Beach Properties Real Estate Group, LLC

Beach Properties Real Estate Group, LLC

If you have any questions or need more detailed information, please feel free to contact us via phone at (850) 227-7000 or fill out this convenient form to let us know how we can help with your Forgotten Coast real estate needs.

Beach Properties Real Estate Group, LLC
113 Monument Avenue
Port Saint Joe, FL 32320
Phone: (850) 227-7000
Fax: (850) 227-2505

Our Cape Office
110 Barrier Dunes Dr.
Cape San Blas, FL 3245
Phone: (850) 227-7000

Communities

The history of Dog Island and Carrabelle Florida includes a wonderful mix of Indians, shipping, bootlegging, logging and war.

Rio Carrabella was the name of the town recognized by the first post office in this area and was said to mean "beautiful river". Early settlers in the area, both Indians and early Europeans, hunted the bountiful game for food and furs, which were then shipped out of St. Marks.

Carrabelle's boom time came after the Civil War when lumber and naval stores were the most important commodities. In 1875 the first lumber mill was established - cutting pine and cypress from up river and in swamps, and shipping it to the north. Ships, mainly schooners, would come through and pass and drop anchor behind Dog Island in Ballast Cove, so named because the ships would drop their ballast before sailing into Carrabelle to pick up their cargo. You may to this day, find ballast rock in the cove.

By 1893 there were many lumber and saw mills along the Carrabelle River and the downtown area was established around Coombs Mill, close to the mouth of the river. The town was incorporated in May, 1893 and during this time, the area flourished - docks were stacked high with lumber and turpentine.

There was a railroad station from which trains carried salted down mullet and other goods to points north, as well as bringing in needed supplies for the residents. The railroad also brought tourists from Tallahassee to stay at the Lanark Springs Hotel, a luxurious resort hotel.

A disastrous hurricane hit the town head on at the turn of the century and it was at this time that the downtown area was moved to its present location. The town was rebuilt, and many of today's larger buildings were built during the early part of the 1900's.

This was a boom time for Carrabelle. Lumber and turpentine were king. During a short period, Greek sailors came and began a flourishing sponge industry.

Between World War I and World War II, Carrabelle went into a severe economic slump. Fishing became the principal industry and along with the entire country, Carrabelle slipped into the depression.

During the Prohibition much business was done by barter and there was a brief period in which smugglers from the Caribbean unloaded their contraband near Alligator Point and hid in the nearby woods.

In 1942, with the entry of the United States into WW II, Camp Gordon Johnston was built and thousands of men were trained at the camp. For many it was the last stopover for those going to the Pacific or European theaters.

Carrabelle was also an important port for shipping oil. The oil was shipped from Texas, through the Intercoastal Waterway to Carrabelle and then on to Jacksonville through a pipeline, where it was loaded on ships for delivery to Europe. The pipeline began at what is now known as Three Rivers.

Back to Community


Cape San Blas

  • A place like no other in Florida!  This is a hidden gem with no crowds, no malls, and just a great place to relax.
  •  

Indian Pass

  • Indian Pass is a resort on the south coast of Gulf County, Florida, 8 miles south of Port St. Joe. It promotes itself as an uncrowded haven for sports fisherman and water enthusiasts, and for dining featuring locally caught oysters. A ferry
  •  

St. Joe Beach

  • Tiny St. Joe Beach is a few miles east of Mexico Beach and is similarly built. It sits on Route 98 which follows along the shoreline of the Gulf of Mexico through the town, leaving a narrow swath of beach shoreline on which private residenc
  •  

Port St. Joe

  • Perhaps the most outstanding non-physical feature of the Panhandle is the attitude of its residents toward visitors. While other parts of Florida get more attention as tourist destinations, no other region will make you feel more welcome th
  •  

Windmark Beach

  •  Hugging 4 miles of pristine beach along Florida's fabled “Forgotten Coast,” two miles northwest of downtown Port St. Joe and 22 miles west of Apalachicola, WindMark Beach is perhaps the last great beach to be developed
  •  

White City

  • Just 10 minutes north of Port St Joe, located on the Florida's Intercoastal waterway.  This is a small community that abounds with nature and endless possibilities. The White City Park is located in White City, between Port St
  •  

Wewahitchka

  • Wewahitchka in Gulf County is the perfect place to get away from it all. The region is part of the self-proclaimed Forgotten Coast of Northwest Florida and is still very much what Old Florida was. Home to fewer less than one thousand eight
  •  

Overstreet North

  • This Intercoastal Community is a gem in the rough with vast amounts of land to explore.  You are 10 minutes to the beach and 30 minutes to Panama City.

  •  

Mexico Beach

  • Mexico Beach was founded in the 1950’s and remains a friendly town where families have been making beach side memories for generations. Fishing is king here with public boat ramps and a popular fishing pier. Numerous festivals are hel
  •  

Overstreet South

  • This Intercoastal Community is a gem in the rough with vast amounts of land to explore.  You are 10 minutes to the beach and 30 minutes to Panama City.

  •  

Apalachicola

  • Apalachicola or “Apalach“, as it is known by locals, is far from a typical tourist town. Established in 1831, it was once the third largest port on the Gulf of Mexico. Wide, tree lined streets are still graced by picturesque hom
  •  

Eastpoint

  • Eastpoint, just across the Bay from either Apalachicola or St. George Island, is the central point of the Forgotten Coast where one can truly feel untouched by today’s world. A place where seafood docks stretch almost the entire lengt
  •  

St. George Island

  • St. George Island is a 22-mile barrier island with some of the most beautiful and serene beaches on the Gulf Coast. It is one of the last inhabited, yet unspoiled, barrier islands of Florida, with miles of uncrowded beaches for sunning and
  •  

Carrabelle

  • The history of Dog Island and Carrabelle Florida includes a wonderful mix of Indians, shipping, bootlegging, logging and war. Rio Carrabella was the name of the town recognized by the first post office in this area and was said to mean &quo
  •  

Lanark

  • The village of Lanark was once home to a fashionable resort in the late 1800s as it was the terminus of the , Florida During WWII the area was know as Camp Gordon Johnston, a military installation that trained over a quarter million men for
  •  

Alligator Point

  • Alligator Point is a coastal community off the Gulf of Mexico located approximately an hour from Tallahassee, Florida's state capital. There are no strip malls, nightclubs, no glaring lights, no honking horns or other signs of big city
  •  

Home | About Us | Services | Exclusive Listings | Property Search | Real Estate Tools
Rentals | Restaurants | Things To Do | Area Resources | Buyer Information | Seller Information
© Copyright 2010 floridabeachproperties.us. All rights reserved. | Terms | Sitemap | Login - Design by Agent Image - Real Estate Web Design