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Lee Van Grack Twenty-three miles of the world's most famous hard-packed sandy shore, as well as action adventures, botanical gardens and historic sites provide exciting photo opportunities.
The pictures of the beach and Jesus walking on water on Daytona's Facebook page have been replaced with the usual posts about events and meetings. No more Jesus picture. City of Daytona Beach ...
Daytona Beach Coquina Clock Tower is a clock tower located in Daytona Beach, Florida.It is a contributing property within the Daytona Beach Bandshell and Oceanfront Park Complex historic district which was entered into the United States National Register of Historic Places (VO7135) [2] on February 25, 1999 from a multiple property submission under the following areas of significance ...
Free concerts are given in the summer at the Bandshell on the north end of the area. The Daytona Beach Pier, also known as the Main Street Pier, was built by Thomas Keating in the late 1800s. [2] The pier begins at the east end of Main Street, south of the boardwalk and extends 1,000 feet into the Atlantic Ocean. [3] [4]
April 9, 1987 (426 South Beach Street: Daytona Beach: 2: Airport Clear Zone Archeological Site: July 10, 2008 (Address Restricted: New Smyrna Beach: Part of the Archeological Resources of the 18th-Century Smyrnea Settlement of Dr. Andrew Turnbull MPS
“On the island, there are 365 beaches which are all publicly accessible and free.” Talk about a beach lover’s paradise! As far as price, a five-day trip for a family of four could start from ...
[Daytona Beach, Florida]: Daytona Beach Community College. ISBN 1-887040-16-1; Parks, Gordon, Deborah Willis, and Leonard Richard Lempel. 1999. Midway: portrait of a Daytona Beach neighborhood: photographs by Gordon Parks. [Daytona Beach, Florida]: Southeast Museum of Photography at Daytona Beach Community College. ISBN 1-887040-26-9
In 1884 David D. Rogers bought 47 acres (190,000 m 2) of land on the beach peninsula, east of Daytona, stretching from present-day Main Street on the north to Harvey Street on the south, and from the Atlantic Ocean on the east, to Pinewood Cemetery on the west. Rogers divided the property into lots for sale and named the development Seabreeze.