My family has been in Miami since 1919. It was such a pleasure to hear Ralph Rennick's voice on TV again. Had brought back so many memories. I felt like it was 1962 again. Thank you for taking the time to make this documentary. I subscribed.
I was born in 1956 in Daytona Beach - a direct descendant of an original settler/ first Postmaster of Ormond Beach. Several years ago I toured Ponce De Leon Hotel - fantastic !
If you can find it, there is a book, fiction but factual, called Miami. Very interesting good read. I'm from Florida and know the book to be accurate. I had the paperback, don't know if there is a hardcover.
Florida population increases every year as the populations of New York and California decrease every year. Florida is now the third largest state overtaking New York. The political leadership of the last 20-30 years in each state should explain the reason for these population trends.
I was a third generation Miamian. I left in 1997 for many reasons! I loved the waters be them lakes, rockpits, beaches or Biscayne bay. I knew that bay like the back of my hand, spending all my spare time at one place or another, but always with my dogs at my side! I knew where alligators were so I knew where and where not to let my dogs swim. (Alligators love to eat dogs!) Also, anyone with a brain knew not to feed gators cause that's what made them dangerous. I lived threw hurricane Donna, Cleo, Betsy and the infamous Andrew! That was the finale straw! Between the poor growth planning, the Mariel Boat lift bringing around 125,000 Cubans and 25,000 Haitians arrive in Miami. A large percentage of the cubans Castro sent were hardened criminals he emptied his jails of and had mental health problems. The hatians, well, coming from such a poverty stricken country their acceptance of living in poor conditions followed them. All this poluting the beauty, landscape and saftey of Miami mostly affected the middle class and below. Crime and cocaine cowboys were everywhere, there was no where or way to escape it. The beaches became noisy, dirty, and over run by plan rudness towards others just trying to enjoy their surroundings. Then as Miami pushed out more and more towards the Everglades, alligators were put on the endangered list and coupled with ignorant people feeding them there was no body of water that didn't have an alligator in it making them dangerous to not only dogs, but to people as well! The fun was gone! It even became dangerous in the bay as weekend boat warriors didn't follow the rules! I left in 1997, moved to Central GA and embraced my love of horses and exploring the woods! I now spend my spare time camping, embracing the beauty, serinity, and solitude of exploring the woods by horseback! I do miss the Miami I grew up in, that's for sure. But, I don't miss the Miami I left. Growing up in the 50s, 60s & 70s in Miami was magical. I love those memories and feel fortunate that I was able to grow up there during those times. I also feel fortunate to have developed an equal love to where I am now and have a horse to carry me around making exploring easier in my older years! Oh! And my dogs are there tagging along too!
We recently went thru Miami - just the traveling thru it was an absolute nightmare. You made a better move and life for yourself. The Miami today is not the one of course from yesterday- what city is/ but this rings most true in Florida now more than ever. The population is absolutely out of control there.
Not one mention of the devastation of the many Hurricanes and how unaffordable and unavailable home insurance in Florida has become. The cost of a house didn't drive me out of Florida, but the cost of insurance did!
I blame low energy Jeb Bush for this. He allowed building material suppliers to rape and pillage, after the 04 hurricanes. Prices shot up from $150 a square to over $350 a square for roofs. I did claims adjusting in the Mobile Al area after Katrina in 05. Out there to remove and replace a roof was only $150, and that was one year later.
@@kevinyoung8651 The Busch family is the gift that kept on giving to America: ZERO climate change policy from GW Bush (and most things he did made everything worse) and then his little brother fucks up Florida, after Lawton Chiles did a great job leaving it a good state.
Ya mon I almost bought in Pprt Charlotte and Port St. Lucie. Both since blown away by hurricane. Lucky me it was cheap to rent. cheers your point was well said 🍺🍺🍺
@@dannyboy8883 Port St Lucie was blown away by a hurricane? News to me. I've lived 5 miles north of Port St Lucie since 1982 and I didn't even know about that.
