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Source: Wikipedia

Canaveral National Seashore

The Canaveral National Seashore (CANA) is a National Seashore located between New Smyrna Beach and Titusville, Florida, in Volusia and Brevard Counties. The park, located on a barrier island, was created on January 3, 1975, by an act of Congress. Canaveral National Seashore celebrated its 25th birthday on January 3, 2000; however, the concept for the park actually originated 44 years earlier. This 25 miles of pristine Atlantic Ocean beach, dunes and Mosquito Lagoon is the longest expanse of undeveloped land along the East Coast of Florida and as a federally protected area will remain primarily as it is today.
During 1955, a National Park Service (NPS) survey team visited the Turtle Mound area and "found the seashore a priceless scenic and scientific resource for which there is no substitute". Ten years later, T. C. Wilder, president of the New Smyrna Beach (NSB) Chamber of Commerce, organized a Seashore Park subcommittee, acting on a recommendation by the East Central Florida Regional Planning Council (ECFRPC) to follow up on the NPS report. The committee included several former presidents of the NSB Chamber of Commerce. They were Dr. Cook (committee chairman), John Deal, and Walter Mulbury. Other members were Ed Hughes, mayor of NSB, Bill Owens of the ECFRPC, Volusia County Commissioner Harris Saxon, Chamber of Commerce Director William I. Smith, and Chamber of Commerce Manager Hanford Eckman.
Their purpose was "to meet with state and NPS officials, as well as area chambers of commerce to promote the creation of a 15-mile-long National Seashore on the Atlantic Ocean south of New Smyrna Beach. The proposed name was Cape Canaveral National Seashore". Robert G. Howard, ECFRPC director, in a February 2, 1968, letter to the chamber, stated: "The proposal to preserve 9,000 acres of land between Cape Kennedy and New Smyrna Beach is without doubt the Region’s most important recreational project. The entire country today has only 10 national seashores, including Gulf Island National Seashore in the Florida Panhandle and Cape Lookout in North Carolina. No other recreation site in the Region, the State, or perhaps the Nation can compare with it".
On April 26, 1968, the Volusia County Board of Commissioners passed Resolution No. 68-51 requesting the Department of the Interior to establish the National Seashore on the east coast of Volusia County, Florida. In 1968, William V. "Bill" Chappell was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. During his first year in office, Chappell promised the chamber that the seashore project would be one of his top priorities. He kept his word and on April 5 and 6, 1974, Congressman Roy Taylor, chairman of the house subcommittee on National Parks and Recreation, brought a congressional party to review the proposed site. A second group, including chairman of the Senate National Parks and Recreation Committee, Senator Alan Bible, visited on April 19. By this time, the original 9,000 acres had grown to 35,000. Things then began to progress quickly. The House passed the Seashore Act on December 3, as did the Senate on December 17. After 10 years of perseverance, the chamber realized its goal to establish Canaveral National Seashore when President Gerald Ford signed his approval on January 3, 1975. Local artist and environmentalist Doris Leeper was instrumental in the creation of the park.The Canaveral National Seashore is home to more than 1,000 plant species and 310 bird species. CANA occupies 57,662 acres (23,335 ha) (including lagoons). The park's 24-mile-long beach is the longest undeveloped beach on the east coast of the state. The southern part is also known as Playalinda Beach, the middle section as Klondike Beach, and the northern section as Apollo Beach.
The John F. Kennedy Space Center is located at the southern end of the barrier island occupied by Canaveral National Seashore, so access to the seashore is often restricted during launch-related activities at the space center. Mosquito Lagoon borders the other side of the cape from the seashore.
The Playalinda Beach has 13 parking lots numbered from the south. The space shuttle launch facility is easily visible from the approach to Parking Lot number one.

  1. 1 See also
  2. 2 References
  3. 3 External links

Comments

  • Great experience combining Florida's wetland ecosystem and the beach. No showers, but restrooms are available. The beach strip is narrow, and for a more typical beach experience, I would recommend Jetty Park or the Cocoa Beach. On the way to the entrance, there are a couple of side trips you can take to drive thru the wetlands park and do some bird watching.

    a month ago
  • CMB

    Our favorite beach. Use your national park pass or park pass for after entrance. Go early it is popular on the weekends, and when there are Space X launches that day. Primitive restrooms (no running water). Kayak Launch sites, nude beaches (last/end parking lot). All sorts of wildlife can be seen.

    6 months ago
  • Not sure which is cooler… huge birds, flooding crabs, or big cats? Bobcat encounter was definitely something we weren’t expecting, and she almost got a raccoon when we were there… 0”0

    4 months ago
  • Amazing beach, it does cost $20 to get in but as long as you keep your receipt it is definitely worth it because it can be used for 6 more days. There are 13 different places to park to access the beach which is also nice because then you can choose your preference of busy or not busy beach.

    4 months ago
  • This is absolutely my favorite beach. You can see hatching baby sea turtles and other wildlife, watch rockets launch, and swim nude. There is not the random riff raff that you get in more populated beach resort areas. It is very clean and well managed. Every person there is there to have fun. It feels very rustic and close to nature. I highly recommend visiting this hidden gem.

    8 months ago
  • Wonderful remote feeling but close to all amenities. Beautiful. Can see Cape Kennedy structures from the turn around. Plentiful bathrooms. Beware though if nudity offends you.

    7 months ago
  • Incredible. We had such a great time at this park. It was weird though to see some naked folks on the shore at the end of the scenic drive. Must be some philosophy behind all that.

    a week ago
  • Wow. I mean Wow. If you like your parks and beaches uncrowded (even when New Smyrna Beaches ramps are closed due to beach capacity!), serene, natural, full of wildlife & fish, with access to both beach & intercoastal, clean and with facilities. As for me, that’s exactly what I was looking for on one of the hottest Sundays yet this summer. The breeze off the water kept us cool and kept the bugs away except when I waded into the water of the intercoastal to take some fabulous photos. As you can see in some of my pics, we saw an Osprey swoop into the water and nab a fish, then proudly sit on a pole and devour it. Cool 😎! Lots of trails to hike, beach to walk and, as you can see in my pics, choose your spot on the beach - it’s almost empty! Bottom line: Go, run, don’t wait to visit Canaveral National Seashore! Pay your $20 for a week worth of entry and just do it 👍🏼

    5 months ago

Canaveral National Seashore

➴ Coordinates: 28° 47‘ N, 80° 45‘ W
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