Florida Firsts, Facts, and Trivia
Florida Famous Firsts, Florida Interesting Facts, Florida Trivia
Growing Wild!!
The water hyacinth, a beautiful
flowered aquatic plant, was introduced to
Florida accidentally in the 1880s and grows
so abundantly it has restricted commercial
navigation on portions of the Saint Johns
River.
More Florida Firsts, Facts, and Trivia
- Greater Miami is the only metropolitan area in the United States
whose borders encompass two national parks. You can hike through
pristine Everglades National Park or ride on glass-bottom boats
across Biscayne National Park.
- Saint Augustine is the oldest European settlement in North
America.
- The name Punta Gorda, which means, "fat point" when translated
from Spanish. The moniker was given to the city because a broad part
of the land in Punta Gorda juts into Charlotte Harbor. The harbor
itself is somewhat unique, as it is the point where the Peace River
meets the ocean.
- Orlando attracts more visitors than any other amusement park
destination in the United States.
- New England Congregationalists who sought to bring their style
of liberal arts education to the state founded Rollins College, the
oldest college in Florida, in Winter Park in 1885.
- Cape Canaveral is America's launch pad for space flights.
- Florida is not the southernmost state in the United States.
Hawaii is farther south.
- A museum in Sanibel owns 2 million shells and claims to be the
world's only museum devoted solely to mollusks.
- The Benwood, on French Reef in the Florida Keys, is known as one
of the most dived shipwrecks in the world.
- Safety Harbor is the home of the historic Espiritu Santo
Springs. Given this name in 1539 by the Spanish explorer Hernando de
Soto. He was searching for the legendary Fountain of Youth. The
natural springs have attracted attention worldwide for their
curative powers.
- Niceville is home to the famous Boggy Bayou Mullet Festival
celebrated the third weekend in October.
- The United States city with the highest rate of lightning
strikes per capita is Clearwater.
- Gatorade was named for the University of Florida Gators where
the drink was first developed.
- Young aviator Tony Jannus made history on January 1, 1914 when
he flew the world's first scheduled passenger service airline flight
from St. Petersburg's downtown yacht basin to Tampa.
- Dr. John Gorrie of Apalachicola invented mechanical
refrigeration in 1851.
- Miami Beach pharmacist Benjamin Green invented the first suntan
cream in 1944. He accomplished this development by cooking cocoa
butter in a granite coffee pot on his wife's stove.
- Neil Smith and his brother of Montverde developed the first
Snapper riding lawn mower.
- Key West has the highest average temperature in the United
States.
- The Saint John's River is one of the few rivers that flows north
instead of south.
- The largest lake in Florida is Lake Okeechobee.
- May 20, 1970 Florida lawmakers passed and sent to the Governor a
bill adopting the moonstone as the official state gem. Ironically,
the moonstone is not found naturally in Florida...nor was it found
on the moon.
- In 1987 the Florida legislature designated the American
alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) the official state reptile.
Long an unofficial symbol of the state, the alligator originally
symbolized Florida's extensive untamed wilderness and swamps.
- Miami installed the first bank automated teller machine
especially for rollerbladers.
- Ybor City was once known as the Cigar Capital of the World with
nearly 12,000 tabaqueros (cigar-makers) employed in 200 factories.
Ybor City produced an estimated 700 million cigars a year at the
industry's peak.
- Plant City, the Winter Strawberry Capital of the World, holds
the Guinness record for the world's largest strawberry shortcake.
The 827 square-foot, 6,000 pound cake was made on Feb. 19, 1999 in
McCall Park.
- The Sunshine Skyway Bridge is a cable-stayed concrete bridge.
Opened in 1987 the bridge coasts through the clouds at 190 feet
above water. Its bright yellow support cables spread from the two
center pillars. The structure gives drivers unobstructed view of the
water during the 4.1 mile trip over Tampa Bay.
- Nearly 80 percent of the states intake of sweet Atlantic white
shrimp is harvested in Amelia Island waters. Two million pounds of
shrimp are delivered to Fernandina docks annually.
- A swamp such as the Fakahatchee Strand in the Everglades
functions in three major ways. First, its vegetation serves as a
filter to clean the water as it makes its slow journey southward.
Secondly, it's a major habitat for wildlife and plant life. Finally,
it actually prevents flooding by slowing down the flow of water
after heavy rains.
- DeFuniak Springs is home to one of the two naturally round lakes
in the world.
- The Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens at Delray Beach is the
only museum in the United States dedicated exclusively to the living
culture of Japan.
- Fort Lauderdale is known as the Venice of America because the
city has 185 miles of local waterways.
- Fort Meade is the oldest settlement in Polk County. It dates
back to 1849 when a settlement grew up around the United States
Cavalry fort during the Seminole Indian Wars.
- The Fred Bear Museum in Gainesville is a tribute to the
accomplishments of Fred Bear a promoter of proper wildlife
management and the founder of Bear Archery Company.
- The Hawthorne Trail a part of Florida's Rails to Trails program
and attracts many outdoor enthusiasts to walk, cycle, or ride
horseback through its 17-mile length.
- Just north of Haines City is the Baseball City Stadium the
spring training home of the Kansas City Royals. Haines City is known
as The Heart of Florida.
- The city of Hypoluxo's name comes from the Seminole expression
water all 'round -- no get out.
- Islamorada is billed as the Sports fishing Capital of the World.
- Key Largo is known as the Dive Capital of the World.
- Marathon is home to Crane Point Hammock, a 63.5 acre land tract
that is one of the most important historical and archaeological
sites in the Keys. The area contains evidence of pre-Colombian and
prehistoric Bahamian artifacts, and once was the site of an entire
Indian village.
- Fort Zachary Taylor in Key West was built between 1845 and 1866.
Controlled by the Union during the Civil War, the fort was the home
base for a successful blockade of Confederate ships that some
historians say shortened the conflict by a full year. The fort also
was active during the Spanish-American War, World War I, and World
War II.
- The first graded road built in Florida was Old Kings Road in
1763. It was named for King George of England.
- During the 1991 Gulf War the busiest military port in the
country was Jacksonville. From this location the military moved more
supplies and people than any other port in the country.
- When first completed in 1989 the Dame Point Bridge became the
longest cable-stayed span in the United States, the longest concrete
span of its type in the Western Hemisphere, and the third longest
cable-stayed bridge in the world.
- The longest river sailboat race in the world is the Annual Mug
Race. The event runs 42 miles from Palatka to Jacksonville along the
St. Johns River.
- The Olustee Battlefield State Historic Site commemorates the
largest battle fought in Florida during the American Civil War.
- Venice is known as the Shark Tooth Capital of the World.
Collecting prehistoric sharks teeth has been a favorite pastime of
visitors and residents of the Venice area for years
- The Florida Museum of Hispanic and Latin American Art in Coral
Gables, is the first and only museum in the United States dedicated
to the preservation, diffusion, and promotion of Hispanic and Latin
American Art.
- The Pinellas Trail, a 47 mile hiking/biking trail connecting St.
Petersburg with Central and north Pinellas County, is the longest
urban linear trail in the eastern United States.
- Titusville, known as Space City, USA, is located on the west
shore of the Indian River directly across from the John F. Kennedy
Space Center.
- Florida is the only state that has 2 rivers both with the same name. There is a Withlacoochee in north central Florida (Madison County) and a Withlacoochee in central Florida. They have nothing in common except the name.
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