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Includes reports of the annual meetings.
Beyond the streets and buildings that now bear the name Brickell is the rich history of William and Mary Brickell, who worked alongside Julia Tuttle and Henry Flagler to found Miami and Fort Lauderdale. Hollywood writer and director Beth Brickell has uncovered the history of this dynamic couple, from William's origins in Ohio to his adventures in the California and Australian gold rushes and marriage to Mary. This never-before-told story reveals both disappointment and triumph as these two pioneers clashed with Flagler and John D. Rockefeller during the robber baron days of the oil industry and finally tamed the wilderness of South Florida.
"The muffled blast of a hunter's gun and the eerie night sounds of an Everglades swamp. The rustle of petticoats and the carefree clink of champagne glasses. The delicate aroma of orange blossoms wafting through the Florida air. Victorian Florida, It was a time and place of elegance and grace, ambition and exploration, gaiety and wealth. By train and by steamship, the inquisitive and the adventurous came to sample the exotic fruits of this last frontier. Among them was railroad and resort entrepreneur Henry M. Flagler, whose grand hotels the Ponce de Leon (St. Augustine), the Royal Poinciana (Palm Beach), and the Royal Palm (Miami) — were models of opulence and luxury and drew to their doors the cream of American society. The real stars of Victorian Florida, however, are not the tourists or the sportsmen or the developers. They are the eyes of the photographers and the natural beauty of the state itself. Scores of amateur and professional photographers, including such well-known and highly respected practitioners of the art as William H. Jackson, O, Pierre Havens, and Benjamin F. Upton, traveled to Florida to take advantage of its unique photo opportunities. The incongruity of the Victorian tradition imposed upon this lush, untamed wilderness created compelling and fascinating images which linger in the mind's eye. Floyd and Marion Rinhart recapture this elusive era in the southernmost state within this exquisite volume. Collected over the course of the Rinharts' thirty years of study and research into the history of photography, these photographs, most published here for the first time, tell the story of a lifestyle long passed and yet still cherished."--Dust jacket flaps.
This book is the story of people of vision and courage, of a small group of prominent Saint Augustine investors who conceived of the Florida waterway and began the first dredging work; of an obscure group of New England capitalists who provided significant financing and obtained a million acres of undeveloped Florida public land in pursuing what was, at best, a speculative enterprise; of innumerable citizen groups like the Florida east coast chamber associations and the larger Atlantic Deeper Waterways Association that demanded at the turn of the last century what they believed was the peoples right-a public waterway, free of the burden of tolls; and finally, of the U>S> Army Corps of Engineers, who conducted all of the Florida waterway's early surveys and assumed the project's control in 1929 to convert what was once a private toll way into Florida's modern-day, toll-free Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway.