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JCe•f ' .1400 . . ka. 35. !o 351•1.1....1.1.1' _ . - ! 2 00 .D 1 r. 4.• 30 .�SY- N rt6 • .50 166 ./ 0 e: it 4f. 11'e•1 L21O.f .Nicer-' _ i�i2.0 '1.01111. - `362j46 Agate 4O(' n•n. f. .n jbej Ito* az. .f Ea.f The aboicM4p d Ttst•hip •SS'Youth .R03.ar42.Ea•l s firs #1.y. rortiorl.e* ii. tat4e.field notes of tit.. surrey tka:aSf en. lilt. ti thi•ll!!ie.. whi•I) 1•urr '•; ,.. 3e•n e.ratat i.edand ap#P'm'pd ` ,• j y DX.1Yurvey.r Qr1m r.tli O. ft'a0 t ' ' �r'�''`1ct 1� :__•jyy'a--/1.1Aa••ee 1''lare'as LX t aki spit=1-a=„p--"�•�'�'- • >:1.• '1 • • it was discussed with as such energy as it was possible in any other part of the country. Nr- Bissell had a good supply of news, having been away some time, which enabled him to be a welcome visitor with all - I still have a photograph of him in my possession, taken soon afterwards. (See p. 10/3). Christmas Passed with nothing out of the usual to indicate such a time. From this time '-on .until 1861, there was nothing to excite much interest except the monthly coming and going of the:mail boats and the occasional new comer or the departure of some of those already here. One man arrived namedDra::�a who settled on the beach opposite Miami, somewhere near where the harbor entrance is to be made. Also, during this time, Captain ,i Amon FroT•_ s;as made keeper of Cape rlorida..light house, moving here with his'family from Key West. Dr. Barrow, the late keeper, went to Key West, but returned soon after, living in one of the officers' quarters until a.house•was built for him at the Punch Bowl, some two miles down the bay, where he lived until the war broke out, when he returned to Key ;:est, serving the people of Nonroe county as county judge for years. r • Geor=e 7er^uson also sold his belong na s amara to .:r. George -o and moved with his family to Key West, and was interested in the commission merchant business there for many years after. 3° 170 68 T EQ UESTA steamer on the Benner line schooners and using his own boat from Key West. One of the schooners running from Jacksonville continued running until after the railroad reached Miami and she was wrecked on her way to Miami. Now to get back to the settlers on the bay at Big Hunting grounds, John Addison had settled in the early seventies. Also Charles F. Seibold who came in a small schooner but disposed of her and made his home with the Addisons. For years they were the only three people living there. Then in the early eighties Dr. Cutler made a third and last attempt to make a settle- , ment on the Perrine grant. I think there were twelve or fifteen people all together who landed there. They had a steam launch to run about the bay and to the P. 0. at Miami as there was no other on the bay at that time. But they did not last long. While they were there they made compty starch, having brought a steam mill with them for the purpose. In fact it was the only way anyone could make a living in those days. But they all left, the only one sticking was Harry Fozzard. But while they were there they got a Post Office and changed the name to Cutler. Fozzard married a Key Wed girl and stayed there until the railroad reached Miami when he moved there. The Post Office was discontinued and there was no one left at Cutler but the Addisons. Charles F. Seibold had bought property at Snapper Creek an moved there. In 1884 James L. Nugent came to Miami and located at fi at Snapper Creek. He bought land from one end of the bay to the oth That is, he owned land at Snake Creek, the head of Biscayne Bay, at Snap Creek and south of Cutler. One never knew where to find him. About time two men came to Miami. One man was Eley and the other Burkhar Burkhardt took up a homestead south of Coconut Grove and Eley ho' steaded later at what is now Miami Shores. Eley died on his pro Burkhardt, after proving up on his homestead, was mail carrier bet Lake Worth and Miami. When the railroad reached Lake Worth he wo there until it started to Miami and worked until the hotel was completed so far as I know left the state. He never was well liked anywhere he In 1884 F. S. Moore came to Miami during the winter from Boston, Ma- chusetts for his health, boarding at Brickell's. After his second winter, made his home in Miami and entered the real estate business. At this Dennis O'Neal came to Miami in a schooner. There was another man him. They stayed 4intil spring and returned north. While here 0' Neil Mr. Morse and they arranged to meet in New York as Morse had decid• buy