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'''Lake Worth Beach''' is a coastal city in east-central [[Palm Beach County]], Florida, situated directly south of [[West Palm Beach]] along the shores of the [[Lake Worth Lagoon]] and the Atlantic Ocean. Previously named simply Lake Worth, the city is located approximately 63 miles (101 km) north of Miami. The city is home to approximately 42,000 residents within 7 square miles, bordered to the east by the Atlantic Ocean and the broad waters of the Lake Worth Lagoon, and to the west by the fresh waters of Lake Osborne. Long a destination for artists, retirees, and beach-goers alike, Lake Worth Beach has evolved from a quiet agricultural settlement into a culturally vibrant community recognized for its historic architecture, walkable downtown, and nationally celebrated arts events.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach City — Official Website |url=https://lakeworthbeachfl.gov/ |work=City of Lake Worth Beach |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
'''Lake Worth Beach''' is a coastal city in east-central [[Palm Beach County]], Florida, sitting directly south of [[West Palm Beach]] along the shores of the [[Lake Worth Lagoon]] and the Atlantic Ocean. The city was called simply Lake Worth before, and it sits about 63 miles (101 km) north of Miami. Home to roughly 42,000 people across 7 square miles, the city's bordered to the east by the Atlantic and the broad waters of Lake Worth Lagoon, and to the west by the fresh waters of Lake Osborne. Artists, retirees, and beach-goers have long found their way here, and Lake Worth Beach has transformed from a quiet agricultural settlement into a vibrant community that draws attention for its historic architecture, walkable downtown, and nationally recognized arts events.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach City — Official Website |url=https://lakeworthbeachfl.gov/ |work=City of Lake Worth Beach |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


== Name and Geography ==
== Name and Geography ==


The city's name is derived from the body of water along its eastern border, the Lake Worth Lagoon, which was named for General William J. Worth, who commanded United States Army forces during the concluding phase of the Second Seminole War.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Lagoon — South Florida Aquatic Environments |url=https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/southflorida/regions/lake-worth-lagoon/ |work=Florida Museum of Natural History |date=2022 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> In the early nineteenth century, the body of water now referred to as the Lake Worth Lagoon was a freshwater lake; at that time, the only inflow was ground seepage from the Everglades, and the only outflow was through a swamp that became Lake Worth Creek as it approached the Loxahatchee River and Jupiter Inlet. Until approximately the time of the Civil War, the Lake Worth Lagoon remained a landlocked freshwater lake, fed only by runoff from lakes and bodies of water to the west; storms would occasionally cause breaches allowing seawater to flow in from the ocean, but those breaches were not permanent.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Lagoon Estuary |url=https://discover.pbc.gov/erm/Pages/Lake-Worth-Lagoon.aspx |work=Palm Beach County Environmental Resources Management |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The city gets its name from the waterway along its eastern border. The Lake Worth Lagoon was named after General William J. Worth, who commanded United States Army forces during the final stages of the Second Seminole War.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Lagoon — South Florida Aquatic Environments |url=https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/southflorida/regions/lake-worth-lagoon/ |work=Florida Museum of Natural History |date=2022 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


Lake Worth Beach is situated south of West Palm Beach, southeast of Lake Clarke Shores, east of Palm Springs, and north of [[Lantana, Florida|Lantana]], while a small section of the city also abuts the town of [[Palm Beach]]. The Lake Worth Lagoon itself spans approximately 20 miles from North Palm Beach to Ocean Ridge, where ocean water flows in through two inlets and mixes with freshwater flowing through three major flood control canals that drain over 350,000 acres of land.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Lagoon Estuary |url=https://discover.pbc.gov/erm/Pages/Lake-Worth-Lagoon.aspx |work=Palm Beach County Environmental Resources Management |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The lagoon is a navigable public waterway used extensively for recreational boating, kayaking, paddleboarding, and fishing, with Peanut Island a 79-acre park operated by Palm Beach County — located within the lagoon near the Lake Worth Inlet.
Back in the early 1800s, what we now call Lake Worth Lagoon was fresh water. Ground seepage from the Everglades fed it, and the only way out was through a swamp that became Lake Worth Creek as it approached the Loxahatchee River and Jupiter Inlet. The lagoon stayed landlocked and fresh right up until around the Civil War era. Storms occasionally punched holes that let seawater in from the ocean, but those openings didn't last.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Lagoon Estuary |url=https://discover.pbc.gov/erm/Pages/Lake-Worth-Lagoon.aspx |work=Palm Beach County Environmental Resources Management |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
 
