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FLORIDA FACTS
I bet you did not know.......
Total Area - 58,560 square miles
Total land area - 54,252 square miles
Total water area - 4,308 square miles
Rank among states in total area - 22nd
Length north and south - 447 miles (St. Marys River to Key West)
Width east and west - 361 miles (Atlantic Ocean to Perdido River)
Distance from Pensacola to Key West - 792 miles (by road)
Highest Natural Point - 345 feet near Lakewood in northeast Walton County
Geographic Center - 12 miles northwest of Brooksville, Hernando County
Coastline - 1,197 statute miles
Tidal shoreline (general) - 2,276 statute miles
Beaches - 663 miles
Longest River - St. Johns, 273 miles
Largest Lake - Lake Okeechobee, 700 square miles
Largest county - Palm Beach, 2,578 square miles
Smallest county - Union, 245 square miles
Number of lakes (greater than 10 acres) - about 7,700
Number of first-magnitude springs - 27
Number of islands (greater than 10 acres) - about 4,500
First permanent European settlement - 1565, St. Augustine, by Spain
U.S. Territory - 1821
Admitted to U.S. as state - March 3, 1845 (27th state)
Capital - Tallahassee
Population 1990 - 12,937,926 (Rank 4th)
Population 1980 - 9,739,992
Population growth rate 1980-90 - 32.83%
Most populous metropolitan area 1990 - Miami-Ft. Lauderdale: 3,192,582
Number of counties - 67
Form of government - Governor and independent cabinet consisting of
secretary of state, attorney general, comptroller, treasurer, commissioner
of agriculture, and commissioner of education
State sales tax - 6%
State income tax - None
Legislature - 120 house districts, 40 senate districts, 23 congressional
districts
Source: Atlas of Florida, Copyright (c), 1992. Board of Regents,
State of Florida.
History
People first reached Florida at least 12,000 years ago. The rich variety of
environments in prehistoric Florida supported a large number of plants and
animals. The animal population included most mammals that we know today. In
addition, many other large mammals that are now extinct (such as the
saber-tooth tiger, mastodon, giant armadillo, and camel) roamed the land.
The Florida coastline along the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico was
very different 12,000 years ago. The sea level was much lower than it is
today. As a result, the Florida peninsula was more than twice as large as it
is now. The people who inhabited Florida at that time were hunters and
gatherers, who only rarely sought big game for food. Modern researchers
think that their diet consisted of small animals, plants, nuts, and
shellfish. These first Floridians settled in areas where a steady water
supply, good stone resources for tool making, and firewood were available.
Over the centuries, these native people developed complex cultures. During
the period prior to contact with Europeans, native societies of the
peninsula developed cultivated agriculture, traded with other groups in what
is now the southeastern United States, and increased their social
organization, reflected in large temple mounds and village complexes.
European Exploration and Colonization
Written records about life in Florida began with the arrival of the Spanish
explorer and adventurer Juan Ponce de León in 1513. Sometime between April 2
and April 8, Ponce de León waded ashore on the northeast coast of Florida,
possibly near present-day St. Augustine. He called the area la Florida, in
honor of Pascua florida ("feast of the flowers"), Spain’s Eastertime
celebration. Other Europeans may have reached Florida earlier, but no firm
evidence of such achievement has been found.
On another voyage in 1521, Ponce de León landed on the southwestern coast of
the peninsula, accompanied by two-hundred people, fifty horses, and numerous
beasts of burden. His colonization attempt quickly failed because of attacks
by native people. However, Ponce de León’s activities served to identify
Florida as a desirable place for explorers, missionaries, and treasure
seekers.
In 1539 Hernando de Soto began another expedition in search of gold and
silver, which took him on a long trek through Florida and what is now the
southeastern United States. For four years, de Soto’s expedition wandered,
in hopes of finding the fabled wealth of the Indian people. De Soto and his
soldiers camped for five months in the area now known as Tallahassee. De
Soto died near the Mississippi River in 1542. Survivors of his expedition
eventually reached Mexico.