In America , Mr Flagler seems the only visionary that developed so many towns, Palm Beach was his Crown Jewel. Mr Flagler it seems developed the modern day corporation and made Exxon into the company that is today along with Rockefeller. Mr Flagler was a passenger rail Lover, we had so much passenger rail in America during his time, his FEC railway is a important passenger rail line for Miami to Orlando. We so need more passenger rail in America
I lived on Miller Road and Galloway Ave in South Miami in the 50’s We farmed sugar cane, seed corn,lettuce and tomato’s. The Mackle Brothers built a project of houses at $7,900average. The Miami Herald and the Miami News basically denigrated the project “who would by a home for $7,900in a nowhere place!” Those houses now sell for $750,000 and up! The only problem was our property taxes and property value skyrocketed and had to sell as farming was out of the question! The closest public transportation was two miles away on Sunset Avenue and it ran four times a day to South Miami to connect to Downtown Miami and Coral Gables. Kendall Drive was known for its Public County Hospital and and the threat to kids of the Reform School if you did things wrong, now long gone! The quality of life for those raised in rural areas deteriorated with traffic, overcrowded services, higher prices! While no paradise it was an incredible life for a kid until I joined the Army in 1962. When I return four years latter everything had changed and not for the better from my point of view!
Great documentary---there is a weeklong tour from Miami airport to Key West, stopping at every key of interest. Even includes a boat ride to Dry Tortugas. It's run by Road Scholar---you learn everything about the vegetation, wildlife and human history of the Keys.
Interesting/informative/entertaining. Excellent still-motion photography pictures/maps/guest speakers. Enabling viewers to better understand what the orator is describing.
Although much older (and probably every bit as disrespectful), the same can be said of mummified remains being similarly sold off as souvenirs to wealthy collectors. I of course immediately think of the Egyptian kind, but the same can presumably be said of other cultures too.
@@davidglad That has got to be one of the dumbest statements of all time, communicated instantly from the comforts of either heated or air conditioned safety. I bet you think you're virtuous for doing so as well. Do you think that Indians, Central Americans, SE Asians, Modern Day Egyptians, etc, etc, etc, gave a sh.t about their antiquities before the arrival of the Europeans? Egyptian, Syrian, Judaic, antiquities had been raided for thousands of years before the ENGLISH primarily and French documented every site all around the planet in the 1800's. The Ottomans didn't give a s..t. nor the Mongols before them, nor the Arabs before them. Antiquities is a Western Science and like it or not, it's because of the British that anybody knows anything, including you, you ungrateful person. Ankor Wat was left to rot. It's a poem. I just made it up. Remember it.
Lived there for 27 years. Owned a business. Homes, family. Moved back North after watching the meltdown that I spoke about to many the previous 6 years. There was nothing holding it up...literally nothing. Now that it's hot, all the time, you can keep it. We did have 'seasons' for about 12 of the 27 years I lived there. Be prepared for a 400 plus dollar a month electric bill, crappy water and watch you home roast under the unrelenting Sun. Freedom ain't free and nothing in Florida is neither.
Totally. My family moved here in 95' and I was here until 2010 and then moved back in 2018... I remember growing up there was actually cooler weather for about three months, now? It's hot all of the time, traffic is horrifically worse, prices are insane, and the people suck in every way possible. I can't wait to leave this place again and never come back.
"Waterlogged bug infested wilderness" ( 1:40 ) is a good description of how these people must have seen it; they must have had no conception of respect for ecology. Just stuff in the way of hotels, logistical problems to be overcome.
Stop! We don’t need more people! We are in a housing crisis! The housing economy is a nightmare now. Rent has sky rocketed to the highest it’s ever been. $2000 to rent a one bedroom apartment. It’s price gouging at its worst and no one in the government is doing anything to stop the current crisis.
Yes. There must be a moratorium placed on building condos. Greedy builders and the stupid people running town building departments, keep approving building permits with inadequate roadways. Traffic is beyond horrendous and accidents and deaths are out of control. STOP BUILDING.