Geographically, Lake Worth Beach sits south of West Palm Beach, southeast of Lake Clarke Shores, east of Palm Springs, and north of [[Lantana, Florida|Lantana]]. A small section also touches the town of [[Palm Beach]]. The lagoon itself stretches roughly 20 miles from North Palm Beach down to Ocean Ridge, where ocean water flows through two inlets and mixes with fresh water coming through three major flood control canals that drain more than 350,000 acres of land.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Lagoon Estuary |url=https://discover.pbc.gov/erm/Pages/Lake-Worth-Lagoon.aspx |work=Palm Beach County Environmental Resources Management |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
 
Boaters, kayakers, paddle boarders, and anglers all rely on the lagoon as a navigable public waterway. Peanut Island, a 79-acre park managed by Palm Beach County, sits within the lagoon near the Lake Worth Inlet and serves as a recreation destination.


== History ==
== History ==
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=== Early Settlement ===
=== Early Settlement ===


From 1889 to 1903, Fannie A. Jones James maintained the Jewell Post Office at the [[Florida East Coast Railway]] station for the few households between West Palm Beach and Lantana. James and her husband, Samuel James, who had been enslaved prior to emancipation, homesteaded 186 acres stretching from present-day Dixie Highway to the lake shore, and from Lake Avenue to 12th Avenue South. The couple made a claim for their land under the Homestead Act in 1885, and their holdings grew over time to more than 700 acres, encompassing areas that would become the College Park neighborhood and lands between present-day Dixie and Federal highways.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — Palm Beach County History Online |url=https://education.pbchistory.org/pbc_community/lake-worth-beach/ |work=Palm Beach County History Online |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
From 1889 to 1903, Fannie A. Jones James ran the Jewell Post Office at the [[Florida East Coast Railway]] station. Not many households were between West Palm Beach and Lantana back then. She and her husband Samuel James, who'd been enslaved before emancipation, homesteaded 186 acres stretching from what's now Dixie Highway to the lakeshore, and from Lake Avenue down to 12th Avenue South. They filed their homestead claim in 1885, and over time their holdings grew to more than 700 acres, eventually covering what became the College Park neighborhood and lands between present-day Dixie and Federal highways.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — Palm Beach County History Online |url=https://education.pbchistory.org/pbc_community/lake-worth-beach/ |work=Palm Beach County History Online |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


In 1911, a year after Samuel James died, Fannie sold most of her land to the Palm Beach Farms Company. The owners of Palm Beach Farms Company — Frederick Edward Bryant, his brother Harold J. Bryant, and William Greenwood formed Bryant and Greenwood, which marketed the land throughout the United States and Canada, offering five-acre farm tracts in the Everglades for $250 each, with a 25-by-25-foot lot included at no additional cost at the Townsite of Lucerne on the shores of Lake Worth.<ref>{{cite web |title=City of Lake Worth — Palm Beach County History (pbchistoryonline.org) |url=https://pbchistoryonline.org/page/city-of-lake-worth |work=Historical Society of Palm Beach County |date=2009 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> After Henry Flagler extended the Florida East Coast Railway south from West Palm Beach to Miami in 1896, the land development scheme placed a townsite between the railroad and the lake; purchasers of agricultural lots, most located in what is now Greenacres, would also receive a small city lot within the community, and the developer Bryant & Greenwood promoted the area to markets across the United States and Canada.
A year after Samuel died in 1910, Fannie sold most of her land to the Palm Beach Farms Company. Frederick Edward Bryant, his brother Harold J. Bryant, and William Greenwood owned the company and formed Bryant and Greenwood to market the land across the United States and Canada. They offered five-acre Everglades farm tracts for $250 each, and threw in a 25-by-25-foot city lot at the Townsite of Lucerne on Lake Worth's shore with no extra charge.<ref>{{cite web |title=City of Lake Worth — Palm Beach County History (pbchistoryonline.org) |url=https://pbchistoryonline.org/page/city-of-lake-worth |work=Historical Society of Palm Beach County |date=2009 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
 
Henry Flagler had extended the Florida East Coast Railway south from West Palm Beach to Miami back in 1896. This land scheme placed a townsite between the railroad and the lake. Farm lot buyers, mostly in what's now Greenacres, would also get a small city lot in the community. Bryant and Greenwood promoted the area across the United States and Canada to anyone who'd listen.


