- Native American
- Spanish Colonial
- Black Heritage
- Civil War
- World War II
- Jewish Heritage (coming soon)
- Cuban Heritage (coming soon)
Key West Fort Myers Miami St Augustine Walt Disney World Ponte Vedra Beach Fernandina Beach Punta Gorda Lake Buena Vista Key Largo Islamorada Cape Canaveral Boca Raton Florida's Spanish Colonial Heritage Trail
This angel attends a grave at Bosque Bello Cemetery in Fernandina Beach, one of the oldest in Florida.
Photo Credit: Sarah Miller, Florida Public Archaeology Network at Flagler College
The prime waterfront location of Castillo de San Marcos in St. Augustine was critical to its defense.
Photo Credit: Castillo de San Marcos
The Mission of Nombre de Dios in St. Augustine marks the first Spanish Catholic Mass and mission on American soil.
Photo Credit: Contributed Photo
Statue of Ponce de León at Gilchrist Park, Punta Gorda
Photo Credit: Charlotte Harbor Visitor and Convention Bureau
A sunset view of the Boca Raton Resort & Club
Photo Credit: Boca Raton Chamber of Commerce
A group fishing off Islamorada in The Florida Keys.
Photo Credit: Andy Newman/Florida Keys News Bureau
From St. Augustine to Cape Canaveral to Key Largo, the state's Spanish heritage is evident just from a look at the map.
Five minutes max.
That's how long it takes motorists southbound on Interstate 95 to get the first hint that Florida is awash in Spanish heritage. Once across the Georgia border, visitors soon will spy signs to Fernandina Beach, a community on the Atlantic Ocean north-northeast of Jacksonville.
Fernandina, named for Spain's King Ferdinand VII in 1811, is one of many Florida places whose names are flavored with a Spanish accent.
And no wonder. Spain ruled Florida twice: from 1513 to 1763 and again from 1783 to 1821, when the Spanish gave Florida to the young United States.
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Even our state's name came from an early Spanish explorer's first vision. Juan Ponce de Leon arrived near Florida's shore in April 1513, near Easter, and called the lush new land La Pascua de la Florida, translated often as "flowery passover," or "passion of the flowers."
Hundreds of Spanish – or Spanish-sounding – names sprinkle the Florida map, from high-profile tourist destinations such as St. Augustine to fanciful designations of subdivisions such as Del Tura, a retirement community near Fort Myers that translates literally to "of the structure."
St. Augustine, of course, was named in 1565 by its founder, conquistador Pedro Menendez de Aviles, for San Agustin, the Catholic Bishop of Hippo.
Both residents and visitors will learn much about the Spain-Florida relationship – not simply place-names, but shared history and culture – during the next two years. Viva Florida 500! celebrates our 500-year tie with Spain. To learn more about the quincentenary, go to www.visitflorida.com/viva.
San Agustin is one of many places whose Spanish names became Anglicized as history unfolded. Among them: San Marcos de Apalachee became St. Marks in northwest Florida, for example. Others include San Jose to St. Joseph (now Port St. Joe); and Santa Maria to St. Marys (the river). Alachua County derives from La Chua, an early Spanish cattle ranch near Payne's Prairie.
Other places have retained their original Spanish names. Among them is Matanzas, the Spanish word for "slaughter"; today a national park commemorates Fort Matanzas, which guarded the south river approach to St. Augustine.
Two other St. Augustine spots are unchanged from the original Spanish: Castillo de San Marcos (Castle of St. Mark), and Nombre de Dios (Name of God, a mission.)
Here's a quick trip through more Florida Spanish place-names:
Finally, as an example of something named long after the colonial era, there is Lake Buena Vista, home to the Walt Disney World Resort. The words mean "good view," and was taken from a street in Burbank, Calif., where Disney headquarters are located.
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Mission of Nombre de Dios/Shrine of Our Lady of La Leche
Castillo de San Marcos
Fort Matanzas National Monument
Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park
San Marcos de Apalache Historic State Park
Walt Disney World Resorts®
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