Apalachicola, FL cover art

Apalachicola, FL

Apalachicola, FL

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

Apalachicola: The Town That Froze the World

Welcome to Drive Thru Towns. In this episode, we travel to the "Forgotten Coast" to visit Apalachicola, Florida—a place that proves you don't need a theme park to have a world-changing story.

Apalachicola isn't just a picturesque fishing village; it’s a town built on ice, cotton, and a fierce sense of survival. We explore the layers of history hidden beneath the oyster shells, including:

  • The Ice Man of Florida: How Dr. John Gorrie accidentally invented mechanical refrigeration and the air conditioner in 1844 while trying to cure yellow fever.

  • A National Tragedy: The story of the "Apalachicola Ice Queen"—the ship that was supposed to bring Gorrie's invention to the world but sank, leaving him to die in poverty and obscurity.

  • The Cotton Kingdom: How this small port once handled more cotton than almost anywhere else in the South, creating a skyline of brick warehouses that still stand today.

  • The Oyster Capital: The rise and fall of the legendary Apalachicola Bay oyster industry and the town's ongoing battle to save its ecological heart.

  • Botany and Rebellion: The legacy of Alvan Wentworth Chapman, the world-famous botanist who stayed in Apalachicola through the Civil War despite his Union sympathies.

    Apalachicola is a town that the 20th century largely forgot to pave over. It remains a masterclass in "Florida Gothic"—weathered, beautiful, and deeply human.

Host: Andrew Wilcox

Follow for more episodes: [Click Follow on Spotify]

Instagram: @50statefamily

LinkedIn: Andrew Wilcox

Email: wilcoxlegal@gmail.com

Special thanks to Chloe Jones for the music: chloejonesmusic.co.uk

No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.