• Cedar Key/ Rosewood, FL
    Mar 23 2026

    Cedar Key & Rosewood: Pencils, Clams, and a Buried Town

    Welcome to Drive Thru Towns. In this episode, we travel to the end of State Road 24 to visit two towns forever linked by a railroad, a swamp, and a silence that took decades to break: Cedar Key and Rosewood, Florida.

    This isn't just a trip to a quiet fishing village; it’s a journey through the tools that wrote American history and the stories that were nearly erased from it. We explore:

    • The Pencil Capital of the World: How the towering cedar forests of these islands provided the wood for billions of pencils, fueling American education and bureaucracy until the trees simply ran out.

    • Atsena Otie: The "original" Cedar Key, now a ghost island of ruins and cisterns, abandoned after the devastating hurricane of 1896 proved that nature always has the final say.

    • The Tragedy of Rosewood: A somber look at the self-sufficient, prosperous African American community that was destroyed in a week of violence in 1923—and the brave railroad conductor who risked everything to spirit women and children to safety.

    • Breaking the Silence: How a town "erased" from the map for sixty years finally had its story told, leading to a historic act of state restitution.

    • The Clam Resurrection: How a community that lost its timber and its nets reinvented itself as a world-class aquaculture hub, proving that resilience is the true local industry.

    The road into Cedar Key is the same road out, but after hearing these stories, you’ll never look at the Florida hammock—or a Number Two pencil—the same way again.

    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

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    24 mins
  • Fernandina Beach. FL
    Mar 19 2026

    Fernandina Beach: The Isle of Eight Flags

    Welcome to Drive Thru Towns. In this episode, we steer toward the northeastern tip of Florida to Fernandina Beach on Amelia Island—a place that has seen more flags, more pirates, and more reinventions than perhaps any other spot in America.

    Fernandina Beach isn't just a charming Victorian escape; it is a survivor of centuries of global tug-of-war. We explore the high-stakes history of this deep-water harbor, including:

    • The Pirate Republic: The wild story of Luis Aury, a French privateer who claimed the island for a Mexican Republic that didn't even know he existed, just to provide cover for his smuggling operations.

    • The Eight Flags: Why this small island holds the unique distinction of having been under eight different national flags—from France and Spain to the short-lived "Republic of the Floridas."

    • The Manhattan of the South: How Senator David Levy Yulee built the state's first cross-peninsula railroad and envisioned a metropolis that would rival New York, only to have his dreams derailed by the Civil War.

    • The Palace Saloon: A look inside the oldest continuously operated bar in Florida, which survived Prohibition by selling "medicinal" ice cream and gasoline, and where a ghost bartender reportedly still keeps watch.

    • Victorian Resilience: How a town that once thrived on shrimping and shipping preserved its stunning "gingerbread" architecture to become a masterclass in historic preservation.

    Fernandina Beach is a town that empires wanted, pirates stole, and locals saved. It’s a reminder that even the most beautiful places are often forged in the fires of conflict and ambition.

    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

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    22 mins
  • Mount Dora, FL
    Mar 16 2026

    Mount Dora: Where the Map Lies


    Welcome to Drive Thru Towns. In this episode, we climb to one of the highest points in Florida to discover Mount Dora—a town that defies every geological and cultural expectation of the Sunshine State.

    Mount Dora isn't just a quaint village of antique shops and bed-and-breakfasts; it is a place of inland lighthouses, cinematic history, and Cold War secrets. We explore the fascinating contradictions of this lakeside "mountain" town, including:

    • The Mountain and the Light: How a town at 184 feet above sea level became a Florida "peak" and why it maintains a proud, freshwater lighthouse miles from any coastline.

    • The Catacombs of Mount Dora: The incredible story of the "Catacombs," a 5,000-square-foot private bomb shelter built during the height of nuclear anxiety—complete with a 2,000-pound steel door hidden beneath a croquet court.

    • The Pinkest Disaster in Hollywood: A look back at the time Hollywood painted the entire town Pepto-Bismol pink for the film Honky Tonk Freeway, and how the town survived the movie’s spectacular box-office failure.

    • Pat Alasnas’s Ghost: The literary legacy of the novel Alas, Babylon, which used Mount Dora as the inspiration for a town surviving nuclear annihilation.

    • A Legacy of Stubbornness: How Mount Dora has maintained its identity—and its afternoon tea—against the relentless pull of nearby Orlando’s theme park gravity.

      Mount Dora is a masterclass in being exactly yourself, regardless of what the map or the neighbors say. It is a town built on a ridge that looks out over a landscape it refuses to conform to.

    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

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    20 mins
  • Port St. Joe, FL
    Mar 12 2026

    Port St. Joe: The Town That Wrote Florida’s Soul—Then Vanished

    Welcome to Drive Thru Towns. In this episode, we explore the "Forgotten Coast" to uncover the story of a city that was once the largest and most ambitious in Florida—only to be wiped off the map in less than a decade.

    Port St. Joe (formerly St. Joseph) isn't just a quiet waterfront town; it is the birthplace of Florida’s legal identity. We look at the rise, fall, and resurrection of a city that refused to stay buried:

    • The Rivalry of the Century: How a group of defiant businessmen built St. Joseph from scratch just to spite the neighboring town of Apalachicola.

    • The Constitutional Convention: The incredible story of how the legal soul of Florida was written in 1838 in a grand hall that no longer exists.

    • The Triple Crown of Disaster: A harrowing look at how yellow fever, a devastating fire, and a massive storm surge erased a city of 12,000 residents in a matter of years.

    • The Great Migration: How the few surviving houses were literally floated on barges across the bay to start over in other cities.

    • Modern Resilience: A visit to the Port St. Joe of today—a place of pristine scallops, working waterfronts, and a museum where mannequins tell the story of a vanished empire.

      Port St. Joe reminds us that while cities can be erased by the elements, the ideas and laws they leave behind can govern for centuries.

    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

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    22 mins
  • Everglades City, FL
    Mar 12 2026

    Welcome to Drive Thru Towns. In this episode, we journey to the edge of the map to Everglades City, Florida—a town where the line between the wilderness and the law has always been as thin as a mangrove leaf.


    Everglades City isn't just a gateway to a National Park; it’s a monument to stubbornness, isolated ambition, and a local history that reads like a thriller. We dive into:

    • The Vision of Barron Collier: How a self-made advertising tycoon bought a county’s worth of swamp and tried to build a corporate utopia in the middle of nowhere.

    • The Tamiami Trail: The brutal, explosive saga of building the "Impossible Road," a feat of engineering that required millions of pounds of dynamite to blast through solid limestone.

    • The "Square Grouper" Era: A look at the 1970s and 80s, when the town’s labyrinth of mangroves became the primary entry point for a multi-million dollar marijuana smuggling trade.

    • Operation Everglades: The 1983 federal raid that saw nearly every able-bodied man in town arrested, leaving a legacy of local defiance and silence.

    • Survival and Stone Crabs: How a community that has survived world-changing hurricanes and massive federal stings continues to reinvent itself as the "Stone Crab Capital of the World".

      Everglades City is a place where nature eventually wins every argument, but the people here have never stopped talking back. It is a town defined by what it chose to keep out—and what it was brave enough to let in.

    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

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    19 mins
  • Apalachicola, FL
    Mar 12 2026

    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

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    26 mins