=== Incorporation and Early Growth ===
=== Incorporation and Early Growth ===


The population of the settlement increased rapidly from 38 residents in July 1912 to 308 only five months later. The town of Lake Worth was incorporated in June 1913, and its first elected mayor was James Love, a carpenter and member of the [[Socialist Party of America]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — Palm Beach County History Online |url=https://education.pbchistory.org/pbc_community/lake-worth-beach/ |work=Palm Beach County History Online |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The growth was stunning. In July 1912, the settlement had just 38 residents. Five months later it had 308. Lake Worth incorporated in June 1913, and James Love, a carpenter and [[Socialist Party of America]] member, became the first elected mayor.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — Palm Beach County History Online |url=https://education.pbchistory.org/pbc_community/lake-worth-beach/ |work=Palm Beach County History Online |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


A wooden automobile traffic bridge over the lake was completed in 1919, the same year the Brelsford family of Palm Beach deeded a 1,000-foot parcel of land on the barrier island to the town. The town benefited along with the rest of South Florida during the Florida land boom of the 1920s, with Lake Worth's population more than quintupling from 1,106 in 1920 to nearly 6,000 in 1930. Following the approval of a $100,000 bond issue in 1920, the Mediterranean Revival-style Lake Worth Casino and Baths was constructed, and its opening drew many tourists to the area.<ref>{{cite web |title=City of Lake Worth — Palm Beach County History (pbchistoryonline.org) |url=https://pbchistoryonline.org/page/city-of-lake-worth |work=Historical Society of Palm Beach County |date=2009 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
A wooden automobile bridge crossed the lake in 1919. That same year the Brelsford family from Palm Beach gave 1,000 feet of barrier island land to the town. Lake Worth boomed right along with the rest of South Florida in the 1920s. Population jumped from 1,106 in 1920 to nearly 6,000 by 1930. A $100,000 bond issue approved in 1920 paid for the Mediterranean Revival-style Lake Worth Casino and Baths. When it opened, it brought tourists flooding in.<ref>{{cite web |title=City of Lake Worth — Palm Beach County History (pbchistoryonline.org) |url=https://pbchistoryonline.org/page/city-of-lake-worth |work=Historical Society of Palm Beach County |date=2009 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


During the era of racial segregation, African Americans lived in the Osborne Colored Addition, platted in 1917, and described by local historians as probably the only neighborhood in Palm Beach County to be legally designated as "colored." A concrete wall was added in 1954 to separate the Osborne neighborhood, west of Dixie Highway at the southern end of town, from the Whispering Pines neighborhood to the west. In 1994, the city renamed the plat the Osborne Addition; the Florida Legislature subsequently unanimously amended state law to allow local governments to remove derogatory racial terms from official records more easily.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — Palm Beach County History Online |url=https://education.pbchistory.org/pbc_community/lake-worth-beach/ |work=Palm Beach County History Online |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
During segregation, African Americans lived in the Osborne Colored Addition, platted in 1917. Local historians say it was probably the only neighborhood in Palm Beach County legally designated as "colored." In 1954, a concrete wall went up to separate the Osborne neighborhood, west of Dixie Highway at the south end of town, from Whispering Pines to the west. Then in 1994, the city renamed the plat the Osborne Addition. The Florida Legislature later unanimously changed state law to make it easier for local governments to remove derogatory racial terms from official records.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — Palm Beach County History Online |url=https://education.pbchistory.org/pbc_community/lake-worth-beach/ |work=Palm Beach County History Online |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


