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Sell your home
faster and keep more dollars in your pocket

The "World of Florida Real Estate" can be a Minefield!
Confused? Anxious? Disillusioned? Frazzled?
Would you like a guide and a mentor to help you succeed in this
volatile market? Our web site is a library of special reports,
white papers and audio help that is totally free to registered
Info Seekers. Register as an Info Seeker today and have all our
library of information at your fingertips. It is extremely
important to be well informed in home selling before you put the
For Sale sign up.
Read our Special Report on
Home Selling
Interesting
Data About Florida
- Saint Augustine is the oldest European
settlement in North America.
- The name Punta Gorda, which means, "fat
point" when translated from Spanish. The moniker was given
to the city because a broad part of the land in Punta
Gorda juts into Charlotte Harbor. The harbor itself is
somewhat unique, as it is the point where the Peace River
meets the ocean.
- Orlando attracts more visitors than any
other amusement park destination in the United States.
- New England Congregationalists who sought
to bring their style of liberal arts education to the
state founded Rollins College, the oldest college in
Florida, in Winter Park in 1885.
- Cape Canaveral is America's launch pad for
space flights.
- Florida is not the southernmost state in
the United States. Hawaii is farther south.
- A museum in Sanibel owns 2 million shells
and claims to be the world's only museum devoted solely to
mollusks.
- The Benwood, on French Reef in the Florida
Keys, is known as one of the most dived shipwrecks in the
world.
- Safety Harbor is the home of the historic
Espiritu Santo Springs. Given this name in 1539 by the
Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto. He was searching for
the legendary Fountain of Youth. The natural springs have
attracted attention worldwide for their curative powers.
- Niceville is home to the famous Boggy
Bayou Mullet Festival celebrated the third weekend in
October.
- The United States city with the highest
rate of lightning strikes per capita is Clearwater.
- Gatorade was named for the University of
Florida Gators where the drink was first developed.
- Young aviator Tony Jannus made history on
January 1, 1914 when he flew the world's first scheduled
passenger service airline flight from St. Petersburg's
downtown yacht basin to Tampa.
- Dr. John Gorrie of Apalachicola invented
mechanical refrigeration in 1851.
- Miami Beach pharmacist Benjamin Green
invented the first suntan cream in 1944. He accomplished
this development by cooking cocoa butter in a granite
coffee pot on his wife's stove.
- Neil Smith and his brother of Montverde
developed the first Snapper riding lawn mower.
- Key West has the highest average
temperature in the United States.
- The Saint John's River is one of the few
rivers that flows north instead of south.
- The largest lake in Florida is Lake
Okeechobee.
- May 20, 1970 Florida lawmakers passed and
sent to the Governor a bill adopting the moonstone as the
official state gem. Ironically, the moonstone is not found
naturally in Florida...nor was it found on the moon.
- In 1987 the Florida legislature designated
the American alligator (Alligator mississippiensis) the
official state reptile. Long an unofficial symbol of the
state, the alligator originally symbolized Florida's
extensive untamed wilderness and swamps.
- Miami installed the first bank automated
teller machine especially for rollerbladers.
- Ybor City was once known as the Cigar
Capital of the World with nearly 12,000 tabaqueros
(cigar-makers) employed in 200 factories. Ybor City
produced an estimated 700 million cigars a year at the
industry's peak.
- Plant City, the Winter Strawberry Capital
of the World, holds the Guinness record for the world's
largest strawberry shortcake. The 827 square-foot, 6,000
pound cake was made on Feb. 19, 1999 in McCall Park.
- The Sunshine Skyway Bridge is a
cable-stayed concrete bridge. Opened in 1987 the bridge
coasts through the clouds at 190 feet above water. Its
bright yellow support cables spread from the two center
pillars. The structure gives drivers unobstructed view of
the water during the 4.1 mile trip over Tampa Bay.
Google News - Florida
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Florida State Trivia
Capital City:
Tallahassee
Area: 65758 sq.mi.
Land: 53997 sq.mi.
Water: 11761 sq.mi.
Coastline: 1350 mi.
Shoreline: 8426 mi.
Area Codes: 305 - 321 - 352 - 386 - 407 - 561 - 727 - 754
- 772 - 786 - 813 - 850 - 863 - 904 - 941 - 954
Bird: Mockingbird
Flower: Orange Blossom
Highest Point: 345 feet
Lowest Point: Sea level
Soil: Florida - Myakka
Tree: Cabbage Palmetto
Largest Cities: Miami, Tampa, Jacksonville, Saint
Petersburg, Hialeah, Orlando, Fort Lauderdale, Tallahassee,
Hollywood, Pembroke, Pines
Nickname: Sunshine State
Population: 15,982,378
Economy:
Agriculture: Citrus, vegetables, nursery stock, cattle,
sugarcane, dairy products
Industry: Tourism, electric equipment, food processing,
printing and publishing, transportation equipment, machinery
State of Florida
Flag
On a white field
emblazoned with a red X and the state seal, Florida's
flag represents the land of sunshine, flowers, palm
trees, rivers and lakes. The seal features a brilliant
sun, a cabbage palmetto tree, a steamboat sailing and a
Native American Seminole woman scattering flowers. Flag
adopted 1899
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