Body

 

Florida nature as seen by naturalist William Bartram in the 1770s, ornithologist, naturalist, and painter John James Audubon in the 1830s, and wilderness and landscape photographer Clyde Butcher since the 1980s.

Program Date
Relevant Videos
Name
https://youtu.be/sJws7ZBCcDs
Remote video URL
Media Item Default Name
Florida Frontiers TV - Episode 15 - Documenting Florida Nature
Episode Number
15
Body

 

The Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art in Winter Park, Florida, has the most comprehensive collection of work by Louis Comfort Tiffany anywhere.

Program Date
Relevant Videos
Name
https://youtu.be/m1ZjUngOhTM
Remote video URL
Media Item Default Name
Florida Frontiers TV - Episode 14 - The Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art
Episode Number
14
Body

 

Flagler County was established in 1917, but has historic sites from much earlier, including Mala Compra and the Bulow Plantation.

Program Date
Relevant Videos
Name
https://youtu.be/SVQ0DU0ReX4
Remote video URL
Media Item Default Name
Florida Frontiers TV - Episode 13 - Flagler County
Episode Number
13
Body

 

The annual Florida Folk Festival celebrates and preserves the stories, music, dance, crafts, and food of the Sunshine State.

Program Date
Relevant Videos
Name
https://youtu.be/peUYwW6moN4
Remote video URL
Media Item Default Name
Florida Frontiers TV - Episode 12 - Florida Folk Festival
Episode Number
12
Body

 

The Luna Settlement Excavation. Archaeologists have discovered the site of Don Tristan de Luna's ill-fated 1559 settlement in Pensacola.

Program Date
Relevant Videos
Name
https://youtu.be/E5nx49o3VqE
Remote video URL
Media Item Default Name
Florida Frontiers Television - Episode 11 - Luna Settlement Excavation
Episode Number
11
Body

 

Stetson Kennedy was an American author, civil rights activist, and pioneering oral historian and folklorist.

Program Date
Relevant Videos
Name
https://youtu.be/Ps0ZlSHtDBU
Remote video URL
Media Item Default Name
Florida Frontiers TV - Episode 10 - Stetson Kennedy
Episode Number
10
Body

 

Established near St. Augustine in 1738, Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mose was the first community of former slaves.

Program Date
Relevant Videos
Name
https://youtu.be/YYybsYkJu9M
Remote video URL
Media Item Default Name
Florida Frontiers TV - Episode 9 - Fort Mose
Episode Number
9
Body

 

Hundreds of Greek sponge divers and their families moved to Tarpon Springs, Florida in 1905. Today, there are more Greek people per capita in Tarpon Springs than in any other American city. We explore the history of Greek culture and the annual Epiphany celebration in Tarpon Springs.

Program Date
Relevant Videos
Name
https://youtu.be/SPzim45euDo
Remote video URL
Media Item Default Name
Florida Frontiers TV - Episode 8 - Tarpon Springs Epiphany
Episode Number
8
Body

 

On February 21, 1870, Sheriff David Mizell, his son Will, and brother Morgan went onto the property of Moses Barber to serve an arrest warrant. Tensions between the Barbers and Mizells had been growing for years, and the Sheriff had been warned that if he set foot on Barber land he would be killed. When the group stopped at Bull Creek, a shot was fired from behind some bushes. Sheriff Mizell was killed, becoming the first casualty of this long-running feud.

Program Date
Relevant Videos
Name
https://youtu.be/X9u8CY0br4Q
Remote video URL
Media Item Default Name
Florida Frontiers TV - Episode 7 - The Barber-Mizell Family Feud
Episode Number
7
Body

 

Florida writer, folklorist, and anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston was one of the most celebrated figures of the Harlem Renaissance, but died in obscurity.

Program Date
Relevant Videos
Name
https://youtu.be/u2N-JrGiRQ8
Remote video URL
Media Item Default Name
Florida Frontiers TV - Episode 6 - The Lost Years of Zora Neale Hurston
Episode Number
6