Les Stanford has his timing mixed up ~9:10. While Flagler began investing in hotels and what-became-the-FEC Railroad in late 1880's, early 1990's, One could not get on a train at Penn Station in NYC (and travel anywhere) until the station and connecting tunnels were complete c. 1910~1912.
For people always complaining about the rich, and tax the rich, blah, blah, blah. If it wasn't for the wealthy visionaries; hotels, towns, cities, and states would not be what they are today. Thank God for their vision and plans, they brought us a living. - Pappy
And not one word of how the marxist policies of the Clinton administration,forced on the banks by Janet Reno, caused the real estate collapse. The banks were actually using unemployment checks as collateral to take mortgages on new houses.
I usually love everything WLRN does, but the talking heads crushing on Flagler (“luxurious mustache”) was gross. He exploited cheap land and good weather to make money. Everything was about 💰bank and ego.
I was very interested in this video, however, the music was too distracting. I am planning on watching it with the transcript. Great information, interviews but unnecessary and annoying background music.
4:49….the guy says that Flagler looked like a tall Monopoly Man. I see that….but he really looks like Commander McBragg. If you’re younger than 50, you probably don’t know what I’m talking about. Google that name….you’ll be glad you did.
Thank you. He was afraid on the Timacuan Tribes and sold them off as Slaves in Cuba then brought in Seminole to work ,thats why they get reparations as they do....$18,000 month
This video's implication that amendments to Florida's environmental laws allowed irreparable damages to the environments is false. Counties and municipalities quickly enacted ordinances that filled those gaps. Florida is replete with ordinances, rules and regulations, including strictly enforced building codes regarding hurricanes, wetlands, drainage, and licensing contractors at every tier. Almost all serious environmental damages in Florida have been caused by federal projects, including Alligator Alley's needlessly impeding the southernly flow of water in the everglades.
My family has been in Miami since 1919. It was such a pleasure to hear Ralph Rennick's voice on TV again. Had brought back so many memories. I felt like it was 1962 again. Thank you for taking the time to make this documentary. I subscribed.
I was born in 1956 in Daytona Beach - a direct descendant of an original settler/ first Postmaster of Ormond Beach. Several years ago I toured Ponce De Leon Hotel - fantastic !
Nowhere else is the phrase "build it and they will come" more appropriate than in Florida.
Outstanding documentary, it helps me understand the nuance and idiosyncracy of Florida.
If you can find it, there is a book, fiction but factual, called Miami. Very interesting good read. I'm from Florida and know the book to be accurate. I had the paperback, don't know if there is a hardcover.
@@kathiefilkins445who is the author of this book?
Florida population increases every year as the populations of New York and California decrease every year. Florida is now the third largest state overtaking New York. The political leadership of the last 20-30 years in each state should explain the reason for these population trends.
Florida, destroyed by New Yorkers.
@@Pfsif .. AND, the "Everybody come on down", attitude of money-grubbing politicians 🤔
It doesn't, lol. It has nothing to do with political leadership.
It is sooo true in many political socio-economic ways 🎉
I was a third generation Miamian. I left in 1997 for many reasons!
I loved the waters be them lakes, rockpits, beaches or Biscayne bay. I knew that bay like the back of my hand, spending all my spare time at one place or another, but always with my dogs at my side! I knew where alligators were so I knew where and where not to let my dogs swim. (Alligators love to eat dogs!) Also, anyone with a brain knew not to feed gators cause that's what made them dangerous.
I lived threw hurricane Donna, Cleo, Betsy and the infamous Andrew!
That was the finale straw!
Between the poor growth planning, the Mariel Boat lift bringing around 125,000 Cubans and 25,000 Haitians arrive in Miami. A large percentage of the cubans Castro sent were hardened criminals he emptied his jails of and had mental health problems. The hatians, well, coming from such a poverty stricken country their acceptance of living in poor conditions followed them. All this poluting the beauty, landscape and saftey of Miami mostly affected the middle class and below. Crime and cocaine cowboys were everywhere, there was no where or way to escape it.
