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Classic Florida Attractions
By Chelle Koster Walton, of the Society of American Travel Writers
Florida ’s early roadside attractions strove to satiate America’s appetite for the eccentric with rare animals, flamboyant gardens, crowd-thrilling acts and human oddities. Many such attractions became extinct with the rise of the state’s major theme parks. Others adapted to the changing times and anew environmental conscientious to endure as a precious bit of Florida history. Flash back at any of these:
Cypress Gardens www.cypressgardens.com
Dick and Julie Pope launched Central Florida’s tradition of
theme parks in the 1930s when they enhanced their
gorgeous gardens with Southern belles and stunt
water-skiers. The
classic park has recently reopened
after undergoing major enhancements to resurrect its
trademark traditions, along with some thoroughly
modern twists. Don’t miss the butterfly arboretum and ice-skating extravaganzas, along with four roller coasters and 33 other rides.
Gator Land Orlando www.gatorland.com
Gnarly and tyrannisaurish, ‘gators became emblematic of Florida roadside attractions. Nothing drew in the crowds like these chompers. Many attractions devoted themselves primarily to the prehistoric beasts, including Gatorland, an alligator farm that opened in 1948. Through the years it has introduced snakes and other animals, shows, a get-wet playground and a petting zoo.
Key West Aquarium www.keywestaquarium.com
When Key West toppled from its position as one of the country’s richest towns to one of its poorest, the federal government sent the WPA in 1932 to build an open-air aquarium and jump-start tourism. The Key West Aquarium today lures visitors with homey charm and the promise of petting a shark. To show its eco-conscience, it has become involved in raising baby sea turtles.
Marine Land
904-460-1275
www.marineland.net
Tourists love dolphins, seals and all the creatures under the sea. Marineland near St. Augustine capitalized on that love affair in June 1938, when it opened the world’s first “oceanarium,” an aquarium that recreates the ocean’s diversity of marine life. It thrilled early crowds with marine animal acts and a realistic view of ocean life. Today it takes an ecological and interactive course with dolphin encounter programs and scuba diving in the 450,000-gallon, 18-foot deep oceanarium, fed by water from the Atlantic.
Monkey Jungle Miami, 941-355-5305
www.monkeyjungle.com
Here, monkeys in the wild peer down at you – in YOUR cage. Monkey Jungle began in 1933 as an experiment on the territorial instincts of monkeys. Un caged, the crab-eating macaque monkeys hung around. People came to look. When the monkeys objected to the intruders, founder Frank DuMond built cages for the visitors. Amazonian monkeys have joined the jungle, along with others, including tamarins, for which Frank pioneered a breeding program
St. Augustine Alligator Farm
Zoological Park St. Augustine, 904-824-3337, www.alligatorfarm.com
In a city full of “oldest” superlatives, St. Augustine Alligator Farm opened in 1893 to score as the world’s first of its kind. During its 110-plus years, the park has grown from a commercial farm raising alligators and staging ‘gator wrestling to a zoological park with the world’s only complete collection of crocodilians, not to mention snakes, monkeys, birds and educational wildlife shows.
In 1878, Hullam Jones glued a window to the bottom of a rowboat and simultaneously invented Florida tourism and the glass-bottom boat. Now grown to a 350-acre animal and nature park, it has added live animal exhibits and shows, a water park, Jeep Safari, Kids Ahoy! Playland and the brand-new Lighthouse Ride and Fantastic Fountains Water Show.
Sunken Gardens St. Petersburg, 727-551-3100
www.stpete.org/sunken.htm
Sunken Gardens began in 1935 as one man’s obsession with Florida’s ability to flourish. Visitors paid to peek and before you knew it, tourism overgrew the gardens. Residents and the city saved Sunken Gardens from demise in 1999. Today the classic attraction has taken on a new mission to educate, adding butterflies and rainforest programs to the lush waterfall-splashed gardens.
Esther Williams and Don Knotts were among the stars filmed on location at Weeki Wachee, a.k.a. Mermaid City near Spring Hill. The park and its underwater mermaid theater opened in 1947 when a Navy frogman instructor devised a way for his sexy and sequined mermaids to breath through hoses under water. Today, a wilderness river cruise, a mermaid museum and school, water slides and flumes have added modern appeal to the classic underwater mermaid shows.