Welcome to Hendry County

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Adjacent counties

Glades County, Florida - north
Martin County, Florida - northeast
Okeechobee County, Florida - northeast
Palm Beach County, Florida - east
Broward County, Florida - southeast
Collier County, Florida - south
Lee County, Florida - west
Charlotte County, Florida - west

Hendry County was created in 1923. It was named for Major Francis A. Hendry, one of the first settlers.


The Florida Heartland is a region of Florida located to the north and west of Lake Okeechobee. Unlike the coastal areas to the east and west, the rural nature of the Florida Heartland is culturally closer to the Deep South than the rest of peninsular Florida

 

The Hendry County Courthouse, starting point for the annual Swamp Cabbage Festival parade, was designed in the Italian Renaissance Revival style by E. C. Hosford and built in 1926. Local legend states that the clock in the tower does not tell time, having been struck by lightning shortly after the building was completed. Other versions hold that the clock was removed lest it become a lightning hazard, still others that its mechanism was improperly wound and burned itself out. In any event, for decades the clock tower stood without hands, leading to inevitable comments that "time stands still " in drowsy LaBelle. We have been assured, however, that the clock has been fixed so that the Swamp Cabbage Parade can start on time.


Cities in Hendry County
Clewiston The area is beside Lake Okeechobee was once used as a fishing camp by the Seminole Indians. The first permanent settlement began in 1920, when John O'Brien of Philadelphia and Alonzo Clewis of Tampa purchased a large tract of land to establish a town. They commissioned a town plan and built the Moore Haven & Clewiston Railroad to connect the community to the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad at Moore Haven. Incorporated as a city in 1925, Clewiston would become noted for its sport fishing, particularly of largemouth bass.Large sugar plantations were established around Lake Okeechobee. By the 1950s and 1960s, the cultivation of citrus, vegetables and cattle were also important to the economy. United States Sugar, however, remained the dominant manufacturer in Clewiston, which became known as "America's Sweetest Town."
On June 24, 2008, however, Governor Charlie Crist announced that the state of Florida has arranged to buy for $1.75 billion the company's 187,000 acres (75,680 hectares), including the refinery in Clewiston. The farmland will be converted into reservoirs and water-filtering areas as part of the ongoing restoration of the Everglades ecosystem. United States Sugar will lease its former facilities from the state for about five years to help defray the cost, and then cease to exist.

LaBelle is a city in and the county seat of Hendry County, Florida, It was named for Laura and Belle Hendry, daughters of pioneer cattleman Francis A. Hendry.LaBelle hosts the annual Swamp Cabbage Festival, which is held in honor of the Florida state tree during the last full weekend of February.
The city is somewhat unique in that the low population of the county makes Clewiston the center of economic activity for the county, but LaBelle is the county seat. For example the only hospital in the county is in Clewiston and all the larger retailers and motels are there too.

Unincorporated

1. Big Cypress
2. Felda
3. Harlem
4. Port La Belle

Cemeteries in Hendry County

1. Ortona Cemetery
2. Ridgelawn Cemetery
3. Fort Denaud Cemetery
4. Washington Memorial Cemetery
5. Felda Cemetery

 

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