Pictures from Google Image Search

Miami: History

Cities of the United States | 2006 | Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Miami: History

Early Settlement Attempts Create Conflict

South Florida was settled more than four thousand years ago by primitive people who had established a thriving culture by the time Spanish explorers led by Ponce de Leon arrived in 1513. The principal native tribe in the region that is now Miami-Dade County was the Calusa (renamed Tequesta by de Leon), whose members built villages along the Miami River. The name Miami comes from the Calusa word "Mayami," meaning "Big Water." Tequestaor Chequeschatheir village on the north bank of the river, became the site of the future city of Miami.

Spanish conquistadors, attracted by the mild climate, abundant food sources, and fresh water supplyand by tales of gold and other richesmade repeated attempts to colonize the Miami region during the early sixteenth century but were met with hostility from the Calusas. Nevertheless, by the early 1700s, less than two hundred years after the arrival of the Spanish, most of the native population of south Florida had disappeared. European diseases like smallpox had severely reduced their numbers, as did inter-tribal wars. The few Calusas who remained were threatened by invading Creek and Seminole Indians, and in 1711 many fled to Havana, Cuba.

Spain, never really successful in settling the Miami region, supported France against the British during the French and Indian War, and as a result lost Florida to the victorious British in 1763. In 1783, after the American Revolution, Florida briefly reverted to Spanish possession, but in 1821 Spain ceded Florida to the United States for $5 million. Over the next two decades, settlers moving into the Biscayne Bay area encountered conflict with the Seminoles living there. In 1836, as part of an effort to quell the angry Seminoles, the U.S. Army took over Fort Dallasoriginally a naval post at the mouth of the Miami River. In 1842, after numerous skirmishes, the remaining Seminoles were driven into the Everglades swamp, a region so unfit for human habitation that the government did not challenge their occupation of it. Seven years later a permanent structure was built at Fort Dallas from which the army could monitor the Seminoles.

While other outposts in Florida flourished after the final Seminole conflict, Miami and Dade County suffered. Farming had become impossible and settlers drifted to other locales. By 1860 the name Miami no longer appeared in public records. The Civil War barely touched the few people who lived in the isolated Miami River settlement; in fact, it was assumed by those in prosperous north Florida towns that the southern region was uninhabited. Although stragglers, deserters, and freed slaves passed through Miami after the war, few settled there.

The City Becomes a Cosmopolitan Mecca

In the 1870s investors and developers from the midwest moved into the area, claiming old titles and buying land. Among them was Julia Tuttle, the wealthy widow of a Cleveland businessman, who enjoyed life in Miami and saw potential for a resort community there. She persuaded Henry Flagler to extend his Florida East Coast Railroad into the wilderness beyond Palm Beach. On April 15, 1896, Flagler brought his railroad into Miami and also began to develop the town, which was incorporated in 1896. Other entrepreneurs followed, and Miami grew from a village with a population of 343 people to a flourishing resort. Miami Beach was founded in 1915.

After World War I, improved highways gave greater access from the north and triggered an unprecedented building boom. In 1920 the city's population was 30,000 people; by 1925 real estate speculation swelled the population to 200,000 people. A year later the boom had collapsed, but it had laid the basis for future development in office buildings, hotels, housing, and a network of streets and roads. A hurricane in 1926 killed 243 people and caused damage estimated at $1.4 billion in 1990 dollars. Miami's phenomenal growth slowed.

World War II brought a second boom to Miami. Soldiers replaced tourists, and after the war servicemen who had trained in the city returned to make their homes there. This second boom has continued without significant interruption to the present. It was given impetus in the 1960s with the migration of more than 178,000 refugees from Communist Cuba. The Cuban migration transformed Miami into an international city, strengthening existing ties with the Caribbean and South America. Today the city is bilingual; Spanish-speaking employees work at most businesses, and downtown shops post signs in both English and Spanish. Still, racial tensions persisted. For example, an incident of alleged police brutality toward an African American caused major rioting in 1980. And African Americans staged a tourism boycott resulting from the snubbing by county commissioners of former South African President Nelson Mandela during his visit to Miami in 1990.