No great treasure troves awaited the Spanish conquistadores who explored
Florida. However, their stories helped inform Europeans about Florida and
its relationship to Cuba, Mexico, and Central and South America, from which
Spain regularly shipped gold, silver, and other products. Groups of
heavily-laden Spanish vessels, called plate fleets, usually sailed up the
Gulf Stream through the straits that parallel Florida’s Keys. Aware of this
route, pirates preyed on the fleets. Hurricanes created additional hazards,
sometimes wrecking the ships on the reefs and shoals along Florida’s eastern
coast.
In 1559 Tristán de Luna y Arellano led another attempt by Europeans to
colonize Florida. He established a settlement at Pensacola Bay, but a series
of misfortunes caused his efforts to be abandoned after two years.
Spain was not the only European nation that found Florida attractive. In
1562 the French protestant Jean Ribault explored the area. Two years later,
fellow Frenchman René Goulaine de Laudonnière established Fort Caroline at
the mouth of the St. Johns River, near present-day Jacksonville.
First Spanish Period
These French adventurers prompted Spain to accelerate her plans for
colonization. Pedro Menéndez de Avilés hastened across the Atlantic, his
sights set on removing the French and creating a Spanish settlement.
Menéndez arrived in 1565 at a place he called San Augustín (St. Augustine)
and established the first permanent European settlement in what is now the
United States. He accomplished his goal of expelling the French, attacking
and killing all settlers except for non-combatants and Frenchmen who
professed belief in the Roman Catholic faith. Menéndez captured Fort
Caroline and renamed it San Mateo.
French response came two years later, when Dominique de Gourgues recaptured
San Mateo and made the Spanish soldiers stationed there pay with their
lives. However, this incident did not halt the Spanish advance. Their
pattern of constructing forts and Roman Catholic missions continued. Spanish
missions established among native people soon extended across north Florida
and as far north along the Atlantic coast as the area that we now call South
Carolina.
The English, also eager to exploit the wealth of the Americas,
increasingly came into conflict with Spain’s expanding empire. In 1586 the
English captain Sir Francis Drake looted and burned the tiny village of St.
Augustine. However, Spanish control of Florida was not diminished.
In fact, as late as 1600, Spain’s power over what is now the southeastern
United States was unquestioned. When English settlers came to America, they
established their first colonies well to the North—at Jamestown (in the
present state of Virginia) in 1607 and Plymouth (in the present state of
Massachusetts) in 1620. English colonists wanted to take advantage of the
continent’s natural resources and gradually pushed the borders of Spanish
power southward into present-day southern Georgia. At the same time, French
explorers were moving down the Mississippi River valley and eastward along
the Gulf Coast.
The English colonists in the Carolina colonies were particularly hostile
toward Spain. Led by Colonel James Moore, the Carolinians and their Creek
Indian allies attacked Spanish Florida in 1702 and destroyed the town of St.
Augustine. However, they could not capture the fort, named Castillo de San
Marcos. Two years later, they destroyed the Spanish missions between
Tallahassee and St. Augustine, killing many native people and enslaving many
others. The French continued to harass Spanish Florida’s western border and
captured Pensacola in 1719, twenty-one years after the town had been
established.
Spain’s adversaries moved even closer when England founded Georgia in 1733,
its southernmost continental colony. Georgians attacked Florida in 1740,
assaulting the Castillo de San Marcos at St. Augustine for almost a month.
While the attack was not successful, it did point out the growing weakness
of Spanish Florida.
British Florida
Britain gained control of Florida in 1763 in exchange for Havana, Cuba,
which the British had captured from Spain during the Seven Years’ War
(1756–63). Spain evacuated Florida after the exchange, leaving the province
virtually empty. At that time, St. Augustine was still a garrison community
with fewer than five hundred houses, and Pensacola also was a small military
town.
The British had ambitious plans for Florida. First, it was split into two
parts: East Florida, with its capital at St. Augustine; and West Florida,
with its seat at Pensacola. British surveyors mapped much of the landscape
and coastline and tried to develop relations with a group of Indian people
who were moving into the area from the North. The British called these
people of Creek Indian descent Seminolies, or Seminoles. Britain attempted
to attract white settlers by offering land on which to settle and help for
those who produced products for export. Given enough time, this plan might
have converted Florida into a flourishing colony, but British rule lasted
only twenty years.
