Matecumbe
Geography
It is located at 24°54′50″N 80°38′20″W / 24.914°N 80.639°W, its elevation 7 feet (2 m).[1] Matecumbe consists of two islands (keys,) Upper Matecumbe Key and Lower Matecumbe Key. The latter Key is where the settlement of Matecumbe is located, just south of Matecumbe Bight and adjacent to an just north of Matecumbe Harbor. The southernmost tip of Lower Matecumbe Key marks the beginning of the famed Seven Mile Bridge.
The name Matecumbe refers to a region of area in the Upper Keys. The name Matecumbe is the only place name in South Florida which dates from the sixteenth century and is still used to designate the same or approximate location as at that time. On Spanish maps it is a name which frequently appears, as it did in their records. The exact meaning of the name is unknown, but the suggestion that it was derived from the Spanish mata hombre is a weak one. When the term Matecumbe first appeared in use it was in a form very close to its present spelling and pronunciation. As was often the case in Florida, the name was applied interchangeably to the chief and to the tribe.
This was one of the first of the Upper Keys to be permanently settled. Early homesteaders were so successful at growing pineapples in the rocky soil that at one time the island yielded the country's largest annual crop. However, foreign competition and the Hurricane of 1935 killed the industry. Today, life centers on fishing and tourism, and the island is filled with bait shops, marinas, and charter-fishing boats.
Pulitzer Prize-winning author James A. Michener was in his sixties when he began traveling frequently to the Florida Keys. One result of those visits was the novel Matecumbe, named after two of the islands that comprise the town of Islamorada, located between Miami and Key West in the Upper Keys.
References
Coordinates: 24°54′50″N 80°38′20″W / 24.914°N 80.639°W