Captiva Island is an
island in
Lee County in southwest
Florida, located just offshore in the
Gulf of Mexico. Originally part of neighboring
Sanibel Island to the southeast, it was severed in 1926 when a
hurricane's
storm surge washed away a new channel,
Blind Pass. The channel filled in over subsequent years, but was reopened by dredging in the summer of 2009. Like Sanibel, Captiva is a
barrier island to
Pine Island (to the east of Captiva and north of Sanibel), however it is much narrower. The only automobile access to Captiva is via the
Sanibel Causeway and Sanibel-Captiva Road, which ends in the
CDP of
Captiva, the island's only CDP. Captiva was homesteaded in 1888 and a tiny cemetery next to The Chapel by the Sea has the grave of the original resident, William Herbert Binder (1850–1932), an Austrian. Half the island is in private ownership, with "Millionaire's Row", luxury homes on gulf and bay side of "San-Cap" road. The
South Seas Island Resort entry gate is at the end of this road. Roosevelt Channel on the east side of the island, is named for
Theodore Roosevelt who fished there.
North Captiva Island or Upper Captiva is another island, in turn severed from Captiva in a 1921 hurricane, creating
Redfish Pass. North Captiva has power from lines that originate on the north end of Captiva, and is privately owned. With about 300 homes built and 300 vacant lots, the island is about half way to
build-out. Since the island can be accessed by boat or...
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