Julia bought a property near the Miami River of almost three square kilometers. At a party, Julia met James E. Ingraham , who was a representative of a railroad company.
For the story remains the promise Julia made to the representative , by expressing her interest in bringing the train to Miami and the idea that one day someone would want to build a station in Miami and that she was willing to donate part of her land to make it happen. After the historic frost that wiped out Florida crops, except for those crops that were in Miami, another railroad entrepreneur, Henry flagler , began to consider the possibility of building a train station in Miami.
James E. Ingraham began working for Flagger and told him about the benefits and potential of Miami as well as the promise Julia Tuttle had made to him two years before donating her land to get the train there. The content of the article adheres to our principles of editorial ethics. She married Frederick L. Tuttle in The couple visited Miami to see her parents several times over the next couple of decades.
Julia Tuttle's father, Ephraim T. Sturtevant, had settled with his wife on Biscayne Bay in Miami in The Sturtevant family arrived with the William Brickell family and settled at the mouth of the Miami River, but they soon quarreled and the Sturtevants moved a few miles north. Julia Tuttle's husband, Frederick, died in Trending Here are the facts and trivia that people are buzzing about. Is Vatican City a Country? The Languages of Africa. The Mongol Empire.
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