Henry Flagler heralded boom time for Miami and its environs when his railroaders completed nearly seven years of work on the Miami to Key West extension of the Florida East Coast Railway (FEC) in 1912.
thejfblog.com/post/6493982...
His retirement from Standard Oil and creation of the Florida East Coast Railway (FEC) in 1885 set the stage for the incorporation of Miami city government in 1896, and the overseas railroad connecting it to Key West in 1912.
Florida’s Black and African American voters survived suppression after the Civil War to remain an intact bloc through the 1960s, testing their influence in 1972 with Shirley Chisholm.
thejfblog.com/post/7996913...
Aretha Franklin commanded respect as the “Queen of Soul” for the 1967 Summer of Love and the disillusionment of 1968, with breakout albums, “I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You,” and follow-up, “Lady Soul.”
thejfblog.com/post/8061311...
Aretha Franklin commanded respect as the “Queen of Soul” for the 1967 Summer of Love and the disillusionment of 1968, with breakout albums, “I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You,” and follow-up, “Lady Soul.”
thejfblog.com/post/8061311...
Aretha Franklin commanded respect as the “Queen of Soul” for the 1967 Summer of Love and the disillusionment of 1968, with breakout albums, “I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You,” and follow-up, “Lady Soul.”
thejfblog.com/post/8061311...
Aretha Franklin commanded respect as the “Queen of Soul” for the 1967 Summer of Love and the disillusionment of 1968, with breakout albums, “I Never Loved a Man the Way I Love You,” and follow-up, “Lady Soul.”
thejfblog.com/post/8061311...
The Beatles and The Supremes amassed a cumulative 32 No. 1 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 from 1964 to 1970, becoming the two most successful bands in pop music.
thejfblog.com/post/8054153...
The Beatles and The Supremes amassed a cumulative 32 No. 1 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 from 1964 to 1970, becoming the two most successful bands in pop music.
thejfblog.com/post/8054153...
Miami was Frank Sinatra’s kind of town in the 1960s, and that’s the way it was.
thejfblog.com/post/8006115...
Miami was Frank Sinatra’s kind of town in the 1960s, and that’s the way it was.
thejfblog.com/post/8006115...
Before Gloria Estefan and Uncle Luke popularized the “Miami Sound,” it was created by Mack Emerman and cultivated by Henry Stone.
thejfblog.com/post/7996400...
Before Gloria Estefan and Uncle Luke popularized the “Miami Sound,” it was created by Mack Emerman and cultivated by Henry Stone.
thejfblog.com/post/7996400...
Florida’s Black and African American voters survived suppression after the Civil War to remain an intact bloc through the 1960s, testing their influence in 1972 with Shirley Chisholm.
thejfblog.com/post/7996913...
Florida’s Black and African American voters survived suppression after the Civil War to remain an intact bloc through the 1960s, testing their influence in 1972 with Shirley Chisholm.
thejfblog.com/post/7996913...
Miami’s Black and African American urban core gained federal representation when local U.S. Rep. Claude Pepper was Florida’s lone vote for the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
thejfblog.com/post/7978621...
Miami’s Black and African American urban core gained federal representation when local U.S. Rep. Claude Pepper was Florida’s lone vote for the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
thejfblog.com/post/7978621...
Richard Nixon was corrupt, but even he had enough sense to put the country before his ego.
thejfblog.com/post/7954110...
Richard Nixon was corrupt, but even he had enough sense to put the country before his ego.
thejfblog.com/post/7954110...
Hundreds of Black and African American migrant farm workers drowned and were buried in unmarked mass graves in Belle Glade and surrounding areas when the Okeechobee hurricane came ashore Sunday, September 16, 1928.
thejfblog.com/post/6247251...
Hundreds of Black and African American migrant farm workers drowned and were buried in unmarked mass graves in Belle Glade and surrounding areas when the Okeechobee hurricane came ashore Sunday, September 16, 1928.
thejfblog.com/post/6247251...
Dade County became Miami-Dade County as its population doubled to two million in the late 20th century.
thejfblog.com/post/7905468...
Dade County became Miami-Dade County as its population doubled to two million in the late 20th century.
thejfblog.com/post/7905468...
His retirement from Standard Oil and creation of the Florida East Coast Railway (FEC) in 1885 set the stage for the incorporation of Miami city government in 1896, and the overseas railroad connecting it to Key West in 1912.
Henry Flagler heralded boom time for Miami and its environs when his railroaders completed nearly seven years of work on the Miami to Key West extension of the Florida East Coast Railway (FEC) in 1912.
thejfblog.com/post/6493982...
His retirement from Standard Oil and creation of the Florida East Coast Railway (FEC) in 1885 set the stage for the incorporation of Miami city government in 1896, and the overseas railroad connecting it to Key West in 1912.
Miami’s reputation as a dreamer’s paradise was cultivated during the 1920s land boom.
thejfblog.com/post/7830402...
Miami’s reputation as a dreamer’s paradise was cultivated during the 1920s land boom.
thejfblog.com/post/7830402...
Frank Sinatra delivered his most indelible era of work as he turned 50.
thejfblog.com/post/7711861...
Frank Sinatra delivered his most indelible era of work as he turned 50.
thejfblog.com/post/7711861...
Dade County, Florida experienced explosive population growth in the middle of the 20th century, with a tenfold increase from 100,000 to one million residents from the 1920s to the 1960s.
thejfblog.com/post/7681176...
Dade County, Florida experienced explosive population growth in the middle of the 20th century, with a tenfold increase from 100,000 to one million residents from the 1920s to the 1960s.
thejfblog.com/post/7681176...
In 1900, Dade County, Florida had a population of 5,000. By the 1920s, the number of its permanent residents mushroomed to 100,000 as a land boom flourished, prompting Miami to be nicknamed “The Magic City.”
thejfblog.com/post/7606666...
In 1900, Dade County, Florida had a population of 5,000. By the 1920s, the number of its permanent residents mushroomed to 100,000 as a land boom flourished, prompting Miami to be nicknamed “The Magic City.”
thejfblog.com/post/7606666...
Miami Beach and Downtown Miami were inundated when a major hurricane came ashore in South Beach, ending the Miami land boom of the 1920s.
thejfblog.com/post/6868147...
Miami Beach and Downtown Miami were inundated when a major hurricane came ashore in South Beach, ending the Miami land boom of the 1920s.
thejfblog.com/post/6868147...