Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
Security, improved pension plans, and air-conditioning. Inflated housing
values in the Midwest and Northeast provided retirement capital for those
who packed up for the move to Florida. The pattern first became apparent
by the 1940s and 1950s as tens of thousands of Jews from the Northeast
502 · Raymond A. Mohl and Gary R. Mormino
retired to Miami and Miami Beach, while midwesterners chose St. Peters-
burg. Postcards of senior citizens lounging on green benches identified
St. Petersburg as America’s “Sunshine City,” a positive image of old age in
America.
Geography is not destiny. There was nothing inevitable about bean fields
and cattle ranches becoming Century Vil age and Sun City Center. Develop-
ers provided new housing for retirees on a massive scale—high-rise, ocean-
front condominiums and gated golf-course communities for the wealthy,
sprawling tract houses for the middle classes, and enormous apartment
complexes and mobile-home parks for the less wel -to-do. Retirees often
lived in age-restricted communities with names like Leisure City, Leisure-
ville, Leisure Lakes, Golf Vil age, and Serenity.
The graying of Florida has come swiftly and dramatical y. In 1880, Florida
was a frontier state populated by predominantly young people; the median
age of Floridians stood at eighteen. By 1990, the state’s median age was
thirty-six, the nation’s highest, climbing to 40.7 in the 2010 census. Most
striking, in 1890, about 2 percent of Floridians were older than sixty-five; by
2010 the figure was 17 percent. Today, Flagler, Charlotte, Highlands, Her-
nando, Martin, Sumter, Citrus, and Sarasota Counties rank among the old-
est counties in America, each having a median age of fifty and older. The
proof
image of Florida as a relaxing, sunshine-fil ed paradise for retirees was a
powerful one. Throughout the five and a half decades after 1950, a thousand
retirees were moving to Florida each week, representing a staggering trans-
fer of financial capital and emotional commitment. The state’s over-sixty-
five population increased 70 percent during the 1970s and 40 percent during
the 1980s. Florida’s invisible economy rests on a pil ar of Social Security and
pension checks. The aging of the now-middle-aged baby-boom generation
will have a powerful impact on Florida’s future, as the first wave of that de-
mographic cohort reached sixty-five in 2011.
The history of modern Florida can be viewed as a dizzying set of migra-
tions involving individuals, families, and groups over time. White and black
Georgians sought fresh starts during Reconstruction, the 1920s boom, and
the flush times of World War II. Emigrants from the West Indies worked as
spongers in Key West, laborers in Miami, and cigar makers in Ybor City.
During World War II, temporary workers from Jamaica, Barbados, and the
Bahamas picked tomatoes in Bel e Glade, harvested potatoes at Hastings,
and cut sugarcane at Okeechobee. In the postwar era, countless GIs who had
trained at bases in Florida returned to pursue their tropical dreams. Huge
numbers of northeastern Jews and Italian Americans trekked to Florida in
Boom, Bust, and Uncertainty: A Social History of Modern Florida · 503
the decades after depression and war. New migrations of Cubans, Haitians,
and Nicaraguans have revolutionized the demographic profile of Miami-
Dade County in the past three decades, with spil over effects on nearby
Monroe, Broward, and Palm Beach Counties. Annual y thousands of Finns
make the winter trek from the northern Midwest and Canada to Lake
Worth. Since the 1950s, Canadians have been wintering in Florida in as-
tounding numbers. In 2010, 3 million Canadians visited the Sunshine State,
a figure comprising almost 10 percent of the Great White North’s entire pop-
ulation! The presence of the Maple Leaf flag and sounds of Canadian accents
alter the dynamics of Dunedin and Hol ywood. These multiple and ongo-
ing migrations contribute to the difficult task of comprehending a common
history in the peopling of Florida. Ironical y, the diverse migration stories
provide a unifying theme in their history.
The migrations have contributed to a firestorm of social change in Flor-
ida. Such population growth over a compressed period of time is unparal-
leled in the American South. On the eve of Pearl Harbor, Florida’s popula-
tion of 1.9 mil ion ranked it the least-populated state in the South. Since
1940, Florida’s population has grown more than ninefold. Between 1970 and
1990, as the nation’s population grew by 21 percent, the South’s population
soared by 40 percent, much of that growth the result of surging gains in
proof
Texas and Florida. One can only imagine what Florida wil be like in the
year 2050, when, according to one projection, the state’s population will hit
47 million!
The dazzling pace of population growth has produced cataclysmic and
catalytic change in modern Florida. The ecological relationship of man and
land, between human groups and the geographical environment, has be-
come increasingly unbalanced and destructive. Over time, man and ma-
chine, relentless growth and development, have taken their tol , transform-
ing Florida, altering and reshaping the landscape, and reconfiguring the
ways Floridians lived and live. In 1845, Florida’s sylvan forests, lush lands,
and superabundant waters must have seemed limitless. More than 30,000
lakes, rivers, and springs graced the state. The last century has witnessed
a concerted private/public effort to dredge, ditch, dike, and dam the wa-
ters. Curiously, for a state where visionaries often invoked the metaphor of
Florida as a land of dreams, the evidence suggests that most developers and
dream makers sought to transform the land into something else. Florida
beaches became seawall fortresses. Lagoons became Venetian canals, com-
plete with gondoliers.
