Treasure Coast

The Treasure Coast is a region of the U.S. state of Florida. It is located on the state's Atlantic coast, comprising Indian River, St. Lucie, and Martin counties. The region, whose name refers to the Spanish Treasure Fleet lost in a 1715 hurricane, evidently emerged from residents' desire to distinguish themselves from Miami and the Gold Coast region to the south.

Coastal areas of Martin, St. Lucie, and Indian River counties

The area includes two metropolitan statistical areas designated by the Office of Management and Budget and used for statistical purposes by the Census Bureau and other agencies: the Port St. Lucie Metropolitan Statistical Area (comprising St. Lucie and Martin counties) and the Sebastian–Vero Beach, Florida Metropolitan Statistical Area (comprising Indian River County). Palm Beach County is part of the Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL Metropolitan Statistical Area.

History

The area has long been inhabited, but like other of Florida's vernacular regions, a popular identity for the area did not emerge until the area saw its initial population boom in the 20th century. It is one of several "coast" regions in Florida, like the Gold Coast and the First Coast.[1] The term was coined by John J. Schumann Jr. and Harry J. Schultz of the Vero Beach Press Journal newspaper shortly after salvagers began recovering Spanish treasure off the coast in 1961.[2] The discovery of treasure from the 1715 Treasure Fleet, lost in a hurricane near the Sebastian Inlet, was of major local importance and brought international attention to the area.[3] Press Journal publisher Shumann and editor Schultz noted that there was no name for their area, which was between the well known Gold Coast (Palm Beach to Miami to the south) and the Space Coast (Brevard County to the north). They started referring to their region as the "Treasure Coast" in the newspaper, and this use spread to the community.[2]

Though some local businesses were using the term as early as 1966, it spread fairly slowly. The Miami Herald's 1972 Florida Almanac refers to the area from Miami to Vero Beach as the "Tropical Coast".[2] A 1982 survey of Florida's vernacular regions by geographers Ary J. Lamme and Raymond K. Oldakowski did not include the "Treasure Coast". The survey showed that the entire area from Dade County (now Miami-Dade) north to Martin County was considered the "Gold Coast" at that time. However, a 2007 survey by the same authors found that by then the "Gold Coast" was restricted primarily to Miami-Dade and Broward counties, while the "Treasure Coast" region had emerged describing the area from Palm Beach County northward. Lamme and Oldakowski noted that by that time, "Gold Coast" had acquired some unflattering connotations. They suggest the communities to the north may have seen the need to distinguish themselves from the Gold Coast and Miami to promote their locale as a destination for American tourists and residents, contributing to the current popularity of the Treasure Coast as a vernacular region.[1]

The Anthony J. Catanese Center for Urban and Environmental Solutions at Florida Atlantic University notes that the Treasure Coast is becoming increasingly continuous with the rest of South Florida, with much of its current and projected development being tied to growth in the urban Miami metropolitan area.[4]

Area

Lamme and Oldakowski found that the Treasure Coast comprises the area from Palm Beach County north to the Space Coast (including Palm Beach, Martin, St. Lucie, and Indian River counties). They note, however, that Palm Beach County remains part of South Florida and the Miami metropolitan area.[1] The Treasure Coast Regional Planning Council, based in Stuart, uses a similar definition and has jurisdiction over these four counties.[5] Other sources exclude Palm Beach County. A report by the Catanese Center lists the Treasure Coast, including only Martin, St. Lucie, and Indian River counties, as a subregion of the wider South Florida economic region.[6]

Media

Nielsen Media Research includes Palm Beach County along with Martin, St. Lucie, Indian River, and Okeechobee counties as a part of the West Palm Beach-Ft. Pierce TV media market.

