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  1. www.factmonster.com › society-culture › julia-tuttleJulia Tuttle - Fact Monster

    Julia Tuttle. Miami is the only major U.S. city to have been founded by a woman. Julia Tuttle, a Clevelander, first saw southern Florida in 1875 when she visited her father, who had moved there as a homesteader. After Tuttle’s husband died in 1886, she decided to move to South Florida as well. Arriving in 1891, she bought several hundred ...

  2. 14 Sep 1898. Julia DeForest Tuttle, the “Mother of Miami” died on this date. Mrs. Tuttle first came to the Biscayne Bay area in the 1870s when she was in her 20s to visit her father. Born in Cleveland Ohio on January 22, 1849, and married to a wealthy ironworks magnate in her mid-20s, she returned to Miami to live permanently after her ...

  3. Jan 10, 2022 · "Julia Tuttle: The Mural" is an original work of art that is currently on display at the HistoryMiami Museum. The special exhibition has been extended for a month. 📺 24/7 South Florida news ...

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  4. Mar 8, 2019 · Three months later, on July 28, 1896, the city was incorporated. The tale of the “Mother of Miami” arrived soon after. “Yes, Julia Tuttle was the catalyst. Unquestionably,” Seth Bramson ...

  5. Following the passing of her father, Julia DeForest Tuttle embarked on a remarkable journey from Cleveland, Ohio to Fort Dallas, Florida in 1891. Accompanied by her two children, the 42-year-old widow leveraged the land inherited from her father and her late husband’s resources to acquire 640 acres in the region that would become Miami, setting the stage for a visionary undertaking.

  6. Julia Tuttle. Julia DeForest (Sturtevant) Tuttle was a landowner and businesswoman known as the Mother of Miami because she owned much of the land upon which modern Miami, Florida, was built and encouraged development of the city. She married Frederick L. Tuttle in 1867.

  7. Mar 8, 2022 · March 8, 2022. Julia Tuttle was a visionary for her time. With dreams of establishing a city on the warm coast of South Florida, she made it happen by being the first, and so far only, woman to be the founder of a major American city -- Miami. Thanks to her business sense and persistence, she left behind an enduring legacy.