| Florida State Guide
Florida is a state located in the southeastern United
States. Most of the state is a large peninsula with the Gulf of Mexico
on its west and the Atlantic Ocean on its east. It has a warm and humid
subtropical climate. It was named by Juan Ponce de León, who landed
on the coast on April 2, 1513, during Pascua Florida (Spanish for "Flowery
Easter," referring to the Easter season). Florida's economy relies
heavily on tourism.
Florida State Guide - Geography
Florida is situated mostly on a large peninsula between
the Gulf of Mexico, the Atlantic Ocean, and the Straits of Florida. It
extends to the northwest into a panhandle, extending along the northern
Gulf of Mexico. It is bordered on the north by the states of Georgia
and Alabama, and on the west, at the end of the panhandle, by Alabama.
It is near the countries of the Caribbean, particularly the Bahamas and
Cuba.
At 345 feet (105 m) above mean sea level, Britton Hill is the highest
point in Florida and the lowest highpoint of any U.S. state. Contrary
to popular belief, however, Florida is not entirely "flat." Some
places, such as Clearwater, feature vistas that rise 50 to 100 feet (15–30
m) above the water. Much of the interior of Florida, typically 25 miles
(40 km) or more away from the coastline, features rolling hills with
elevations ranging from 100 to 250 feet (30–76 m) in many locations.
Lake County holds the highest point of peninsular Florida, Sugarloaf
Mountain, at 312 feet (95 m).
Areas under control by the National Park Service include:
* Big Cypress National Preserve, near Lake Okeechobee
* Biscayne National Park, near Key Biscayne
* Canaveral National Seashore, near Titusville
* Castillo de San Marcos National Monument, in St. Augustine
* De Soto National Memorial, in Bradenton
* Dry Tortugas National Park, at Key West
* Everglades National Park
* Fort Caroline National Memorial, at Jacksonville
* Fort Matanzas National Monument, in St. Augustine
* Gulf Islands National Seashore, near Gulf Breeze
* Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve, in Jacksonville
Areas under the control of the USDA United States Forest Service include:
* Apalachicola National Forest along the east bank of the Apalachicola
River,
* Choctawhatchee National Forest near Niceville,
* Ocala National Forest in Central Florida, and
* Osceola National Forest in Northeast Florida.
Florida State Guide - Boundaries
The state line begins in the Atlantic Ocean, traveling
west, south, and north up the thalweg of the Saint Mary's River. At the
origin of that river, it then follows a straight line nearly due west
and slightly north, to the point where the confluence of the Flint River
(from Georgia) and the Chattahoochee River (down the Alabama/Georgia
line) used to form Florida's Apalachicola River. (Since Woodruff Dam
was built, this point has been under Lake Seminole.) The border with
Georgia continues north through the lake for a short distance up the
former thalweg of the Chattahoochee, then with Alabama runs due west
along latitude 31°N to the Perdido River, then south along its thalweg
to the Gulf via Perdido Bay.
Florida State Guide - Climate
The climate of Florida is tempered somewhat by its proximity
to water. Most of the state has a humid subtropical climate, except for
the southern tip which borders on tropical and the Florida Keys which
have a true tropical climate. Cold fronts can occasionally bring high
winds and cool to cold temperatures to the entire state during late fall
and winter. One such front swept through the peninsula on November 25,
1996, bringing cold temperatures and winds up to 95 miles per hour (150
km/h), knocking out power to thousands and damaging mobile homes. The
seasons in Florida are actually determined more by precipitation than
by temperature with mild to cool, relatively dry winters and autumns
(the dry season) and hot, wet springs and summers (the wet season). The
Gulf Stream has a moderating effect on the climate, and although much
of Florida commonly sees a high summer temperature over 90 degrees Fahrenheit
(32 °C), the mercury seldom exceeds 100 degrees Fahrenheit (39 °C).
