
Robert Harrill, known as "The Fort Fisher Hermit",
was born on February 2, 1893 in Shelby, North Carolina in the United States.
He became a hermit in 1955 at the age of 62
after a string of unsuccessful and unsatisfying jobs and a failed marriage.
Harrill hitchhiked to Fort Fisher on the North Carolina Coast
from Morganton, North Carolina, a distance of 260 miles (418 km).
He had been committed to a mental hospital in Morganton by his in-laws,
after his wife, Katie Hamrick, left him and asked for a divorce.
Harrill apparently walked away from the hospital
or made a key from an old spoon and used the key to escape the facility.
The name "The Fort Fisher Hermit" came from Fort Fisher State Recreation Area,
where he settled after leaving the mental institution in Morganton.
Soon after arriving at Fort Fisher, Robert Harrill was arrested as a vagrant
and sent to his hometown of Shelby by the sheriff's department.
He returned the following summer
and set up a simple home in an abandoned World War II era bunker
near the Cape Fear River along a salt marsh.
He was able to gather much of the food that he needed
from the salt marsh and the nearby oyster beds.
The Fort Fisher Hermit was not a hermit in the truest sense of the word.
A hermit (from the Greek á¼”Ï
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