a small yacht and sail it to Miami. This time O'Neil stayed, taking homestead on the shore of Miami River. He was a County Commies' • HENRY 1. WAGNER 69 for a while. Later he was keeper of the House of Refuge at New River and lived there until he went north for the first time since coming to Florida and disappeared completely. He was never heard from. About 1888 or '89 W. C. Valentine came to Miami, staying at Brickell's for a while before lo- cating on New River about where Ft. Lauderdale now is. He was a civil engineer and did much of the surveying in and around Miami. He was drowned in New River. About this time Henry T. Prest came as County Clerk. He was from Lake Worth. He took up a Homestead on the south fork of the Miami River. In 1883 E. T. Field, Osborn and Lum came to Miami. They were going to plant a coconut grove on the beach between Narrow Cut and Indian Creek. With them was Richard Carney and another young man. I do not remember his name, and Mr. Lum's son Charles. They had a small shack built at Bremon's Landing to live in. y had a load of coconuts come on a schooner and were planted and most of them would have become trees but for the rabbits who are very fond of nut buds. However a few survived and are now part of those growing Miami Beach. Field or Osborn did not live on the beach after the Coco- nts were planted. Charley Lum stayed for several years. He went north d got married and brought his bride back, built a home on the beach here they stayed for some time trying to make a living raising tomatoes t could not do much, the land not being suitable. So he moved to a piece property his father owned adjoining the Wagner land, or, that is, he ovcd in a house belonging to A. C. Richards but on the Wagner property. t we could see at once that he would never succeed in getting a mill built make starch. While willing to work he was a farmer and nothing else. I proposed to my grandfather Wagner that we offer to take him in with on shares, which he accepted. He stayed a summer and winter and went to New Jersey where he was from, mainly because his wife was home - and they never came back again except for a winter visit some years Dick Carney who came with Field, Osborn, and the Lums, stayed with ley Lum on the beach for a while then went with R. M. Munroe at Coco - Grove, played around with Munroe for some time then drifted over to eacock's and helped Alfred Peacock in the store, at no time doing any hard rk. At that time he was made school trustee, a position he held for years. ter he was captain of a yacht for a number of years. When he died the -up in the papers said that he was at one time Sheriff of the County, but never was; nor did he change the babies of the ladies that came to the 120 THE COMMODORE'S STORY having worked in the Cooper -Hewitt Wire Mills in Trenton, and when he suggested that he might be able to help them, it was like the calming of the gale! Asking for a few spikes, hammer and plank, he soon had them straightening wire as fast as it could be pulled through the staggered spikes. This put us on good terms with the party; nothing was too good for us, and we spent many pleasant days on the Ready and at their camps along the beach for the rest of the winter. The end of the old base line had been marked by a marble obelisk mounted on a granite base, south of the lighthouse, but the sea had cut away the point, and the site of the monument was in deep water. They therefore located themselves by the center of the lantern table, which had been used as a check for just such a contin- gency. Some time later, when the party had covered fifteen miles of the coast, I happened to remark that the light had been built up thirty-five feet higher than it was originally. Consternation resulted, as their field notes had not mentioned this, and the question was, had the builders carried the center of that table up in the same axis as the old one? Back went all hands to the Cape early next morning, and after much calculating and observation it was de- termined that the error was about half an inch. The reader may remark "that wasn't much to fuss about," but if he will look up the methods of the Coast Survey, their definition of accuracy will prove a revelation. During the previous winter Messrs. H. B. Lum and Stillwell Grover, of Red Bank, New Jersey, had sailed from Key West in a small boat, looking for land to plant coconuts. The journey itself was a bit of courageous pioneering for them, since they knew nothing whatever of sailing, and actually