Old Lauderdale
115 posts
The Reshaped City
Here, water and land have long had a fluid relationship. Quietly flowed the New and Middle rivers, like something out of a Russian novel, until the Army engineers arrived. They…
Early Resident Special
The choices may have been limited in the old days, but people took quickly to dining out. Ah, the selections: turkey or roast beef with sides of boiled spinach, buttered…
Heartbreak Hotels
Most of the buildings that housed the city’s first lodgings no longer exist. Construction of our first hotel begun in 1905 by Edwin T. King for Philemon Bryan, a railroad…
Young Love
There were plenty of places for early residents to meet and fall for one another. The singles scene in Fort Lauderdale in the early decades of the 20th century had…
In Service to Others
Among the city’s earliest civic associations, three groups stood out. In the worldwide pro-democracy movement, a difficulty frequently cited is the lack of indigenous civic organizations. Fort Lauderdale had no…
Breckinridge’s Retreat
Devoid of white settlers during the Civil War, South Florida played virtually no part in the nation’s great struggle. But its rugged coasts and hidden‑away rivers did provide for some…
The Hoosier Hospital
The Indianapolis entrepreneur had it all – wealth, fame and acclaim. That’s why a trip here in 1923 when he became seriously ill made such headlines. The Fort Lauderdale Herald…
Leading From the Front
Time after time, people thought they could get Dr. Von Delaney Mizell to back down. They were never right. Years before he co-founded Fort Lauderdale’s first black hospital or ran…
Ocoee’s Survivor
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…