The two Floridas remained loyal to Great Britain throughout the War for
American Independence (1776–83). However, Spain—participating indirectly in
the war as an ally of France—captured Pensacola from the British in 1781. In
1784 it regained control of the rest of Florida as part of the peace treaty
that ended the American Revolution.
Second Spanish Period
When the British evacuated Florida, Spanish colonists as well as settlers
from the newly formed United States came pouring in. Many of the new
residents were lured by favorable Spanish terms for acquiring property,
called land grants. Others who came were escaped slaves, trying to reach a
place where their U.S. masters had no authority and effectively could not
reach them. Instead of becoming more Spanish, the two Floridas increasingly
became more "American." Finally, after several official and unofficial U.S.
military expeditions into the territory, Spain formally ceded Florida to the
United States in 1821, according to terms of the Adams-Onís Treaty.
On one of those military operations, in 1818, General
Andrew Jackson
made a foray into Florida. Jackson’s battles with Florida’s Indian people
later would be called the First Seminole War.
Territorial Period
Andrew Jackson returned to Florida in 1821 to establish a new territorial
government on behalf of the United States. What the U.S. inherited was a
wilderness sparsely dotted with settlements of native Indian people, African
Americans, and Spaniards.
As a territory of the United States, Florida was particularly attractive to
people from the older Southern plantation areas of Virginia, the Carolinas,
and Georgia, who arrived in considerable numbers. After territorial status
was granted, the two Floridas were merged into one entity with a new capital
city in Tallahassee. Established in 1824, Tallahassee was chosen because it
was halfway between the existing governmental centers of St. Augustine and
Pensacola.
As Florida’s population increased through immigration, so did pressure on
the federal government to remove the Indian people from their lands. The
Indian population was made up of several groups—primarily, the Creek and the
Miccosukee people; and many African American refugees lived with the
Indians. Indian removal was popular with white settlers because the native
people occupied lands that white people wanted and because their communities
often provided a sanctuary for runaway slaves from northern states.
Among Florida’s native population, the name of Osceola has remained familiar
after more than a century and a half. Osceola was a Seminole war leader who
refused to leave his homeland in Florida. Seminoles, already noted for their
fighting abilities, won the respect of U.S. soldiers for their bravery,
fortitude, and ability to adapt to changing circumstances during the Second
Seminole War (1835–42). This war, the most significant of the three
conflicts between Indian people and U.S. troops in Florida, began over the
question of whether Seminoles should be moved westward across the
Mississippi River into what is now Oklahoma.
Under President Andrew Jackson, the U.S. government spent $20 million and
the lives of many U.S. soldiers, Indian people, and U.S. citizens to force
the removal of the Seminoles. In the end, the outcome was not as the federal
government had planned. Some Indians migrated "voluntarily." Some were
captured and sent west under military guard; and others escaped into the
Everglades, where they made a life for themselves away from contact with
whites.
Today, reservations occupied by Florida’s Indian people exist at Immokalee,
Hollywood, Brighton (near the city of Okeechobee), and along the Big Cypress
Swamp. In addition to the Seminole people, Florida also has a separate
Miccosukee tribe.
By 1840 white Floridians were concentrating on developing the territory and
gaining statehood. The population had reached 54,477 people, with African
American slaves making up almost one-half of the population. Steamboat
navigation was well established on the Apalachicola and St. Johns Rivers,
and railroads were planned.
Florida now was divided informally into three areas: East Florida, from the
Atlantic Ocean to the Suwannee River; Middle Florida, between the Suwannee
and the Apalachicola Rivers; and West Florida, from the Apalachicola to the
Perdido River. The southern area of the territory (south of present-day
Gainesville) was sparsely settled by whites. The territory’s economy was
based on agriculture. Plantations were concentrated in Middle Florida, and
their owners established the political tone for all of Florida until after
the Civil War.
