This lighthouse has significant meaning to me. My grandfather was a painter who would come down from Connecticut to visit South Florida. Although I never met him, I grew up appreciating his paintings in our house. One of my favorite paintings was of this lighthouse. Although I grew up in Texas, my parents met in Miami and would talk fondly of Key Biscayne. It brought me great joy to come to this lighthouse and capture its beauty as seen today. And while this lighthouse has much family history, it has great history in Florida as well!
Ponce de Leon named this area 'Cape of Florida' when he led the first Spanish expedition to Florida in 1513.
The Cape Florida lighthouse was completed in 1825 but was damaged during the Second Seminole War. The rebuilt tower, completed in 1846, remains the oldest standing structure in Miami-Dade County.
On hearing of the massacre, the settlers on the mainland around the Miami River crossed over Biscayne Bay to the lighthouse. As the island was not considered safe, the settlers and Captain Dubose's family moved to Key West for refuge.
Later in January, Lt. George M. Bache, U.S. Navy, arrived from Key West with a small work party to fortify the lighthouse tower; they boarded up the ground floor windows and reinforced the door. On July 18, 1836, Captain Dubose went to visit his family in Key West. The assistant keeper, John W. B. Thompson, was in charge, aided by Aaron Carter, an African American.[9][10]
Five days later, on July 23, 1836, a band of Seminole attacked the lighthouse. Thompson and Carter reached the lighthouse tower; Thompson later recounted feeling rifle balls go through his clothes and hat. The Seminoles grabbed the door just after he turned the key to lock it. Thompson exchanged rifle fire with the Seminoles from upper windows in the tower for the rest of the day but after dark, the raiders approached the tower, setting fire to the door and a boarded-up window at ground level. Rifle balls had penetrated tanks in the bottom of the tower, which held 225 gallons of lamp oil for the light, and the oil caught fire. Thompson's clothing had been soaked with oil, and he and Carter retreated to the top of the tower, taking a keg of gunpowder, balls, and a rifle with them. The two men cut away a part of the wooden stairway below them in the tower before being driven out of the top by the searing flames.
The fire flaming up the interior was so bad that Thompson and Carter had to leave the lantern area at the top and lie down on the 2-foot-wide (0.61 m) tower platform that ran around the outside of the lantern. Thompson's clothes were burning, and both he and Carter had been wounded by the Seminoles' rifle shots. The lighthouse lens and the glass panes of the lantern shattered from the heat. Sure that he was going to die and wanting a quick end, Thompson threw the gunpowder keg down the inside of the tower. The keg exploded, but did not topple the tower. It dampened the fire briefly, but the flames soon returned as fierce as ever before dying down. Thompson found that Carter had died from his wounds and the fire.
The next day Thompson saw the Seminoles looting and burning the other buildings at the lighthouse station. They apparently thought that Thompson was dead, as they had stopped firing at him. After the Seminoles left, Thompson was trapped at the top of the tower. He had three rifle balls in each foot, and the stairway in the tower had been burned away. Later that day he saw an approaching ship. The United States NavyschoonerMotto had heard the explosion of the gunpowder keg from twelve miles (19 km or 22 km)[a] away and had come to investigate. The men from the ship were surprised to find Thompson alive. Unable to get him down from the tower, they returned to their ship for the night. The next day the men from the Motto returned, along with men from the schooner Pee Dee. They fired a ramrod tied to a small line up to Thompson, and used it to haul up a rope strong enough to lift two men to the top, who could get the wounded man down. Thompson was taken first to Key West, and then to Charleston, South Carolina, to recover from his wounds.[11] The Cape Florida Light was extinguished from 1836 to 1846.
The island served as a secret meeting place and port for fugitive slaves and Black Seminoles waiting to rendezvous with sea captains or board dugouts for a passage to safety in the British Bahamas.
Although the lighthouse was built to save lives and ships, its unflinching light brought an end to this avenue of escape.
In September 2004, Cape Florida was designated a National Underground Railroad Network to Freedom Site.
Visualize the picturesque scene of the Cape Florida Lighthouse basking in the radiant sunlight under a cloudless, clear blue sky in Key Biscayne, Miami, Florida. Imagine the details:
The iconic Cape Florida Lighthouse stands tall against the azure sky, its classic white tower and black lantern contrasting vividly against the brilliance of the day. The architectural details are accentuated by the unobstructed backdrop, creating a timeless and elegant silhouette.
Surrounding the lighthouse, two stately palm trees sway gently in the coastal breeze. Their fronds frame the lighthouse, adding a touch of tropical charm to the scene. The palm trees stand as sentinels, enhancing the coastal ambiance of Key Biscayne.
The sunlight bathes the entire scene in a warm and golden glow, casting soft shadows on the ground. The combination of the lighthouse, palm trees, and the radiant blue sky creates a postcard-perfect image of a South Florida day.
The air is filled with a sense of tranquility and coastal serenity. Whether viewed from the nearby shores or afar, this image encapsulates the allure of Key Biscayne, where maritime history meets tropical beauty under the expansive, clear skies of Miami.
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