Metropolitan areas

The Treasure Coast
Regional statistics
Composition

Indian River County
St. Lucie County
Martin County

Demonym Treasure Coaster
Area
- Total

1786.62 sq mi (4627.3 km²)
(Slightly larger than Rhode Island.)
Population

 - Total  - Density


586,414 (2014 est.)[7]
(Slightly larger than Wyoming.)
Largest city Port St. Lucie, Florida (pop. 171,016)
Largest Metropolitan Area Port St. Lucie, Florida Metropolitan Statistical Area (pop. 444,420 as of 2014 estimate)

The Treasure Coast includes two metropolitan statistical areas designated by the Office of Management and Budget and used for statistical purposes by the Census Bureau and other agencies. These are:

  • The Port St. Lucie, Florida Metropolitan Statistical Area, consisting of Martin and St. Lucie counties. Port St. Lucie is designated as the principal city. The two-county metropolitan statistical area was first defined in 1983 as the Fort Pierce Metropolitan Statistical Area. In 1993, the MSA was renamed the Fort Pierce-Port St. Lucie Metropolitan Statistical Area. In 2006, Fort Pierce was dropped as a principal city and the name was changed to its present form.
  • The Sebastian – Vero Beach, Florida Metropolitan Statistical Area, which is coextensive with Indian River County. Sebastian and Vero Beach are designated as the principal cities.

Geography

Aerial view of Indian River Lagoon

All of the Treasure Coast is shielded from the Atlantic Ocean by narrow sandbars and barrier islands that protect the shallow lagoons, rivers, and bays. Immediately inland, pine and palmetto flatlands are abundant.[8] Numerous lakes and rivers run through the Treasure Coast, notably the well known Indian River, a part of the Indian River Lagoon system. At certain seasons of the year, bridges may impede the red drift algae flow, causing a "rotten egg" hydrogen sulfide odor in the area. The Treasure Coast is also bordered by the Atlantic portion of the Intracoastal Waterway, a stretch of closed water from Brownsville, Texas to Boston, Massachusetts.[9]

Communities

A great amount of the Treasure Coast's population is made up of census-designated places (CDPs), with almost all of these in Martin County and Indian River County. Only one city on the Treasure Coast has a population of more than 100,000 inhabitants, which is Port St. Lucie in St. Lucie County. Here is the classification of the places of the Treasure Coast. C for city, T for town, and V for village.

Place with more than 100,000 inhabitants

Places with 10,000 to 50,000 inhabitants

Places with 5,000 to 10,000 inhabitants

Places with 1,000 to 5,000 inhabitants

Places with fewer than 1,000 inhabitants

Census-designated places (by population, as of 2010 Census)

Transportation infrastructure

Airports

Despite Port St. Lucie being the 7th largest city in Florida, there are no airports in the immediate area that offer scheduled passenger flights. One must travel to Melbourne's Orlando Melbourne International Airport to the north (40 miles from Vero Beach) and West Palm Beach's Palm Beach International Airport to the south (35 miles from Hobe Sound). However, there are three small regional airports in the area: Vero Beach Regional Airport in Vero Beach, Treasure Coast International Airport in Fort Pierce, and Witham Field in Stuart. If northern Palm Beach County is included in the Treasure Coast, North County Airport can be included in this list. William P. Gwinn Airport is also located in northern Palm Beach County, but is a private airfield for Pratt & Whitney's Sikorsky Aircraft business unit.

Marine transportation

Fort Pierce Harbor, in Fort Pierce, located along the Indian River across from the Fort Pierce Inlet, is a locally significant port for imports and exports.

Highways

Despite its large population, the Treasure Coast has only two major north-south highways running through the area: Florida's Turnpike (a toll road) and Interstate 95. Both routes run generally parallel to each other (twice crossing each other), but are mostly located along the extreme western edges of the cities lining the coast. Through the cities themselves, U.S. 1 is the main north-south roadway. Farther east, running along the coast, and often on the barrier island for the region (Hutchinson Island and Orchid Island), is Florida State Road A1A.

Railroads

The Florida East Coast Railway operates freight service along the coast throughout the region. FEC also operates a rail yard just south of downtown Fort Pierce.

