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HISTORY
OF THE
FLORIDA
KEYS
RAILROAD
Railroads
stemmed
from
early
tramways
that
transported
stone,
coal
and
similar
mined
materials.
These
early
systems
were
not
steam
driven,
but
pulled
by
animals,
usually
in
combination
with
gravity.
The
first
steam
train
in
the
United
States
was
the
"Sourbridge
Lion,"
brought
over
from
England
by
the
Delaware
and
Hudson
Canal
and
Railroad
Company
and
was
in
operation
in
1829.
For
a
comparison,
the
Transcontinental
Railroad
was
completed
in
1869.
On
the
island
of
Jamaica,
the
Jamaica
Railway
Company
built
its
first
complete
railroad
in
1843.
Henry
Morrison
Flagler
was
born
in
Hopewell,
New
York
on
January
2,
1830,
the
son
of
a
struggling
Presbyterian
minister.
Morrison
was
the
name
of
his
mother's
first
husband
(Hugh
Morrison)
who
had
died.
At
birth
and
living
at
home,
Henry
had
a
half
brother
eight
years
his
senior
by
his
mother's
second
marriage
named
Harry
Harkness.
Harry
went
to
live
with
the
Harkness
family
early
in
his
life.
Henry
also
had
a
half
sister
Caroline,
nicknamed
Carrie,
from
his
fathers
second
marriage
to
Ruth
Deyo
Smith.
Carrie
was
four
years
his
senior.
Henry
left
school
after
the
eighth
grade
to
go
work
for
the
Harkness
family
in
Ohio.
The
Harkness
family
was
his
mother's
second
husband's
family
(David
Harkness)
and
played
a
helpful
role
in
Henry's
life
for
many
years.
To
begin
his
new
life,
he
found
work
on
a
barge
traveling
the
newly
opened
Erie
Canal
to
Lake
Erie
where
he
traveled
overland
to
the
small
Harkness
store
in
Republic,
Ohio.
There
he
began
work
with
his
half-brother,
Dan
Harkness.
He
had
arrived
almost
penniless.
Working
hard
and
learning
all
facets
of
the
mercantile
business,
he
was
promoted
to
manager
when
Dan
moved
to
a
larger
store
in
Bellevue,
Ohio,
the
principal
hometown
of
the
Harkness
family.
After
a
total
of
five
years,
he
then
moved
to
Bellevue
where
he
bought
out
a
partner
in
one
of
the
Harkness
operations
with
money
he
had
saved.
In
Bellevue
he
courted
and
married
his
step-uncle's
(Lamon
Harkness)
second
daughter,
Mary
Harkness,
November
9,
1853.
Henry
and
Mary
had
two
daughters,
Jennie
Louise
and
Carrie.
Carrie
died
at
age
three.
The
company
expanded
into
the
grain
and
distillery
businesses,
and
the
latter
was
sold
after
making
considerable
money.
One
of
the
grain
brokers
he
shipped
grain
to
was
John
D.
Rockefeller
in
Cleveland,
Ohio.
In
1862,
Flagler
and
Barney
York
formed
a
salt
producing
company
that
boomed
because
of
demand
brought
on
by
the
Civil
War.
He
sold
his
interest
in
the
grain
business
to
his
half
brother
and
moved
to
Saginaw,
Michigan.
When
the
Civil
War
ended
in
1865,
so
did
the
huge
demand
for
salt.
The
Flagler
and
York
Salt
Company
went
bankrupt
a
year
later,
and
Flagler
retained
a
$50,000
debt.
Instead
of
returning
to
Bellevue,
the
Flaglers
moved
to
Cleveland,
Ohio
where
he
re-entered
the
grain
business
and
renewed
his
connections
with
John
D.
Rockefeller.
Handsome
profits
from
the
grain
business
allowed
him
pay
off
his
debt
and
to
have
sufficient
money
to
invest
in
a
new
adventure.
His
conversations
with
John
Rockefeller
mostly
involved
petroleum
and
not
grain.
In
1868
at
age
37,
he
joined
with
John
Rockefeller
and
Samuel
Andrews
to
form
the
Rockefeller,
Andrews
and
Flagler
Oil
Refinery
the
RAF
Refinery.
-
Standard
Oil
Days
-
From
this
point,
everything
snowballed
for
Henry
Flagler.
In
1870,
the
Standard
Oil
Company
was
formed,
with
Flagler
as
a
major
stockholder.