The beaches became noisy, dirty, and over run by plan rudness towards others just trying to enjoy their surroundings.
Then as Miami pushed out more and more towards the Everglades, alligators were put on the endangered list and coupled with ignorant people feeding them there was no body of water that didn't have an alligator in it making them dangerous to not only dogs, but to people as well! The fun was gone! It even became dangerous in the bay as weekend boat warriors didn't follow the rules!
I left in 1997, moved to Central GA and embraced my love of horses and exploring the woods! I now spend my spare time camping, embracing the beauty, serinity, and solitude of exploring the woods by horseback!
I do miss the Miami I grew up in, that's for sure. But, I don't miss the Miami I left.
Growing up in the 50s, 60s & 70s in Miami was magical. I love those memories and feel fortunate that I was able to grow up there during those times.
I also feel fortunate to have developed an equal love to where I am now and have a horse to carry me around making exploring easier in my older years!
Oh! And my dogs are there tagging along too!
We recently went thru Miami - just the traveling thru it was an absolute nightmare. You made a better move and life for yourself. The Miami today is not the one of course from yesterday- what city is/ but this rings most true in Florida now more than ever. The population is absolutely out of control there.
Henry Flagler should be given more importance in business history.. Flagler was visionary..
So was Julia Tuttle
Not one mention of the devastation of the many Hurricanes and how unaffordable and unavailable home insurance in Florida has become. The cost of a house didn't drive me out of Florida, but the cost of insurance did!
I blame low energy Jeb Bush for this. He allowed building material suppliers to rape and pillage, after the 04 hurricanes. Prices shot up from $150 a square to over $350 a square for roofs. I did claims adjusting in the Mobile Al area after Katrina in 05. Out there to remove and replace a roof was only $150, and that was one year later.
@@kevinyoung8651 The Busch family is the gift that kept on giving to America: ZERO climate change policy from GW Bush (and most things he did made everything worse) and then his little brother fucks up Florida, after Lawton Chiles did a great job leaving it a good state.
@@rsr789 great sarcasm there. Especially about Lawton Chiles leaving the state in great shape LOL.
Ya mon I almost bought in Pprt Charlotte and Port St. Lucie. Both since blown away by hurricane. Lucky me it was cheap to rent. cheers your point was well said 🍺🍺🍺
@@dannyboy8883 Port St Lucie was blown away by a hurricane? News to me. I've lived 5 miles north of Port St Lucie since 1982 and I didn't even know about that.
Florida wasn’t empty. There were native people here and they are still here.
Also Moors
As a native Floridian who left 35 years ago. This is a stunning documentary like I remembered in school.
Fantastic story very well told thank you!
In America , Mr Flagler seems the only visionary that developed so many towns, Palm Beach was his Crown Jewel. Mr Flagler it seems developed the modern day corporation and made Exxon into the company that is today along with Rockefeller. Mr Flagler was a passenger rail Lover, we had so much passenger rail in America during his time, his FEC railway is a important passenger rail line for Miami to Orlando. We so need more passenger rail in America
I lived on Miller Road and Galloway Ave in South Miami in the 50’s We farmed sugar cane, seed corn,lettuce and tomato’s. The Mackle Brothers built a project of houses at $7,900average. The Miami Herald and the Miami News basically denigrated the project “who would by a home for $7,900in a nowhere place!” Those houses now sell for $750,000 and up! The only problem was our property taxes and property value skyrocketed and had to sell as farming was out of the question! The closest public transportation was two miles away on Sunset Avenue and it ran four times a day to South Miami to connect to Downtown Miami and Coral Gables. Kendall Drive was known for its Public County Hospital and and the threat to kids of the Reform School if you did things wrong, now long gone! The quality of life for those raised in rural areas deteriorated with traffic, overcrowded services, higher prices! While no paradise it was an incredible life for a kid until I joined the Army in 1962. When I return four years latter everything had changed and not for the better from my point of view!