The diverse ecosystem known as Florida was often found to be too hot,
504 · Raymond A. Mohl and Gary R. Mormino
For nearly five decades, since the publication of her 1947 classic
The
Everglades:
River
of
Grass
, Marjory Stoneman Douglas (
left
), shown in her Coconut Grove home, was the
most eloquent and enduring defender of the Everglades, Florida’s last frontier, and
the greatest roadless wilderness in the United States. In 1993, in recognition of her
environmental activism, she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Mar-
jorie Carr of Gainesville (
right
) founded Florida Defenders of the Environment in 1969
proof
to oppose construction of the Cross-Florida Barge Canal, which, Carr argued, would
both destroy a large part of the scenic and sensitive Ocklawaha River and threaten the
underground freshwater aquifer. As a result of her efforts, on 17 December 1976, the
Florida cabinet formally recommended to Congress that canal construction be halted,
and that subsequently was done.
too wet, and too inaccessible. Developers and politicians dreamed no small
dreams when it came to improving nature. A favorite parlor game asks Flo-
ridians to name the most ill-conceived, harebrained project in state history.
Choices include the drainage of the Everglades, the planned Jet Port along
the Tamiami Trail, the efforts to make Old Tampa Bay a freshwater lake, the
straightening of the Kissimmee River, and the Cross State Barge Canal.
An examination of a map of the Florida peninsula explains the irresist-
ible appeal of a cross-state canal. Napoleon Bonaparte, who appreciated the
significance of distances, once asserted that Italy was too long to be a coun-
try. Likewise, Florida is a long state; as wel , it is the largest state east of the
Mississippi, boasting 65,758 square miles of landmass and 3,800 miles of
tidal shoreline. The state capital, Tal ahassee, lies only 20 miles from the
Boom, Bust, and Uncertainty: A Social History of Modern Florida · 505
Georgia border but 500 miles from Miami. The creation of modern Florida
has been in large measure a struggle to overcome the tyranny of distance.
Indeed, Florida has been transformed by new technologies that short-
ened distances, speeded development, and promoted tourism. In 1845,
anyone wishing to traverse the peninsula faced daunting and general y un-
comfortable options. One might travel by horseback or stagecoach in some
areas, by canoe or sailboat in others, primitive means untouched by the
transportation revolution unfolding in the northern states. By the time of
the Civil War, steamboats were plying the Apalachicola and St. Johns Rivers,
but Florida had only 400 miles of railroad track in place and remained last
among the Confederate states in railroad mileage.
By the end of the century, however, railroads crisscrossed the peninsula,
reaching Pensacola and even distant Miami. Beginning in 1880, a great surge
in railroad construction began to open up new areas for settlement, tourism,
and economic development. Total railroad mileage in Florida surpassed
3,500 in 1900, and it nearly doubled to about 6,000 miles by 1930. Great rail-
road magnates such as Henry M. Flagler and Henry B. Plant pushed Florida
into the twentieth century. Flagler’s transportation and hotel empires even-
tual y extended from St. Augustine to Key West, leaving in its wake the new
or rejuvenated cities of Daytona Beach, Palm Beach, West Palm Beach, and
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Miami. Before his death in 1913, Flagler pushed his railroad all the way to
Key West, an engineering marvel of the time.
On Florida’s west coast, the iron messiah made and unmade cities. Cedar
Keys, in 1880 one of Florida’s most promising cities, was connected by rail to
Fernandina on the East Coast and was blessed with rich nearby cedar for-
ests, as well as lumber mil s, fine wharfs, and steamship connections to New
Orleans and Key West. Yet it was devastated by hurricanes and Henry Plant’s
decision to select Tampa as a rail hub for his growing empire. A vil age of
only 720 residents in 1880, Tampa prospered with the coming of the railroad
in 1884. Now linked by rail to Jacksonvil e, Tampa was becoming part of
a complex modern economic and transportation system. Cigar manufac-
turers in Tampa, lumber companies in the Panhandle, commercial fisher-
men in Fernandina, cattlemen on the open range, orange growers in Polk
County, and truck farmers in Dade County all connected to an expanding
integrated system of railroads and steamships, markets and schedules. Pom-
pano from Boca Ciega Bay could now be rushed to New York City’s Fulton
fish market, while refrigerated rail cars brought freshly slaughtered pork
and beef quarters from the Chicago stockyards.
506 · Raymond A. Mohl and Gary R. Mormino
Technology pierced the Florida interior. The steamboat and then the rail-
road opened markets and spurred the growth of specialty exports: Sanford
celery, Frostproof oranges, Zel wood corn, Apopka green beans, and Plant
City strawberries. Yet technology could be capricious. Just as new develop-
ments such as the railroad and cotton processing doomed the once thriving
seaports of Apalachicola and St. Marks, so new technologies such as electri-
fication and the internal combustion engine threatened the primacy of the
railroad. Where once cities relied upon “natural advantages”—a seaport,
river, or crossroads—electrical generating plants with their spinoff technol-
ogies (streetcars and telephones) reorganized and reshaped American cities.
Above al , the automobile brought a flurry of big changes to the Sunshine
State. The motorcar altered the roadside landscape, introducing the familiar
trinity of the gasoline station, diner, and motel. Introduced by Henry Ford
in 1908, the Model T helped reduce distances, social y and geographical y,
between rural and urban Florida. Farmers and rural families drove to town
on Saturdays, accentuating the importance of downtowns with their atten-
dant attractions of department stores, movie theaters, and chain stores. The
automobile also democratized tourism in the 1920s, enabling middle-class
“tin can tourists” to share Sunshine State attractions and amenities that had