Wonderful Naples and the surrounding area including the Everglades and Big Cypress Swamp. There are lots of links at the bottom of this brief history:

Naples History

Back in the early 30’s, winter visitors were coming to Naples to enjoy the sun, the beaches and a small golf course located at the end of Fifth Avenue near the beach. It was in 1932 that Charles “Lucky” Lindbergh landed his plane in that area. Lindbergh and his wife, Ann, had a retreat in Sanibel and would drop in to pick up supplies.
Naples Downtown consisted of a few businesses located approximately 3 blocks east and west of Ninth Street South (U.S. 41), at the junction that was known as Four Corners. Ed Frank’s Garage and his small strip mall, the Chamber of Commerce building, telephone company, train depot, a liquor store, gas station, dry good store, Club 41 and not too much else was located there.
Club 41 was a popular place for entertainment. It has been said that among the guests that frequented the Club were Gary Cooper, Lawrence Tibbets, Gertrude Lawrence and perhaps Gloria Swanson.
Occasionally a car would pass by Four Corners. Some were crossing the state going to Miami on the new Tamiami Trail East that had been completed in 1928. At noon you could hear the loud train whistle from the Orange Blossom Express as it arrived daily at the Depot train station just a block away. Today the Depot remains as a historical landmark of the train service that began in Naples in 1927.
In 1923, the Frank family lived upstairs over the Ed Frank Garage near 10th Street South. This was the first commercial building on Fifth Avenue South. Mrs. Frank would throw her table scraps to alligators in the swamp below which eventually was filled in with old cars and motors. This family was one of the first settlers in the area and are noted for having opened the first car dealership. Mr. Frank invented the first swamp buggy and also built the first strip mall.
The first bank in Collier County was built in 1923 in Everglades City. It was 26 years before Mamie Tooke, often called the Mother of Naples, opened the first bank in Naples in 1949 on Fifth Avenue. South. She was instrumental in teaching locals how to budget and save their money, and many of those original depositors became large land owners. In 1989, it became Barnett Bank.
Cory Osceola (a member of the Seminole tribe and local resident of Naples) and his family used to set up a stand and sell their Indian crafts on Fifth Avenue. They were a very well respected, old Indian family in the area. The descendants of the Osceolas are now world-renown builders of Chickees (cypress pole constructions with palmetto-thatched roofs). Today many of their structures stand in southwest Florida and the Caribbean.
The Naples Depot began providing train service on January 7, 1927. The last train to leave Naples was in 1971 when the service was discontinued. The Depot has since been restored and is today used by many community organizations for functions. A train whistle is blown at noon every day just as it was in the early days of Naples.
The Rexall Drug Store on the corner of Fifth Avenue South and 8th Street South was the meeting place of local businessmen. They sat at the benches in front of the store and discussed local business highs and lows each day. No one objected when the children sat on the floor inside reading the new comic books when they arrived. This building changed hands in 1971 and is now known as Naples 5th Avenue Pharmacy.
The Naples Women’s Club was responsible for providing Naples with it’s first library as early as 1932. In 1951, they built the club house at Park Street and Sixth Avenue South which housed the library and had a separate street entrance.
The location of the Naples Chamber of Commerce has come full circle. In 1928, it was located in approximately the same spot as the Chamber’s Visitors’ Center of today.
In 1929, a small building housed the telephone company where the Merrill Lynch building is now located. In 1945, there were 17 telephones in town. In 1968, the United Telephone Company built a new telephone building around the first little structure. The counter where telephone bills were paid is now the counter where the chef from Bistro 821 turns out his delicacies.
In the 1944 hurricane, Pappy Turner’s cow and calf were loaded on a skiff and put on high ground for safety. That location today is the sight of Kepp’s Men’s Store. This was also the original location of Wynn’s Market in 1945. (The Turner family still owns Turner Marine on 10th Street South.)
In 1960, during Hurricane Donna, surge water was over the table tops of Beroni’s Cafe which was located on Fifth Avenue South near 9th Street South.
The first road, of sorts (shells in deep mud ruts), from Naples to Fort Myers was completed in 1918 and is known today as Tamiami Trail North. To travel to Miami one would have to go north to Jacksonville and then south. In 1928, with the vision and resources of Barron Collier, the Tamiami Trail East was completed from Naples to Miami.

Special Thanks to the Florida State Archives Photographic Collection for Historical Photos

Here is the National Park Service link to Big Cypress> http://www.nps.gov/bicy/

One of Gary’s favorite day trips is to Everglades City and then continue out to Chokoloskee and then out to the newly renovated Ted Smallwood’s Historic Store Museum. http://www.smallwoodstore.com/

Collier Everglades State park is about 40 minutes away and also beautiful. Summer time: Bring the bug spray. LOTS of it!

Cool links and great stuff to know:

Here is State of Florida Coastal Access guide website>http://www.dep.state.fl.us/cmp/beachaccess/default.htm

Want to get ahead of the curve on what’s happening in Naples before you come? The Florida Weekly Newspaper also great restaurant coupons. Pick one up as soon as you are in town.  http://naples.floridaweekly.com/

The Naples Philharmonic and Center for the Arts, and Baker Museum is only about a mile away from Naples Cay. https://artisnaples.org/

It is adjacent to the Shops of Waterside (Saks, Neiman Marcus) http://www.watersideshops.com/

And at the other end of the haute shopping experience spectrum is the very fun Tin City. Really, you “gotta go” and be sure to eat at one of the waterfront restaurants. http://www.tin-city.com/

An easy drive down US 41 gets you to Collier Seminole State Park. Very old Florida  http://www.floridastateparks.org/collierseminole/

A nice FULL day trip is a visit to Everglades City. Some info: http://www.southwestfloridatravelguide.com/destinations/everglades-city

Another (almost) full day is a trip to the Corkscrew Swamp, boasting one of the world’s longest boardwalk. They have a great little cafe as well. And yes, it is a long drive out there. but worth it: http://corkscrew.audubon.org/

Only about 17 miles north of Regatta is Lover’s Key State Park. Great kayaking, beaching and manatee viewing. http://www.floridastateparks.org/loverskey/

One of our favorites just southeast of the Coastland Center mall is the Naples Zoo @ Caribbean Gardens (not for profit, publicly owned and fabulous) http://www.napleszoo.com/