Under
Flagler's
guidance,
Standard
Oil
began
buying
out
almost
all
the
smaller
refineries,
and
became
a
monopoly.
Later
in
his
life,
he
was
called
before
Congress
for
possible
violations
of
anti-trust
laws.
Also,
in
1870,
Flagler's
first
and
only
son,
Harry
Harness
Flagler,
was
born.
By
1884,
Standard
Oil
moved
its
headquarters
to
New
York
City,
and
was
considered
the
largest
and
richest
industrial
company
in
the
world.
Flagler
and
Rockefeller
moved
to
New
York
City
in
1887,
but
kept
their
Cleveland
homes.
Meanwhile,
Mary
had
been
diagnosed
with
tuberculosis
and
her
health
had
been
declining.
Her
doctor
recommended
she
avoid
the
harsh
New
York
winters
and
seek
a
warmer
climate
during
the
colder
months.
Florida
was
chosen
for
the
winter
of
1878
and
the
Flagler's
set
out
for
Jacksonville,
Florida.
When
Flagler
arrived
in
Jacksonville,
Florida,
he
found
the
most
backward
state
on
the
Atlantic
Coast.
Key
West
was
Florida's
largest
populated
city
of
about
10,000;
Jacksonville
7,000;
St.
Augustine
2,300;
Tampa
1,000
and
Daytona
321.
Miami
was
just
a
settlement,
not
yet
a
city.
In
Jacksonville,
Henry
found
few
amenities
for
the
vacationer
and
was
quickly
bored.
It
could
also
have
been
the
almost
daily
"vacation
managing"
of
the
rapidly
growing
Standard
Oil
Trust.
After
a
few
weeks
Henry,
Mary
and
Harry
returned
to
New
York
City
as
Mary
would
not
remain
in
Florida
without
Henry.
Mary's
condition
grew
steadily
worse,
and
she
eventually
died
in
New
York
at
age
48,
on
May
18,
1881.
Young
Harry
was
10
years
old.
Henry
had
his
sister,
Carrie,
move
in
and
help
with
the
care
of
Harry.
Jennie
Louse,
now
married,
also
made
frequent
visits.
On
June
5,
1883,
Flagler
married
one
of
his
first
wife's
nurses,
Ida
Alice
Shourds.
He
was
too
busy
to
honeymoon
in
the
summer,
so
in
the
winter
they
went
to
Florida,
but
this
time
to
St.
Augustine,
Florida.
Things
appeared
to
be
different
now,
as
Flagler
became
interested
in
Florida.
He
reduced
his
workload
with
Standard
Oil
and
at
age
53
he
turned
to
a
new
vocation.
-
A
New
Home
-
In
St.
Augustine
he
built
two
hotels,
the
Ponce
de
Leon
and
the
Alcazar,
and
purchased
the
third
from
a
competitor,
renaming
it
the
Cordova.
To
make
his
hotels
more
accessible,
he
purchased
and
rebuilt
a
short-line
railroad
company
and
this
is
how
he
entered
the
railroad
business.
He
also
built
in
St.
Augustine
several
churches,
a
hospital,
waterworks,
electric
and
sewer
utilities,
and
a
winter
home
for
the
family.
It
was
1885
when
he
purchased
a
short-line
railroad
between
Jacksonville
and
St.
Augustine,
which
was
the
forerunner
of
the
Florida
East
Coast
Railway
(F.E.C
Rwy.).
He
had
tried
to
convince
the
previous
railroad
owners
to
improve
the
system.
They
shook
their
heads
"no,"
and
their
"no"
proved
to
be
a
turning
point
in
Flagler's
life
and
Florida's
history.
He
started
extending
his
railroad
lines
to
the
south,
first
to
Ormond
Beach,
Florida
and
then
to
Palm
Beach,
Florida
in
1893.
To
support
the
Flagler
System,
he
purchased
existing,
or
built
new
railroads.
Again
he
also
built
schools,
hospitals,
churches,
fire
stations,
city
halls,
courthouses
and
utilities.
In
the
April
1893
Board
of
Directors
minutes,
Flagler
resolved
to
extend
the
railway
from
some
point
on
Key
Biscayne
across
the
Florida
Keys
to
Key
West.
-
Railroad
to
Miami
-
Following
the
great
freezes
of
December,
1894
and
January
and
February
of
1895,
Julia
Tuttle,
the
mother
of
Miami,
contacted
Flagler
through
his
vice-presidents,
Messrs.
