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FLORIDA DISCOVERIES
If you are going to Florida naturally
you'll think of visiting Disneyworld, or Epcot or Seaworld,
St. Augustine Alligator World, Barnum and Bailey World,
Universal Studios or even the underwater mermaids at Weeki
Wachee Springs. Or even the 'See the Gore Voting Ballots
floating in the Swamp - Tour'. Even if this list doesn't
interest you, why not try Parrot Jungle or Cypress Gardens
or the rival to St Augustine's attraction, Gator World in
Orlando or watch something hurtle into space at Cape Canaveral.
Still can't temp you. excellent.
Then you might very well be the type of e-mate who hates
to be 'entertained' when on vacation and want to go to the
real Florida. Come with me and let's give Mickey a miss.
Weirdly enough, Florida actually provides one of the most
cultural destinations in the USA outside of Boston and New
York and in both cases in a warmer and more convenient package.
Modern Florida wasn't always thus. The State is a relatively
new invention, not really aspiring to anything until after
1890 when Henry Flagler and Henry Plant rivalled each other
for supremacy with their competing railroads on the East
and West Coasts of Florida. When Flagler discovered St Augustine,
the original Spanish settlement, he declared it to be a
perfect winter holiday resort, but found nowhere to stay
and the surroundings very swampy and infested.
Ponce De Leon Hotel
In a very short time he built the Ponce De Leon Hotel in
the heart of the town - one of the most spectacular, durable
and stylish hotels ever built. The building, now Flagler
College, was the first major poured concrete construction,
built to last centuries and in Mediterranean Spanish Renaissance
style. The very best artists were brought in and no expense
was spared. George Maynard painted the fine murals on the
dramatic domed ceiling. The gardens were elegant and to
spare anyone any trouble, private trains could be 'parked'
in the sidings specially built for the convenience of hotel
guests. The 'season,'January to early March attracted the
very best of society and Florida as a 'destination' was
begun. The Hotel Ponce De Leon built 1888 Now Flagler College,
where tution is a remarkable $9600 a year. Great value for
money and a wonderful friendly college. Henry Plant seeing
the success of Flagler's hotel which opened in 1888 responded
by building the equally spectacular Tampa Bay Hotel in 1890,
serviced by it's own railroad.
The Hotel looks for all the world like a Russian fantasy
building , a cross between the kremlin and a huge Russian
Orthodox Cathedral. Plant didn't really go for any Spanish
stlyes with his hotels. The Gulf coast was still looking
for an identity. Competition between the two coasts had
begun. It was not enough to build hotels. Alongside the
hotels sprang cities and ports and although there was no
particular ordinance for it, a Florida 'Mediterranean' style
began to take hold. Perhaps only a veneer in many cases,
but the idea that Florida would look 'different' to the
rest of America began. The railroads had already pushed
south as far as Palm Beach when Miami became a city in 1886
(with a population of 512 people). It would not be far for
the railroad to travel the sixty miles to this new and promising
city. Florida would now become a cruise destination as well.
Flagler ever building, now topped himself with the amazing
Royal Palm Hotel on Miami River (built for speed, it was
in a more traditional American Hotel style rather than continuing
with the Spanish theme. The brochures were all talking about
the 'American Riviera'. The grand opening ball was held
on New Year's Even 1896.
The Astors and Vanderbilts, Sanford's were all guests of
Henry Flagler to make sure of its success in society and
it was, immediately it opened that January of 1897. The
thrust south was encouraged by the terrible winter's of
1894 and 1895, where frost destroyed the orange crops as
far south as West Palm Beach - coincidentally the site of
Flagler's most ambitious hotel The Breakers, built right
on the ocean .