Great documentary---there is a weeklong tour from Miami airport to Key West, stopping at every key of interest. Even includes a boat ride to Dry Tortugas. It's run by Road Scholar---you learn everything about the vegetation, wildlife and human history of the Keys.
Interesting/informative/entertaining. Excellent still-motion photography pictures/maps/guest speakers. Enabling viewers to better understand what the orator is describing.
This was really great. Thanks for making it.
Thanks a lot!!! Great job! Really appreciate it
Loved the piece about the Indian Graves dug up and the skulls given away as souvenirs... lol
Although much older (and probably every bit as disrespectful), the same can be said of mummified remains being similarly sold off as souvenirs to wealthy collectors. I of course immediately think of the Egyptian kind, but the same can presumably be said of other cultures too.
@@davidglad
That has got to be one of the dumbest statements of all time, communicated instantly from the comforts of either heated or air conditioned safety.
I bet you think you're virtuous for doing so as well.
Do you think that Indians, Central Americans, SE Asians, Modern Day Egyptians, etc, etc, etc, gave a sh.t about their antiquities before the arrival of the Europeans?
Egyptian, Syrian, Judaic, antiquities had been raided for thousands of years before the ENGLISH primarily and French
documented every site all around the planet in the 1800's.
The Ottomans didn't give a s..t. nor the Mongols before them, nor the Arabs before them.
Antiquities is a Western Science and like it or not, it's because of the British that anybody knows anything, including you, you ungrateful person.
Ankor Wat was left to rot.
It's a poem. I just made it up. Remember it.
Life in Florida is great! 😊
Thanks for sharing.
The rate of decline will continue through 2040 in Florida..... 😂
I believe my home state of Florida as made a remarkable recovery.
Would’ve been lovely to hear more about the 20’s, 30’s and 40’s
Lived there for 27 years. Owned a business. Homes, family. Moved back North after watching the meltdown that I spoke about to many the previous 6 years. There was nothing holding it up...literally nothing. Now that it's hot, all the time, you can keep it. We did have 'seasons' for about 12 of the 27 years I lived there. Be prepared for a 400 plus dollar a month electric bill, crappy water and watch you home roast under the unrelenting Sun. Freedom ain't free and nothing in Florida is neither.
Totally. My family moved here in 95' and I was here until 2010 and then moved back in 2018... I remember growing up there was actually cooler weather for about three months, now? It's hot all of the time, traffic is horrifically worse, prices are insane, and the people suck in every way possible. I can't wait to leave this place again and never come back.
Don’t come back.
@@MondoMiami get a job
2023 and so far in 2024 it colder than i ever remember. It was low 40’s over night here in naples a few nights ago.
Lmao you lillylivered northerners arent wanted. Btw its plenty cool in winter. DONT COME BACK
It’s now time to restore train service to the Keys.
The Disney brothers would be shocked at what has happened with their once great company.
lol ok
Great history lesson.
Tourist turned Transplant here!🌴🌞🌞 DeSantis has done a fantastic job here!
Please go back. He's made this place a nightmare where everyone hates each other and we obsess over absolute nonsense.
IMHO the whole of Florida should have been classed as a National Park.
Gee how could governor and now senator Rick Scott not have seen what his deregulations would allow when hurricane Ivan visited last year.
Surprised Hemingway or the Summer White House weren't mentioned in Key West.
"Waterlogged bug infested wilderness" ( 1:40 ) is a good description of how these people must have seen it; they must have had no conception of respect for ecology. Just stuff in the way of hotels, logistical problems to be overcome.
Stop! We don’t need more people! We are in a housing crisis! The housing economy is a nightmare now. Rent has sky rocketed to the highest it’s ever been. $2000 to rent a one bedroom apartment. It’s price gouging at its worst and no one in the government is doing anything to stop the current crisis.
