Thursday, June 11, 2020

Last of the Tequesta burial sites in Broward: Indian Mound Park, Pompano Beach








Indian Mound Park, Pompano Beach
1232 Hibiscus Avenue (12th Street and Hibiscus)

By Jane Feehan

Pompano‘s Indian Mound Park, which sits along the east side of the Intracoastal Waterway, features a Tequesta burial mound thought to be at least a thousand years old. The mound, about seven feet high and 100 feet wide holds the artifacts and bones of Tequesta Indians, early residents of Florida. Referred to as the only burial mound to escape Broward County development, the site was listed on the National Registry of Historic Places in April 2014 (registry reference 14000151). Pompano listed it on its historical directory in 2010.

Residents have known about the Indian Mound for decades. A newspaper in 1925 referred to it as the “old Indian Mound of historical romance.” Others promoted it as a tourist attraction. Few understood the Tequesta connection but an associate professor of anthropology from the University of Florida, John Goggin, did. He came to the site in 1938 and started digging. He didn’t find much except one significant piece, an image dubbed “Keeper of the Mound.” It was enough to pique the interest of an archaeologist a short time later, but he was stopped from digging by neighborhood residents who did not want the site to be disturbed. Goggin was to return nearly two decades later but for a different purpose mentioned below.
1925 ad for Lake Santa Barbara: "
the old Indian Mound has been
a mecca for thousands."

It is thought the Tequestas came to Florida about 2,500 years ago. They lived peacefully off its land and waters for centuries. Most of these early settlers were decimated by disease after Spanish explorers started coming to Florida in the 15th century. Florida remained in Spanish hands until 1763, when it was ceded to the British in the First Treaty of Paris. Some historians think a few Tequesta left with the Spanish and headed for Havana; others think the last of the Tequesta lived in Florida until the 1800s.

The Tequesta legacy includes mounds throughout Florida; there were probably 50 of them between Lake Okeechobee and the Keys, including that of the Miami Circle downtown (though some dispute this site). Some sites reveal evidence of canals the Indians built to reach the mounds. These dirt mounds could be 40 feet high and 300 feet wide and used for dwellings, ceremonies and for burial. There is also evidence of above-ground cemeteries built by Tequesta.

Pompano’s Indian Mound was long thought to be an eyesore along the Intracoastal. The Jelks family, residents of the area since the early 1900s, donated the property to the city of Pompano for a park. It was dedicated by Mayor Bruce Blount as Indian Mound Park April 13, 1958 with Professor Goggin on hand. Indigenous trees and plants were planted for the occasion and many remain.  At one time a museum was planned for the site, but it never materialized. For years it remained largely unnoticed. It still wasn’t much to look at during my childhood, well after its dedication.

But things have changed, even though the park sits between a water tower and a tall condominium. Today, it’s a small, but beautiful area astride Hibiscus Avenue. It provides a wide view of Lake Santa Barbara and the Intracoastal. The park now includes a covered waterside table, a Water Taxi stop, a winding sidewalk with benches and parking for only four or five cars. I visited recently and found myself in the company of two others taking a quiet lunch break. Stop by … but don’t tell too many. Indian Mound Park is a gem of historical significance with a magnificent vista. One can only imagine how beautiful it was when the Tequesta lived here.




Sources:

Miami Herald, Nov. 3, 1925
Miami News, May 19, 1935
Miami Herald, July 29, 1951
Tampa Tribune, March 27, 1955
Fort Lauderdale News, April 13, 2958
Fort Lauderdale News, Oct. 3, 1958
Sun-Sentinel, Feb. 19, 1986
Sun-Sentinel, June 2, 2003
Sun-Sentinel, March 31, 2004
Sun-Sentinel, March 31, 2014
Sun-Sentinel, June 26, 2014

Tags: Pompano Beach history, Indian burial mound, Tequesta Indians, Pompano Parks
Jane Feehan

Pioneer Julia Tuttle, her bright hopes for Miami ... and Henry Flagler


Florida State Archives





By Jane Feehan

“Miami is going to be one of the greatest and most important cities, financially, commercially and residentially,” [sic] said Julia Tuttle in 1896. Thanks to this Florida pioneer, Henry M. Flagler was convinced to extend his Florida East Coast Railway from Palm Beach to Biscayne Bay.

