Glades culture: Difference between revisions
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The '''Glades culture''' refers to a prehistoric and historic tradition of human settlement and subsistence in the wetlands, beaches, and interior wilderness of [[South Florida]], with roots extending as far back as 15,000 years and continuing through the early period of European contact. Centered on the expansive [[Everglades]] ecosystem and its surrounding coastal environments, the Glades culture encompassed Indigenous peoples who developed sophisticated strategies for living in one of North America's most | The '''Glades culture''' refers to a prehistoric and historic tradition of human settlement and subsistence in the wetlands, beaches, and interior wilderness of [[South Florida]], with roots extending as far back as 15,000 years ago and continuing through the early period of European contact. Centered on the expansive [[Everglades]] ecosystem and its surrounding coastal environments, the Glades culture encompassed Indigenous peoples who developed sophisticated strategies for living in one of North America's most ecologically demanding landscapes. In the [[West Palm Beach]] region and throughout [[Palm Beach County]], evidence of Glades culture occupation is found across archaeological sites near the Atlantic coast and inland waterways. The legacy of this tradition is complex. While the original Indigenous peoples who defined the Glades culture largely disappeared following European colonization, aspects of a broader Glades-derived way of life persisted for centuries, eventually giving rise to a distinct community of settlers and survivalists whose traditions are now under pressure from federal land-use regulations and changing environmental policy. | ||
== Origins and Prehistoric Background == | == Origins and Prehistoric Background == | ||
The Glades culture represents one of the longest continuous human traditions documented in the [[Florida]] archaeological record. Researchers and local historians trace the | The Glades culture represents one of the longest continuous human traditions documented in the [[Florida]] archaeological record. Researchers and local historians trace human occupation of the peninsula back as far as 15,000 years ago, when early peoples first adapted to its subtropical wetland environments.<ref>{{cite web |title=Boca Raton's Native Americans: Jeaga, Calusa or ... |url=https://www.4boca.com/boca-ratons-native-americans-jeaga-calusa-or-tequesta/ |work=4boca.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> That long Archaic-period presence is distinct from the Glades culture as archaeologists formally define it. The Glades cultural complex emerged from the late Archaic tradition roughly 2,000 years ago, representing a recognizable shift in subsistence patterns, material culture, and social organization rather than simply a continuation of earlier occupation.<ref>{{cite book |last=Milanich |first=Jerald T. |title=Archaeology of Precolumbian Florida |year=1994 |publisher=University Press of Florida |location=Gainesville}}</ref> Some sources place the onset of the Glades period at approximately 500 BCE, though this figure reflects a transitional horizon within the broader Archaic-to-Glades sequence rather than a clean cultural break.<ref>{{cite web |title=Exploring the Rich Heritage and History of Boca Raton |url=https://royalpalm.com/exploring-the-rich-heritage-and-history-of-boca-raton/ |work=Royal Palm Properties |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
The | The Glades cultural complex is defined archaeologically by several distinguishing features. These include a characteristic sand-tempered pottery tradition, extensive reliance on shell middens as both refuse deposits and structural platforms, and a subsistence economy anchored in fishing, shellfishing, hunting, and gathering rather than agriculture. The Everglades and surrounding coastal environments offered a resource base rich enough to support permanent settlements without the cultivation of crops, a pattern that distinguished South Florida's Indigenous inhabitants from many other Eastern Woodlands peoples.<ref>{{cite book |last=Milanich |first=Jerald T. |title=Archaeology of Precolumbian Florida |year=1994 |publisher=University Press of Florida |location=Gainesville}}</ref> Canoes were central to daily life. They allowed communities to cover large distances across flooded prairies and coastal waterways, linking settlements and enabling trade. | ||
These communities weren't isolated or static. Archaeological evidence indicates that Glades culture peoples maintained networks of habitation and resource use across a wide territory that included | According to the [[Boca Raton]] Historical Society, the earliest known inhabitants of the Boca Raton area were peoples of the Glades culture, who established communities near the ocean at least one thousand years ago, though the broader tradition itself is considerably older.<ref>{{cite web |title=Our History |url=https://www.bocahistory.org/our-history |work=Boca Raton Historical Society |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> One well-documented Glades culture site in that area is now occupied by the [[Gumbo Limbo Nature Center]], where archaeological investigations have confirmed sustained pre-contact occupation at the coastal margin. These communities weren't isolated or static. Archaeological evidence indicates that Glades culture peoples maintained networks of habitation and resource use across a wide territory that included coastal margins, interior wetlands, and elevated landforms known as [[tree island]]s. | ||
