Peace River (Florida) Explained

The Peace River is a river in the southwestern part of the Florida peninsula, in the U.S.A.[1] It originates at the juncture of Saddle Creek and Peace Creek northeast of Bartow in Polk County and flows south through Fort Meade (Polk County) Hardee County to Arcadia in DeSoto County and then southwest into the Charlotte Harbor estuary at Punta Gorda in Charlotte County. It is 106miles long and has a drainage basin of 1367sqmi. U.S. Highway 17 runs near and somewhat parallel to the river for much of its course. The river was called Rio de la Paz (River of Peace) on 16th century Spanish charts.[2] It appeared as Peas Creek or Pease Creek on later maps. The Creek (and later, Seminole) Indians call it Talakchopcohatchee, River of Long Peas.[3] Other cities along the Peace River include Fort Meade, Wauchula and Zolfo Springs.[4]

History

Fresh water from the Peace River is vital to maintain the delicate salinity of Charlotte Harbor that hosts several endangered species, as well as commercial and recreational harvests of shrimp, crabs, and fish. The river has always been a vital resource to the people in its watershed. Historically, the abundant fishery and wildlife of Charlotte Harbor supported large populations of people of the Caloosahatchee culture (in early historic times, the Calusa). Today, the Peace River supplies over six million gallons per day of drinking water to the people in the region. The river is also popular for canoeing.[5]

There were many Pleistocene and Miocene fossils found throughout the Peace River area, eventually leading to the discovery of phosphate deposits. Most of the northern watershed of the Peace River comprises an area known as the Bone Valley.[6] [7]

The Peace River is a popular destination for fossil hunters who dig and sift the river gravel for fossilized shark teeth and prehistoric mammal bones. Several campgrounds and canoe rental operations cater to fossil hunters, with Wauchula, Zolfo Springs, and Arcadia being the main points of entry.[8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13]

List of crossings

CrossingCarriesImageLocationCoordinates
Headwaters (Juncture of Peace Creek and Saddle Creek)
Spessard L Holland Bridge SR-60Bartow27.9022°N -81.8176°W
Homeland Garfield RoadHomeland27.821°N -81.7997°W
John Singletary Bridge US-98Fort Meade27.7517°N -81.7819°W
Mt Pisgah RoadFort Meade27.7227°N -81.7901°W
CSX TransportationBowling Green27.6569°N -81.8024°W
County Line RoadBowling Green27.6462°N -81.8021°W
Lake Branch RoadBowling Green27.6462°N -81.8021°W
Heard BridgeHeard Bridge RoadWauchula27.5757°N -81.8045°W
SR-636 (East Main Street)Wauchula27.5506°N -81.7937°W
Griffin RoadWauchula27.5408°N -81.792°W
Doyle E. Carlton Bridge US 17Zolfo Springs27.5045°N -81.8004°W
FL 64Zolfo Springs27.4996°N -81.8104°W
NE Brownville Street27.3027°N -81.8461°W
Seminole Gulf RailwayArcadia27.2366°N -81.886°W
Footbridge (Old SR 70 bridge)Arcadia27.2221°N -81.8762°W
FL 70Arcadia27.221°N -81.8765°W
CR 760Arcadia27.1624°N -81.9017°W
CR 761Fort Ogden27.0886°N -81.994°W
I-75Solana26.9602°N -82.0202°W
Barron Collier Bridge and Gilchrist Bridge US 41Punta Gorda26.9451°N -82.0579°W
Mouth (Charlotte Harbor)

See also

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: McCarthy, Kevin M. . The Book Lover's Guide to Florida . 1992 . 304 . Kevin McCarthy (historian).

    "The Peace River begins at Lake Hamilton in Polk County and runs through Arcadia southwesterly to Charlotte Harbor. For a description of the river, read Rivers of Florida (Atlanta: Southern Press, 1974) by Henry Marks and Gene Britt Riggs ..."

  2. O'Donnell
  3. Brown, Canter, Jr. (1991) Florida's Peace River Frontier. Orlando, Florida: University of Central Florida Press. P. xiv (Preface)
  4. O'Donnell
  5. O'Donnell
  6. Web site: 2017-03-27. Peace River 3A. 2021-06-21. Florida Museum. en-US.
  7. Web site: 2020-12-05. Peace River Paleo Project (PRiPP). 2021-06-21. Florida Museum. en-US.
  8. Web site: Duns. Rob. May 10, 2021. Buried beneath the Peace River: fossil hunting in DeSoto Count. June 21, 2021. NBC 2.
  9. Web site: Galbraith . Alex . Central Florida divers find mammoth leg bone in Peace River . https://web.archive.org/web/20210430190556/https://www.orlandoweekly.com/Blogs/archives/2021/04/30/central-florida-divers-find-mammoth-leg-bone-in-peace-river . 2021-04-30 . 2021-06-21 . Orlando Weekly . en.
  10. Web site: Cavitt . Mark . August 25, 2015 . Beneath the surface: Fossil hunting uncovers Peace River treasures . https://web.archive.org/web/20210628181631/https://www.theledger.com/article/LK/20150825/Lifestyle/608082377/LL . 2021-06-28 . 2021-06-21 . The Ledger . en.
  11. Web site: Florea . Linda . November 1, 2004 . Search For Fishing Hole Uncovers A Mammoth Find . 2021-06-21 . Sun-Sentinel.com . en-US.
  12. Web site: Company. Tampa Publishing. Paddling through prehistory on the Peace River. 2021-06-21. Tampa Bay Times. en.
  13. Web site: FOSSILS … FLORIDA'S PAST UNEARTHED – ONE FIND AT A TIME Naples Florida Weekly. 2021-06-21. naples.floridaweekly.com.