worked up along the keys with jib hauled flat amidships all the way, being blown out into the Gulf Stream more than once, and taking four weeks for the trip. Lum finally bought a tract just north 1881() 2 i&g3 "PEACOCK'S," 1882-3 121 of Narres Cut, then called Brama's Landing, and later did some planting. This work interested his friend, Ezra Osborn, of Mid- dletown, New Jersey (a well-known engineer, designer of Hollywood on the Jersey Coast), and a company was formed to secure all the vacant beach lands from Cape Florida to Jupiter, about eighty miles, and plant them. They got most of them, spending over a hundred thou- sand dollars, and then Osborn's foreman, E. T. Field, was put in charge of the planting. Gangs of men accus- tomed to beach and surf work were brought from New Jersey, with surf -boats, and schooners were chartered to bring loads of coconuts from St. Andrew's, Greytown, Nicaragua, and Baracoa, Cuba. For several years their camps were a picturesque touch of life on the otherwise desolate coast. The coconut planting was contrary to my views, and I declined to take an interest in the venture, being con- vinced that coconuts could not be grown commercially in this latitude, owing to poor land and occasional frost, as well as the destruction of the young plants by rats and rabbits. This has proven to be the case, the nuts being poor in oil -content, their chief value, in comparison with those of the West Indies and the South Seas. However, when they embarked in it I did all I could to help them, and was later agent of the heirs of Mr. Osborn for his land on Key Biscayne, part of which I sold to Mr. W. J. Matheson. Only a few of the many thousands of trees planted by Field and Osborn are in existence, and the direct result of this big investment in the region was a heavy loss. Mr. John Collins was one of the company, however, and his interest directed attention to the Beach, which has been one of the prominent factors in Miami develop- ment. His great bridge, at the time of its construction said to be the largest wooden bridge in the world, and the several beach companies which have been so abundantly N cn <n N turn a 7-1 +J u V) •1-t w a. b1.4 00 •rt 0 Cr) 0 • r-t�� 44 .2) 4-t.--Irn O «7 U • r4 0 0 4J .) W N xx4-1 1-4 a,JJ ataa) IIIC Thralls, of Warsaw, Indiana, and they have five children: Joseph Cooble, Earl Mallory, James 1'., Jr., Cecil Sidney and Mary Marjorie. Josilot HA►.rox, M. 1). That Doctor Halton has expressed his abounding civic loyalty in con- structive thought, action and service has proved of enduring benefit to his home City of Sarasota, where he stands in secure vantage place as one of the leading physicians and surgeons in this part of Florida. Doctor Halton was born in Lancastcrshire, Eng- land, January 9, 1881, and is a son of Henry and Mary A. (Everson) Halton. He gained his rudi- mentary education in his native land, and was a lad of ten years when he accompanied his parents to the United States in 1891, the family home having been established at Bowling Green, Ohio, and removal later having been made to Muncie, Indiana, where he was reared to adult age and received the advantages of the public schools, including the high school. In 1907 he graduated from Miami Medical College,•Ohio, and soon after receiving his degree of Doctor of Medicine he initiated the practice of his profession at Sara- sota, Florida, which has since been the central stage of his professional activities, as well as those of progressive civic enterprise. The doctor has been unflagging in his ambition to keep in full touch with the advances made in medical and surgical science, is a member of the American Medical Association and the Florida State Med- ical Society, and at the time of this writing, in the autumn of 1922, he is taking a leading part in bringing about the organization of the Sara- sota County Medical Society, this new county having been established in 1921, with Sarasota as its judicial center. Doctor Halton took two post- graduate courses in the medical school of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland; a summer post graduate course in the Toronto (Canada) General Hospital; a summer course in the Institute of Surgery in the City of Chicago; a similar course in the famed clinic and hospital of the Mayo Brothers, Rochester, Min- nesota; five summer courses in the Nev fork Lying -In Hospital, and a similar number in the New York Post -Graduate Hospital. In 1921 he erected and fully equipped the first and only general hospital in