Is Vatican City a Country? The Languages of Africa. The Mongol Empire. The Most and Least Religious Countries. However, the freeze of February would finally help to sway Flagler's opinion when Tuttle alerted him that the freeze had spared the Miami River.
Legend has it that she sent an orange blossom to him by mail. More accurate accounts contend that Flagler sent Tuttle an associate, who then had vast amounts of citrus shipped back to Flagler as proof of its agricultural survival. In either case, Flagler himself arrived in March of that year and was won over rapidly, drawing up plans to extend the railroad there immediately. Under their agreement, Tuttle supplied Flagler land for a hotel and a railroad station for free, and they split the remainder of her acres 2.
On July 28, the new City of Miami was chartered. The original Royal Palm Hotel was opened in This hotel was demolished following the hurricanes of and Search form Search. White, Pleasant Woodson Misc. Box 1 Misc. Box 2 Misc. Box 3 Misc. Box 4 Misc. Box 5 Misc. Getty Images. From Gene M. Speaking in the s, an aging [Miami pioneer banker] J. Lummus recalled the time he visited her and asked her point blank, "Do you really think this place has a future?
Lummus, if you live your natural lifetime you will see one hundred thousand people in this city. It was a visionary's understatement. She had the building jacked up, set on a brick foundation and enlarged.
It burned down in Tuttle had realized the area would never prosper unless it was reached by the railroads, and began an aggressive campaign to convince Henry Flagler to continue his tracks to Fort Dallas -- even offering to give up hundreds of acres of her land. Above: men on the porch of Julia Tuttle's hotel, Tuttle first tried convincing transportation mogul Henry B.
Plant to bring trains to Miami from his railroad's terminus in Tampa, but after the firm conducted a study they deemed it impractical. Neither did she have any luck convincing Flagler to extend his railroad via letters, and even paid a fruitless visit to the magnate in person in St.
But nature stepped in to help: the three Great Freezes of devastated orange groves and vegetable farms in central and northern Florida, wiping out citrus and fortunes alike.
When Tuttle smartly sent Flagler a package of flowers or foliage -- some say it was fragrant and enticing orange blossoms -- she proved her Miami River properties were below the frost line. Flager, unhappy to see settlers moving back north and his fruit shipping business dwindle, recognizing the obvious financial opportunities and gave in. He agreed to lay 60 miles of track to Miami from his railroad's end in Palm Beach.
For Julia, who convinced neighbors Mary and William Brickell to also throw acreage at Flagler, the deal didn't come cheap.
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