Parrott
and
Ingraham,
and
advised
them
that
the
region
south
of
the
New
River
(Ft.
Lauderdale)
was
untouched
by
the
freezes.
Upon
receiving
Parrott's
and
Tuttle's
reports,
Mr.
Flagler
asked
Mrs.
Tuttle
what
she
proposed,
the
answer
being
of
great
interest
to
HMF.
"If,"
Mrs.
Tuttle
wrote,
"you
will
build
one
of
your
great
hotels,
and
if
you
will
extend
the
railroad
to
Biscayne
Bay,
I
will
give
you
half
of
my
holdings
north
of
the
Miami
River
as
well
as
50
acres
for
shops
and
yards
and
Mr.
Brickell
will
give
you
half
of
his
holdings
south
of
the
river"
(referring
to
the
Miami
River).
Mr.
Flagler
agreed,
a
contract
was
signed,
and
the
railroad
reached
Miami
on
April
15,
1896,
with
the
first
passenger
train
operating
into
the
community
on
the
shores
of
Biscayne
Bay
on
April
22.
On
July
28,
1896,
without
every
having
been
a
village
or
a
town
or
an
incorporated
municipality
of
any
kind,
the
City
of
Miami
sprang
into
existence
and
over
the
weekend
of
July
26--July
28,
1996,
the
FEC
Railway
and
the
City
celebrated
their
Centennial
in
a
grand
and
gala
joint
event.
The
story
that
Mr.
Flagler
extended
the
railroad
to
Miami
after
the
freezes
because
Mrs.
Tuttle
sent
him
some
orange
blossoms
is
an
old
Miami
fable
and
was
debunked with
facts
many
years
ago
by
Seth
Bramson,
FEC
Company
Historian,
in
an
article
in
the
National
Railway
Historical
Society
Bulletin.
A
note
at
this
time.
The
Flagler
System
denotes
all
of
the
Flagler
entities,
e.g.
the
Florida
East
Coast
Railway
(F.E.C.
Rwy.),
the
entire
system
of
hotels,
the
land
holding
companies,
the
Peninsular
&
Occidental
(P&O)
Steam
Ship
Company
and
all
other
subsidiaries.
The
overseas
railroad
is
correctly
titled
the
Key
West
Extension,
Flagler
System.
In
1897,
Flagler's
second
wife
Ida
Alice,
was
committed
to
an
insane
asylum
in
New
York.
Insanity
was
not
grounds
for
divorce
in
either
New
York
or
Florida.
Flagler
convinced
the
Florida
Legislature
to
change
its
law
in
1901
and
he
married
his
third
wife,
Mary
Lily
Kenan,
whom
he
had
known
for
about
eight
years.
As
a
wedding
present
he
built
the
Palm
Beach
mansion
named
Whitehall.
Florida
later
repealed
this
change
in
the
divorce
law
.
In
Miami
as
in
other
places,
Flagler
built
an
electric
company,
water
company,
schools,
churches,
streets
and
homes
for
his
workers.
In
1899,
he
purchased
three
ships
to
transport
people
to
and
from
the
Bahamas
where
he
owned
two
more
hotels.
For
his
ships
to
enter
the
Miami
harbor
he
had
to
dredge
a
channel
through
Biscayne
Bay
to
the
docks,
but
it
was
not
sufficient
to
be
considered
a
deep
water
seaport.
During
the
Spanish
-
American
War,
the
federal
government
used
the
Tampa
seaport
and
the
Henry
Plant
railway,
as
Tampa
had
a
deep
water
seaport.
In
1903,
the
United
States
signed
an
agreement
to
construct
the
Panama
Canal.
Flagler
envisioned
Key
West
with
its
natural
deep
water
seaport
as
the
shipping
hub
for
all
the
ships
passing
through
the
canal,
connecting
South
and
Central
America,
the
U.
S.
and
Cuba.
His
trains
would
thus
provide
land
deliveries
throughout
the
east
coast.
As
he
had
been
eyeing
Key
West
for
some
time,
these
additional
motivations
could
have
been
the
deciding
factor
for
Flagler
to
push
on
to
Key
West.
Strange
as
it
may
seem,
the
editor
of
the
Key
West
Gazette
suggested
a
railroad
linking
Key
West
to
the
mainland
as
early
as
1831.
