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Then
& Now
From the
time the Tequesta Indians danced nearly naked around their
ceremonial Miami Circle, to now, when hipsters dance nearly
naked in the darkened halls of downtown clubs, South Florida’s
history has been defined by eclectic people with a constant
thirst for discovering the best that our sunny corner of the
world has to offer.
Throughout
that history, what was once a subtropical oasis evolved into a
mélange of glam, grit and ambition worthy of the raciest novels,
films and headlines.
Although a
13-year-old Spaniard named Hernando d’Escalante Fontaneda became
the first non-native resident of what is now Miami when he was
shipwrecked in 1545 — 62 years before Jamestown was settled —
the region, as we now know it, really began to take shape in the
late 1800s, when the lovely Julia Tuttle convinced tycoon Henry
Flagler to extend his Florida East Coast Railroad down to
Biscayne Bay. The tracks arrived in 1896, the year our Magic
City was incorporated.
Some years
later, Carl Fisher (of Fisher Island fame) came to town with the
millions he made from selling Union Carbide (yes, the same
company whose chemicals killed thousands in Bhopal, India, in
1984). John Collins (as in Collins Avenue) borrowed 50 grand
from him to build the wooden Collins Bridge between Miami and
the beach in 1913, which was later rebuilt and named the
Venetian Causeway.
That same
year, a guy named Joe Weiss moved here from New York to treat a
bad case of asthma with the region’s fresh air, and opened a
fish shack that eventually became Joe’s Stone Crab. It seems
Weiss was on to something because, this year, Miami’s coastal
breezes helped earn the city Forbes magazine’s America’s
Cleanest City award.
Weiss was also on to something when he decided to build his crab
shack in Miami Beach’s now-upscale South of Fifth neighborhood.
South Florida’s first big building boom began about seven years
later, in the 1920s, and burst by 1926, leaving
abandoned
projects littered across the landscape.
Obviously,
we came roaring back from that downturn, and developers began
erecting Art Deco buildings — including the Century, The Raleigh
and the Delano — in the 1930s and ’40s. By then, Lincoln Road
had already become a shopping mecca with such high-end stores as
Bonwit Teller, Saks Fifth Avenue and a Cadillac dealership on
the corner of Pennsylvania Avenue, where Guess Jeans recently
opened (the Cadillac symbol can still be found on the façade
above the front door).
Meanwhile,
Roddey Burdine had built downtown Miami’s first five-story
“skyscraper” in 1912 to house his family’s namesake “dry-goods”
store, Burdines (which became Macy’s in 2005). The Orange Bowl
was initially named Roddey Burdine Stadium in his honor when it
was built in 1937. Of course, all that history has now been
leveled into a dust bowl to make room for a new Marlins stadium,
as part of a controversial $3 billion mega-deal approved by both
the city and county this year.
During the
1950s, millions of sun-seekers rushed to swanky new hotels, such
as the Fontainebleau and the Eden Roc designed by Morris Lapidus.
The Miami Marlins played in Miami Stadium (later Bobby Maduro
Stadium) in Allapattah, and the Irish-American enclave of
Hialeah greeted its newest neighbors from the south as wealthy
Cubans began trickling onto our shores.
That
trickle became a flood in the 1960s as a young Belen Jesuit
grad, Fidel Castro, solidified his grip on the island nation and
threatened Miami and the eastern seaboard with nuclear
destruction. But everything wasn’t doom and gloom — the Fab Four
spent eight days frolicking on the beach in 1964, the same year
Jackie Gleason set up a studio at the Miami Beach Auditorium,
bringing national acts to town. Civil Rights took bold steps in
the late 1960s as integration slowly took hold throughout the
region.
During the
1970s, gas prices soared, native Miamians fled northward to
Broward and beyond, and snowbirds flocked south. By the 1980s,
our sunny playground became a battlefield of gun fights and
dereliction when cocaine cowboys, Marielitos and reams of
laundered cash flooded the streets. The movie Scarface
captured the mood, but Miami Vice kicked off a
renaissance and carried our sunny community for shady people
into the national spotlight. Soon, models and artists
transformed God’s Waiting Room into an international runway for
the rich, hip and fabulous.
Now, in
spite of its excessive political scandals involving all kinds of
colorful politicians — Alex Daoud, Xavier Suarez, Joe Carollo,
Art Teele and Johnny Winton come to mind — or perhaps because of
them, our sunny community has become a world-class cultural
mecca.
So, here’s
a guide to the best of South Florida in 2008.
CREDITS
Contributing Writers:
Rene Basulto, Erik Bojnansky, Rachael Lee Coleman, Kris Conesa,
Mary Damiano, Angie Hargot, Helen Hill, John Hood, Erica Landau,
Monika Leal, Jordan Melnick, Lee Molloy, Paula Niño, David
Quinones, Ken Rivadeneira, Michael W. Sasser, Mary Jo
Almeida-Shore, Victor Thompson, Ben Torter, Alfredo Triff
Editor:
Rachael Lee Coleman
Copy
Editors:
Mary Louise English and Ken Rivadeneira
Web
Editor:
Angie Hargot
Cover
Photography:
Janette Valentine/
www.terriblygirly.com
Production
Queen:
Simone Fong
Cover
Design:
Michael Menchero
Spread
Design:
Kim Davidson
Production
Assistance:
Ashley Swanson, Lily Rodriguez
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