Banks of the New River & Bryan Homes

Banks of the New River & Bryan Homes

Where the River meets the Railroad

The banks of the New River have been continuously occupied for 2,000 years. From the Tequesta and Seminole First Nation People down to this day, the river has been live sustaining. At this stop we also visit the oldest buildings on our tour: the 1903 Bryan Homes built by Ed King.

  • <p>Tequesta &amp; Seminole New River</p>
  • <p>New River Aerial View</p>
  • <p>Tequesta People by Theodore Morris</p>
  • <p>New River Tequesta Archaeological Dig</p>
  • <p>17th century Spanish engraving of Juan Ponce de León</p>
  • <p>New River Aerial View</p>
  • <p>Seminole Canoe on the New River</p>
  • <p>Seminoles kept the oral tradition of the Tequesta People</p>
  • <p>1562 Spanish Map of La Florida</p>
  • <p>Bryan Family</p>
  • <p>Dredging the North New River Canal</p>
  • <p>Ed King's Boat Works</p>
  • <p>Las Olas Inn on Fort Lauderdale Beach</p>
  • <p>Workers stacking concrete blocks on site</p>
  • <p>Tom and Reed Bryan Homes</p>
  • Banks of the New River & Bryan Homes