Gilded
Age industrialist Henry Flagler knew a thing or two about tourism; he’s a big
reason why St Augustine, West Palm Beach and Miami are the major destinations
they are today. In fact, most of Florida owes its modern existence to the great
railroad baron, who opened the route south from Jacksonville with his visionary
East Coast Railway in the 1880s and built the first hotels that would
eventually attract a wealthy clientele.
It makes sense, then, that the Sunshine State’s next big attraction will be a high-speed railway that mimics much of what Flagler pioneered more than 120 years ago.
High-speed rail in the US has a chequered history, with more false starts than a nervous sprinter. Plans have been in place for a national high-speed rail network since 1965, but to this day only the 150mph Acela Express from Boston to Washington DC fits that particular bill. California has committed to an intra-state line that will link its major cities, but don’t hold your breath. The tentative completion date is 2029.It makes sense, then, that the Sunshine State’s next big attraction will be a high-speed railway that mimics much of what Flagler pioneered more than 120 years ago.
All Aboard Florida’s Brightlineservice, on the other hand, is set to open in 2017. Starting at Orlando International Airport, the train – reaching top speeds of 120mph – will head east to the coast, and then pick up Flagler’s original route south, stopping in West Palm Beach and Fort Lauderdale before breezing into the city that was almost named “Flagler”, before Henry insisted it take its title from the original Native American settlers, the Myaamiaki, or Miami Indians.
Trains will run 16 times a day in each direction, taking around three hours – considerably quicker than their predecessors – and offering the latest on-board creature comforts, including wi-fi, full dining service and plenty of luggage storage. It could also take as many as three million cars off the four-hour-long Orlando-to-Miami drive.
It is a bold vision for the Sunshine State, with the southeast’s leading railroad historian, professor Seth Bramson, insisting: “It is an incredible initiative that will put billions of dollars into state infrastructure and hundreds of millions into the state treasury. And it is all being done in the tradition of the single most important name in the history of the state.”The historical side of things began in St Augustine, where Flagler arrived in 1883 and discovered a tourist diamond in the rough, a glittering beach resort area lacking only the glitter, which Flagler promptly supplied in the form of Hotel Ponce de Leon, a 540-room Spanish Renaissance marvel of the age, and its sister property, the Hotel Alcazar.
Today, the Ponce de Leon is the centrepiece of artsy Flagler College, while the Alcazar has become the Lightner Museum, a treasure trove of American Gilded Age antiquities. Another of Flagler’s great edifices, the Casa Monica – which he bought in 1888 – remains a bastion of period grace as one of the oldest hotels in the country
From St Augustine, Flagler built steadily south, creating his Florida East Coast railway as a gateway for the rich and famous. He acquired the Hotel Ormond just north of Daytona – demolished in 1992 to make way for a condo building – and kept going, chalking up settlements like New Smyrna and Titusville along the Indian River, where manatees and dolphins amused his customers and are still the subject of wildlife cruises today.
The town of Cocoa, just south of Titusville, is also where old meets new
for Brightline, with its all-new 40-mile stretch of line from Orlando meeting
the original route laid down by Flagler’s men. Heading south, riders will have
the same gorgeous coastal views that the “Tycoon in Paradise” (as Flagler was
dubbed by the media of the day) afforded his customers for the journey south to
West Palm Beach, America’s first purpose-built tourist resort after he arrived
in 1894.
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Nearby, Henry’s stunning 55-room mansion, Whitehall, has been converted
into the ultimate look into his life and times as the Flagler Museum.
When it was completed in 1902, at a cost of $2m – the equivalent of almost $2bn
today – Whitehall was hailed by the New York Herald as “more wonderful than any
palace in Europe, grander and more magnificent than any private dwelling in the
world”. And it maintains much of that splendour today.
The story of Flagler and his groundbreaking railway culminated in 1912
with the epic extension to Key West, which is widely considered to be the
greatest rail construction feat in US history. An engineering marvel to rival
the Panama Canal, its 127-mile extent of bridges and railbeds through the
Florida Keys –then just a chain of unlinked islands scattered in the rough
direction of Cuba – was dubbed “the Eighth Wonder of the World”, and finally
opened the whole of the state to a tourist boom that has never ceased.
The Florida East Coast railway itself eventually managed to emerge from
insolvency and passengers continued to pour into the state until the slow,
motor-car induced decline of the railways finally caught up with the company
and the passenger services were discontinued in 1968. More prosaic but more
profitable, cargo and goods have been the railroad’s stock in trade ever since.
The ponderous Amtrak service continues to offer passenger options into South
Florida, but using a slower, inland route rather than Flagler’s historic track.
When the first Brightline trains roll in from Orlando next year, it will
revive an era of east coast glamour and style not seen since the Gilded Age
itself. It’s the perfect way to salute one of the great American pioneers,
offering a journey that’s as back to the future as they come.
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