Flagler himself had moved on from St Augustine to his own
mansion at Palm Beach just outside the frost region. Around
him were also built the Royal Poinciana with 1,150 rooms
and Colonel Bradley's Beach Club, the most exclusive gambling
club in the US and Palm Beach was then to acquire it's somewhat
exclusive and racy reputation. Modern motor racing developed
here on the beach and early flying feats were performed
here. Whereas Miami became the popular resort, somehow Palm
beach remained uptown and insular. Nevertheless the presence
of high society wintering in his hotels also help Flagler's
other interests, selling real estate and city,seaside housing
developments. In each of the resorts he founded, he built
huge towns fed by his own publication the Florida East Coast
Homeseeker. These were sold as investments and of course,
refuge from the harsh northern winters.
To encourage visitors there was a ACL-FEC Hunting and Fishing
Bureau inside the New York ticket office on West 45th street.
As demand grew for Florida vacations and homes to purchase,
key areas were developed along the Flagler railroad ( the
motor vehicle not yet dictating where town should be located).
Daytona beach, Titusville, New Smyrna, Delray Beach, Jacksonville
and as far west as Key West (1912) were all earmarked for
development. With it, came a demand for employment and development
of Florida's key resource, citrus products. Florida Orange
juice was being touted all over the USA by the turn of the
century and Florida seemed set to become one of the most
prosperous regions in all the States. Art colonies grew
up, schools and Universities were founded and the rich endowed
them willingly for they were retiring to this new state
and wanted the cultural life to follow them. The great hotels
became the winter playgrounds for vacationers and behind
them came the orchestras, restauranteurs, movie theatres,
dancehalls, speakeasies as well as designers, artists, musicians.
Almost anyone could have a better life down here and no
one really needed a brochure to get them there. They couldn't
get there fast enough.
Of course Florida was definitely not the place to be in
summer and the Florida economy often struggled in July to
September prior to air-conditioning becoming wide-spread.
By the 1920' s however the State was in the grip a fantastic
property boom. Cities like Sarasota were being sold in New
York and Chicago to people who had no idea that it actually
only existed on paper, or that just a few buildings were
being constructed. Other places really did only exist on
paper and were real estate scams that probably hurt a lot
of people. Cities like Aladdin or Garden of Allah, outside
Sarasota promoted glamorised versions of fabulous Meditterannean
architecture no doubt inspired by a popular film in 1924
'Thief of Baghdad'. It's ads read 'Study the drawing - you
can have a Home on Mecca Boulevard' . Lots were sold and
resold many times, but no actual houses were ever built.
The Marx brothers actually made a film based on the flim-flammery
of Florida real-estate brokers called 'Coconuts'.
Sarasota advertised itself to would be punters with posters
stating 'No Income Tax or Inheritance Taxes to pay in Florida'.
Local promoters did invest. John and Marble Ringling did
build in the Mediterranean style and they also owned the
Ringling Bank which encouraged investment by a new phenonema
of 20th century America; the very mobile, car owning, credit-empowered
middle classes. People keen to purchase not just a home,
but a lifestyle and cities like Sarasota on the Gulf Coast
were heavily advertised all over the USA and even in British
magazines such as Country Life . They told people that they
could buy into a fantasy life of tea dances and romance
beside the bougainvillea.
But by now, there was a consensus, Spanish architecture
would dominate the landscape and some pretty spectacular
buildings were going up in this style. Would be investors
who came south to buy their lots would see the elegant and
simple Atlantic Coast Line Passenger Station, (1925). The
fine and substantial Sarasota County Courthouse (completed
1927) and the stunning Hotel El Verona which inspired artists
all over the USA, not to mention the never completed but
ambitious Ritz-Carlton Hotel on Longboat key. The El Verona
was seriously ambitious. Inside the cavernous lobby and
restaurants everything was aged to have the appearance of
centuries of wear and floor and wall tiles from Mexico gave
it a patina of authenticity and cool atmosphere that convinced
many people to believe it was a relic of the Spanish Empire.
Florida was being moulded into a Spanish country and might
have become one but for the disastrous hurricane of 1926
that destroyed Miami.