Up until 1963, long distance passenger trains operated along the route. Among the most notable passenger trains were (main sponsors and destinations) the East Coast Champion (Atlantic Coast Line, New York City); City of Miami (Illinois Central, Chicago); Dixie Flyer (Louisville & Nashville, Chicago); Ponce de Leon (Southern Railway, Cincinnati); Royal Palm (Southern Railway, Cincinnati); South Wind (Louisville & Nashville, Chicago).

Amtrak and the Florida Department of Transportation have been discussing returning passenger service to the coast.[10] In 2018, Brightline (now Virgin Trains USA), a higher speed train line that will ultimately run between Miami and Orlando, announced that it was looking for sites for a new station between Fort Pierce and Miami.[11][12] As of November 2019, Stuart is the frontrunner to receive the Brightline station.[13]

Notes

  1. Lamme & Oldakowski, p. 331.
  2. Tyler Treadway (March 27, 2011). "Who came up with the 'Treasure Coast' name?". tcpalm.com. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  3. "The storm that gave the Treasure Coast its name". The Miami Herald. June 10, 1996. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  4. "Charting the Course", p. 3.
  5. "About the Council". www.tcrpc.org. Treasure Coast Regional Planning Council. 2013. Retrieved March 7, 2013.
  6. "Charting the Course", p. 2–3.
  7. "State & County QuickFacts". US Census Bureau. Retrieved 2008-07-24.
  8. http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/us/A0858162.html%7Cdate=2011-03-19
  9. Jim Waymer (2010-07-02). "Man on mission to sweeten smell of Indian River Lagoon". Burlington Free Press.
  10. "Orlando Sun-Sentinel," Feb 22, 2013, Angel Streeter, "Amtrak still hopeful for service on FEC tracks" http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2013-02-22/news/fl-amtrak-florida-east-coast-railroad-20130215_1_amtrak-service-fec-passenger-service
  11. Janny Rodriguez, WPTV September 6, 2018 "Brightline considers Fort Pierce train station," https://www.wptv.com/news/region-st-lucie-county/fort-pierce/brightlineconsiders-fort-pierce-train-station
  12. Keona Gardner, TC Palm, September 5, 2018 "Fort Pierce: Brightline wants to build station, hotel at H.D. King site downtown" https://www.tcpalm.com/story/news/local/shaping-our-future/all-aboard-florida/2018/09/05/brightline-interested-h-d-king-site-fort-pierce/1199122002/
  13. George Andreassi, Vero News November 21, 2019 "With Fort Pierce out, nearest Virgin Trains stop looks like Stuart" http://veronews.com/2019/11/21/with-fort-pierce-out-nearest-virgin-trains-stop-looks-like-stuart/
gollark: Although preparation and fuel production and stuff ended up taking up waaaay more than you get out, IIRC net-positive if you just count energy input used to heat up the fuel or whatever was achieved a while ago.
gollark: Actually, that was sort of achieved a while ago.
gollark: I'm sure there's ridiculously long-lived chemical waste from stuff which people completely ignore too.
gollark: I mean, people complain it'll be around for a while, but... so what? There isn't a massive amount of it.
gollark: Plus fast breeder reactors.

References

Further reading

  • Spence, Sharon Lloyd (2007). Florida's Palm Beaches & the Treasure Coast. Hunter Publishing. ISBN 1-58843-831-7.
  • Champion Map Space and Treasure Coast Cities. Rand McNally. 2010. ISBN 0-528-88232-5. A guide to the Space and Treasure Coast cities
  • Thurlow, Sandra Henderson (1992). Sewall's Point: The History of a Peninsular Community on Florida's Treasure Coast. ISBN 0-9630788-0-1.
  • McGoun, William E. (1998). Southeast Florida Pioneers: The Palm and Treasure Coasts. ISBN 1-56164-157-X. A resource relating the history of the region

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