End of Century Sees Political Turmoil, Reform Efforts

Capitalizing on its multinational character, Miami moved during the 1980s and 1990s into the forefront of world commerce and finance. Hundreds of thousands of European visitors discovered Miami Beach, popularizing the Art Deco hotels and adding to the city's cosmopolitan flair. But in the wake of racial and ethnic tensions, some highly publicized murders of foreign tourists, and Hurricane Andrew in 1992, at least 100,000 non-Hispanic whites fled the Greater Miami area between 1990 and 1996, leaving a city that was the only large U.S. city with a Hispanic majority.

The city struggled in the late twentieth century to balance the needs of its mostly poor citizens with the need for business development. In spite of its glamorous image, Miami was the nation's fourth poorest city. In 1997, faced with a $68 million budget shortfall, Miami became the first city in Florida to have an oversight board appointed by the state. City voters rejected a plan to dissolve Miami as separate entity and merge it with the county, though county voters approved to change the name of Dade County to Miami-Dade County. This name change did little to help Miami, whose problems had become more than financial. The 2000 incident involving Elian Gonzalez, a five-year-old Cuban boy who survived a shipwreck to arrive in the United States only to be returned to Cuba by the U.S. government, deepened ethnic tensions between Miami's Cuban and non-Cuban population. By the turn of the century, corruption in the city government and a number of controversial police shootings brought about scrutiny by the U.S. Department of Justice.

A Radical with a Business Vision

Desperate for a positive change, disenchanted voters shook up Miami's government by electing Manuel A. Diaz as mayor in 2001. Diaz, a lawyer who had never held elected office, immediately and radically restructured the government. Modeling it on a private-sector organization, he eliminated some departments and consolidated others, and incorporated a vertical structure consisting of such positions as a Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer. Business processes were rewritten at each employee and government level, and a new emphasis was placed on accountability, training, and timely service to citizens. A number of programs were developed and implemented to boost the local economy and improve the quality of life for Miami's residents and visitors. By 2004, only three years after the city was nearly bankrupt and its bonds were junk grade, Wall Street gave its bonds an A+ rating, the highest in Miami's history. Diaz's remarkable results in such a short time earned him the Urban Innovator of the Year Award by the Manhattan Institute.

Historical Information: Historical Museum of Southern Florida, 101 W. Flagler St., Miami, FL 33130; telephone (305)375-1492; email hasf@historical-museum.org

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Miami: History." Cities of the United States. Thomson Gale. 2006. Encyclopedia.com. 24 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Miami: History." Cities of the United States. Thomson Gale. 2006. Encyclopedia.com. (November 24, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3441800124.html

"Miami: History." Cities of the United States. Thomson Gale. 2006. Retrieved November 24, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3441800124.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

