FMP: Florida Memory Project
      State Library and Archives of Florida | Site Map | Contact Us     
 
  Home Florida Photographic Collection Online Classroom Highlights of Florida History Collections Timeline  

 FMP Home > Florida Photographic Collection > Photo Exhibits


Photo Exhibits

Alligators

Baseball

Black History

Bob Graham

Bush Years

Cigar Workers

Conch Town

Daguerreotype to Digital

Everglades

Folklife Postcards

Golf

Harper Collection

Hurricanes

Key West

Kingsley Plantation

Jacksonville Fire

Migrant Workers

Movies

Pets

Roxcy Bolton

Seminoles

Spanish - American War

Winter Holidays

Women's History

Women Who Serve

Yamato Colony

Site Map

Contact Us

The Everglades in the Time of Marjory Stoneman Douglas

These photographs from the Florida Photographic Collection document the nature, culture, development and conservation of the Florida Everglades, a massive wetland ecosystem that has been the focus of much human activity and as well as debate throughout the 20th Century.

 
 
 

Seminoles hunting alligators

The first documented peoples in the Everglades were the Calusa and related cultures.

Decimated by disease, they were followed by the Florida Seminoles, who settled into South Florida during the Second and Third Seminole Wars.

While most of the Seminoles were relocated to the West by the Federal government in the mid-1800s, many stayed behind to make their home in the Everglades and along the Tamiami Trail.

 

Black Seminole in the Everglades (1952)

Originally comprised of escaped slaves who ran to the Seminoles peoples, the Black Seminoles resided both in the Everglades as well as in the Indian territories in Texas and Oklahoma.

 

Farmer and mule grinding cane (1916?)

Yeomen farmers, often referred to as “crackers”, settled in and near the Everglades in the late 1800s.

 

Harvesting palm for "swamp cabbage" (1950s)

Many of the native plants and animals provided food for people living near the Everglades.

Pictured is Everglades trail guide and long-time native George Espenlaub harvesting the heart of the sabal palm (swamp cabbage).

 

Family from the Everglades (ca. 1929)

Although there had been tourism and development there since the early 1900s, most of the Everglades was considered waste land because of its mosquitoes, lack of timber, and the perception that wetlands were "useless."

Most who lived there were poor farmers and laborers.

 

Glen Simmons on his glade skiff (1980s)

Simmons represents the continued cultural traditions of the Everglades that date back to the 1800s.

For more on Simmons as well as the Florida Folklife Program which has preserved many of these traditions, see the Florida Folklife Collection.

 

 

 


NEW AND NOTEWORTHY ON FLORIDA MEMORY
Cigar Workers   Troubadours   Migrant Workers During the Great Depression in Florida
Florida Cigars: Artistry, Labor, and Politics in Florida’s Oldest Industry Commercial cigar rolling first came to Florida in the 1830s and in the decades after the Civil War it became one of the most important industries in the southeastern United States.   Troubadours From the 2003 Florida Folk Festival Florida Troubadours showcase, this podcast features Florida songwriters Jeanie Fitchen, Frank Thomas, Bobby Hicks and others.   Migrant Workers During the Great Depression in Florida These images were created by the Farm Security Administration in order to document the hardships of farm workers during the Great Depression.

 


Great Seal of the State of Florida  
The Florida Memory Project is funded under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act, from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, administered by the Florida Department of State, State Library & Archives of Florida. Contact Us. Disclaimer.

Florida’s history is your history. Help us preserve it by joining the Friends of the State Library & Archives of Florida.


MyFlorida.com