It heralded a complete collapse of Florida as in 'investment'
and many boom places were not only not built, but what was
there, fell quickly into ruin. Suddenly, what had seemed
like paradise on America's doorstep turned very sour indeed
and Florida went into a 15 year decline as far as property
development was concerned, not generally retrieved until
the outbreak of the second world war. Miami was rebuilt
and still attracted inward investment, but it mushroomed
as an all year around retirement resort and throughout the
century has always built in the current fashion of the day,
rather than looking back to the styles that Flagler, Plant
and Ringling envisioned for the coastal towns. Even if investment
could have been stimulated for the rest of the State, the
depression saw to it that Florida was not a place to invest.
Memories were long and it would take a generation to forget
the land and propoerty price collapse on '26/27.
The Florida that developed after the war went in a modernist
direction but fortunately, some of what was built by the
early State pioneers and visionaries has survived and still
influences the way some domestic architecture has progressed.
The Spanish look is still in vogue and appropriate to the
weather. The legacy of the boom years in the shape of art-deco
structures and artifacts is still there, or being restored.
The City of Coral gables founded by George Merrick (1886-1942)
is one such place. Built as a utopian ideal it ignored all
the architectural influences of the North which dictated
one could only build in the Midwest Prairie School of Architecture
and went headlong into Mediterranean Revival, picture-book
architecture. There were others of this kind. Miami Shores,
Fort Lauderdales's Progresso community , Snell island in
St. Petersburg. It was never particularly functional, more
expressive architecture. The Mediterranean style flourished
from the time Flagler built his Ponce De Leon hotel in St
Augustine in 1888 to John Bindley's house (who owned Pittsburgh
Steel) on Biscayne Bay in 1917 and later on in the 20's
with the Everglades Club. Charming though it was and is
to our eyes now, It was bastardised Moorish style that completely
faded from vogue with the depression, to be replaced by
art-deco and 'modern' styles.
See Also: Cadiz Jerez Seville Madrid
The thirties saw the rise of art-deco and the moderne style
continued right through to the 1950's with big building
booms in Miami and South Beach Miami in particular, with
wonderful eclectic designs. The National Hotel on Collins
Avenue typifies this and the Delano Hotel, 1685 Collins
Avenue is a very colourful example. The BlueDoor restaurant
is still the key fashionalbe place to be seen and eat in
Miami. These things go in and out of vogue, but right now
South Beach is one of the most interesting resort venues
in the USA where the main attraction is the art-deco rows
of hotels and the people who flit between them. It is lively
and exciting and new buildings will all kinds of influences
are going up. Check this out at the bottom of Collins Avenue
and 5th Street. To see just over a century of cultural and
architectural development visit Miami this autumn and stay
in fabulous places such as The National Hotel on Miami Beach
an art deco classic on 1677 Collins Avenue www.nationalhotel.com
and take your time to visit these other wonderful places:
The News Cafe on Ocean Boulevard The Penguin Hotel on 14th
for a genuine raw art deco hotel and great breakfast Go
to LINCOLN ROAD (16th Street) for great pan-asian food at
PACIFIC TIME or across the way experence British food at
BALLANS or go native at VAN DYKES, about the only place
serving decent wine. Better yet, walk to the end and find
the state of the art cinema with around 12 screens.
The Florida without a Mouse guide
recommends:
The Art Museum & The FIU School of Architecture University
Park Campus PC 110 SW 107th St. Miami
Bass Museum of Art 2121 Park Avenue, Miami
Wolfsonian & Florida International University 1001 Washington
Avenue, Miami Beach.
Miami Art Museum & Historical Museum 101 West Flagler
Street,
Miami Ambrosino Gallery Contemporary Art 3095 SW 39th Avenue,Miami
And a side trip:
Visit the Ponce de Leon Hotel-St Augustine (now Flagler
College) and stroll along St.George Street for the simple
pleasure of tasting what Florida could have been like if
it was still a colony of Spain but you'll be lucky to get
a good meal.
Go find Backstreet Coffee Bar instead. It's off Cordova
somewhere.
For updates on hotels, weather, resorts,
and all Florida info www.flausa.com
and www.miami.com
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