== | == Material Culture and Subsistence == | ||
Daily life within the Glades culture revolved around an intimate knowledge of South Florida's ecosystems. Fishing dominated subsistence across most of the region. Communities near the coast took fish, shellfish, sea turtles, and manatees using nets, weirs, and dugout canoes, while inland groups focused on freshwater fish, white-tailed deer, alligator, and migratory waterfowl.<ref>{{cite book |last=Widmer |first=Randolph J. |title=The Evolution of the Calusa: A Nonagricultural Chiefdom on the Southwest Florida Coast |year=1988 |publisher=University of Alabama Press |location=Tuscaloosa}}</ref> Shell middens, some reaching considerable size, formed a defining feature of Glades settlements. They weren't simply trash heaps. Over time, accumulated shell deposits raised habitation surfaces above the surrounding wetlands, effectively creating stable ground in a landscape that offered little of it naturally. | |||
Pottery of the Glades tradition was predominantly sand-tempered and undecorated, distinguishing it from the fiber-tempered wares of the preceding Archaic period. Tool assemblages included bone pins, shell gouges, stone projectile points, and a variety of implements fashioned from local materials. Woodworking was sophisticated. Carved wooden objects recovered from waterlogged sites at Key Marco in Collier County, though representing a related but distinct coastal tradition, provide a sense of the organic material culture that rarely survives in the archaeological record.<ref>{{cite book |last=Milanich |first=Jerald T. |title=Archaeology of Precolumbian Florida |year=1994 |publisher=University Press of Florida |location=Gainesville}}</ref> Trade goods including copper ornaments and exotic stone found at some Glades sites indicate connections to exchange networks extending well beyond South Florida. | |||
== Settlement Patterns and the Role of Tree Islands == | |||
A defining feature of Glades culture settlement was the strategic use of tree islands scattered across the vast [[sawgrass]] plains of the Everglades. These elevated landforms, small forested hammocks rising above surrounding sawgrass prairies, provided dry ground in an otherwise inundated landscape. For the Indigenous peoples of the Glades culture, tree islands offered locations for habitation, food storage, ceremony, and, critically, concealment and defense. | |||
Historical accounts and journalistic investigations of the Everglades region have noted that tree islands deep in the sea of grass once helped [[Native Americans]] elude capture by United States troops during the nineteenth century, particularly during the [[Seminole Wars]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Stepping Into a Hidden World in the Everglades |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/29/travel/everglades-miccosukee-reservation.html |work=The New York Times |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> That capacity for concealment reflects the deep geographic knowledge Indigenous peoples and their successors developed over millennia of inhabiting the Everglades. The ability to read the landscape, identify safe ground, and move through a seemingly impenetrable wilderness was a form of cultural knowledge transmitted across generations. | |||
The | The landscape served not only as a source of physical sustenance but also as a cultural and strategic resource. Communities located within this terrain were largely self-sufficient, relying on hunting, fishing, gathering, and in later periods, limited cultivation. The archaeological record from Palm Beach County and the surrounding region reflects this pattern of settlement, with site distributions corresponding closely to the locations of tree islands, coastal ridges, and freshwater sources. | ||
== Indigenous Peoples and European Contact == | |||
== | The Glades culture as practiced by its original Indigenous inhabitants didn't survive European colonization intact. Native peoples associated with the Glades tradition occupied Florida's beaches and wetlands from roughly 2,000 years ago through the early centuries of European contact, at which point population decline, displacement, and cultural disruption rapidly eroded the communities that had sustained the tradition for generations.<ref>{{cite web |title=Exploring the Rich Heritage and History of Boca Raton |url=https://royalpalm.com/exploring-the-rich-heritage-and-history-of-boca-raton/ |work=Royal Palm Properties |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> Disease was the primary driver. Epidemics introduced by Spanish explorers and missionaries in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries devastated communities that had no prior exposure to Old World pathogens, reducing populations that had numbered in the tens of thousands to scattered remnants within a few generations. | ||
The specific tribal identities connected to the broader Glades culture in the Palm Beach and Boca Raton areas have been a subject of ongoing historical inquiry. Three groups are most frequently considered in connection with the cultural traditions documented along Florida's southeast coast: the [[Jeaga]], the [[Calusa]], and the [[Tequesta]].<ref>{{cite web |title=Boca Raton's Native Americans: Jeaga, Calusa or ... |url=https://www.4boca.com/boca-ratons-native-americans-jeaga-calusa-or-tequesta/ |work=4boca.com |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> The Tequesta occupied the southeast coast in the vicinity of present-day Miami and the lower Palm Beach coast. The Jeaga are associated with the area around present-day Palm Beach and Martin counties. The Calusa, centered on Charlotte Harbor and the southwest coast, exercised political dominance over much of South Florida through a chiefdom structure that incorporated tributary relationships with smaller coastal groups. | |||
