Boca Raton, Florida
Boca Raton is a city in Palm Beach County, Florida, United States. The population was 97,422 in the 2020 census, and it ranked as the 23rd-largest city in Florida in 2022. Many people with a Boca Raton postal address live outside of municipal boundaries, such as in West Boca Raton. As a business center, the city also experiences significant daytime population increases. Boca Raton is north of Miami and is a principal city of the Miami metropolitan area.
It was first incorporated on August 2, 1924, as "Bocaratone", and then incorporated as "Boca Raton" on May 26, 1925. While the area had been inhabited by the Glades culture, as well as Spanish and later British colonial empires prior to its annexation by the United States, the city's present form was developed predominantly by American architect Addison Mizner starting in the 1920s. Mizner contributed to many buildings in the area having Mediterranean Revival or Spanish Colonial Revival architecture. Boca Raton also became a key city in the development of the early computer industry. The city is the birthplace of IBM's first personal computer and various other technologies created by the company.
Still centered around luxury beach culture, the city today is dotted by many malls and shopping centers, including the Town Center at Boca Raton. The ODP Corporation, which operates Office Depot and OfficeMax, is headquartered here. Boca Raton is also home to Lynn University, Florida Atlantic University, and the Evert Tennis Academy, owned by former professional tennis player Chris Evert. The city has a strict development code for the size and types of commercial buildings, building signs, and advertisements that may be erected within the city limit, which has led to major thoroughfares without billboards and large advertisements, as well as increased green spaces on roads.
Name
Etymology
Boca Ratón translates to "Mouse Mouth" in English. Its name was originally labeled in the early European maps of the area as. Boca, meaning "mouth", was a common term to describe an inlet on maps by sailors. The meaning of the word ratones for the area is less certain. Some claim that the word ratones appears in old Spanish maritime dictionaries referring to "rugged rocks or stony ground on the bottom of some ports and coastal outlets, where the cables rub against". Thus, one possible translation of Boca Raton is "Rugged Inlet". Others claim that ratones referred to pirates who hid out in the area, and thus the name could translate to "Pirates' Inlet".Pronunciation
City residents pronounce Raton as. People not from the region often mispronounce this as instead.History
Timeline
- 1890 – Bocaratone settled.
- 1896 – Florida East Coast Railway begins operating.
- 1909 – Bocaratone becomes part of newly created Palm Beach County.
- 1912 – Intracoastal Waterway opens.
- 1915
- * Telephone installed.
- * Board of Trade organized.
- 1918 – Ebenezer Baptist Church founded in Pearl City neighborhood.
- 1923 – Boca Raton Inlet bridge constructed.
- 1924
- * Town of "Boca Ratone" incorporated.
- * Addison Mizner chosen as town planner.
- * George Long becomes mayor.
- 1925
- * Town of "Boca Raton" incorporated.
- * Mizner Development Corporation in business.
- 1926
- * Cloister resort built.
- * Chamber of Commerce founded.
- 1927 – Town Hall built.
- 1928 – Water plant built.
- 1930
- * Railroad station built.
- * Population: 447.
- 1936 – Airport established.
- 1939 – Camino Real Bridge opens.
- 1942 – U.S. military Boca Raton Army Air Field established.
- 1947 – October: 1947 Cape Sable hurricane occurs.
- 1950
- * Art Guild established.
- * Population: 992.
- 1955 – Boca Raton News begins publication.
- 1960 – Population: 6,961.
- 1961
- * Florida Atlantic University founded.
- * Boca Raton Public Library building constructed.
- 1962
- * Lynn University established.
- * Saint Andrew's School opens.
- 1963 – Boca Inlet Bridge opens.
- 1964 – Boca Raton Theatre in business.
- 1970 – Population: 28,506.
- 1972 – Boca Raton Historical Society founded.
- 1979 – Jewish Floridian of South County newspaper begins publication.
- 1980
- * Pope John Paul II High School established.
- * Town Center at Boca Raton opens.
- 1981 – August: "IBM introduces the IBM PC from its Boca Raton factory."
- 1986 – Boca Raton Museum of Art active.
- 1989 – Boca Raton station opens.
- 1990
- * Old Floresta designated a city historic district.
- * Population: 61,492.
- 1991 – W.R. Grace & Co. headquarters relocated to Boca Raton from New York.
- 1998 – City website online.
- 1999 – W.R. Grace & Co. headquarters moves away from Boca Raton.
- 2000
- * Muvico cinema in business.
- * Population: 83,255
- 2001 – Anthrax attack; Robert Stevens dies.
- 2004 – September: Hurricane Frances and Hurricane Jeanne occur.
- 2005 – October: Hurricane Wilma occurs.
- 2009 – Boca Raton News ceases publication.
- 2010 – Population: 84,392.
- 2012
- * October 22: United States presidential debate held in Boca Raton.
- 2014 – Susan Haynie elected mayor.
