Long Key State Park is a
Florida State Park located on
Long Key, one of the
Florida Keys, in
Monroe County,
Florida,
United States. It is at mile marker 67.5 on
U.S. 1, 67400 Overseas Highway.
History
Prehistoric
coral reefs grew here over the course of millennia, when the
sea level was over deeper. The remnants came to form Long Key, and the rest of the
Florida Keys.
The climate and waters provided abundant plant and aquatic life for the
Calusa, who settled in the area long before
Spanish explorers arrived.
"Cayo Vivora", or Rattlesnake Key, is what the first Spaniards called the island, since to them it resembled a snake with its jaws open.
By the early twentieth century, Long Key became an important depot for the completed
Key West Extension of the
Florida East Coast Railroad. The railroad's founder,
Henry Flagler, also established the
Long Key Fishing Camp, a resort that attracted the greatest
saltwater fishermen from around the world. But it did not last for long, when in 1935, the
Labor Day hurricane devastated the Club, the railroad, and much of the Keys.
The land that came to comprise the park was acquired between 1961 and 1973, with the official opening in 1969.
Biology
The plant life at Long Key originated in the
Caribbean. Trees include
mangrove, West Indian Mahogany (
Swietenia mahagoni), Jamaica fish poisontree (
Piscidia piscipula), poisonwood (
Metopium toxiferum), gumbo-limbo (
Bursera simaruba) and oysterwood (
Gymnanthes lucida).
The shallow waters...
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