=== Name Change ===
=== Name Change ===


In March 2019, city residents voted in a referendum to rename their city Lake Worth Beach, Florida, in part to better distinguish the municipality from the Lake Worth Lagoon itself and to emphasize its coastal identity.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach City — Official Website |url=https://lakeworthbeachfl.gov/ |work=City of Lake Worth Beach |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The 2010 census had recorded a population of 34,910, which grew to 42,219 in the 2020 census, reflecting continued residential growth in the years surrounding the renaming.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — Palm Beach County History Online |url=https://education.pbchistory.org/pbc_community/lake-worth-beach/ |work=Palm Beach County History Online |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
March 2019 brought a referendum vote on renaming the city Lake Worth Beach, Florida. The change helped distinguish the municipality from the Lake Worth Lagoon itself and emphasized the city's coastal identity.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach City — Official Website |url=https://lakeworthbeachfl.gov/ |work=City of Lake Worth Beach |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
 
Population had been 34,910 in the 2010 census. By 2020, it'd grown to 42,219, reflecting steady residential expansion in the years around the renaming.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — Palm Beach County History Online |url=https://education.pbchistory.org/pbc_community/lake-worth-beach/ |work=Palm Beach County History Online |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


== Government ==
== Government ==


Lake Worth Beach operates under a commission-manager form of government, with a five-member city commission that sets policy and an appointed city manager responsible for day-to-day administration. The city commission includes a mayor elected at-large and four commissioners elected by district. Municipal services include the Lake Worth Beach Police Department, fire-rescue services, and public utilities. The city's offices are headquartered in City Hall near the downtown core.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach City — Official Website |url=https://lakeworthbeachfl.gov/ |work=City of Lake Worth Beach |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The city operates under a commission-manager system. A five-member city commission sets policy while an appointed city manager handles day-to-day work. The commission includes a mayor elected at-large and four district commissioners. Lake Worth Beach Police Department, fire-rescue services, and public utilities run municipal operations. City Hall near downtown holds the main offices.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach City — Official Website |url=https://lakeworthbeachfl.gov/ |work=City of Lake Worth Beach |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


In recent years, the city government has advanced several affordable housing initiatives. Among them is the development of new Community Land Trust (CLT) villas aimed at first-time homeowners, offering homes at significantly below-market prices as part of a broader effort to preserve housing affordability in an area where property values and tax burdens have risen steadily.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Palm Beaches — Lake Worth Beach |url=https://www.thepalmbeaches.com/explore-cities/lake-worth-beach |work=The Palm Beaches |date=2022 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
Housing affordability has become a focus for city leadership. The city has pushed forward with several initiatives. Community Land Trust villas aimed at first-time homeowners now offer homes at prices well below market rate, part of a broader push to keep housing costs manageable as property values and tax burdens have climbed.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Palm Beaches — Lake Worth Beach |url=https://www.thepalmbeaches.com/explore-cities/lake-worth-beach |work=The Palm Beaches |date=2022 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


== Historic Districts and Landmarks ==
== Historic Districts and Landmarks ==


Lake Worth Beach contains several historic neighborhoods listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]], including College Park and Old Lucerne (also known as Parrot Cove). The Old Lucerne Historic Residential District encompasses the area where Samuel and Fannie James once lived, comprising a total of 346 structures, of which 218 are classified as contributing and 128 as non-contributing to the district's historic character. The downtown area also contains dozens of buildings that form the Historic Old Town Commercial District, which anchors the city's walkable commercial core.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — Palm Beach County History Online |url=https://education.pbchistory.org/pbc_community/lake-worth-beach/ |work=Palm Beach County History Online |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
Lake Worth Beach has several historic neighborhoods on the [[National Register of Historic Places]], including College Park and Old Lucerne (also called Parrot Cove). The Old Lucerne Historic Residential District covers the area where Samuel and Fannie James once lived. It has 346 total structures. 218 are considered contributing to the district's historic character, while 128 aren't. Downtown contains dozens of buildings that make up the Historic Old Town Commercial District, which anchors the city's walkable commercial heart.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — Palm Beach County History Online |url=https://education.pbchistory.org/pbc_community/lake-worth-beach/ |work=Palm Beach County History Online |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