The hottest temperature ever recorded in the state was 109 °F (43 °C),
set on June 29, 1931 in Monticello. The coldest was –2°F (-19 °C),
on February 13, 1899, just 25 miles (40 km) away, in Tallahassee. Mean
high temperatures for late July are primarily in the low 90s Fahrenheit
(32–35 °C). Mean low temperatures for late January range from
the low 40s Fahrenheit (4–7 °C) in northern Florida to the
mid-50s ( ˜13 °C) in southern Florida.
The Florida Keys, being surrounded by water, have a more tropical climate,
with lesser variability in temperatures. At Key West, temperatures rarely
exceed 90 °F in the summer or fall below 60 °F in the winter, and
frost has never been reported in the Keys.
Florida's nickname is the "Sunshine State," but severe weather
is a common occurrence in the state. Central Florida is known as the lightning
capital of the United States, as it experiences more lightning strikes than
anywhere else in the country. Florida has the highest average precipitation
of any state, in large part because afternoon thunderstorms are common in
most of the state from late spring until early autumn. A fair day may be
interrupted with a storm, only to return to sunshine. These thunderstorms,
caused by collisions between airflow from the Gulf of Mexico and airflow
from the Atlantic Ocean, pop up in the early afternoon and can bring heavy
downpours, high winds, and sometimes tornadoes. Florida leads the United
States in tornadoes per square mile, but these tornadoes do not typically
reach the intensity of those in the Midwest and Great Plains. Hail often
accompanies the most severe thunderstorms.
Snow is a rare occurrence in Florida. During the Great Blizzard of 1899,
Florida experienced blizzard conditions. During that time, the Tampa Bay
Area had "gulf-effect" snow, similar to lake-effect snow.[citation
needed] The Great Blizzard of 1899 is the only time the temperature in the
state is known to have fallen below 0 degrees Fahrenheit (-18 °C). The
most widespread snowfall in Florida history happened in February 1978, when
snow fell over much of the state in different times of the month, as far
south as Homestead. Snow flurries fell on Miami Beach for the only time
in recorded history. 1982's "Cold Sunday," which saw freezing
conditions throughout much of the country, ruined that year's orange crops.
In 1989, a severe hard freeze created lots of ice and also caused minor
flurries in sections of the state and resulted in rolling blackouts from
power failures caused by massive demands on the power grid for heating.
A hard freeze in 2003 brought "ocean-effect" snow flurries to
the Atlantic coast as far south as Cape Canaveral.
The 1993 Superstorm brought blizzard conditions to the panhandle, while
heavy rain and tornadoes beset the peninsula. The storm is believed to have
been similar in composition to a hurricane, and even brought storm surges
of six feet or more to regions of the Gulf coast.
Although some storms have formed out of season, hurricanes pose a threat
during hurricane season, which lasts from June 1 to November 30. Florida
saw a slew of destruction in 2004, when it was hit by a record four hurricanes.
Hurricanes Charley (August 13), Frances (September 4–5), Ivan (September
16), and Jeanne (September 25–26) cumulatively cost the state's economy
US$42 billion. In 2005, Hurricane Dennis (July 10) became the fifth storm
to strike Florida within eleven months. Later, Hurricane Katrina (August
25) passed through South Florida and Hurricane Rita (September 20) swept
through the Florida Keys. Hurricane Wilma made landfall in Florida in the
early morning of October 24 as a Category 3 hurricane, with the storm's
eye hitting near Cape Romano, just south of Marco Island, according to the
National Hurricane Center.
Florida was the site of the second costliest weather disaster in U.S. history,
Hurricane Andrew, which caused more than US$25 billion in damage when it
struck on August 24, 1992. In a long list of other infamous hurricane strikes
are the 1926 Great Miami Hurricane, the Lake Okeechobee Hurricane of 1928,
the Labor Day Hurricane of 1935, Hurricane Donna in 1960, and Hurricane
Opal in 1995.
Florida State Guide - History
Archaeological finds indicate that Florida had been
inhabited for thousands of years before any European settlements.