Statehood
Florida became the twenty-seventh state in the United States on March 3,
1845.
William D. Moseley
was elected the new state’s first governor, and David Levy Yulee, one of
Florida’s leading proponents for statehood, became a U.S. Senator. By 1850
the population had grown to 87,445, including about 39,000 African American
slaves and 1,000 free blacks.
The slavery issue began to dominate the affairs of the new state. Most
Florida voters—who were white males, ages twenty-one years or older—did not
oppose slavery. However, they were concerned about the growing feeling
against it in the North, and during the 1850s they viewed the new
anti-slavery Republican party with suspicion. In the 1860 presidential
election, no Floridians voted for Abraham Lincoln, although this Illinois
Republican won at the national level. Shortly after his election, a special
convention drew up an ordinance that allowed Florida to secede from the
Union on January 10, 1861. Within several weeks, Florida joined other
southern states to form the Confederate States of America.
Civil War and Reconstruction
During the Civil War, Florida was not ravaged as several other southern
states were. Indeed, no decisive battles were fought on Florida soil. While
Union forces occupied many coastal towns and forts, the interior of the
state remained in Confederate hands.
Florida provided an estimated 15,000 troops and significant amounts of
supplies— including salt, beef, pork, and cotton—to the Confederacy, but
more than 2,000 Floridians, both African American and white, joined the
Union army. Confederate and foreign merchant ships slipped through the Union
navy blockade along the coast, bringing in needed supplies from overseas
ports. Tallahassee was the only southern capital east of the Mississippi
River to avoid capture during the war, spared by southern victories at
Olustee (1864) and Natural Bridge (1865). Ultimately, the South was
defeated, and federal troops occupied Tallahassee on May 10, 1865.
Before the Civil War, Florida had been well on its way to becoming another
of the southern cotton states. Afterward, the lives of many residents
changed. The ports of Jacksonville and Pensacola again flourished due to the
demand for lumber and forest products to rebuild the nation’s cities. Those
who had been slaves were declared free. Plantation owners tried to regain
prewar levels of production by hiring former slaves to raise and pick
cotton. However, such programs did not work well, and much of the land came
under cultivation by tenant farmers and sharecroppers, both African American
and white.
Beginning in 1868, the federal government instituted a congressional program
of "reconstruction" in Florida and the other southern states. During this
period, Republican officeholders tried to enact sweeping changes, many of
which were aimed at improving conditions for African Americans.
At the time of the 1876 presidential election, federal troops still occupied
Florida. The state’s Republican government and recently enfranchised African
American voters helped to put Rutherford B. Hayes in the White House.
However, Democrats gained control of enough state offices to end the years
of Republican rule and prompt the removal of federal troops the following
year. A series of political battles in the state left African Americans with
little voice in their government.
Florida Development
During the final quarter of the nineteenth century, large-scale commercial
agriculture in Florida, especially cattle-raising, grew in importance.
Industries such as cigar manufacturing took root in the immigrant
communities of the state.
Potential investors became interested in enterprises that extracted
resources from the water and land. These extractive operations were as
widely diverse as sponge harvesting in Tarpon Springs and phosphate mining
in the southwestern part of the state. The Florida citrus industry grew
rapidly, despite occasional freezes and economic setbacks. The development
of industries throughout the state prompted the construction of roads and
railroads on a large scale.
Beginning in the 1870s, residents from northern states visited Florida as
tourists to enjoy the state’s natural beauty and mild climate. Steamboat
tours on Florida’s winding rivers were a popular attraction for these
visitors.
The growth of Florida’s transportation industry had its origins in 1855,
when the state legislature passed the Internal Improvement Act. Like
legislation passed by several other states and the federal government,
Florida’s act offered cheap or free public land to investors, particularly
those interested in transportation. The act, and other legislation like it,
had its greatest effect in the years between the end of the Civil War and
the beginning of World War I. During this period, many railroads were
constructed throughout the state by companies owned by Henry Flagler and
Henry B. Plant, who also built lavish hotels near their railroad lines. The
Internal Improvement Act stimulated the initial efforts to drain the
southern portion of the state in order to convert it to farmland.