Yes. There must be a moratorium placed on building condos. Greedy builders and the stupid people running town building departments, keep approving building permits with inadequate roadways. Traffic is beyond horrendous and accidents and deaths are out of control. STOP BUILDING.
It ain't paradise if the locals cant afford to live there.
Timing is Everything!
Why do you have the Chicago waterworks in the opening scene of this video?
Les Stanford has his timing mixed up ~9:10.
While Flagler began investing in hotels and what-became-the-FEC Railroad in late 1880's, early 1990's,
One could not get on a train at Penn Station in NYC (and travel anywhere) until the station and connecting tunnels were complete c. 1910~1912.
I'd like to know who built all the hundreds of miles of canals throughout Florida.
Moors with White Christian slaves
For people always complaining about the rich, and tax the rich, blah, blah, blah. If it wasn't for the wealthy visionaries; hotels, towns, cities, and states would not be what they are today. Thank God for their vision and plans, they brought us a living. - Pappy
Unbelievable how gloomy and wrong all of the real estate predictions and economic speculation is for the State of Florida at the end of the show
And not one word of how the marxist policies of the Clinton administration,forced on the banks by Janet Reno, caused the real estate collapse. The banks were actually using unemployment checks as collateral to take mortgages on new houses.
This was made in 2012, he said it would be “decades” for Florida to get back to pre recession levels of employment, it happened in 5 years.
A small-minded documentary how Florida was destroyed... First 22 minutes were good and really interesting, but that was it.
I usually love everything WLRN does, but the talking heads crushing on Flagler (“luxurious mustache”) was gross. He exploited cheap land and good weather to make money. Everything was about 💰bank and ego.
How is it possible to build a building like this in such deplorable conditions with no infrastructure of any kind?
Per Flagler's son, Harry, Ida never was Mary's nurse.
senseless after 40:00 - Not bad up to that point
Passenger railroad dreams never die, but reality persists.
"They are back"
I was very interested in this video, however, the music was too distracting. I am planning on watching it with the transcript. Great information, interviews but unnecessary and annoying background music.
Florida: God’s waiting room
Not anymore. That's more the Midwest now. With all the meth addicts one hit away from God.
@@LynxStarAuto go fentanyl!!! Let the trash take itself out.
Now its booming again
4:49….the guy says that Flagler looked like a tall Monopoly Man. I see that….but he really looks like Commander McBragg. If you’re younger than 50, you probably don’t know what I’m talking about. Google that name….you’ll be glad you did.
Wonderful
I thought I knew alot about Flager and FL.
Very interesting
Is the monopoly guy is JP.Morgan
Where are the Rich who want to innovate and help mankind
I meant to tell you to share this with Richard
Modern Florida is nothing to be proud of, long live florida man.
I would love to buy a home in Florida but thanks to biden I CANNOT afford it !!!!!!!!!!!!
don't blame Biden. blame your neighbors that voted him in. it's funny that you can't seem to find them now.
Yes, it's all that damn Joe Biden's fault. Couldn't be anyone else's, lol.
I got you....
Florida used to be beautiful until Flagler rode his train into town.
Thank you. He was afraid on the Timacuan Tribes and sold them off as Slaves in Cuba then brought in Seminole to work ,thats why they get reparations as they do....$18,000 month
@@LowTideLowLife Sure he did, 30 years after the Civil War. Just secretly sold slaves to Cuba and nobody said anything. SMH.
*Look at where we ARE. Xat
Florida ma.nnnnnnn.nnnnnnnnn
This video's implication that amendments to Florida's environmental laws allowed irreparable damages to the environments is false. Counties and municipalities quickly enacted ordinances that filled those gaps. Florida is replete with ordinances, rules and regulations, including strictly enforced building codes regarding hurricanes, wetlands, drainage, and licensing contractors at every tier. Almost all serious environmental damages in Florida have been caused by federal projects, including Alligator Alley's needlessly impeding the southernly flow of water in the everglades.
📯🕒⏳⌛; sinkhole state
Da Rockafellers... Hail Caesar! en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesarea