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Fort Meade Florida

Welcome back to #TravelThursday. Last week I wrote all about Fort Meade – briefly mentioning the military post and town in Anne Arundel County Maryland that I grew up near in the 1970s. It’s named after U.S. Civil War Union Major General George Gordon Meade (1815-1872). And then I wrote about the other place that’s named after him – 30 miles away from my current home here in the Heartland of Florida.

Fort Meade Florida is a small historic city in rural southwestern Polk County. It’s the oldest city in the county – with origins dating back to 1849. I was planning to visit the city last Thursday, but that’s the day that Hurricane Helene passed us by a couple hundred miles out in the Gulf Of Mexico. (We enjoyed a partly sunny and windy day on that day – with maximum sustained winds of about 25 to 35 MPH and occasional wind gusts over 50 MPH. Very little rain (about a half-inch). Minimum barometric pressure – 998 MB.)

So guess what ? Fort Meade is on my schedule again for today. I hope to visit the Historical Society Of Fort Meade Florida Museum and talk with the docents of their historic house there as a fellow docent of a historic house. After that I hope to enjoy a nice big lunch at Kiki’s Egg House along Charleston Avenue (U.S. 17 through the city).

Fun Fact: Fort Meade is near the north-end of a series of historic cities, towns, and areas along rural U.S. 17 in the Heartland of Florida. The community of Homeland (once known as Bethel) is to the north of Fort Meade (and to the south of Bartow). Further south along U.S. 17 are Bowling Green, Wauchula, and Zolfo Springs in Hardee County, and Arcadia in DeSoto County. Both counties border Highlands County (my home) to the east.

Heading back eastward (and homeward) to the U.S. 27 corridor I may even make a stop at The Depot Museum in Avon Park before heading home. So – if all of that happens today – then this will become a 3-part series, and I’ll write all about it next#TravelThursday.

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