The | The Calusa in particular represent one of the most remarkable expressions of Glades culture complexity. Their sophisticated social organization, centralized leadership, and mastery of the wetland environment allowed them to sustain a hierarchical society without agriculture, a rare achievement in the pre-contact Americas.<ref>{{cite book |last=Widmer |first=Randolph J. |title=The Evolution of the Calusa: A Nonagricultural Chiefdom on the Southwest Florida Coast |year=1988 |publisher=University of Alabama Press |location=Tuscaloosa}}</ref> Spanish accounts from the sixteenth century describe Calusa towns of considerable size, a paramount chief commanding tribute from dozens of subordinate communities, and canoe fleets capable of long-distance coastal travel. By the early eighteenth century, the combined effects of epidemic disease, slaving raids by English-allied Creek peoples from the north, and Spanish mission disruption had reduced the Calusa and their neighbors to remnant populations. The last survivors reportedly evacuated to Cuba in 1711, effectively ending the Glades cultural tradition as a living Indigenous practice. | ||
After the collapse of the original Glades culture populations, new Indigenous groups moved into Florida, including the ancestors of the modern [[Miccosukee]] and [[Seminole]] peoples. Descended from Creek and other Southeastern nations pushed south during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, these groups occupied some of the same ecological niches the original Glades peoples had inhabited and developed their own traditions in relationship to the Everglades landscape. Their descendants remain present in the region today, with the [[Miccosukee Reservation]] located within the Everglades corridor. The Miccosukee and Seminole traditions are culturally and historically distinct from the Glades culture, though they were shaped by the same physical environment. | |||
== Key Archaeological Sites == | |||
Archaeological investigation across South Florida has identified numerous sites associated with the Glades cultural tradition. In Palm Beach County, coastal shell middens and burial mounds along the Atlantic ridge have yielded material consistent with sustained Glades occupation, including sand-tempered ceramics, bone tools, and faunal remains dominated by marine and estuarine species.<ref>{{cite book |last=Milanich |first=Jerald T. |title=Archaeology of Precolumbian Florida |year=1994 |publisher=University Press of Florida |location=Gainesville}}</ref> The [[Florida Division of Historical Resources]] maintains site inventory records for hundreds of documented Glades-period locations across the region, though many remain only partially investigated.<ref>{{cite web |title=Florida Master Site File |url=https://dos.fl.gov/historical/preservation/master-site-file/ |work=Florida Division of Historical Resources |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
== | The Boca Raton area has produced some of the best-documented evidence of Glades culture presence in the northern coastal zone. Investigations near the Gumbo Limbo Nature Center site have confirmed human occupation at the coastal margin extending back at least one thousand years, consistent with the broader settlement pattern documented along Florida's southeast coast.<ref>{{cite web |title=Our History |url=https://www.bocahistory.org/our-history |work=Boca Raton Historical Society |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> Shell middens, tool assemblages, and faunal remains from these sites offer concrete insight into diet, technology, and settlement organization. Further south, the Belle Glade site near Lake Okeechobee represents one of the most significant interior Glades-period localities, documenting intensive occupation of the lake's rim and connections between the Everglades interior and the coastal zones.<ref>{{cite book |last=Milanich |first=Jerald T. |title=Archaeology of Precolumbian Florida |year=1994 |publisher=University Press of Florida |location=Gainesville}}</ref> | ||
The | == The Gladesmen Tradition == | ||
Following the decline of the original Glades culture peoples, a distinct successor tradition emerged among the non-Indigenous settlers who came to occupy the South Florida wilderness. These individuals, often referred to as [[Gladesmen]], developed a way of life closely tied to the Everglades environment, drawing on many of the same subsistence practices, including hunting, fishing, trapping, and reading the wetlands, that had sustained earlier populations. Some Everglades Gladesmen trace their lineage back to the early settlers who carved out an existence in the wilderness, representing a continuity of ecological adaptation across cultural lines.<ref>{{cite web |title=In a Corner of the Everglades, a Way of Life Ebbs |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/12/us/in-a-corner-of-the-everglades-a-way-of-life-ebbs.html |work=The New York Times |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | |||
