As we approach Halloween, a ghost story seems appropriate. This one involves a family named Arbona that ran a saloon in Pensacola, Florida, for thirty five years. When the premises, shown here, later were being expanded, the skeleton of a man was found in the excavation. Evidence indicated he had been stabbed in the chest. Since then the Arbona Building, left, widely has been considered haunted.
Certainly the founder of the family, Eugenio Arbona has fallen under suspicion as knowing something about the bones and how they got there. Born in 1931 in Palma Mallorca, Spain, he emigrated to the United States while still in his twenties and settled in Mobile, Alabama, working as a bartender. Eugenio and a friend subsequently were convicted of murdering a local cigar maker named Encino Hernandez and sentenced to the Alabama prison in Watumpka, shown below. When the Civil War broke out in 1961, the government released him after serving only ten years of his sentence, possibly expecting him to join the Confederate Army.
Instead, Arbona moved to Georgia. There he met his future wife, Fannie (Frances) Trice. She came from a long established Southern family. Eight years younger than Eugenio, Fannie was the daughter of Thomas Jefferson and Susan McDonald Trice. Following their marriage, the newlyweds left Georgia and moved to Watumpka where Eugenio, apparently ignoring his earlier incarceration there, sought out business contacts. It was in Watumpka that their eldest son, Joseph, was born in 1867.
Perhaps sensing better business opportunities in Pensacola, in 1869 Eugenio moved his growing family there, shown above as it looked in the 1880s. That city in Florida’s Panhandle was experiencing something of a economic boom as its port access to Gulf of Mexico ship traffic and railroads resulted in a rapidly increasing population. Saloons were numerous and Eugenio likely found work in one. The Arbonas moved into a home at 115 Zaragoza Street. When it burned in 1884, the family escaped harm and Eugenio immediately rebuilt it on the same site. Did that work give him an opportunity to stash a cadaver in the cellar?
After two years running a saloon, the Arbonas divorced. Had Fannie became aware of the skeleton underneath their feet? Or had Eugenio’s reputed bad temper proved too much? He is said to have tried on several occasions to have one of his children arrested. After the split Eugenio determined to go back to Spain and signed the business over to his wife. Fannie proved to have a singular ability to run the establishment. The Gulf Saloon became even more popular because she had the foresight to purchase refrigeration equipment that made it possible for her to serve the only really cold beer in Pensacola.
Fannie was assisted by her oldest son, Joseph, who also demonstrated ability as a saloonkeeper. After an absence of several years, however, Eugenio suddenly reappeared in Pensacola. He demanded that the family sign the property back over to him. But Fannie, Joseph, and other family members refused. The father returned to Spain where, on July 15, 1890, he committed suicide.
As his mother aged, Joseph took over increasing responsibilities for the business, expanding into tobacco products and advertising and distributing nationally known products like Duffy’s Malt Whiskey. Joseph also married. His wife was Margaret. The 1900 U.S. Census found them living in Pensacola, wedded three years. Meanwhile, Mother Fannie was keeping an eye on the premises, living upstairs until her death. In 1920 with the coming of National Prohibition, after a business life of 35 years under the Arbonas, the doors of the Gulf Saloon were shut.


In 2008 the Atlantic Paranormal Society came to Pensacola to film an episode of “Ghost Hunters” in the museum. Members of the filming group were standing at the front desk talking about Eugenio and analyzing his shady past. As recounted: “Suddenly, everyone present heard three rapping sounds coming from the back of the building. They were the only ones in the Arbona Building at the time. They concluded that someone did not want Mr. Arbona’s name slurred in his own house.”
Notes: “Haunted Pensacola” is by Alan Brown, and part of a series called “Haunted America.” It was published by The History Press of Charleston, S.C., in 2010. Not only is the book the source of much of the information in this post and the photo of the museum room, the book is an interesting and sometimes spooky read. The Arbona jug shown above recently sold at auction for just over $1,400. Maybe, sometimes, crime does pay.