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  2. Marquesas Keys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marquesas_Keys

    The Marquesas Keys form an uninhabited island group about 20 miles (32 km) west of Key West, four miles (6 km) in diameter, and largely covered by mangrove forest. They are an unincorporated area of Monroe County, Florida and belong to the Lower Keys Census County Division. [1] They are protected as part of the Key West National Wildlife Refuge ...

  3. Key West - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_West

    Key West is closer to Havana (about 106 miles or 171 kilometers by air or sea) [8] than it is to Miami (130 miles or 210 kilometers by air or 165 miles or 266 kilometers by road). [7] Key West is the usual endpoint for marathon swims from Cuba, including Diana Nyad's 2013 swim [33] [34] and Susie Maroney's 1997 swim from within a shark cage. [35]

  4. History of Key West - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Key_West

    Fishermen surround captured sea turtles in Key West, c., 1900. The fishing industry was the center of Key West's economy throughout the island's history. [87] Throughout much of the 19th and 20th centuries, Key West supplied eighty percent of all turtle products in the United States. [88]

  5. Fishing ranchos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishing_ranchos

    William Whitehead, customs inspector in Key West, wrote in 1831 that the women at the fishing ranchos were all Indians, and that the color of their children's skins indicated that many were fathered by the Spaniards. William Bunce, who owned a fishing rancho in Tampa Bay, stated in 1838 that he had 10 Spaniards and 20 Spanish Indians working ...

  6. Long Key Fishing Camp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Key_Fishing_Camp

    It initially served as housing for some of the employees who were building the Overseas Railroad to Key West. Long Key Fishing Camp featured a two-story hotel and a number of cottages. The camp was made famous by author Zane Grey, who was a regular resident, and a pioneer of the sport of sail fishing. Grey became the first president of the Long ...

  7. Florida Keys - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florida_Keys

    The limestone that eroded from the reef formed oolites in the shallow sea behind the reef, and together with the skeletal remains of bryozoans, formed the Miami Limestone that is the current surface bedrock of the lower Florida peninsula and the lower keys from Big Pine Key to Key West. To the west of Key West the ancient reef is covered by ...