- 2017
- * Ted Deutch becomes U.S. representative for Florida's 22nd congressional district.
- * September: Hurricane Irma occurs.
Early history
What Spanish voyagers called "Boca de Ratones" was originally to the south, in present-day Biscayne Bay in Miami-Dade County. The area of Boca Raton was labeled "Rio Seco", meaning "Dry River", during this time. By mistake during the 19th century, mapmakers moved this location to the north and began referring to the city's lake, today known as Lake Boca Raton, as "Boca Ratone Lagoon" and later "Boca Ratone Sounde". An inland stream near the lake was later renamed Spanish River, and eventually became part of the Intracoastal Waterway.
When Spain surrendered Florida to Britain in 1763, the remaining Tequestas, along with other Indians who had taken refuge in the Florida Keys, were evacuated to Cuba. In the 1770s, Bernard Romans reported seeing abandoned villages in the area, but no inhabitants.
The area remained largely uninhabited for long afterwards, during the early years of Florida's incorporation in the United States. The first significant European settler to this area was Captain Thomas Moore Rickards in 1895, who resided in a house made of driftwood on the east side of the East Coast Canal, south of what is now the Palmetto Park Road bridge. He surveyed and sold land from the canal to beyond the railroad north of what is now Palmetto Park Road. Early settlement in the area increased shortly after Henry Flagler's expansion of the Florida East Coast Railway, connecting West Palm Beach to Miami.
Addison Mizner's resort town
Boca Raton as a city was the creation of architect Addison Mizner. Prior to him, Boca Raton was an unincorporated farming town with a population of 100 in 1920.In 1925, Mizner announced his plan for "the foremost resort city on the North American continent," "a new exclusive social capital in America." After spending several years in Palm Beach, where, in his own words, he "did more than any one man to make the city beautiful," and designed the Everglades Club among many other buildings, in Boca Raton his plan was to create from scratch "a resort as splendid in its entirety as Palm Beach is in spots."
Activity in that area began at least a year, and probably more, before Mizner's announcement. Land acquisition, tens of thousands of acres, was the largest part. But it is hard not to see Mizner's hand in the incorporation of Boca Raton in 1924; the city immediately appointed him Town Planner. The Mizner Development Company was incorporated in 1925, and promptly issued $5 million of stock, which was fully subscribed in less than a week. $500,000 was reserved for the "average Floridian"; the remainder was purchased by, as Addison called them, "noted personages", all with a Palm Beach connection: Lytle Hall, Harold Vanderbilt, J. Leonard Repogle, the Duchess of Sutherland, Rodman Wanamaker, Paris Singer, Irving Berlin, Madame Frances Alda, W. C. Robinson, H. H. Rodgers, D. H. Conkling, A. T. Herd, Porte, William Kissam Vanderbilt II, Elizabeth Arden, Jesse Livermore, Clarence H. Geist, and T. Coleman du Pont as chairman. Addison's brother Wilson also appears on the list of investors, but he had little to invest.
Instead of the existing Palmetto Park Road, the main street in Mizner's Boca was to be El Camino Real, 20 lanes wide, which Mizner fancifully translated as "The Royal Highway", referring to Spain's road network and to the road to Santa Fe and to the Spanish missions in California. It was originally to be circular, with a lagoon in the middle. Soon it became, in the plans, Boca Raton's main east–west street, to be wide and with a canal for pleasure boats in the center. His statement that it was inspired by Botafogo, a neighborhood and beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, is another of his many inventions of foreign "facts". Mizner, who never went to Brazil nor knew Brazilians, simply made it up because the name "Botafogo" sounded impressive, as was the concept of imitating Rio de Janeiro.
Only of the road was built. According to drawings, the centerpiece of the street was to be a canal for pleasure boats; it was never built. All streets were to be at least wide.
His first buildings in Boca Raton were his Administrative Buildings, on El Camino Real, and a small hotel to house interested investors. Mizner designed Boca's first town hall/police station/fire station/library, although the design actually built is much smaller and less expensive than what Mizner planned. Today it is the Boca Raton History Museum, which houses Boca's Welcome Center and the Boca Raton Historical Society.
The hotel was his Ritz-Carlton Cloister Inn, built in 1926, later renamed the Boca Raton Resort & Club, and is one of the only "5 star" hotels in Florida. The 1969 addition of its "pink tower" hotel building is visible from miles away as a towering monument on the Intracoastal Waterway.
Because of the end of the Florida land boom of the 1920s and the 1926 Miami hurricane, the Mizner Development Corporation went into bankruptcy in 1927. Little of Mizner's Boca Raton was ever built: his Administration Buildings, the Cloister Inn, 1/2 mile of El Camino Real, the small Dunagan Apartments, a few houses near the Cloister Inn, the Spanish Village neighborhood, and a few small houses in what is now the Old Floresta Historic District neighborhood.