South
Florida's
first
U.S.
Senator,
Stephen
R.
Mallory,
also
from
Key
West,
while
in
Washington
in
the
1850s
advocated
the
advantages
of
a
Key
West
railroad.
J.
C.
Baily
while
surveying
for
the
International
Ocean
Telegraph
Company
in
1866
made
a
survey
route
that
could
be
used
for
a
railroad.
Numerous
proposals
were
made
on
paper,
but
all
lacked
financing.
The
National
Geographical
Magazine
in
1896
contained
an
article
even
mentioning
Key
West's
hopes
centering
on
Henry
Flagler
potential.
The
article
"Across
the
Gulf
by
Rail
to
Key
West"
proposed
the
screw
pile
supports
used
for
construction
of
the
lighthouses
for
bridge
supports.
It
was
the
summer
of
1902
when
Flagler
hired
a
group
of
engineers
under
William
J.
Krome
to
survey
the
best
route
to
Key
West.
They
were
to
conduct,
as
we
would
say
today,
"a
feasibility
study"
to
extend
the
railroad
to
Key
West.
To
our
knowledge,
he
never
asked
anyone
whether
or
not
it
would
be
financially
successful.
Krome
spent
the
remainder
of
1902
and
most
of
1903
surveying
across
the
Everglades
to
Cape
Sable.
He
then
completed
the
Cutler
Extension
to
Homestead
and
in
early
1904
proceeded
to
survey
Key
Largo
for
a
route
to
Turtle
Harbor
off
of
North
Key
Largo.
In
April,
the
Turtle
Harbor
route
was
canceled
and
a
Homestead
to
Key
West
route
was
requested.
On
May
4,
1904,
the
Panama
Canal
Zone
was
formally
acquired
by
the
US.
It
is
not
certain
when
the
following
conversation
took
place,
but
reportedly
in
1904.
The
aging
Flagler
(74
years
old)
called
in
his
Vice
President,
Joseph
R.
Parrott,
and
reportedly
asked
him
if
the
railroad
extension
to
Key
West
could
be
built.
"Yes,
I
am
sure,"
was
the
reply.
Mr.
Flagler
in
turn
said,
"Very
well
then,
go
ahead.
Go
to
Key
West."
Supposition
has
it
that
since
this
happened
coinciding
with
the
US
negotiations
to
buy
the
French
concession
to
build
the
Panama
Canal,
perhaps
the
Panama
Canal
was
an
influence.
The
project
was
announced
to
the
public
in
the
New
York
Herald
on
June
28,
1905
and
the
article
reprinted
in
the
Tropical
Sun.
Regardless,
this
was
an
epic
decision
for
the
74-year-old
Flagler
to
make.
He
had
practically
built
the
east
coast
of
Florida,
had
everything
in
life
that
any
reasonable
man
could
want,
yet
something
pushed
him
on
to
new
horizons.
He
did
this
with
his
own
money,
not
borrowed
money
and
there
were
no
cutting
corners
to
save
money.
About
two
fifths
of
all
his
Florida
investments
were
used
to
complete
the
Key
West
Extension.
What
is
a
fact
is
that
Senator
E.
C.
Crill,
of
Palatka,
pushed
through
bill
number
11,
granting
certain
rights
and
privileges
for
a
railroad
to
the
F.E.C.
Rwy.
The
act
became
effective
May
3,
1905
and
afterwards
Flagler
publicly
announced
the
extension
of
the
railroad
to
Key
West.
-
Building
the
Railroad
to
Key
West
-
At
this
point
we
will
focus
on
Flagler's
accomplishments
with
the
Key
West
Extension
in
the
Keys.
For
this
project
he
needed
an
unusual
team.
For
its
leader
he
chose
Joseph
Carroll
Meredith
as
his
chief
construction
engineer.
The
28-year-old
William
Krome
became
the
assistant
construction
engineer.
As
this
would
be
an
overseas
project,
Flagler
purchased,
leased,
or
built
most
of
the
heavy
marine
equipment
in
the
east.
Land
had
to
be
donated,
purchased,
or
leased,
as
Flagler
did
not
receive
land
grants
in
the
Keys.
Many
of
the
transport
ships
in
the
Atlantic
were
employed
solely
to
transport
supplies
and
materials
for
Flagler.
It
was
a
massive
operation.