The Gladesmen tradition developed its own distinct material culture, social customs, and relationship to the land. Airboat travel became central to this way of life, allowing access to remote areas of the Everglades that would otherwise be unreachable. Hunting and frogging expeditions, seasonal camps, and an intimate knowledge of the wetland ecosystem formed the core of this cultural identity. For many families, it wasn't merely recreational. It constituted a primary mode of subsistence and a defining aspect of community identity across multiple generations. | |||
== Regulatory Pressures and Cultural Decline == | |||
The | The Gladesmen tradition, like the Glades culture that preceded it, has come under significant pressure in the modern era. Regulations passed by the United States Congress in 1989 aimed at protecting [[Everglades National Park]] lands had the effect of pushing out the local culture that had long maintained its connection to the Everglades wilderness.<ref>{{cite web |title=Florida's 'Gladesmen' Near Their Final Voyage |url=https://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2016/06/03/universal/floridas-gladesmen-near-their-final-voyage.html |work=The New York Times |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> These regulations restricted the use of airboats and other vehicles within park boundaries, limited hunting and trapping activities, and effectively curtailed the practices that had defined Gladesmen life for generations. | ||
== | The impact of these restrictions has been documented extensively by journalists covering the region. As national park authorities expanded enforcement of the 1989 regulations, Gladesmen camps and access points within the protected areas were progressively closed or rendered inaccessible. Families that had lived and worked in the Everglades for generations found themselves displaced from landscapes their ancestors had inhabited, sometimes for over a century. That displacement interrupted a cultural continuity linking modern Gladesmen to the broader Glades tradition, with lasting consequences for the communities involved.<ref>{{cite web |title=In a Corner of the Everglades, a Way of Life Ebbs |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/12/us/in-a-corner-of-the-everglades-a-way-of-life-ebbs.html |work=The New York Times |access-date=2026-02-25}}</ref> | ||
== | == Archaeological Significance in the West Palm Beach Region == | ||
The West Palm Beach area and broader [[Palm Beach County]] sit within the northern extent of the territory associated with the Glades culture. Archaeological sites throughout the county provide evidence of sustained Indigenous occupation extending back | |||
[[ | |||
Revision as of 03:47, 25 April 2026
The Glades culture refers to a prehistoric and historic tradition of human settlement and subsistence in the wetlands, beaches, and interior wilderness of South Florida, with roots extending as far back as 15,000 years ago and continuing through the early period of European contact. Centered on the expansive Everglades ecosystem and its surrounding coastal environments, the Glades culture encompassed Indigenous peoples who developed sophisticated strategies for living in one of North America's most ecologically demanding landscapes. In the West Palm Beach region and throughout Palm Beach County, evidence of Glades culture occupation is found across archaeological sites near the Atlantic coast and inland waterways. The legacy of this tradition is complex. While the original Indigenous peoples who defined the Glades culture largely disappeared following European colonization, aspects of a broader Glades-derived way of life persisted for centuries, eventually giving rise to a distinct community of settlers and survivalists whose traditions are now under pressure from federal land-use regulations and changing environmental policy.
Origins and Prehistoric Background
The Glades culture represents one of the longest continuous human traditions documented in the Florida archaeological record. Researchers and local historians trace human occupation of the peninsula back as far as 15,000 years ago, when early peoples first adapted to its subtropical wetland environments.[1] That long Archaic-period presence is distinct from the Glades culture as archaeologists formally define it. The Glades cultural complex emerged from the late Archaic tradition roughly 2,000 years ago, representing a recognizable shift in subsistence patterns, material culture, and social organization rather than simply a continuation of earlier occupation.[2] Some sources place the onset of the Glades period at approximately 500 BCE, though this figure reflects a transitional horizon within the broader Archaic-to-Glades sequence rather than a clean cultural break.[3]
The Glades cultural complex is defined archaeologically by several distinguishing features. These include a characteristic sand-tempered pottery tradition, extensive reliance on shell middens as both refuse deposits and structural platforms, and a subsistence economy anchored in fishing, shellfishing, hunting, and gathering rather than agriculture. The Everglades and surrounding coastal environments offered a resource base rich enough to support permanent settlements without the cultivation of crops, a pattern that distinguished South Florida's Indigenous inhabitants from many other Eastern Woodlands peoples.[4] Canoes were central to daily life. They allowed communities to cover large distances across flooded prairies and coastal waterways, linking settlements and enabling trade.