the City of Sarasota, and of this valued institution he continues the executive head, in addition to giving close attention to his Targe and representative general practice. The doctor has been untiring in his efforts to promote the civic and material advancement of his home city. He was a member of the City Council in 191o. and was a power in the move- ment that resulted in the installing of the munic- ipal water, sewer and electric -lighting systems, as well as in bringing about the construction of good sidewalks throughout the city. He was influen- tial also in the formulating of sentiment and action that resulted in the formation of Sarasota County, formerly a part of Manatee County. As president of the Sarasota Board of Education Doctor Halton was insistent in his efforts to raise the standard of the schools of the city, and it was mainly due to his efforts that the local high school was placed on the accredited list of the state. He is a staunch democrat, is affiliated with the Masonic fraternity, is a valued member of the Sarasota Chamber of Commerce, is a member of the Sarasota Golf Club, and is a charter member of the Sarasota Yacht Club, of which he has served as commodore. june 0, 191o, recorded the marriage of Doctor Halton and Miss Mart Colt, who was born in the City of Hartford, Connecticut, a daughter of Colonel Samuel and Mary (Cadwell) Colt, her father having been the head of the great Colt firearms concern that has long been a national institution. Doctor and Mrs. Halton have no children. They hold membership in the Meth- odist Episcopal Church, South. JO/1N O. BRAI1MAN, who is living retired in his attractive home at the corner of Henley and Second streets in the City of Fort Myers, Lee County, was born at Key West, Florida, February 18, 1840, a son of John and Mary (Kemp) Bra- man, both natives of the fair Bahama Islands, the forner's father, Minus Braman, having been born in Holland and having been an early settler in the Bahamas. The maternal grandparents of the subject of this review were Samuel and Sarah Kemp, the father of the former having likewise been born on the Bahama Islands, of English parentage. The marriage of John Braman and Mary Kemp was solemnized at Key West, Florida, and there Mr. Braman followed the trade of ship carpenter. John O. Braman gained his early education in the school maintained at Key West in the early days, and under the direction of his father he learned the trade of ship carpenter. In 1877 he established his residence at Fort Myers, a town which had only twenty-two houses at that time, and here he conducted for two years a general store. The heavy expense incidental to the trans- porting of merchandise to this point made the enterprise unprofitable, with the result that Mr. Braman resumed the work of his trade, at which he worked at Tampa, Key West and other points, the while maintaining his home at Fort Myers, where he had real estate and other property. From 1895 until his retirement in 1915 he con- centrated his trade work at Fort Myers, and he handled virtually all of the boat work in this vicinity. He was influential in the movement which led to the incorporation of Fort Myers, served as a member of its first City Council and erected the first city jail. He and his wife are active members of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, and he has always been aligned in the ranks of the democratic party. In April, 1862, at Key West, occurred the mar- riage of Mr. Braman and Miss Matilda J. Kemp. who was born on the Bahama Islands, a daughter of 'William and Caroline (Thompson) Kemp, likewise born on those islands. Of the children of Mr. and Mrs. Braman the eldest is Caroline E., wife of Henry Funk, of Fort Myers; Mary Ella is the wife of Vincent A. Archer. of Key West; Frank resides at East Fort Myers, his twin brother, Samuel, having been drowned in a storm off Pensacola when he was twentv-two years of age; Minnie is the wife of A. E. Russell, of Tampa. HENRY CunlNo DOZIER, M. D. The work he has done in private practice at Ocala and as an honored surgeon during the World war affords sound basis for the reputation Doctor Dozier en- joys as one of the thoroughly eminent surgeons of Florida. He is a comparatively young man, just coming into the prime of his skill, and has already done work attracting favorable attention from foremost American surgeons. Doctor Dozier was born at Fernandina, Florida, October 17, 1879, son of John and Julia (Royal.) Dozier. He is a direct descendant through his pa-