For more than 80 years, Armstrong Hightower built a life in Fort Lauderdale. But it was one Central Florida town’s most terror-filled day that helped bring him here. When Armstrong…
Today, Fort Lauderdale is known as a gay-friendly tourist destination. But when the Marlin Beach Hotel opened in 1972, it made powerful enemies. Whether in brochures, online searches or even…
One of cinema’s most legendarily raunchy teen comedies was inspired by a filmmaker’s formative years in 1950s Fort Lauderdale. It’s pretty remarkable that the director of A Christmas Story –…
Robert Hayes Gore Sr.’s Governors Club played host to powerful people with interesting stories – including the man who owned the place. The Wilmar, Fort Lauderdale’s second grand hotel after…
From Isadore Mizell’s family tree spring some of Fort Lauderdale’s most important and accomplished people. When historians recount our early days, certain families are central to the story: the Stranahans…
Early Fort Lauderdale leaders didn’t bother with a fire department – until a devastating fire changed their thinking. When you are building a small city with businesses, banks, a hotel,…
Before the Stranahans, the Cooleys or Maj. Lauderdale’s soldiers, Frankee Lewis made a life along the New River. Fort Lauderdale history is filled with remarkable women pioneers: women such as…
Andytown was never a town and hasn’t been anything since the late ’70s. But try telling that to the internet. Search the internet for the city of Andytown and you…
Often called the Mother of Fort Lauderdale, Ivy Stranahan used her position and clout to preserve natural Florida and help those who lacked power – in particular, the Seminoles. Think…
John Ashley was one of Florida’s most notorious criminals, but he couldn’t evade the law forever. To read the first part of this story, click here. Florida newspapers in the…