According to the Boca Raton Historical Society, the earliest known inhabitants of the Boca Raton area were peoples of the Glades culture, who established communities near the ocean at least one thousand years ago, though the broader tradition itself is considerably older.[5] One well-documented Glades culture site in that area is now occupied by the Gumbo Limbo Nature Center, where archaeological investigations have confirmed sustained pre-contact occupation at the coastal margin. These communities weren't isolated or static. Archaeological evidence indicates that Glades culture peoples maintained networks of habitation and resource use across a wide territory that included coastal margins, interior wetlands, and elevated landforms known as tree islands.
Material Culture and Subsistence
Daily life within the Glades culture revolved around an intimate knowledge of South Florida's ecosystems. Fishing dominated subsistence across most of the region. Communities near the coast took fish, shellfish, sea turtles, and manatees using nets, weirs, and dugout canoes, while inland groups focused on freshwater fish, white-tailed deer, alligator, and migratory waterfowl.[6] Shell middens, some reaching considerable size, formed a defining feature of Glades settlements. They weren't simply trash heaps. Over time, accumulated shell deposits raised habitation surfaces above the surrounding wetlands, effectively creating stable ground in a landscape that offered little of it naturally.
Pottery of the Glades tradition was predominantly sand-tempered and undecorated, distinguishing it from the fiber-tempered wares of the preceding Archaic period. Tool assemblages included bone pins, shell gouges, stone projectile points, and a variety of implements fashioned from local materials. Woodworking was sophisticated. Carved wooden objects recovered from waterlogged sites at Key Marco in Collier County, though representing a related but distinct coastal tradition, provide a sense of the organic material culture that rarely survives in the archaeological record.[7] Trade goods including copper ornaments and exotic stone found at some Glades sites indicate connections to exchange networks extending well beyond South Florida.
Settlement Patterns and the Role of Tree Islands
A defining feature of Glades culture settlement was the strategic use of tree islands scattered across the vast sawgrass plains of the Everglades. These elevated landforms, small forested hammocks rising above surrounding sawgrass prairies, provided dry ground in an otherwise inundated landscape. For the Indigenous peoples of the Glades culture, tree islands offered locations for habitation, food storage, ceremony, and, critically, concealment and defense.
Historical accounts and journalistic investigations of the Everglades region have noted that tree islands deep in the sea of grass once helped Native Americans elude capture by United States troops during the nineteenth century, particularly during the Seminole Wars.[8] That capacity for concealment reflects the deep geographic knowledge Indigenous peoples and their successors developed over millennia of inhabiting the Everglades. The ability to read the landscape, identify safe ground, and move through a seemingly impenetrable wilderness was a form of cultural knowledge transmitted across generations.
The landscape served not only as a source of physical sustenance but also as a cultural and strategic resource. Communities located within this terrain were largely self-sufficient, relying on hunting, fishing, gathering, and in later periods, limited cultivation. The archaeological record from Palm Beach County and the surrounding region reflects this pattern of settlement, with site distributions corresponding closely to the locations of tree islands, coastal ridges, and freshwater sources.
Indigenous Peoples and European Contact
The Glades culture as practiced by its original Indigenous inhabitants didn't survive European colonization intact. Native peoples associated with the Glades tradition occupied Florida's beaches and wetlands from roughly 2,000 years ago through the early centuries of European contact, at which point population decline, displacement, and cultural disruption rapidly eroded the communities that had sustained the tradition for generations.[9] Disease was the primary driver. Epidemics introduced by Spanish explorers and missionaries in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries devastated communities that had no prior exposure to Old World pathogens, reducing populations that had numbered in the tens of thousands to scattered remnants within a few generations.
The specific tribal identities connected to the broader Glades culture in the Palm Beach and Boca Raton areas have been a subject of ongoing historical inquiry. Three groups are most frequently considered in connection with the cultural traditions documented along Florida's southeast coast: the Jeaga, the Calusa, and the Tequesta.[10] The Tequesta occupied the southeast coast in the vicinity of present-day Miami and the lower Palm Beach coast. The Jeaga are associated with the area around present-day Palm Beach and Martin counties. The Calusa, centered on Charlotte Harbor and the southwest coast, exercised political dominance over much of South Florida through a chiefdom structure that incorporated tributary relationships with smaller coastal groups.
