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Miami
real estate

Coral
Gables, Coconut Grove
Homes and Real Estate for sale |
Waterfront Properties Beach Homes Condos 
Coconut
Grove


Coconut Grove is an eclectic
community with many homes from the Art Deco Era. An upscale neighborhood, it is
convenient to downtown Miami and a short ride to South Beach. There are waterfront
homes, condos and town homes as well as single family homes in this market.
-
Coconut Grove History
-
- The earliest settlers of Coconut Grove were
the Pent and Frow families. In the 1830's both families were lighthouse keepers at Cape
Florida and homesteaders in what is now Coconut Grove.
- Another settler of that era was Edmund D.
Beasley who homesteaded 160 acres bay front property. In 1873, after Beasley's death, his
widow rented their home to Dr. Horace P. Porter. He lived there for only a year but during
that time established a post office that he named "Coconut Grove." When Porter
left the area, the post office was closed, but years later it was reopened using the same
name. Town homes for sale.
-
Another pioneer was "Jolly Jack" Peacock,
an Englishman who settled in the south part of the Grove. He persuaded his brother
Charles, then owner of a wholesale meat business in London, to join him. Charles Peacock,
his wife Isabella and their three sons eventually settled in Coconut Grove and in 1882
opened the Bay View House, later called the Peacock Inn, the first hotel in the area.
Black workers came from the Bahamas to work at the Inn and established the first Black
community in Miami, along Charles Avenue. The Peacock Inn attracted all kinds of visitors
including scientists, authors, and nobility, many of whom remained to make Coconut Grove
their permanent home. Among the settlers were yacht designer and wrecker Ralph Munroe
whose home, The Barnacle, is now a state historic site; homesteader Flora McFarlane,
Coconut Grove's first schoolteacher and founder of the Housekeeper's Club (now The Woman's
Club of Coconut Grove); and author Kirk Munroe.
- The fledgling community grew and prospered,
and by the early years of the 20th century, a school, library, Sunday school, chapel, and
yacht club were built. Attracted by the climate, wealthy Northerners, such as James and
William Deering and William Jennings Bryan made Coconut Grove their winter home. In 1925,
the City of Miami annexed Coconut Grove, but it continued to retain its own identity.
- After World War II, as the population of
South Florida mushroomed, Coconut Grove continued to grow, and artists were an important
influence. Waterfront town homes for sale.
For
a Brochure on Coconut Grove
Call Sy for
Coconut Grove
real estate.

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