Our last post (did you notice the use of the royal plural?) was entitled
'Tiger's Tale' and since this one is 'Tiger Tail', you can tell it's
completely different. Actually, it's still on the theme of North Miami
and now I'm going to annoy you with history and geography. Sorry.
There's a point made later.
Ah, North Miami. Although formally
established under this name in 1926, Europeans have been living in the
Arch Creek area since 1858. That's a long time in 'Miami years'. To the
rest of the country, that's like the sixteenth century.
Dade
County's first major road to the outside world was the 'Military Trail'
and it ran right through the eastern part of North Miami. It can be
traced from what is now Biscayne Boulevard right through Arch Creek Park
where the Natural Bridge was and down NE 16th. Avenue to rejoin with
Biscayne Boulevard. In south Florida, the Military Trail ran through
Fort Pierce and Fort Lauderdale to Fort Dallas (later renamed 'Miami').
The purpose of the road was to move troops during the Seminole Wars.
There
were three so-called 'Seminole Wars' but they actually involved many
different tribes in addition to the Seminoles. During the Second
Seminole War which ended in 1842 one of the lead strategists was Thlocko Tustenuggee who wore a Florida panther tail on his waist and went by the respected name Tiger Tail. Tiger Tail lived around Tallahassee and is not known to have ever been to the Miami area. But his legend made it there along with some namesakes.
There
was a warrior in the Third Seminole War (which ended in 1858) who was
also known as Tiger Tail. He is referred to as Old Tiger Tail or Big
Tiger Tail and he had a younger relative called Young Tiger Tail or
Little Tiger Tail.
The younger man may have been his son or
nephew. More likely a nephew, actually, since the matrilineal Indian
culture had sons follow their mother's clan not their father's.
Consequently, men in Old Tiger Tail's clan would be the sons of his
sisters - his nephews.Now
before I tie this huge mess together, I have to bring in the geography
part. South Florida exists as we know it because of a thin ridge of
limestone that runs down the southeast coast. The Military Trail
followed this narrow limestone ridge and was used later to be developed
into Dixie Highway which was later expanded and developed into US 1 -
Biscayne Boulevard.
This limestone ridge forms the eastern edge
of a huge, wide river that runs from Lake Okeechobee south to the ocean.
That river is the Everglades. Most of what is Dade County now used to
be a part of the Everglades and in the rainy season it was underwater.
Underwater as in 'swamp'. This map from 1888 shows the Everglades almost
to the coast.
From downtown Miami north to the Broward County
line, there were only a few breaks in that thin limestone ridge: The
Miami River, Little River, Snake Creek (then Snake River), Arch Creek
and the Oleta River. If not for the modern day extensive range of canals
and man-made lakes, Dade County would still be mostly swamp today.During
the rainy season, Old Tiger Tail, Little Tiger Tail and the other
Seminoles, Miccosukees, Tequestas and other tribes lived on the islands
in this swamp and moved around the landscape in their canoes. They
camped on these 'islands' and the camps were identified when the
mapmakers hit south Florida. One of those island camps was located on
what we would now call North Miami.
On
this map from 1890, three Indian towns are clearly identified. Tigers
Tail Town named for Old Tiger Tail, Aleck Town (yes, 'Aleck') named for
another warrior named Old Alec, and Little Tigers Town named for Little
Tiger Tail. Tigers Tail Town and Aleck Town were around where Arch Creek
Park is now and Little Tigers Town appeared in the area between
downtown North Miami and William Jennings Bryan Elementary School.
By
1917, four major canals had been cut to allow the land to dry out and
be habitable. The Biscayne Canal drained most of what is North Miami
now.
And what's the point of all this then? You can't ever know
yourself and the land where you live without discovering what was there
before. That's the point!
Now, go out and study something. ;->
2 comments:
-
Nice work Rich!!
-
Very interesting!








