Florida’s Southern Keys, Part I

I’ll start off by saying that there’s a special place in heaven for those who leave unsecured WiFi connections open and available for public use. I thought I’d be totally disconnected from the outside world except for an occasional traipsing down to an Internet cafe but for an unknown Good Samaritan. Thank you stranger. You’ve allowed me to remain connected this week while I’m on vacation. We’re in Florida’s southern Keys with the extended family. I’ve spent time soaking up some perfect weather while I understand it’s been below freezing back home.

As usual, these vignettes will provide an overview of what I’ve seen so far, with permanent more comprehensive pages to come later.


Mile Zero

Mile Zero in Key West, Florida. Photo by howderfamily.com; (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
Zero at Zero

No geo-weirdness blog would be complete without a stop at the Zero Mile marker for U.S. Route One. I call this my tribute to readers CTMQ and Prullmw. Those two regularly read and post comments here on the Twelve Mile Circle. Notice how I combine trademark elements of both contributors into a single image. My wife said she understood the photo of the mile marker because I’m always taking pictures of strange things like this. But she wanted to know what was up with the two thumbs thing. I tried to explain but I think it fell flat.

Everyone takes this photo or so it seemed. But how many people then walk a few yards further down the road to record the geodetic survey marker in front of the Monroe County Courthouse? Oh yes I did. It generated some pretty odd stares from passers-by. My in-laws thought it odd as well. I’m sure they’re now wondering what their daughter got into and whether their grandchildren are being raised correctly.


Fake. Totally Fake

Fake Southernmost Point marker in Key West, Florida. Photo by howderfamily.com; (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
The Fake Southernmost Point in the Continental United States

I continued my walk down along Whitehead Street to the so-called “Southernmost Point” buoy. Can we all agree that since we know enough about geography to be reading this blog that we all know it’s not really the southernmost point in the continental U.S.? It’s debatable whether an island can be considered “continental” in any case. Even so, there’s another key even further south than Key West. Heck, there are even spots on Key West further south than this. All of that misses the point, though: it’s a fun diversion. Hiking down here may be the only opportunity for some people to get off the beach or the bar stool to get some exercise. I’ll cut them a little slack.

I found its popularity rather odd. Why do the crowds skip a genuinely interesting places like the 45X90 spot where my family and I stood alone alongside a rural cornfield? Here in Key West it looked like there was a half-hour long line just to get a picture at some meaningless buoy. I certainly wouldn’t do that for a fake anything. Thus, I had to snap quickly between family groupings just to get an image without people in it. I hate people in my photos.


Southernmost Something

Ballast Key - Southernmost Point. Photo by howderfamily.com; (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
At the very least, the Southernmost Point in Florida

Here’s the real southernmost spot: Ballast Key. I’ll let you decide what it’s the southernmost of, but at the very least of Florida. It’s also the only inhabited location in the Key West National Wildlife Refuge.

Today this would never be allowed but obviously it was authorized previously and a Key West developer named David Wolkowsky built his home here. You can read all about it on the inevitable Wikipedia page. He’s invited a number of celebrities to this subtropical paradise and I find it both amusing and ironic that the Bee Gees and Gloria Estefan have touched this southernmost point and I have not. I wonder if they realized it?

Anyway, I snapped that photo of Ballast Key on the way to…


Dry Tortugas

Fort Jefferson at Dry Tortugas National Park, in Florida. Photo by howderfamily.com; (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
Fort Jefferson at Dry Tortugas National Park

I’ve been looking at maps since I was very young and for most of that time I’ve wanted to visit the Dry Tortugas. Yesterday that dream finally came true. It involved a two and a half hour boat ride from Key West covering nearly seventy miles of open water to reach this remote National Park. The centerpiece is Fort Jefferson, a coastal fortification built in the mid-nineteenth century. It controlled the Straight of Florida and protected trade routes to American cities along the Gulf of Mexico and up the Mississippi River. The strategic importance cannot be underestimated.

Most people, if they’ve even heard of it, associate the Dry Tortugas with the imprisonment of Dr. Samuel Mudd. He was the Maryland physician who set John Wilkes Booth’s broken leg as he fled after assassinating Abraham Lincoln. Dr. Mudd served nearly four years here in a cell in Ft. Jefferson for his role in the conspiracy. What an amazingly remote place to be exiled.

Hmm… an island, a coastal fortification, a lighthouse… if there had been a brewpub I would have signed up for a stint in the National Park Service!

See my Fort Jefferson page, Dry Tortugas Ferry page and Garden Key Lighthouse page, each with more photos and short videos.

The adventure continues in Part II.

Comments

5 responses to “Florida’s Southern Keys, Part I”

  1. Matthew Prull Avatar

    Nice Mile Zero photo, I must say! What a surprise to see that one. I wish I had a chance to go further west to the Dry Tortugas and Ballast Key when I was in the area in January but I’m very pleased to see that you got out there. By the way, Ballast Key is apparently for sale for 13 million. I suggest that we buy the island and it can serve as the World Headquarters for Twelve Mile Circle and Concept Travel. I have about $20 that I can put toward the sale price, how about you?

  2. Steve_CTMQ Avatar

    “but she wanted to know what was up with the two thumbs thing.”

    — Sigh. As my site grows in readership now that my course for Quirky Singularly Impassioned Website World Domination has been plotted, people like Mrs. Twelve Mile Circle keep my ego in check.

    For that, I thank her.

  3. aletheia kallos Avatar

    could it be that the thing & the point you & prull & many others were really seeking there is just the southernmost point of the southernmost state of what is called the continental united states

    if so then that point is in the strait of florida about 8nm south of man key
    on the 3mile limit line
    far to the sw of key west

    but if you were merely seeking the southernmost point of what is called the continental united states
    then that point is another 9nm still farther south
    on the 12mile limit line
    & thus still farther from the continent itself
    or from any land at all for that matter

    & if not then i cant figure out what anyone was really looking for

    for the southernmost dry land in florida is something else again
    & the southernmost point in the truly continental united states
    is something else yet again
    etc
    etc

    1. Twelve Mile Circle Avatar

      Matthew: Let’s see… I’ll throw in another twenty, we can gather the combined readership of our respective sites, hit up the relatives, carry the one, hmm… still just a little short. Maybe the Bee Gees or Gloria Estefan will kick in?

      Steve: You’ll be gratified to know that the very next person got her picture taken at the spot and also gave the two thumbs up sign. You are having a subtle influence on common behavior so the ego is safe.

      Aletheia: Yeh, something like that. I’m pretty sure I got close to the southernmost something-or-another while on that boat to the Dry Tortugas — the closest I’m going to get in this lifetime anyway. I tried explaining all of this to the couple seated next to us but we were going through 8-10 foot waves at the time and they were turning green. Seasickness doesn’t bother me at all but at least half the boat wasn’t so lucky. It wasn’t a pleasant trip.

  4. Lincoln Ho Avatar

    There’s a Mile Zero marker on Vancouver Island… but that road connects back as a loop.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest Comments

  1. Clint, 24 March 2021. I’m 89 years old and have traveled the 100th Meridian for years between Uvalde, TX and…

  2. Many of these comments are very interesting, have enjoyed reading. We cross several times a year as well going from…