Homestead, Florida: From Railroad Boom to Sonic Boom
By Seth H Bramson and Bob Jensen
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About this ebook
Seth H Bramson
Seth Bramson is Miami's foremost local historian. He is America's single most-published Florida history book author, with sixteen of his twenty-two books dealing directly with the villages, towns, cities, counties, people and businesses of the South Florida Gold Coast. Bob Jensen retired in Homestead as a Navy Commander after serving 28 years. He served in Germany, the Philippines, the US Embassy in Cyprus, Iceland, and twice at the National Security Agency and at Naval Security Group Headquarters in Washington D.C.
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Homestead, Florida - Seth H Bramson
editions.
Chapter 1
A TOWN BETWEEN THE RAILROAD AND THE FARMS
Homestead and Florida City have rich but relatively short histories because South Florida was among the last areas in the country to be settled. The first twenty years in the area were filled with major events that led to incorporation and growth.
The area east of Krome Avenue was opened to homesteading in 1898 and the area west of Krome in 1900. By 1902, several families had settled in the area north of what is now Homestead. Henry Flagler, owner of the Florida East Coast Railway and former Standard Oil founding executive, had extended the FEC Railway into Miami in 1896. He further extended the FEC into the village of Cutler (area now around the Charles Deering Estate) in order to move fruits and vegetables out of that area. Cutler was the closest place where early homesteaders went for supplies and where they sent their produce for shipment by boat to Miami for further shipment by train or ship. Later, in 1903, the FEC completed a survey under the supervision of William J. Krome to determine whether the better route to Key West was via Cape Sable to Big Pine Key or directly south from Homestead to Turtle Harbor on Key Largo. William J. Krome went on to be the chief construction engineer for the extension to Key West, decided to make Homestead his home, purchased land and became a leading figure in agriculture.
Earliest known photo of Homestead’s Florida East Coast Railway Station. Completed in August 1904, it is now part of the Florida City Florida Pioneer Museum.
Early FEC Railway map showing the Homestead layout east of the tracks.
FIRST BUILDINGS ARE CONSTRUCTED
William A. King, the FEC section foreman, moved his work camp to Homestead in late 1903 and began construction of the FEC station and the homes for the station agent and the section foreman.
The station was constructed on the west side of what is now Flagler Avenue at about Second Street. Two houses on the south side of Flagler later adjoined the two-story building built by Max Losner to house the Dixie Drug Store at 129 South Flagler Avenue. The FEC buildings, completed in August 1904, were of durable Dade County pine. (As a note, Hurricane Andrew destroyed Homestead station in August 1992, and its new site in Florida City is behind the station agent’s house, which still stands.) They have been moved to 826 North Krome Avenue in Florida City for the Florida Pioneer Museum. A replica of the Homestead station was constructed after the hurricane.
In June 1904, the FEC had laid out the town that sprouted twenty-eight miles south of Miami where the tracks stopped. Early survey maps needed to designate the end of the tracks as a destination, so the surveyors labeled it Homestead Country.
Indeed, the first reference to the homestead country
in records of the Florida Pioneer Museum Association is in a Miami Metropolis July 4, 1902 article that reported on the Florida East Coast Railway survey underway to choose a route from Miami to the lower tip of the peninsula. The area south of Cutler was referred to as the homestead country,
the area in which homesteading was taking place. Between 1902 and 1904, newspaper articles on the area south of Cutler were often titled: Homestead Country.
A popular story goes that when construction was underway on the extension of the tracks from Miami south, workers made reference to the area in directing boxcars south by writing homestead country
on the cars with chalk.
Had Henry Flagler been in charge, the city of Homestead could easily have been named the city of Ingraham or Ingrahamville. A Miami Metropolis November 27, 1903 newspaper article reported:
The terminal has not been named but it will be in what is known as the homestead country in section 13, township 56, range 38, six miles east of the end of the pine land on the mainland of the State, or about thirty miles southwest of Miami. Mr. Ingraham has secured 600 acres of land for this purpose from the Government to be used for buildings, yards and other terminal purposes. Mr. Ingraham is delighted with the terminal site. He says that it overlooks an immense prairie, over which the sails of craft on the bay can be seen toward the east while toward the south can be seen the mangrove swamps on the edges of the waters of Card Sound and the Bay of Florida.
Two letters received from the St. Augustine Historical Society clearly show the modesty of FEC Railway third vice-president James E. Ingraham. In a January 4, 1904 letter to FEC vice-president and general manager J.R. Parrott, J.E. Ingraham thanked their boss Henry Flagler for proposing that the terminus
in the homestead country be named Ingraham, but he believed it would hardly be fair to take all the glory of it to myself, and I therefore suggest that the place be named ‘Homestead.’ It is the homestead country, and the name has an attractive sort of a sound that may help bring people to it and establish it as a center. I shall be glad to have your further advice in the matter before we put the name on our map for publication.
J.E. Parrott responded on January 15, 1904, Referring to above; your suggestion of ‘HOMESTEAD’ as name for present terminus of the Cutler Extension meets with Mr. Flagler’s approval, and you may therefore arrange to place same on your printed matter.