One of the city's most storied landmarks is the Gulfstream Hotel. Located at the gateway to downtown, the hotel was originally conceived under the name El Nuevo in 1923, when investors secured $225,000 from two local banks and applied for the building permit — at the time the largest permit in the city's history. The hotel was renamed the Gulf Stream Hotel in 1924 and was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1983. The great Okeechobee Hurricane that struck Palm Beach County in 1928 damaged the hotel's fifth and sixth floors; the Gulfstream survived the storm but was then struck by the financial consequences of the stock market crash of 1929, when its original investors went bankrupt. It remained closed for seven years before reopening in 1936. The hotel closed its doors again in 2005, dealing a significant blow to the downtown district. The property was subsequently acquired by Restoration St. Louis, which undertook a $100 million restoration project aimed at returning the landmark to its former prominence.<ref>{{cite web |title=Gulf Stream Hotel History |url=https://www.thegulfstreamhotel.com/history |work=The Gulfstream Hotel |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Gulfstream Hotel finally changes hands |url=https://www.aol.com/gulfstream-hotel-finally-changes-hands-224301988.html |work=Palm Beach Post via AOL |date=2024-03-28 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The Gulfstream Hotel is one of the city's most legendary landmarks. Positioned at downtown's gateway, it was first envisioned as El Nuevo in 1923. Two local banks fronted $225,000, and investors filed for a building permit. At that time, it was the largest permit in city history. A year later, in 1924, it became the Gulf Stream Hotel. The U.S. National Register of Historic Places added it in 1983. The Okeechobee Hurricane that smashed Palm Beach County in 1928 damaged the fifth and sixth floors. The Gulfstream made it through the storm, but then came the stock market crash of 1929. The original investors went broke. The hotel stayed shuttered for seven years, then reopened in 1936. It closed again in 2005. That dealt a serious blow to downtown. Restoration St. Louis later bought the property and started a $100 million restoration aimed at restoring the landmark's former glory.<ref>{{cite web |title=Gulf Stream Hotel History |url=https://www.thegulfstreamhotel.com/history |work=The Gulfstream Hotel |date=2024 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Gulfstream Hotel finally changes hands |url=https://www.aol.com/gulfstream-hotel-finally-changes-hands-224301988.html |work=Palm Beach Post via AOL |date=2024-03-28 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


Other notable landmarks include the Lake Worth Pier, originally constructed in 1920, and the Lake Worth Playhouse, built in 1924. The Casino building — whose name is a historical reference, as it contains no gambling was reconstructed and reopened in March 2013 with wrap-around terraces offering views of the Atlantic Ocean, the beach, and the surrounding lagoon. It has since become a focal point of the city's waterfront and a venue for community events and dining.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — West Palm Beach Parks |url=https://wpbparks.com/beaches/lake-worth-beach/ |work=West Palm Beach Parks |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
You'll also find the Lake Worth Pier, built in 1920, and the Lake Worth Playhouse, finished in 1924. The Casino building got its name from history rather than current use, since it doesn't have gambling. It was reconstructed and reopened in March 2013 with wrap-around terraces offering Atlantic Ocean views, beach views, and lagoon views. Today it's a centerpiece of the waterfront and hosts community events and dining.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — West Palm Beach Parks |url=https://wpbparks.com/beaches/lake-worth-beach/ |work=West Palm Beach Parks |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


== Arts and Culture ==
== Arts and Culture ==


Lake Worth Beach has developed a well-established identity as an arts community within The Palm Beaches region, balancing a walkable historic downtown with a broad range of cultural institutions and public programming. The revitalized downtown corridor is home to the [[Cultural Council of Palm Beach County]] and the Lake Worth Playhouse, as well as independent galleries, studios, and performance venues that draw visitors and artists from across South Florida and beyond.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach, FL: Things To Do, Attractions & Lodging |url=https://www.thepalmbeaches.com/explore-cities/lake-worth-beach |work=The Palm Beaches |date=2022 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
Lake Worth Beach has built a strong reputation as an arts community in The Palm Beaches region. It balances a walkable historic downtown with a range of cultural institutions and public programming. The revitalized downtown is home to the [[Cultural Council of Palm Beach County]] and the Lake Worth Playhouse, plus independent galleries, studios, and performance venues that pull visitors and artists from South Florida and beyond.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach, FL: Things To Do, Attractions & Lodging |url=https://www.thepalmbeaches.com/explore-cities/lake-worth-beach |work=The Palm Beaches |date=2022 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


