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| Early residents of Fort Lauderdale |
For at least 5,000 years, people have been drawn to
Fort Lauderdale. The prehistoric peoples of South Florida, known
as the "Glades Culture," and the early historic period
peoples of the area, the Tequesta, enjoyed the abundance of natural
resources available along Fort Lauderdales new River. By 1763,
the last of these aboriginal peoples had left the area, and except
for a few white settlers, Fort Lauderdale was devoid of population.
The Seminole Indians first appeared in what is now Broward County in
the 1820s and were joined by a handful of white planters along the
New River.
The city of Fort Lauderdale is named for a Second
Seminole War fortification built on the banks of New River in 1838.
In that year, Major William Lauderdale led a detachment of Tennessee
Volunteers south along the east coast of Florida to capture Seminole
agricultural lands and battle the elusive Indian warriors. Altogether,
three Fort Lauderdales would be constructed: the first at the fork
of New River; the second at Tarpon Bend; and the largest on the
beach at the site of todays Bahia Mar.
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| Stranahan's Trading Post, 1896 |
After the second seminole war, southeastern Florida remained
a virtual wilderness due to the lack of transportation into the
region. In 1892, however, the Dade County government authorized
a rock road to be built between Lantana and Lemon City (North Miami).
An overnight camp and ferry crossing was established on New River,
and a young Ohioan, Frank Stranahan, arrived to take charge of the
facilities. He soon established a flourishing trading post with
the local Seminoles and by 1895, Stranahans Trading Post was
a South Florida landmark.
In 1896,the Florida East Coast Railway
was extended south through Fort Lauderdale, providing rapid transportation
from all parts of the nation to south Florida. The little village
increased in size and was incorporated in 1911. In 1915, Broward
County was created out of parts of Dade and Palm Beach counties. |