Using
Krome's
survey,
plans
were
made
to
send
advance
teams
ahead
to
start
the
more
time
consuming
projects
and
the
overland
clearing
throughout
the
Keys.
Functional
seaports
and
rail
terminals
had
to
be
built
at
Knight's
Key
and
Key
West.
The
large
bridges
could
not
be
started
until
huge
floating
concrete
mixers
could
be
constructed.
Concrete
mixer
number
1
was
towed
out
of
Miami
on
June
27,
1906.
Work
was
begun
throughout
the
Keys,
not
just
one
huge
work
force
moving
southwest
from
Homestead.
The
work
camps
were,
however,
numbered
from
north
to
south
from
Homestead.
Key
Largo
was
camp
1
and
Key
West
was
camp
82.
By
the
spring
of
1905,
construction
teams
were
dispersed
throughout
the
Keys.
From
the
mainland,
in
April,
two
of
the
ten
traveling
dredges
set
out
from
what
would
become
Florida
City
across
Cross
Key
to
Jewfish
Creek.
One
dredge
worked
on
each
side
of
the
right-of-way,
piling
up
fill
to
form
a
track
rail
bed
in
the
center.
Rock
was
transported
and
spread.
Tracks
were
laid
on
top
of
this
rock
foundation.
The
Woodall
and
Everglade
stations
were
built
on
side
tracks
located
where
the
vehicle
passing
lanes
of
the
18-mile
stretch
are
now.
This
was
time
consuming
work,
but
not
difficult.
Jewfish
Creek
presented
them
with
their
first
bridging
challenge.
It
had
to
be
a
drawbridge
to
permit
boat
traffic
even
in
those
days.
The
overall
goal
was
Key
West;
but
the
intermediate
goal
was
Knight's
Key
Dock.
The
immediate
task
was
to
lay
as
much
track
from
Homestead
as
possible.
This
allowed
Flagler
to
use
his
railroad
mounted
equipment,
or
"rolling
stock,"
which
could
carry
huge
loads,
make
more
trips
and
deliver
directly
to
the
place
of
need.
The
water
was
too
shallow
for
larger
transport
ships,
so
they
used
150
huge
barges
to
ferry
supplies
to
shore.
The
Flagler
museum
in
Palm
Beach
has
a
lengthy
collection
of
old
newspaper
clippings.
They
almost
tell
the
story,
and
I
will
share
some
of
them
with
you
to
show
the
progress.
Unfortunately,
some
articles
do
not
have
the
newspaper's
title,
but
are
dated.
An
October
28,
1905
Miami
Metropolis
newspaper
clipping
provides
some
indication
of
work:
"The
steamer
Biscayne
towed
and
delivered
to
the
Keys
two
of
the
remaining
double-decked
houseboats
[living
quarters]
recently
completed.
One
of
the
boats
will
locate
at
Planter
and
the
other
at
Matecumbe
Key
where
camps
will
be
established,
both
being
under
the
charge
of
Engineer
Rogers."
W.
P.
Dusenbury
was
the
engineer
in
charge
of
work
on
Key
Largo.
The
Jewfish
Creek
bridge
was
not
finished
when
the
track
arrived;
however,
difficulty
in
building
a
stable
causeway
across
Lake
Surprise
was
a
greater
concern.
The
lake
was
to
be
filled,
not
bridged.
When
fill
was
dumped
in,
it
sank
and
disappeared.
It
appears
that
it
took
15
months
to
construct
a
satisfactory
fill
that
would
support
continuous
trains
across
Lake
Surprise.
Labor
was
a
constant
problem.
The
pay
was
$1.25
a
day
(soon
raised
to
$1.50)
with
food,
lodging
and
medical
care.
Along
with
labor,
lack
of
fresh
water
and
mosquitoes
constantly
haunted
the
project.
It
is
said
that
a
total
of
40,000
men,
but
never
over
5,000
at
any
one
time,
were
employed.
An
average
of
4.5
million
gallons
of
fresh
water
was
required
each
month.
An
unidentified
clipping
dated
June
27,
1906:
"Concrete
Mixer
No.
1
was
hauled
out
from
the
north
end
of
the
(Miami)
terminal
dock,
and
towed
to
its
destination
in
the
Keys
by
the
steamer
Columbia.
This
is
an
indication
that
the
arch
and
bridgework
is
soon
to
begin.
Mixer
No.
2
is
about
ready
[for
delivery]."
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