These development projects had far-reaching effects on the agricultural,
manufacturing, and extractive industries of late-nineteenth-century Florida.
The citrus industry especially benefitted, since it was now possible to pick
oranges in south Florida; put them on a train heading north; and eat them in
Baltimore, Philadelphia, or New York in less than a week.
In 1898 national attention focused on Florida, as the Spanish-American War
began. The port city of Tampa served as the primary staging area for U.S.
troops bound for the war in Cuba. Many Floridians supported the Cuban
peoples’ desire to be free of Spanish colonial rule.
By the turn of the century, Florida’s population and per capita wealth were
increasing rapidly; the potential of the "Sunshine State" appeared endless.
By the end of World War I, land developers had descended on this virtual
gold mine. With more Americans owning automobiles, it became commonplace to
vacation in Florida. Many visitors stayed on, and exotic projects sprang up
in southern Florida. Some people moved onto land made from drained swamps.
Others bought canal-crossed tracts through what had been dry land. The real
estate developments quickly attracted buyers, and land in Florida was sold
and resold. Profits and prices for many developers reached inflated levels.
The Great Depression in Florida
Florida’s economic bubble burst in 1926, when money and credit ran out, and
banks and investors abruptly stopped trusting the "paper" millionaires.
Severe hurricanes swept through the state in the 1926 and 1928, further
damaging Florida’s economy.
By the time the Great Depression began in the rest of the nation in 1929,
Floridians had already become accustomed to economic hardship.
In 1929 the Mediterranean fruit fly invaded the state, and the citrus
industry suffered. A quarantine was established, and troops set up
roadblocks and checkpoints to search vehicles for any contraband citrus
fruit. Florida’s citrus production was cut by about sixty percent.
State government began to represent a larger proportion of its citizens.
Female citizens won the right to vote in 1920, when the Nineteenth Amendment
to the U.S. Constitution became law. In 1937, the requirement that voters
pay a "poll tax" was repealed, allowing poor African American and white
Floridians to have a greater voice in government. In 1944 the U.S. Supreme
Court outlawed a system of all-white primary elections that had limited the
right of African Americans to vote.
World War II and the Post-war "Boom"
World War II spurred economic development in Florida. Because of its
year-round mild climate, the state became a major training center for
soldiers, sailors, and aviators of the United States and its allies. Highway
and airport construction accelerated so that, by war’s end, Florida had an
up-to-date transportation network ready for use by residents and the
visitors who seemed to arrive in an endless stream.
One of the most significant trends of the postwar era has been steady
population growth, resulting from large migrations to the state from within
the U.S. and from countries throughout the western hemisphere, notably Cuba
and Haiti. Florida is now the fourth most populous state in the nation.
The people who make up Florida’s diverse population have worked to make the
Sunshine State a place where all citizens have equal rights under the law.
Since the 1950s, Florida’s public education system and public places have
undergone great changes. African American citizens, joined by Governor LeRoy
Collins and other white supporters, fought to end racial discrimination in
schools and other institutions.
Since World War II, Florida’s economy also has become more diverse. Tourism,
cattle, citrus, and phosphate have been joined by a host of new industries
that have greatly expanded the numbers of jobs available to residents.
Electronics, plastics, construction, real estate, and international banking
are among the state’s more recently-developed industries.
Several major U.S. corporations have moved their headquarters to Florida. An
interstate highway system exists throughout the state, and Florida is home
to major international airports. The university and community college system
has expanded rapidly, and high-technology industries have grown steadily.
The U.S. space program—with its historic launches from Cape Canaveral, lunar
landings, and the development of the space shuttle program—has brought much
media attention to the state. The citrus industry continues to prosper,
despite occasional winter freezes, and tourism also remains important,
bolstered by large capital investments. Florida attractions, such as the
large theme parks in the Orlando area, bring millions of visitors to the
state from across the U.S. and around the world
Today, Floridians study their state’s long history to learn more about the
lives of the men and women who shaped their exciting past. By learning about
our rich and varied heritage, we can draw lessons to help create a better
Florida for all of its citizens.
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