The annual Lake Worth Beach Street Painting Festival is the city's signature cultural event. Now in its fourth decade, the festival is held each February along [[Lake Avenue]] and [[Lucerne Avenue]] in the heart of downtown, where over 600 artists use the pavement as canvas to transform the streetscape into a temporary outdoor museum of original works and masterpiece reproductions. The event includes live entertainment, food vendors, and free admission for all visitors, drawing large crowds to the downtown district each year. As of June 30, 2021, the City of Lake Worth Beach assumed full ownership and operational control of the Street Painting Festival, with the festival's founding board members retiring after three decades of leadership.<ref>{{cite web |title=Festival Information & FAQ — Lake Worth Beach Street Painting Festival |url=https://spf.lakeworthbeachfl.gov/faq |work=City of Lake Worth Beach |date=2026 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Street Painting Festival — City of Lake Worth Beach |url=https://spf23.lakeworthbeachfl.gov/ |work=City of Lake Worth Beach |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
The Lake Worth Beach Street Painting Festival is the city's biggest cultural event. Running for four decades now, it happens every February along [[Lake Avenue]] and [[Lucerne Avenue]] in downtown. Over 600 artists use the pavement as their canvas, turning the streets into a temporary outdoor museum of original work and masterpiece reproductions. Live entertainment, food vendors, and free admission draw big crowds downtown each year. As of June 30, 2021, the City of Lake Worth Beach took full ownership and control of the festival. The founding board members retired after three decades leading the event.<ref>{{cite web |title=Festival Information & FAQ — Lake Worth Beach Street Painting Festival |url=https://spf.lakeworthbeachfl.gov/faq |work=City of Lake Worth Beach |date=2026 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Street Painting Festival — City of Lake Worth Beach |url=https://spf23.lakeworthbeachfl.gov/ |work=City of Lake Worth Beach |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


The city also hosts an annual holiday parade through its downtown streets, and the concentration of independent shops, restaurants, and art spaces along Lake Avenue has made the corridor a recognized destination within Palm Beach County for visitors seeking an alternative to larger commercial centers.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach, FL: Things To Do, Attractions & Lodging |url=https://www.thepalmbeaches.com/explore-cities/lake-worth-beach |work=The Palm Beaches |date=2022 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
An annual holiday parade marches through downtown streets. Independent shops, restaurants, and art spaces cluster along Lake Avenue, making it a recognized destination in Palm Beach County for visitors looking for something different from the bigger commercial centers.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach, FL: Things To Do, Attractions & Lodging |url=https://www.thepalmbeaches.com/explore-cities/lake-worth-beach |work=The Palm Beaches |date=2022 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>


== Recreation ==
== Recreation ==
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=== Beach and Waterfront ===
=== Beach and Waterfront ===


Lake Worth Beach Park, situated on the barrier island east of the Lake Worth Lagoon, serves as the primary public beach facility for residents and visitors. The park includes a boardwalk that connects to the Lake Worth Pier, a municipal pier originally built in 1920 that extends into the Atlantic Ocean and remains a popular destination for fishing and sightseeing. Directly across the lagoon, the Snook Islands Natural Area features a second boardwalk accessible from the mainland, offering views of the lagoon's mangrove habitats and tidal flats.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — West Palm Beach Parks |url=https://wpbparks.com
Lake Worth Beach Park sits on the barrier island east of Lake Worth Lagoon and serves as the primary public beach for residents and visitors. A boardwalk connects to the Lake Worth Pier, a municipal pier built in 1920 that reaches into the Atlantic Ocean. It's still popular for fishing and sightseeing. On the opposite shore, the Snook Islands Natural Area has a second boardwalk accessible from the mainland, offering views of the lagoon's mangrove habitats and tidal flats.<ref>{{cite web |title=Lake Worth Beach — West Palm Beach Parks |url=https://wpbparks.com/beaches/lake-worth-beach/ |work=West Palm Beach Parks |date=2023 |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref>
 
[[Category:Cities in Florida]]
[[Category:Palm Beach County, Florida]]
[[Category:Historic cities in Florida]]
[[Category:Coastal cities in Florida]]

