Long Key: Flagler’s Island Getaway for the Rich and Famous (A Florida Quincentennial Book)

Amazon.com Price: $21.95 (as of 18/03/2019 17:00 PST- Details)

Description

“Located midway down the Florida Keys, Long Key Fishing Camp was once created by Henry M. Flagler as a retreat for those wealthy winter visitors who wished to experience solitude on a desert island and those who came seeking to do battle with swordfish and tarpon. Then the Labor Day Hurricane of 1935 swept over Long Key, destroying the camp but creating an improbable tale of survival for those trapped on the island.”—Thomas Graham, writer of Flagler’s St. Augustine Hotels
 
“Takes us down an interesting byway of the Flagler empire that shaped modern Florida.”— David Nolan, writer of The Houses of St. Augustine
 
“Expertly captures the rich and textured story of Long Key. I commend Knowles for producing probably the most best Florida history books I have ever read.”—Jerry Wilkinson, president, Historical Preservation Society of the Upper Keys
 
 
With a modest two-story hotel and quite a lot of small cottages, Long Key Fishing Camp offered a dramatic departure from the standard opulence of Henry Flagler’s hotels. Palatial structures with manicured grounds, extravagant recreational facilities, and world-class amenities were the norm at Flagler’s other hotels that dotted the east coast of Florida—but not at Long Key, the last resort to open right through his lifetime. Prospective visitors were frankly warned not to expect the same level of comfort provided at sister properties. Yet still they came.  

Carefully researched and packed with photographs and maps never before published, Long Key offers the first history of this unique destination. Historian Thomas Knowles recounts the strange tale of how a railroad work camp became a world-renowned sportfishing center and a preferred vacation spot of a cadre of well-to-do individuals that included businessmen, poets, nobles, and politicians.

This rustic island, with its unparalleled fishing grounds and cabins named after local fish—“The Kingfish,” “The Porpoise,” “The Barracoota,” “The Shark”—inspired fierce loyalty among its diverse and distinctive clientele, even right through the dark years of the Great Depression. Zane Grey, Lou Gehrig, Wallace Stevens, Charles Kettering, Andrew Mellon, and Herbert Hoover were among those who would board the Florida East Coast Railway to visit this paradisiacal setting, many of them to go back season after season.

Completely destroyed by the fatal 1935 Labor Day Hurricane, the first documented category 5 storm to make landfall in america, Flagler’s unique island getaway has been largely forgotten. Knowles expertly depicts this slice of long-lost Florida and resurrects the famous personalities who found refuge from the limelight at Long Key.
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