A freeze swept Florida during the winter of 1894-95, destroying orange trees and other crops. Tuttle had written Flagler before the freeze, asking him to extend the railway south, but to no avail.

After the cold weather event the story goes, she sent the rail magnate a bouquet of thriving orange blossoms. More likely Flagler’s right hand man, James E. Ingraham, returned with the blossoms Tuttle gave him when he was sent south to survey the area after the freeze.

Whatever the real story, Flagler was convinced by and struck a bargain with Tuttle: for 363 of her acres, he would extend the rail to Biscayne Bay.  The first rail car pulled into the newly incorporated Miami (a name Flagler suggested, spurning the notion it be his own name) in 1896 and a hotel, the Royal Palm, was soon built.

Tuttle first saw Biscayne Bay in 1875 while visiting with her family. She returned to Cleveland,* Ohio where she lived with her husband Frederick Tuttle. Frederick died in 1886, leaving his iron works business to his widow. She returned to Fort Dallas, as Miami was known then, in 1891. Tuttle bought 640 acres on the north bank of the Miami River.  She set up house in the old officers’ quarters at Fort Dallas, which she renovated into the most elegant home of the area.

Tuttle grew orange trees, established a dairy and became known as a business woman among her neighbors. She also fought fires. When a fire struck the settlement Christmas Night 1896, pioneer Tuttle took part in a bucket brigade. Twenty eight buildings were lost in the fledgling town without an established fire company.

Julia DeForest Sturtevant Tuttle died at age 49 in 1898 of meningitis. She is buried in the city of Miami Cemetery. That she is the Mother of Miami was lost on many for years after her death because she died in debt for her land transactions**, mostly with Flagler. But her name resurfaced and became a household one in Miami after the opening of the Julia Tuttle Causeway, the “Little Turnpike” Dec. 12, 1959. The $14 million causeway links the mainland via I-195 to mid-Miami Beach. A statue of Julia Tuttle sits in Bayfront Park. 

Copyright © 2011. All rights reserved. Jane Feehan.
________

*Flagler was also from Cleveland as was John D. Rockefeller. Tuttle and Rockefeller knew and corresponded with each other during the early 1880s.
** Tuttle also donated land to Trinity Church, founded in 1893 at NE 2nd Avenue and 2nd Street.



Sources:
Standiford, Les. Last Train to Paradise. New York: Crown Publishers (2002).
Rockefeller-Tuttle correspondence :
Miami News, April 25, 1927
Miami News,  Sept. 20, 1978
Miami News, Dec. 13, 1959
Miami News, Jan. 2, 1963
Miami News, April 29, 1977



Tags: Miami history, Miami pioneer, Mother of Miami, Flagler in Miami, Florida film researcher, film research, pioneer women of Florida,  history of Miami

Monday, May 18, 2020

Influenza Pandemic messaging, school and work -1918 Florida and the U.S.

Southern Bell operators masking up at work in Jax
Florida State Archives/Florida Memory 
















By Jane Feehan

A look back at the influenza pandemic of 1918-1919, which killed more than 50 million throughout the world, offers some similarities to and differences from our current situation with the COVID-19 contagion.

World War I security fears tamped down official reporting on influenza across the globe—except in Spain where newspapers regularly reported on its ravages. Thus, generations have referred to it as the “Spanish” flu. Recent epidemiology points to strong evidence the 1918 disease originated in rural western Kansas. A resident, an  infected soldier, brought the virus to Fort Riley, KS (Camp Funston) where it spread to others sent to crowded U.S. military installations across the nation. Most wound up in the trenches and barracks of Europe, quickly fueling a pandemic (The Great Influenza, John M. Barry of Tulane University).