Revision as of 20:06, 23 April 2026


Lake Worth Beach is a coastal city in east-central Palm Beach County, Florida, sitting directly south of West Palm Beach along the shores of the Lake Worth Lagoon and the Atlantic Ocean. The city was called simply Lake Worth before, and it sits about 63 miles (101 km) north of Miami. Home to roughly 42,000 people across 7 square miles, the city's bordered to the east by the Atlantic and the broad waters of Lake Worth Lagoon, and to the west by the fresh waters of Lake Osborne. Artists, retirees, and beach-goers have long found their way here, and Lake Worth Beach has transformed from a quiet agricultural settlement into a vibrant community that draws attention for its historic architecture, walkable downtown, and nationally recognized arts events.[1]

Name and Geography

The city gets its name from the waterway along its eastern border. The Lake Worth Lagoon was named after General William J. Worth, who commanded United States Army forces during the final stages of the Second Seminole War.[2]

Back in the early 1800s, what we now call Lake Worth Lagoon was fresh water. Ground seepage from the Everglades fed it, and the only way out was through a swamp that became Lake Worth Creek as it approached the Loxahatchee River and Jupiter Inlet. The lagoon stayed landlocked and fresh right up until around the Civil War era. Storms occasionally punched holes that let seawater in from the ocean, but those openings didn't last.[3]

Geographically, Lake Worth Beach sits south of West Palm Beach, southeast of Lake Clarke Shores, east of Palm Springs, and north of Lantana. A small section also touches the town of Palm Beach. The lagoon itself stretches roughly 20 miles from North Palm Beach down to Ocean Ridge, where ocean water flows through two inlets and mixes with fresh water coming through three major flood control canals that drain more than 350,000 acres of land.[4]

Boaters, kayakers, paddle boarders, and anglers all rely on the lagoon as a navigable public waterway. Peanut Island, a 79-acre park managed by Palm Beach County, sits within the lagoon near the Lake Worth Inlet and serves as a recreation destination.

History

Early Settlement

From 1889 to 1903, Fannie A. Jones James ran the Jewell Post Office at the Florida East Coast Railway station. Not many households were between West Palm Beach and Lantana back then. She and her husband Samuel James, who'd been enslaved before emancipation, homesteaded 186 acres stretching from what's now Dixie Highway to the lakeshore, and from Lake Avenue down to 12th Avenue South. They filed their homestead claim in 1885, and over time their holdings grew to more than 700 acres, eventually covering what became the College Park neighborhood and lands between present-day Dixie and Federal highways.[5]

A year after Samuel died in 1910, Fannie sold most of her land to the Palm Beach Farms Company. Frederick Edward Bryant, his brother Harold J. Bryant, and William Greenwood owned the company and formed Bryant and Greenwood to market the land across the United States and Canada. They offered five-acre Everglades farm tracts for $250 each, and threw in a 25-by-25-foot city lot at the Townsite of Lucerne on Lake Worth's shore with no extra charge.[6]

Henry Flagler had extended the Florida East Coast Railway south from West Palm Beach to Miami back in 1896. This land scheme placed a townsite between the railroad and the lake. Farm lot buyers, mostly in what's now Greenacres, would also get a small city lot in the community. Bryant and Greenwood promoted the area across the United States and Canada to anyone who'd listen.

Incorporation and Early Growth

The growth was stunning. In July 1912, the settlement had just 38 residents. Five months later it had 308. Lake Worth incorporated in June 1913, and James Love, a carpenter and Socialist Party of America member, became the first elected mayor.[7]

A wooden automobile bridge crossed the lake in 1919. That same year the Brelsford family from Palm Beach gave 1,000 feet of barrier island land to the town. Lake Worth boomed right along with the rest of South Florida in the 1920s. Population jumped from 1,106 in 1920 to nearly 6,000 by 1930. A $100,000 bond issue approved in 1920 paid for the Mediterranean Revival-style Lake Worth Casino and Baths. When it opened, it brought tourists flooding in.[8]

During segregation, African Americans lived in the Osborne Colored Addition, platted in 1917. Local historians say it was probably the only neighborhood in Palm Beach County legally designated as "colored." In 1954, a concrete wall went up to separate the Osborne neighborhood, west of Dixie Highway at the south end of town, from Whispering Pines to the west. Then in 1994, the city renamed the plat the Osborne Addition. The Florida Legislature later unanimously changed state law to make it easier for local governments to remove derogatory racial terms from official records.[9]

