- Native American
- Spanish Colonial
- Black Heritage
- Civil War
- World War II
- Jewish Heritage (coming soon)
- Cuban Heritage (coming soon)
Downtowns & Small Towns History Key West Miami Orlando Palm Beach Pensacola St Augustine Clearwater Tampa Delray Beach Tarpon Springs Ybor City Eatonville African American Native American Florida's Spanish Colonial Heritage Trail Florida's Native American Heritage Trail Florida's Black Heritage Trail
Greeks, Spaniards, Cubans and Native Americans, among others, have left their cultural footprints at these historic Florida cities and towns.
We're one better than a melting pot. Cultures don't dissolve into one another here in Florida. They remain whole, creating a collage of ethnicity that represents the global community, with special emphasis on tropical latitudes and seaworthy heritage.
And so it has become a land of fiery foods, sizzling music, salty temperament, colorful accents, striking architecture, and passionate arts. You will experience the diversity and influences in practically every city and town in the state, but in certain places different cultures have stamped a mark that persists in preserving a way of life carved from distant, exotic places. Here's where to best experience our brand of global warmth.
NORTH FLORIDA
St. Augustine: Florida's tradition for welcoming visitors from afar began here and in historic Pensacola, Florida's oldest cities. Well, to be truthful, our tribes didn't exactly welcome the early Spanish conquistadores who contributed the first influx of European heritage, but the Spanish influence has persisted nonetheless. Spain ruled this settlement even longer than the U.S.A. has.
The Spaniards left for 20 years when Britain ruled, fleeing to Cuba then returning with an injection of Latin fire. Mixed in with Spanish architecture and temperament are other strains that make St. Augustine the multi-patterned quilt it is today. Greeks, Minorcans and Africans also spiced the pot. Nearby Fort Moses, settled by runaway slaves from Georgia and the Carolinas, was America's first black settlement. Later, African-Americans built a lovely Victorian neighborhood called Lincolnville, still vital and easily accessible from the downtown historic district. Contact: St. Augustine, Ponte Vedra & the Beaches Visitors & Convention Bureau.
The sponging industry continues to draw swarthy seamen and their families, making the neighborhood around the sponge docks a living museum.
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Visit Orlando
Miccosukee Indian Village
Florida Keys and Key West Tourist Development Council
Palm Beach County Convention & Visitors Bureau
St. Augustine, Ponte Vedra & The Beaches Visitors & Convention Bureau
Visit St. Petersburg/Clearwater
Greater Miami Convention & Visitors Bureau
Florida Seminole Tourism
Discover the lives and legacies of the people who shaped Florida’s past.
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