What follows is both Florida-specific and national in scope and detail. 
Getting ready for school 1918
Florida State Archives


Just after the 15-month influenza pandemic, the U.S. Census recorded about 865,000 Florida residents with Miami at 29,571 and Fort Lauderdale a mere 2,257 (Broward County population then 5,135). Statewide, about 39,000 influenza cases were reported with 3,100 deaths. Jacksonville, with a population of about 91,000, was hardest hit by the influenza. Record keeping then was sketchy, especially in rural areas such as Fort Lauderdale where death notices citing influenza peppered the obituaries until the end of 1919.

Enterprising businessmen parading as medical types advertised nonsensical cures, fraudulent preventatives and useless palliatives to cope with the influenza: Calomel tablets (with quinine) to counter a lazy liver and keep kidneys working; a bottle of Hyomei oil to inhale through a tube every 30 minutes; Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic (quinine) to “purify the blood;” Eucapine Salve (eucalyptus) to breath easier, and Wilson’s Giv-Eze Tablets, “also dispensed at soda fountains,” to ward off both colds and influenza. (None of the above are recommended now or was by the medical establishment then.)

No one, including scientists, could figure out the genesis of the sickness or what it actually was, bacteria or virus or both? The Miami News reported on a Ohio newspaper that suggested eating bacon was the cause of influenza. Newspapers in Florida and around the country claimed the influenza pandemic was the same as the “old-fashioned grippe” or influenza that struck the nation in 1889, except this version was of the “pulmonary type.”

Authentic medical advice published by the Dade County Medical Society, similar to that of today, included warnings to stay away from “moving picture theatres,” to avoid crowds because it was a “crowd disease,” to keep a safe distance from others, not to sneeze or cough into someone’s face, to stay in bed for a week after recovering from influenza ... all similar to today's messaging.

Astoundingly, given today’s warnings, the medical society did not suggest washing hands—nor did Surgeon General of the United States Rupert Blue, who served in that role 1912-1920. He did call for the closing of churches, schools, and public institutions (some did, but not for long). A less-read hand-washing directive came from the U.S. Army; another came from the New York City Commissioner of Health Dr. Royal Copeland to wash hands and face when returning home. Dr. Ralph N. Greene, Florida’s state health officer advised not to touch the face, stay in open air as much as possible and last, to wash hands before eating. A northern newspaper suggested washing hands before dinner (what, no washing hands before the pandemic?).

The Miami Metropolis
published pointers to avoid the influenza in October 1918: adhere to the three “C’s” - Clean mouth, Clean skin, Clean clothes. Number eight on their list was to wash hands (again, handwashing seemed an afterthought in most directives). Their final pointer: don’t think and talk grippe all the time, forget it, “do not yield to panic.”

Frequently mentioned during the 1918-1920 pandemic: more soldiers died from influenza than in battle. Throughout history and until recent conflicts, this has been the case; disease had always claimed more soldiers’ lives than battle. Another interesting tidbit … Spanish flu was blamed for tangential diseases and aftereffects such as sleeping sickness, heart attacks and other strange maladies. Surgeon General Blue reported relapses of influenza. Sound familiar?

Were masks an issue? Yes, same as today. Business and school closings? Yes, but  unlike today, briefly and across fewer establishments (except in St. Louis near the end of the pandemic). One short-lived Miami directive closed businesses at 4 p.m. The University of Miami with its 905 students remained open.

Florida news accounts about the 1918-1919 influenza event claimed cases were milder here than in other states. Some reported fewer cases and deaths in the Sunshine State than any other. That’s hard to prove; reporting was imprecise, or in some areas, nonexistent.

Even today’s reporting differs by sets of variables, methodologies and consistency.