Name Change

March 2019 brought a referendum vote on renaming the city Lake Worth Beach, Florida. The change helped distinguish the municipality from the Lake Worth Lagoon itself and emphasized the city's coastal identity.[10]

Population had been 34,910 in the 2010 census. By 2020, it'd grown to 42,219, reflecting steady residential expansion in the years around the renaming.[11]

Government

The city operates under a commission-manager system. A five-member city commission sets policy while an appointed city manager handles day-to-day work. The commission includes a mayor elected at-large and four district commissioners. Lake Worth Beach Police Department, fire-rescue services, and public utilities run municipal operations. City Hall near downtown holds the main offices.[12]

Housing affordability has become a focus for city leadership. The city has pushed forward with several initiatives. Community Land Trust villas aimed at first-time homeowners now offer homes at prices well below market rate, part of a broader push to keep housing costs manageable as property values and tax burdens have climbed.[13]

Historic Districts and Landmarks

Lake Worth Beach has several historic neighborhoods on the National Register of Historic Places, including College Park and Old Lucerne (also called Parrot Cove). The Old Lucerne Historic Residential District covers the area where Samuel and Fannie James once lived. It has 346 total structures. 218 are considered contributing to the district's historic character, while 128 aren't. Downtown contains dozens of buildings that make up the Historic Old Town Commercial District, which anchors the city's walkable commercial heart.[14]

The Gulfstream Hotel is one of the city's most legendary landmarks. Positioned at downtown's gateway, it was first envisioned as El Nuevo in 1923. Two local banks fronted $225,000, and investors filed for a building permit. At that time, it was the largest permit in city history. A year later, in 1924, it became the Gulf Stream Hotel. The U.S. National Register of Historic Places added it in 1983. The Okeechobee Hurricane that smashed Palm Beach County in 1928 damaged the fifth and sixth floors. The Gulfstream made it through the storm, but then came the stock market crash of 1929. The original investors went broke. The hotel stayed shuttered for seven years, then reopened in 1936. It closed again in 2005. That dealt a serious blow to downtown. Restoration St. Louis later bought the property and started a $100 million restoration aimed at restoring the landmark's former glory.[15][16]

You'll also find the Lake Worth Pier, built in 1920, and the Lake Worth Playhouse, finished in 1924. The Casino building got its name from history rather than current use, since it doesn't have gambling. It was reconstructed and reopened in March 2013 with wrap-around terraces offering Atlantic Ocean views, beach views, and lagoon views. Today it's a centerpiece of the waterfront and hosts community events and dining.[17]

Arts and Culture

Lake Worth Beach has built a strong reputation as an arts community in The Palm Beaches region. It balances a walkable historic downtown with a range of cultural institutions and public programming. The revitalized downtown is home to the Cultural Council of Palm Beach County and the Lake Worth Playhouse, plus independent galleries, studios, and performance venues that pull visitors and artists from South Florida and beyond.[18]

The Lake Worth Beach Street Painting Festival is the city's biggest cultural event. Running for four decades now, it happens every February along Lake Avenue and Lucerne Avenue in downtown. Over 600 artists use the pavement as their canvas, turning the streets into a temporary outdoor museum of original work and masterpiece reproductions. Live entertainment, food vendors, and free admission draw big crowds downtown each year. As of June 30, 2021, the City of Lake Worth Beach took full ownership and control of the festival. The founding board members retired after three decades leading the event.[19][20]

An annual holiday parade marches through downtown streets. Independent shops, restaurants, and art spaces cluster along Lake Avenue, making it a recognized destination in Palm Beach County for visitors looking for something different from the bigger commercial centers.[21]

Recreation

Beach and Waterfront

Lake Worth Beach Park sits on the barrier island east of Lake Worth Lagoon and serves as the primary public beach for residents and visitors. A boardwalk connects to the Lake Worth Pier, a municipal pier built in 1920 that reaches into the Atlantic Ocean. It's still popular for fishing and sightseeing. On the opposite shore, the Snook Islands Natural Area has a second boardwalk accessible from the mainland, offering views of the lagoon's mangrove habitats and tidal flats.[22]