Of the many indigenous people, the largest known were the Ais,
the Apalachee, the Calusa, the Timucua and the Tocobago tribes.
Juan Ponce de
León,
a Spanish conquistador, named Florida in honor of his discovery
of the land on April 2, 1513, during Pascua Florida, a Spanish
term for the
Easter season. From that date forward, the land became known as "La
Florida." (Juan Ponce de León may not have been the first
European to reach Florida. At least one Indian that he encountered
in Florida in 1513 could speak Spanish. Alternatively, the Spanish-speaking
Indian could have been in contact with areas where Spanish settlements
already existed, and Ponce de Le ón
was indeed the discoverer).
Over the following century, both the Spanish and French established
settlements in Florida, with varying degrees of success. In 1559, Spanish
Pensacola was established by Don Tristán de Luna y Arellano as
the first European settlement in the continental United States, but it
had become abandoned by 1561 and would not be reinhabited until the 1690s.
French Huguenots founded Fort Caroline in modern-day Jacksonville in
1564, but this fort was conquered by forces from the new Spanish colony
of St. Augustine the following year. After Huguenot leader Jean Ribault
had learned of the new Spanish threat, he launched an expedition to sack
the Spanish settlement; en route, however, severe storms at sea waylaid
the expedition, which consisted of most of the colony's men, allowing
St. Augustine founder Pedro Menéndez de Avilés time to
march his men over land and conquer Fort Caroline. Most of the Huguenots
were slaughtered, and Menéndez de Avilés marched south
and captured the survivors of the wrecked French fleet, ordering all
but a few Catholics executed beside a river subsequently called Matanzas
(Spanish for 'killings'). St. Augustine came to serve as the capitals
of the British and Spanish colonies of East and West Florida, respectively.
The Spanish never had a firm hold on Florida, and maintained tenuous
control over the region by converting the local tribes, briefly with
Jesuits and later with Franciscan friars. The local leaders (caciques)
demonstrated their loyalty to the Spanish by converting to Roman Catholicism
and welcoming the Franciscan priests into their villages.
The area of Spanish Florida diminished with the establishment of English
colonies to the north and French colonies to the west. The English weakened
Spanish power in the area by supplying their Creek Indian allies with
firearms and urging them to raid the Timucuan and Apalachee client-tribes
of the Spanish. The English attacked St. Augustine, burning the city
and its cathedral to the ground several times, while the citizens hid
behind the walls of the Castillo de San Marcos. The Spanish, meanwhile,
encouraged slaves to flee the English-held Carolinas and come to Florida,
where they were converted to Roman Catholicism and given freedom. They
settled in a buffer community north of St. Augustine, called Gracie Real
de Santa Teresa de Mose, the first completely black settlement in what
would become the United States. Great Britain gained control of Florida
diplomatically in 1763 through the Peace of Paris (the Castillo de San
Marcos surrendered for the first time, having never been taken militarily).
Britain tried to develop Florida through the importation of immigrants
for labor, including some from Minorca and Greece, but this project ultimately
failed. Spain regained Florida after Britain's defeat by the American
colonies and the Treaty of Paris, in 1783. Finally, in 1819, by terms
of the Adams-Onís Treaty, Spain ceded Florida to the United States
in exchange for the American renunciation of any claims on Texas. On
March 3, 1845, Florida became the 27th state of the United States of
America. On January 10, 1861, before the formal outbreak of the Civil
War, Florida seceded from the Union; ten days later, the state became
a founding member of the Confederate States of America. The war ended
in 1865. On June 25, 1868, Florida's congressional representation was
restored. Until the mid-twentieth century, Florida was the least populous
Southern state; however, the local climate, tempered by the growing availability
of air conditioning, made the state a haven, and migration from the Rust
Belt and the Northeast sharply increased the population. Economic prosperity
combined with Florida's sudden elevation in profile led to the Florida
land boom of the 1920s, which brought a brief period of intense land
development before the Great Depression brought it all to a halt. Florida's
economy would not fully recover until World War II. Today, Florida is
the most populous state in the South besides Texas, and the fourth most
populous in the United States.
