MIAMI
CIRCLE
In January, 1999, when no one thought it possible, Dade Heritage
Trust launched a campaign to save the mysterious 2000-year-old
Miami Circle --located on 2.2 acres of prime Downtown real estate
where the Miami River met Biscayne Bay-- from being demolished
for a highrise development. Thirty-eight feet in diameter, the
Circle was carved four feet deep into the limestone bedrock and
was probably used for ceremonial purposes. As the only cut stone
formation of its kind found in the U.S. , it aroused international
interest. DHT’s efforts to save the Circle from oblivion
included legal action, community education, press releases, TV
appearances, grassroots advocacy and fundraising. Vast amounts
of media coverage and political persuasion-- and scientific testing
provided by funding DHT secured --- finally led to a settlement
with the developer for $26.7 million. The State of Florida allocated
$15 million in CARL funds for acquisition, Miami-Dade County allocated
$3 million from Safe Neighborhood Parks Bond funds, private donors
contributed, and the Trust for Public Land loaned the County $8.7
million. DHT Executive Director Becky Roper Matkov and DHT Past
President Enid Pinkney, who both fought to save the Circle, now
serve on the State Circle Planning Committee to develop the interpretation
of this symbolically powerful historic place.
OLD MIAMI
HIGH SCHOOL
The very first Miami High School , a 1905 bungalow-style structure,
was going to be demolished for a high-rise development, but thanks
to a coalition of Dade Heritage Trust, the City of Miami and the
Miami High Alumni, the owner agreed to donate the structure to
the City of Miami for public use. After months of planning, fundraising
and negotiating, the Old Miami High was relocated three blocks
away to Southside Park on January 18, 2003 . There it will be used
as a community center, serving a fast-growing neighborhood that
needs additional resources badly.
The developer, Kevin Reilly of KV Brickell Partners, Ltd., donated
$35,000 towards the relocation, DHT and the Miami High Alumni raised
$41,000 for the project, and the City of Miami allocated $350,000
for the restoration. DHT secured a $350,000 State Special Category
grant and Miami-Dade County General Obligation Bond funding to
complete the restoration. When fully restored, Old Miami
High will once again be a resource for school children and the
general public.
HUBBARD-ALVAREZ
BUNGALOW
A house in Little Havana, considered by many to be the best example
of a Belvedere Bungalow in the City of Miami , was saved from the
bulldozer by Dade Heritage Trust, which used its Preservation Revolving
Fund to purchase the building in August, 2003.
Located near the Orange Bowl, at 138 NW l6th Avenue, the J. Jacob
Hubbard house had been built circa 1921 in the Lawrence Estate
Land Company Subdivision. It was home to Rolando and Mercedes Alvarez
for the last 40 years. They had raised their family there, and
still enjoyed sitting in the rocking chairs on the breezy front
porch with its oolitic limestone piers. Health problems and a desire
to live near their daughter in Orlando , however, made a developer’s
offer to buy the property, demolish the house and construct an
apartment building sound attractive.
Bungalows, a common architectural style from 1914 through 1920,
are now fast vanishing in Miami , with DHT listing them on its “Most
Endangered Historic Sites List.”
This particular bungalow, with its wood shingles, intersecting
gabled roof planes, wide overhanging eaves, decorative timbers,
Prairie style casement windows, and a second-story belvedere, is
extraordinary in that it has been changed so little. When DHT Executive
Director Becky Roper Matkov learned that it was imperiled at a
City Historic and Environmental Preservation Board meeting, DHT’s
Board decided to act. Empowered with a Preservation Revolving Fund,
established with support from Miami-Dade County , DHT was able
to purchase the house and save it from destruction. DHT secured
partial funding from the Miami-Dade County General Obligation Bond
and is currently seeking additional funding to completely restore
the house as a demonstration project to instruct and inspire others
to treasure and preserve their own historic homes and buildings.
HISTORIC
MIAMI CITY CEMETERY
Since 1996, Dade Heritage Trust has
worked to secure, preserve, and beautify the historic Miami City
Cemetery, final resting place of Julia Tuttle, the "mother
of Miami," and many early pioneer families, both black and
white, Christian and Jewish. Thanks to Dade Heritage Trust's
Cemetery Task Force, an attractive security fence has been installed
and hundreds of flowering trees have been planted. An annual
Cemetery Commemorative Service, organized by DHT's African American
Committee, features a procession led by a marching band and is
a multi-cultural highlight of Dade Heritage Days.
RESTORATION
AND RE-LIGHTING OF THE 1825 CAPE FLORIDA LIGHTHOUSE ON KEY BISCAYNE
Dade Heritage Trust raised and administered
over $900,000 in grants and private donations for this ambitious
undertaking, which involved thousands of volunteer hours. This
massive project was done in cooperation with the Florida Department
of Environmental Protection, Division of Recreation and Parks.
The Lighthouse Restoration culminated with a Gala Re-Lighting
Ceremony in July 1996, capping Miami's Centennial Celebration.
PRESERVATION
OF THE OFFICE OF DR. JAMES M. JACKSON
Built in 1905 as an office and surgery
for the pioneer Doctor Jackson, this wood frame structure was
moved to its present location in 1917. Listed on the National
Register of Historic Places, it was restored by Dade Heritage
Trust in 1976 and is maintained by the organization as its headquarters.
HURRICANE
RESTORATION OF HISTORIC PROPERTIES
Dade Heritage Trust administered over
$2,000,000 in federal, state, and foundation funds to rehabilitate
and restore a multitude of Dade County historic properties damaged
by Hurricane Andrew.
PRESERVATION
AND RELOCATION OF THE 1858 WAGNER HOMESTEAD, DADE COUNTY’S
OLDEST HOUSE, TO LUMMUS PARK
Ongoing efforts include securing the
park as an educational and cultural heritage site and revitalizing
the adjoining neighborhoods along the historic Miami River. |