Do we record deaths from or with COVID-19? How do we distinguish from the usual death occurrences? Some are taking an average yearly number of deaths and subtracting that from current assumed COVID deaths. Scientific? And about the crazy 2020-2021 models. Many have proven abysmally wrong.

How far have we come in the 100 plus years since the "great influenza"? The 1918 event ended without a vaccine. It took decades to develop a vaccine, one that rarely exceeds 50 percent efficacy. No world leader or politician can take credit for having ended the great influenza.

For a timeline of the 1918-1919 pandemic, see Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov/flu/pandemic-resources/1918-commemoration/pandemic-timeline-1918.htm


Sources:

Barry John M. The Great Influenza. Penguin Books, New York, New York (2004, 2005, 2009, 2018).
Miami News, Oct. 4, 1918
Miami News, Oct. 5, 1918
Miami Metropolis, Oct. 11, 1918
Miami Herald, Oct. 13, 1918
Miami News, Oct. 16, 1918
Miami News, Oct. 24, 1919
Miami Herald, Jan. 14, 1919
Miami Herald, Feb. 16, 1919
Miami Herald, Jan. 23, 1919
Miami News, Nov. 1, 1919
Miami News, Nov. 5, 1919
Miami News, Dec. 1, 1919
Sun-Sentinel, Jan. 23, 2000
Sun-Sentinel, April 11, 2007
U.S. Public Health Service
National Library of Medicine
National Archives
Miamistudent.net




TAGS: Influenza pandemic in Florida 1918




Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Fort Lauderdale Tarpons - Minor League Baseball, city pastime, Westside Park and ...


Before Westside Park, Stranahan Field, Fort Lauderdale High School
 State Archives of Florida


By Jane Feehan

Fort Lauderdale was fully engaged in baseball, the National Pastime*, by 1913. That’s when pioneer Frank Stranahan donated and cleared land for the sport. The Tarpons, later acknowledged as the “representative team” of the city, played its first game July 4 that year against Stuart at the new Stranahan Field.

The city upped its endorsement of baseball as a community pastime in 1925 by designating $15,000 for construction of Municipal Field, later known as Westside Park. Located off Northwest 4th Street, the four-acre park included a concrete grandstand for 600 spectators with concession stands to sell sandwiches and soft drinks. Lauded as perhaps the finest in the state, the park included dressing rooms and showers below the grandstand to serve home and away teams. Baseball stories and stats filled sports pages of the day, so a press box in the grandstand hosted assigned reporters and photographers. Bleachers were added after opening day, July 19, 1925.

As master of ceremonies at 3:30 that afternoon, Fort Lauderdale Mayor Will Reed proudly led the Tarpons from the dugout onto the field under rain-threatened skies. About 600 eager fans filled the grandstand. It was time for the team, managed by “Pop” Lewis, to “cross bats” with the Coconut Grove team, nicknamed the Schulzmen and managed by “Rabbit” Schulz.

Skies opened up after a few innings, soaking the field and equipment; the game was called but soon resumed. In the bottom of the ninth inning, the Tarpons lost to Coconut Grove 6-3, the first of a four-game loosing streak. According to the Fort Lauderdale News sports reporter Howard Babb, the “team lost after many innings of disturbed playing.”

The Tarpons, a Minor League Baseball team played in the Florida State League in 1928 when its teams included the Fort Meyers Palms, Clearwater Pelicans, West Palm Beach Sheriffs, the Sanford Celeryfeds, the Tampa Smokers and a list of others with just as interesting names. The Tarpons, affiliated with the Pittsburg Pirates, also played for the Florida East Coast League from 1940 to 1942. They won a championship in 1940. The roster of teams in the FECL included the Miami Beach Flamingos, the Miami Wahoos and the Fort Pierce Bombers.

