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ABOVE: Prize-winning author Ernest Hemingway lived
and wrote in Key West for more than 10 years. His
residence-turned-museum is probably Key Wests
most visited attraction.

ABOVE: The Southernmost House represents the timeless
grandeur and beauty of Key West. Built in 1896,
the home serves as an event center, an inn and a
museum.

ABOVE: Key West offers great fishing on the flats
and offshore, and one of the most amazing sunsets
in the country.

ABOVE: During his presidency, Harry Truman frequently
stayed at the Little White House. The house-turned-museum
has since played host to many political luminaries.

ABOVE: Key Wests Museum of Art & History
is housed within the Custom House. After a nine-year,
$9 million restoration, the red brick building has
returned to its former glory.
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Ive been to Key West many times before, but
this time was different. Seeing it with the eyes
of a native, I rediscovered this charming Caribbean
island at the tip of the Florida Keys. Small town
yet cosmopolitan in feel, Key West has been home
to many well-known artists, writers and statesmen
over the years, including Jimmy Buffet, Ernest Hemingway
and Harry Truman, to name a few. Perhaps its
the islands tropical, temperate climate or
the way it embraces you with its inviting turquoise
shores that makes everyone want to stay.
The southernmost city in the continental United
States, Key West or the Conch Republic as
its affectionately called mixes a delicious
concoction of beautiful water, exotic foliage, innovative
cuisine and cultural activities. Only a few square
miles in size, this small island is big on offerings.
Protected from the sea by the only barrier reef
in North America, Key West is positioned between
the Atlantic Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico
just 90 miles from Cuba. A water-lovers mecca,
Key West offers some of the best scuba diving, snorkeling,
sailing and more within minutes of any direction.
Walking down Duval Street, the islands most
known address, hundreds of boutiques, galleries,
restaurants, cafes and legendary bars open their
doors with an array of local art, fashion, food
and fanfare. At night, everyone gathers at the very
southern end of Duval at Mallory Square dock for
the famous sunset celebration. Here, mimes, jugglers,
musicians and street artists entertain while onlookers
take in one of the most amazing sunsets.
Aside from the most obvious reasons to visit Key
West, there are many more that lie beneath the surface.
With one of the largest historic districts in the
United States, Key West boasts a history as rich
as its natural treasures.
From Ponce de Leon to pirates, and American Indians
to Bahamians and Cubans, a truly eclectic mix of
settlers has helped form the islands cultural
interest today. Originally belonging to Spain in
1513, Key West came under British rule in 1763,
and became a city and a part of Florida in 1826.
Today, many of the original settlers homes
remain intact thanks to the communitys commitment
to restoration, renovation and preservation. Thus,
visitors can literally follow in the footsteps of
these famous predecessors.
Probably the most renowned residence-turned-museum
is the Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum. This Nobel
and Pulitzer prize-winning author lived in the Spanish
Colonial home in the 1930s, where he wrote To
Have or Have Not and For Whom the Bell
Tolls. Today, visitors can walk through the
estate and see the roped-off area where Hemingway
wiled away the hours writing. The home, however,
is perhaps best known for its newer inhabitants
the more than 60 cats that roam the property.
Some of them are direct descendants of Hemingways
own cats.
The Southernmost House is appropriately located
at the Southernmost Point in the continental United
States. Built in 1896, this turn-of-the-century
residence has been converted into a museum, guesthouse
and event center. Visitors of this oceanfront mansion
are treated to a literary and political retrospective
of Key West with original U.S. presidential documents,
Hemingways letters, period furnishings and
more.
President Harry Truman made a name for himself in
Key West with this infamous quote: Ive
a notion to move the capitol to Key West and just
stay. In 1946, Truman visited the island to
get away from it all, and returned more than 150
times throughout his term. He stayed at the Little
White House, which has since become a museum on
the property now called the Truman Annex. Since
then, the Little White House has played host to
other heads of state, including Dwight Eisenhower,
John F. Kennedy, Jimmy Carter, and the Joint Chiefs
of Staff for the United States, Great Britain, Germany
and France.
Once a post office, court house and government center,
the Custom House is now home to the Key West Museum
of Art & History, where whimsical folk art and
portraits of famous locals add a dose of fun to
the historical showcase.
In addition to those mentioned above, The Audubon
House & Tropical Gardens, The Oldest House Museum,
the Mel Fisher Maritime Heritage Society Treasure
Museum and the Key West Lighthouse Museum are some
more sights to see.
These and other homes helped establish the islands
varied and unique architectural styles Classic
Revival, eyebrow, Bahamian, Queen Anne and Conch.
Today, these motifs are reflected in the colorfully
painted wooden homes, Victorian mansions and tin-roofed
conch houses that line the streets of Key West.
Once the richest per-capita city in the United States,
Key West has experienced a renaissance with endless
natural, architectural and historical treasures
to be discovered time and again.
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