As the FEC’s third vice-president for lands and industrial enterprises, Ingraham did continue to play an important role developing South Miami-Dade County. When the Florida Federation of Women’s Clubs (FFWC) was working to establish Florida’s first state park at Royal Palm Hammock, he facilitated Mrs. Henry Flagler’s donation of 960 acres of land. Later, he and local county commissioner W.J. Tweedell assisted the Woman’s Club of Homestead’s involvement in the building of the road to the park.
Years later, the Woman’s Club of Homestead helped see to it that the road from Miami to the park became Ingraham Highway and that Railroad Avenue in Homestead be renamed for Henry Flagler.
FLORIDA EAST COAST RAILWAY EXTENSION TO KEY WEST
Henry Flagler clearly envisioned extending his railway from the mainland over the Keys to Key West. Official historian of the FEC Seth Bramson attributes the beginning of the extension to the hiring of Joseph C. Meredith as his chief construction engineer in 1904. He announced his intentions to bring his railway to Key West to its leading citizens in January 1905.
Railroad (now Flagler) Avenue sometime between 1910 and 1912 from a postcard. The buildings to the right of the station are the first commercial buildings.
Homestead did not play a major role in the construction. A Miami Metropolis article of August 1906 reported, A vast amount of material for the F.E.C. Railway extension building is now being transported by rail to the Homestead section, the most of the material at present being intended to complete the track from the present terminus to Jewfish Creek, where the line leaves the mainland for the Keys.
A very early Florida Pioneer Museum postcard shows railroad wooden ties stacked high along the FEC tracks south of the depot. Most of the construction supplies were later shipped by water. The important commodity of fresh water was shipped to the Keys using cypress wood tanks on flat cars.
Homestead’s biggest gain from the extension was the families who settled here after construction was completed. Three very notable FEC men were William J. Krome, the man who was the chief project engineer for the completion of construction; J.D. Redd, who became chair of the Dade County Commission; and S.E. Sid
Livingston, who was Homestead’s first clerk and tax assessor, school board member, mayor and then postmaster. Interestingly, Krome devoted most of his remaining life to South Dade horticulture and became a world horticultural authority.
The first citizen of the new town not associated with the railroad, however, was William D. Horne, who purchased two lots south of the railway station from the Model Land Company, Henry Flagler’s landholding company. He built a store with living quarters on the second floor and rented lodging to occasional visitors. In December 1904, his wife, Ida Campbell Horne, arrived by train with their household possessions. Next, Charles McMinn, a bachelor, homesteaded a tract that ran from Krome Avenue to McMinn Road. Then David Sullivan and his sons David, George and Homer came from Cutler and lived at Richard Road and Avocado Drive. The parents of Mrs. Horne, Thomas A. and Elizabeth Campbell, took up a homestead on the west side of Krome around Eighth Street (Campbell Drive) in the summer of 1906, and later the same year, Horne’s brother-in-law, R.E. Caves, homesteaded the northwest corner of Avocado Drive and Tennessee Road. Horne sold his store to Caves to devote his energies to his farming, his packinghouse and his real estate interests. Horne was Mister First
in Homestead: first merchant, first packinghouse owner, first postmaster and first bank president.
The William J. Krome home place at Krome and Avocado Drive, shown circa 1910, was long called Krome Corner.
SCHOOLS ARE BUILT
Homestead had sixteen or seventeen children by the fall of 1907, qualifying them for a Dade County school. The FEC Model Land Company supplied a lot at Northeast First Road and Second Drive; the school board furnished the lumber; and W.D. Horne, Charles McMinn, R.E. Caves and James Wesley Campbell constructed the one-room building, later adding a second classroom and using the building until 1913. If the school was provided a name, it was not recorded in available records.
The cemetery was located next to the new school, which Dr. John B. Tower considered to be a health risk. Dr. Tower, who had arrived in 1910 from Topeka, Kansas, had become Homestead’s first doctor after he was called upon to assist with an outbreak of typhoid fever. In order to ensure the school could remain, the Model Land Company donated land on Old Dixie Highway in Naranja for a new cemetery and citizen volunteers transferred the remains on special cemetery work days.
Establishing the cemetery was a real community project with a lead role taken by the Pioneer Guild, a women’s social group that met in its own Guild Hall at the corner of Redland Road and Bauer Drive. The Guild Hall still stands as the Redland Grocery.
The two FEC Bungalows on Railroad Street (now Flagler Avenue). Constructed in 1904, they housed the station agent and the track foreman.
CHURCHES ARE NEXT
The first church that was officially recorded as established and built in Homestead was First Baptist Church, organized on September 5, 1909, with founding members Reverend H.H. Sturgis, Mr. and Mrs. W.D. Horne, Mr. and Mrs. T.A. Campbell and Mrs. S.E. Livingston. Mr. Livingston was a charter member of the Methodist Episcopal Church South that was also organized in 1909 by the Reverend F.L. Glennen with Livingston and Mrs. C.W. Little, among other charter members. The church was a part of a South Dade circuit composed