'Manchukuo' lies hurt relations
Newspaper article from: China Daily; 8/19/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...made the surprising assertion that "Manchukuo" region was "an independent state...Aggression against China. The so-called "Manchukuo" refers to the puppet regime illegally...into historical facts must prove that "Manchukuo" was no more than a result of Japan...
Sovereignty and Authenticity: Manchukuo and the East Asian Modern.(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Journal of World History; 9/1/2004; ; 700+ words ; Sovereignty and Authenticity: Manchukuo and the East Asian Modern. By PRASENJIT...book, Sovereignty and Authenticity: Manchukuo and the East Asian Modern, Prasenjit...only overthrows the old conception of Manchukuo as a Japanese puppet state (without...
'Manchukuo' draws heated debate
Newspaper article from: China Daily; 8/1/2003; ; 526 words ; ...Japanese lawyers claiming that the "Manchukuo" region was "an independent state...suburban Beijing. "The so-called 'Manchukuo' area was the result of a Japanese invasion...China at the end of World War II said "Manchukuo" was "an independent state." They...
Resisting Manchukuo; Chinese women writers and the Japanese occupation.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News; 8/1/2007; 432 words ; 9780774813358 Resisting Manchukuo; Chinese women writers and the Japanese occupation. Smith...Contemporary Chinese studies PL2278 Interrogating the nature of Manchukuo's Chinese-language literary production at the high point of...
Former 'Manchukuo' palace opens to public
Newspaper article from: China Daily; 7/21/2003; ; 383 words ; CHANGCHUN: The palace of "Manchukuo" - a puppet regime (1932-45) installed in northeastern China by Japanese invaders - is being renovated in Changchun, capital...
World War II, Pacific Theater, 1941-1945 -- North America,United States,Mongolia,Manchukuo(Manchuria)Vladivostok,Lushun,Peking(Beijing),Seoul,Pusan,Japan,Hiroshima,Tokyo,NagasakiShanghai,China,Tibet,I
Map from: Maps.com (Historical Maps); 1/1/2002; 210 words ; 00-00-0000 World War II, Pacific Theater, 1941-1945 -- North America,United States, Mongolia,Manchukuo(Manchuria)Vladivostok,Lushun,Peking(Beijing),Seoul, Pusan,Japan,Hiroshima,Tokyo,NagasakiShanghai,China...
Helion & Company Ltd./Casemate.(Rays of the Rising Sun: Armed Forces of Japan's Asian Allies 1931-45, China And Manchukuo, vol. 1)(Hitler's Last Levy: The Volkssturm 1944-45)(On the Bloody Road to Berlin: Frontline Accounts from North-west Europe and the Eastern Front)(Twilight of the Gods )(Book review)
Newspaper article from: Library Bookwatch; 1/1/2006; 700+ words ; ...history. Philip S. Jowett's Rays Of The Rising Sun: Armed Forces Of Japan's Asian Allies 1931-45, Volume 1: China And Manchukuo (1874622213, $59.95) is also an excellent recommendation for military collections, covering a puppet government set...
Helion & Company Ltd.(Hitler's Last Levy: The Volkssturm, 1944-1945)(Rays of The Rising Sun: Armed Forces of Japan's Asian Allies 1931-45, China and Manchukuo, vol. 1)(Brief article)(Book review)
Magazine article from: California Bookwatch; 1/1/2007; 700+ words ; ...history. Philip S. Jowett's RAYS OF THE RISING SUN: ARMED FORCES OF JAPAN'S ASIAN ALLIES 1931-45, VOLUME 1: CHINA AND MANCHUKUO (1874622213, $59.95) is also an excellent recommendation for military collections, covering a puppet government set...
Santa Sede e Manciukuò (1932-1945), con appendice di documenti
Magazine article from: The Catholic Historical Review; 10/1/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...In recent years, the history of Manchukuo, the puppet state in Northeast China...Duara's Sovereignty and Authenticity: Manchukuo and the East Asian Modern (Lanham...particular, have shown the importance of the Manchukuo's nation-building experiment not...
Manshukoku no ahensenbai: "Waga ManMo no tokushu ken'eki" no kenkyu.(Reviews)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: China Review International; 9/22/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII] (The opium monopoly in Manchukuo: Research into the "special rights...February 1932, the artificial state of Manchukuo [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII...finding a way to finance the new country of Manchukuo was far more problematic. For one thing...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Manchukuo
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to World War II Manchukuo (‘state of the Manchus...commander of the Kwantung Army, while Manchukuo's commerce was dominated by the South...Company. Japan officially recognized Manchukuo's existence in September 1932, but...
Manchuria and Manchukuo
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History MANCHURIA AND MANCHUKUO MANCHURIA AND MANCHUKUO. Manchuria, a region in China roughly coincident with the...Incident) and established the puppet state of Manzhouguo (Manchukuo) in 1932. The United States condemned the invasion and refused...
Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to World War II ...new state in Manchuria in 1932 (see Manchukuo ), there was already a debate among...racial harmony. In his view, the new Manchukuo should be regarded as a model for Sino...idea of a bloc consisting of Japan, Manchukuo, and China whose object would be to...
Yamashita Tomoyuki, General
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to World War II ...in Korea and was later transferred to Manchukuo. However, his reputation continued...March 1941 he was again dispatched to Manchukuo, this time to command the Kwantung Army...vital) command of First Army Group in Manchukuo, was refused an audience with the emperor...
Japanese–Soviet campaigns and relations, 1939–45
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to World War II ...backed Outer Mongolia, and Japan-backed Manchukuo, garrisoned by the Kwantung Army , which...onwards to include Soviet bombing raids on Manchukuo, and Japanese air attacks on Mongolia...where the Red Army crossed into Western Manchukuo) that in ten days reached objectives...

Find thousands of answers for hundreds of subjects at Smart QandA .

All answers verified by trusted sources at Encyclopedia.com

Try Smart QandA now!

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: