Harrison H, 12/29/2018 for
www.delmarhistory.blogspot.com