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David Albers/ Staff. Acclaimed Everglades photographer Clyde Butcher sets up to photograph the smoldering ruins of the historic Monroe Station on Sunday, April 10, 2016, in Ochopee, Fla.
Historic monument to fall, rise again. Before it burned, Monroe Station was one of two of the original six such outposts on Tamiami Trail, situated on the western end of scenic Loop Road.
Help restore Monroe Station For more information or to make donations, contact the Everglades Society for Historic Preservation at [email protected] or online at evergladeshistorical.org.
Famed Everglades photographer Clyde Butcher photographs the smoldering ruins of the historic Monroe Station on Sunday after a fire gutted it. David Albers Naples Daily News Staff Wildfire burned ...
If you want to travel through the Florida Everglades, stay off the main roads. This secret route provides even better views ...
The Everglades is a massive swath of water and land ― a mixture of sea, limestone, mangroves, beaches and plants and animals.
In a fiery twist of fate, it was a stunt camera shot that reduced Monroe Station, the most photographed landmark in the Big Cypress, to smoking ashes. A south Florida man admitted he accidentally ...