The Calusa in particular represent one of the most remarkable expressions of Glades culture complexity. Their sophisticated social organization, centralized leadership, and mastery of the wetland environment allowed them to sustain a hierarchical society without agriculture, a rare achievement in the pre-contact Americas.[11] Spanish accounts from the sixteenth century describe Calusa towns of considerable size, a paramount chief commanding tribute from dozens of subordinate communities, and canoe fleets capable of long-distance coastal travel. By the early eighteenth century, the combined effects of epidemic disease, slaving raids by English-allied Creek peoples from the north, and Spanish mission disruption had reduced the Calusa and their neighbors to remnant populations. The last survivors reportedly evacuated to Cuba in 1711, effectively ending the Glades cultural tradition as a living Indigenous practice.
After the collapse of the original Glades culture populations, new Indigenous groups moved into Florida, including the ancestors of the modern Miccosukee and Seminole peoples. Descended from Creek and other Southeastern nations pushed south during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, these groups occupied some of the same ecological niches the original Glades peoples had inhabited and developed their own traditions in relationship to the Everglades landscape. Their descendants remain present in the region today, with the Miccosukee Reservation located within the Everglades corridor. The Miccosukee and Seminole traditions are culturally and historically distinct from the Glades culture, though they were shaped by the same physical environment.
Key Archaeological Sites
Archaeological investigation across South Florida has identified numerous sites associated with the Glades cultural tradition. In Palm Beach County, coastal shell middens and burial mounds along the Atlantic ridge have yielded material consistent with sustained Glades occupation, including sand-tempered ceramics, bone tools, and faunal remains dominated by marine and estuarine species.[12] The Florida Division of Historical Resources maintains site inventory records for hundreds of documented Glades-period locations across the region, though many remain only partially investigated.[13]
The Boca Raton area has produced some of the best-documented evidence of Glades culture presence in the northern coastal zone. Investigations near the Gumbo Limbo Nature Center site have confirmed human occupation at the coastal margin extending back at least one thousand years, consistent with the broader settlement pattern documented along Florida's southeast coast.[14] Shell middens, tool assemblages, and faunal remains from these sites offer concrete insight into diet, technology, and settlement organization. Further south, the Belle Glade site near Lake Okeechobee represents one of the most significant interior Glades-period localities, documenting intensive occupation of the lake's rim and connections between the Everglades interior and the coastal zones.[15]
The Gladesmen Tradition
Following the decline of the original Glades culture peoples, a distinct successor tradition emerged among the non-Indigenous settlers who came to occupy the South Florida wilderness. These individuals, often referred to as Gladesmen, developed a way of life closely tied to the Everglades environment, drawing on many of the same subsistence practices, including hunting, fishing, trapping, and reading the wetlands, that had sustained earlier populations. Some Everglades Gladesmen trace their lineage back to the early settlers who carved out an existence in the wilderness, representing a continuity of ecological adaptation across cultural lines.[16]
The Gladesmen tradition developed its own distinct material culture, social customs, and relationship to the land. Airboat travel became central to this way of life, allowing access to remote areas of the Everglades that would otherwise be unreachable. Hunting and frogging expeditions, seasonal camps, and an intimate knowledge of the wetland ecosystem formed the core of this cultural identity. For many families, it wasn't merely recreational. It constituted a primary mode of subsistence and a defining aspect of community identity across multiple generations.
Regulatory Pressures and Cultural Decline
The Gladesmen tradition, like the Glades culture that preceded it, has come under significant pressure in the modern era. Regulations passed by the United States Congress in 1989 aimed at protecting Everglades National Park lands had the effect of pushing out the local culture that had long maintained its connection to the Everglades wilderness.[17] These regulations restricted the use of airboats and other vehicles within park boundaries, limited hunting and trapping activities, and effectively curtailed the practices that had defined Gladesmen life for generations.
The impact of these restrictions has been documented extensively by journalists covering the region. As national park authorities expanded enforcement of the 1989 regulations, Gladesmen camps and access points within the protected areas were progressively closed or rendered inaccessible. Families that had lived and worked in the Everglades for generations found themselves displaced from landscapes their ancestors had inhabited, sometimes for over a century. That displacement interrupted a cultural continuity linking modern Gladesmen to the broader Glades tradition, with lasting consequences for the communities involved.[18]
Archaeological Significance in the West Palm Beach Region
The West Palm Beach area and broader Palm Beach County sit within the northern extent of the territory associated with the Glades culture. Archaeological sites throughout the county provide evidence of sustained Indigenous occupation extending back
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