The decades after World War II were a golden age for roadside
attractions in the Sunshine State. The advent of the family automobile
put Florida's exotic flora and fauna within easy reach for millions of
curious Americans. Entrepreneurs were happy to meet that demand, setting
up for-profit nature parks around four of Florida's most splendid
natural springs--at Silver Springs, Homosassa, Rainbow Springs, and
Weeki Wachee.
To distinguish themselves in a crowded field, these roadside operators
upped the ante on weird, sweetening nature's majesty with theme park
fantasy in the form of hippos, macaques, and mermaids, oh my!
Though these gimmicky roadside parks ultimately fell out of favor as
commercial ventures, this truly wooly and weird chapter in Florida's
history lives on, fully-integrated by popular demand into the state park
system.
Lovingly documented across more than 135 full-color photographs,
Nature's Own Attraction: A History of Florida's Roadside Springs
presents a living history of Florida's bygone roadside era--a special
kind of man-made Florida wildness vying for attention alongside the
native, natural Florida wilderness that we all know and love.