The Fort Lauderdale Tarpons folded in 1942 due to financial difficulties and World War II concerns, but its demise did not spell the end of the city’s affiliation with baseball. Fort Lauderdale hosted spring training for the Boston Braves in 1946 (see https://janeshistorynook.blogspot.com/2020/07/boston-braves-first-mlb-team-in-fort.html) and the New York Yankees for a few years beginning in 1962 (see https://janeshistorynook.blogspot.com/2020/06/yankees-come-to-fort-lauderdale-in-1962.html)

Westside Park closed in 1957. Today, it is the site of the Fort Lauderdale Police Department Headquarters.

* The term  "National Pastime" was linked to baseball as early as 1856 in news stories.



Sources:
Miami Herald, July 18, 1921
Lineup for park's opening day, Jul. 19, 1925
Fort Lauderdale News, July 20,1925
Fort Lauderdale News, July 20, 1928
Fort Lauderdale News, April 26, 1942
Wikipedia

 Tags: Minor League Baseball, Fort Lauderdale baseball, National pastime, Fort Lauderdale history


Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Fort Lauderdale's first restaurant, first tamales and top character


By Jane Feehan

One story, a true one about early Fort Lauderdale, often crosses my mind as a terrific opening scene of a movie. A dog walks into a lunch stand. With an air of purpose, he trots behind seated customers who appear amused but not surprised to see this frequent visitor. 

Duke the dog finds a vacant spot at the counter where he drops a nickel from his mouth. The owner of the town’s first restaurant takes the nickel as payment for two hamburgers. He wraps the food in paper; Duke gently picks up the order to deliver to his master, baseball player and animal trainer, Joe Atchinson.*

The story is as colorful as that of the restaurant’s owner Ed Caruth, by then a fixture at the city’s Tarpon baseball games where he sold soda and hot dogs. Kids knew him as “Uncle Ed.”

No one knows when he first came to town, but Caruth was here, according to late historian Philip Weidling, when the notorious Ashley Gang was still robbing banks in South Florida (1915-1924). He opened the first restaurant (there was one other, a diner, but open only in winter). Caruth opened on Brickell Avenue and named it the Hungry Man’s Friend.
(Years later this address transitioned to the site of the famed political hub, Brown’s Restaurant).

Caruth, known for his long black mustache and for using a large multi-purpose knife to flip burgers (new to the American palate then), slice buns, swat roaches and trim his ‘stache, was well-liked by all, but seemingly restless. Sometime in 1918 or the year before, he ventured to Pascagoula, MS where he cooked at a hotel restaurant near a large shipyard. By October 1918, he returned to Florida because, as he told a Miami newspaper, “influenza was everywhere.”

Caruth also looked into prospects at Lake Worth where it was booming. But he reappeared in Fort Lauderdale afterward where he opened Ed’s Lunch Stand (or Ed's Place) on Wall Street. Newspaper accounts indicate he was busy at the stand in 1930. By that time everyone in town knew Ed and he knew all. Many delighted in telling stories about the popular eatery, including the time someone asked for half a scrambled egg and he cooked up a half dozen. Business was brisk and everyone expected him to continue to do well. He did, until the Great Depression, when he was forced to close the restaurant.

Ever enterprising, Caruth converted a baby buggy into a cart he painted red and included a sign, “Hot Tamales.” Those were probably the city's first. Refusing tips, he made and sold tamales along the New River waterfront until rationing policies of World War II made meat a scarcity. By then, he could barely walk. It was reported in 1946 that he had moved to Miami to live with relatives; that move could have been well before that. The trail and the timeline, always sketchy, ends there but not before the Caruth name and character was known throughout the city.

In 1959, a story in the Fort Lauderdale News suggested the city’s history included five top characters:
1. Charlie Swaggerty
2. Larry Crabtree
3. Ed Caruth
4. Commodore Brook
5. Sam Drake

Who would be Fort Lauderdale’s top five characters today?