Florida State Guide - Government
The basic structure, duties, function, and operations
of the government of the State of Florida are defined and established
by the Florida Constitution, which establishes the basic law of the state
and guarantees various rights and freedoms of the people. The state government
consists of three separate branches: judicial, executive, and legislative.
The legislature enacts bills, which, if signed by the governor, become
Florida Statutes.
The Florida Legislature is comprised of the Florida Senate, which has
40 members, and the Florida House of Representatives, which has 120 members.
The current Governor of Florida is Republican Jeb Bush, brother of U.S.
President George W. Bush and son of former U.S. President George H. W.
Bush. The Florida Supreme Court consists of a Chief Justice and six Justices.
Florida was traditionally a Democratic Party state; at one time, 68.5
percent of all Floridians were registered Democrats. In the last decades
of the twentieth century, the realignment of the "Solid South" has
led many conservative Democrats of Florida to vote with the Republican
Party. This tendency, combined with explosive population growth, which
has brought many Republicans into the state, has given Florida a Republican
edge in practice. As a result, Republicans control the governorship and
most other statewide elective offices: both houses of the state legislature,
18 of the state's 25 seats in the House of Representatives, and one of
the state's two Senate seats. The disputed 2000 Presidential election
in Florida was extremely close. Because of the state's population and
number of electoral votes, political analysts consider it to be a key
swing state in presidential elections. The Tampa area, once a major center
of Democratic union support, is now almost evenly split between registered
Republicans and Democrats, making it part of the important I-4 Corridor
swing region.
Florida State Guide - Economy
The gross state product of Florida in 2005 was $596
billion. Personal income was $30,098 per capita, ranking 26th in the
nation.
Florida's economy relies heavily on tourism. About 60 million visitors
visit the state every year. Warm weather and hundreds of miles of beach
attract vacationers from around the world. The Walt Disney World Resort,
a mega-resort consisting of four theme parks, more than twenty hotels,
water parks, shopping centers, and other attractions, is an important
tourist attraction located in Lake Buena Vista. Together, Walt Disney
World, and other theme park resorts such as Universal Orlando Resort
and SeaWorld, are an important driver of the Central Florida economy.
Other major industries include citrus fruit and juice production, banking,
and phosphate mining within the Bone Valley region. With the arrival
of the space program at Kennedy Space Center in the 1960s, Florida has
developed a sizeable aerospace industry. The state did not have a state
minimum wage law until November 2, 2004, when voters passed a constitutional
amendment establishing a state minimum wage and mandating that it be
adjusted for inflation every six months.
Historically, Florida's economy was based upon cattle farming and agriculture
(especially sugarcane, citrus, tomatoes, and strawberries). In the early
1900, land speculators discovered Florida, and Plant and Henry Flagler
developed railway systems, which led people to move in, drawn by the
weather and local economies. From then on, tourism boomed, fueling a
cycle of development and tourism that overwhelmed a great deal of farmland.
In 2004 and 2005, key industries along the west coast—commercial
fishing and water-based tourist activities (sports fishing and diving)—were
threatened by outbreaks of red tide, a discoloration of seawater caused
by an efflorescence of toxin-producing dinoflagellates.
Florida is one of the nine states that do not impose a personal income
tax (list of others). The state imposes a tax on "intangible personal
property" (stocks, bonds, mutual funds, money market funds, etc.),
but this tax will be abolished in 2007. The state sales tax rate is 6%.
Local governments may levy an additional local option sales tax of up
to 1.5%. A locale's use-tax rate is the same as its sales-tax rate, including
local options, if any. Use taxes are payable for purchases made out of
state and brought into Florida within six months of the purchase date.
Other taxes are mostly levied on businesses. They include the following
taxes: corporate income, communication services, intangibles, unemployment,
solid waste, documentary stamps, insurance premium, pollutants, and various
fuel taxes.
