The Calusa Indians were probably some of the first
visitors to the Dinner Island/Hendry County area, southwest of Lake
Okeechobee. From A.D. 800 into the seventeenth century, these
skilled hunters and fishermen inhabited the coastal regions of
southwest Florida and traveled up the Caloosahatchee River in
dugout canoes to reach interior wetlands associated with Lake
Okeechobee and the Kissimmee River. The Caloosahatchee, which means
"River of the Calusa," flows southwest to the Gulf of Mexico (near
present-day Fort Myers) from Lake Okeechobee. The river lies north
of Dinner Island close to the Hendry/Glades County border.
Later visitors to the area included soldiers of the
Seminole Wars, cattlemen, hunters, trappers and traders. By the
1880s, settlements such as LaBelle, northwest of Dinner Island,
sprang up where forts had been built. Hendry County was named for
Captain Francis Asbury Hendry, a cattle baron and Civil War
hero.
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Florida Photographic Collection
A field loader loading cut cane into tractor train: Clewiston,
Florida.
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The Caloosahatchee River was once a meandering
river with its headwaters near Lake Hicpochee, northwest of Lake
Okeechobee. To provide flood control for surrounding counties and a
navigable channel for steam boats from the lake to the Gulf of
Mexico, dredging began on the Caloosahatchee in 1881. A canal was
built to connect the river with Lake Okeechobee. This new
connection opened the area to increased development and growth, but
created significant flooding problems downstream.
During the 1920s, the town of Clewiston blossomed and sugar cane
and citrus became important local industries. Southern Sugar, which
became The U.S. Sugar Corporation in 1931, established a sugar mill
in Clewiston. After 2,400 residents around Lake Okeechobee died in
floods from hurricanes in 1926 and 1928, flood control began in
earnest. A dike was built around Lake Okeechobee and the
Caloosatchee and St. Lucie rivers were dredged and channelized to
create the Okeechobee Waterway, which connected the lake to the
Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico. Lock-and-dam structures
controlled water flow. The construction of this man-made waterway
and a sprawling network of canals diverted much needed water to
agriculture and urban uses and away from the surrounding areas and
sensitive ecosystems of the Florida Everglades and Florida Bay.
Hydrological restoration at Dinner Island will take into account
these manmade alterations and the WMA's location immediately
adjacent to the publicly-owned, 35,000-acre Okalaocoochee Slough, a
wetland that runs north to south between the Caloosahatchee River
and the Fakahatchee Strand and Big Cypress National Preserve.
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Florida Photographic Collection
Cattle herding on the United States Sugar Corporation range:
Clewiston
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Agriculture and cattle ranching operations have flourished in
the area since the 19th century. Today, agriculture is the base of
Hendry County's economy. Sugar cane and citrus, followed by cattle
and tomato farming are the county's most important commodities.
Dinner Island was operated by the Hilliard family primarily as a
cattle ranch; citrus and sugarcane production were much smaller
enterprises on the property. The property came into public
ownership in July 2003.