*Atchinson, a catcher, also a successful animal trainer, wound up in the movie biz in Hollywood, CA. More on him in another story …

Sources:

Burghard, A. and Weidling, P. Checkered Sunshine.University of Florida Press, Gainesville: 1966
Miami Metropolis, Oct. 23, 1918
Fort Lauderdale News, July 14, 1930
Fort Lauderdale News Sept. 20, 1932
Fort Lauderdale News, Dec. 20, 1938
Fort Lauderdale News, Aug 14, 1946
Fort Lauderdale News, Oct. 7, 1946
Fort Lauderdale News, Feb. 22, 1955
Fort Lauderdale News, Aug. 28, 1959

Tags: Fort Lauderdale history, Fort Lauderdale characters, Fort Lauderdale restaurants, influenza

Saturday, October 19, 2019

Fort Lauderdale in the news 1966





By Jane Feehan

The Vietnam War dominated national headlines in 1966 and at times worked its way into sad local stories, but other topics appeared in Fort Lauderdale news. A Man for All Seasons won Best Picture for that year and many who saw Dr. Zhivago, released December 1965, probably did so in 1966. The International Swimming Hall of Fame was inaugurated in 1965 and Parker Playhouse opened in February 1967, two big local stories many will recall, but 1966 held other news.

Summarized below are a few of those local headlines. Some advertisements also referenced.

Merchants protest a proposed Las Olas Boulevard interchange off I-95. A few politicos envisioned it as a route to downtown. Merchants won that one (Fort Lauderdale News, March 6, 1966).

It is first suggested portions of A1A serve as one-way, parallel thoroughfares. So it is today. (Fort Lauderdale News, Dec. 4, 1966).

Actor and heartthrob Gregory Peck (1916-2003) speaks at the Coral Ridge Yacht Club on behalf of the American Cancer Society. He was given the keys to the city of Fort Lauderdale at the event. His wife, French journalist Veronique Passani, accompanies him (Fort Lauderdale News. Mar. 25, 1966).

Fort Lauderdale police find a 9.5 ft hammerhead shark tied to a bench at A1A (Atlantic Boulevard) and 15th Street. The 400-pound creature, probably left by spring breakers, is incinerated by the city (Fort Lauderdale News. Mar. 25, 1966).

On Jan. 10, 1966, John J. Yuscius, chef at Fred Wenner’s restaurant on North Federal Highway, is named Chef of the Year for 1965 by the Epicurean Club. Yuscius is the first to receive that honor from the club.  (Fort Lauderdale News, Jan. 10, 1966)

The body of self-proclaimed messiah, Stephen Solomon Berenbaum, 28, is found in the Intracoastal near the International Swimming Hall of Fame. According to his brother, he had jumped into the waterway near the Las Olas Bridge, stood at the bottom with arms stretched upward and soon disappeared. Police hint LSD (Fort Lauderdale News, Dec. 4, 1966).

Jordan Marsh, at the Sunrise Shopping Center, announces Jan. 1, 1966 it will add two floors, one for a restaurant and bar and another for an auditorium (Fort Lauderdale News, Jan. 1, 1966)

Coral Ridge Properties begins construction on Coral Ridge Towers South, west of the Galt Mile. Resident count of the four-building project rises to 1,350 (Fort Lauderdale News, Jan. 1, 1966).

“An authentic history of Fort Lauderdale,” Checkered Sunshine, is published by University of Florida Press. Authors Philip Weidling and August Berghard hold a book signing at Birch State Park on Dec. 4. (Fort Lauderdale News, Dec. 4, 1966)

Vic Tanny International Gym and Health Clubs advertises 20 visits for $20 at its 3425 North Federal Hwy location (Fort Lauderdale News, throughout 1966).

The Royal Admiral, an apartment building on the Galt Mile, advertises $155 rent for a one-bedroom unit.