Florida State Guide - Demographics
The center of population of Florida is located in Polk
County, in the town of Lake Wales
The largest reported ancestries in the 2000 Census were German (11.8%),
Irish (10.3%), English (9.2%), American (8%) and Italian (6.3%).
Before the American Civil War, when slavery was legal, and during the
Reconstruction era that followed, African Americans made up nearly half
of the state's population. Their proportion declined over the next century,
as many moved north in the Great Migration while large numbers of northern
whites moved to the state. Recently, the state's proportion of black
residents has begun to grow again. Today, large concentrations of black
residents can be found in northern Florida (notably in Jacksonville,
Gainesville and Pensacola), the Tampa Bay area, and South Florida (where
their numbers have been bolstered by significant immigration from Haiti
and Jamaica).
Florida's Hispanic population includes large communities of Cuban Americans
in Miami and Tampa, Puerto Ricans in Tampa and Orlando, and Central American
migrant workers in inland West-Central and South Florida. The Hispanic
community continues to grow more affluent and mobile: between the years
of 2000 and 2004, Lee County in southwest Florida, which is largely suburban
in character, had the fastest Hispanic population growth rate of any
county in the United States.
Whites of all ethnicities are present in all areas of the state. Those
of British ancestry are present in large numbers in the coastal cities.
There is a large German population in Southwest Florida, a sizeable and
historic Italian community in the Miami area, and white Floridians of
longer-present generations in the culturally southern areas of inland
and northern Florida. Native white Floridians, especially those who have
descended from long-time Florida families, affectionately referred to
themselves as "Florida Crackers."
Persons from Florida are known properly as "Floridians" or
as "Floridans".
Florida State Guide - Education
Florida's public primary and secondary schools are administered
by the Florida Department of Education.
Florida's public-school revenue per student and spending per $1000 of
personal income usually rank in the bottom 25 percent of U.S. states.
Average teacher salaries rank near the middle of U.S. states.
Florida public schools have consistently ranked in the bottom 25 percent
of many national surveys and average test-score rankings. Many education
surveys are not scientific, but measure prestige. Governor Jeb Bush has
been criticized by many Florida educators for a program that penalizes
underperforming schools (as indicated by standardized tests, most prominently
the FCAT) with fewer funding dollars. Supporters say the program's tough
measures have resulted in vast improvements to the education system.
Major testing organizations frequently discount the use of state's average
test-score rankings, or any average of scaled scores, as a valid metric
(for details on scaled test scores, see psychometrics).
In 2000, the governor and the state legislature abolished the Florida
Board of Regents, which long had governed the State University
System of Florida, and created boards of trustees to govern each
university. As is typical of executive-appointed government boards,
the appointees
so far have overwhelmingly belonged to the governor's party. This
effect
has not been without controversy. In 2002, former governor
and then U.S. Senator Bob Graham (Dem.) led a constitutional-amendment
ballot
referendum designed to restore the board-of-regents system. Voters
responded by creating the Florida Board of Governors; however,
each university still maintains a Board of Trustees which work
under this new,
overseeing
Board of Governors.
Florida State Guide - State Symbols
* Nickname: "The Sunshine State"
* State Motto: "In God we trust"
* State Bird: Mockingbird
* State Flower: Orange blossom - (Citrus sinensis)
* State Insect: Zebra Longwing Butterfly
* State Song: "Old Folks at Home (Suwannee River)" by Stephen C. Foster
* State Tree: Sabal Palm
* State Reptile: American Alligator
* State Animal: Florida Panther
* State Marine Mammal: West Indian Manatee
* State Saltwater Mammal: Dolphin
* State Drink: Orange juice
* State Fruit: Orange
* State Shell: Horse Conch (The great band shell)
* State Saltwater Fish: Sailfish
* State Freshwater Fish: Florida Largemouth Bass
* State Pie: Key lime pie
* State Gem: Moonstone
Article Source: Wikipedia
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