Tags: Fort Lauderdale history, Fort Lauderdale news 1966, Coral Ridge Properties, The Royal Admiral, Coral Ridge Towers South, Las Olas Boulevard, Gregory Peck, Jordan Marsh



Wednesday, October 9, 2019

First wildlife refuge set aside by Teddy Roosevelt 1903 in Florida


Pelican Island (Govt. photo - George Gentry
Wikipedia, Public Domain (see below)








By Jane Feehan

Pelican Island sits in the Indian River at Sebastian on Florida’s east coast. It’s a small piece of property with national significance. Few Floridians, even some who live near it, are aware of Pelican Island’s place in the conservation movement—and in U.S. history.

The story starts with Friedrich Paul Kroegel, a native of Germany, who came to Sebastian (known then as New Haven) in 1881 with his father. 

The two built a house along Indian River in view of the tiny island. Paul Kroegel developed a keen interest in pelicans and other birds nesting there.

The late 1800s and early 1900s were tough times for Florida’s birds. Ladies’ plumed hats, a coveted fashion accessory at the time, were adorned with feathers plucked from thousands (some say millions) of slaughtered egrets, pelicans and other birds nesting in the Everglades and nearby habitats. Kroegel sought to protect them, often sailing to rookeries on the small island to discourage bird hunters.

The Kroegel house, atop an Indian shell mound, provided a unique vantage point from which to observe birds on the island. Artists, ornithologists and writers were among its visitors. In 1898, Frank M. Chapman, curator of the American Museum of Natural History, came to Florida to continue his study of wildlife. He stayed with Paul Kroegel for a few days gathering facts for his book, Camps and Cruises of an Ornithologist.

The slaughter of birds shocked people across the nation and served as impetus for the founding of Audubon Society chapters. The Florida chapter was chartered in 1900 in Maitland. Chapman and William Dutcher of the American Ornithologists Union Committee and of the Florida Audubon Society, persuaded President Theodore Roosevelt to protect Florida birds. 

Woodstork
President Theodore Roosevelt (1858-1919), a key player in America’s nascent conservation movement, signed an executive order March 14, 1903, making this three-acre island the first designated wildlife refuge in the United States. The president also appointed the Audubon Society as operator of the island in cooperation with the Dept. of Agriculture. Paul Kroegel was tapped in the same order as warden of the refuge for a salary of $1 a month. He served in that role until 1926. The 1903 executive order led to the establishment in the U.S. of its national wildlife system. Since then:

1948 - Paul Kroegel died at 84.

1956 – Congress passed the Fish and Wildlife Act, creating policy to acquire and develop lands for national wildlife refuges.

1963 - Pelican Island was designated a National Historic Landmark because it was the first area set aside to protect wildlife.

1970 - Pelican Island became the smallest wilderness area (six acres) in the National Wilderness Preservation System under the 1964 Wilderness Act.

1993 – Pelican Island was recognized as a Wetland of International importance.

2002 – 250 acres were acquired to serve as a buffer against boaters near Pelican Island.

Present - Pelican Island administered as part of the Everglades NWR complex

A statue of Paul Kroegel sits in Sebastian’s Riverview Park across from Pelican Island. Its plaque reads “One person can make a difference.” Inspired by him, others will continue to protect Pelican Island. The refuge, now affected by increased boating activity and area development, will need people who also know they can make a difference.

Copyright 2019, All Rights Reserved. Jane Feehan

Sources:
Tampa Tribune, May 17, 1903
Miami News, Jan. 12, 1909
Tampa Times, June 4, 1913
Palm Beach Post, Nov. 17, 1949
Tampa Tribune, Nov. 24, 1940
Miami News, June 27, 1946
Orlando Sentinel, Nov. 24, 1960
Wikipedia
Photo: Gentry, George - U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, digital library

Tags: Paul Kroegel, Florida wildlife refuge, Florida birds, slaughter for plumes, Florida Audubon Society, Sebastian, Florida, Pelican Island, Jane Feehan, conservation