
The nineteenth century also wrote a harder chapter here, one the canopy roads themselves remember. Those high red-clay lanes were cut to haul Sea Island cotton from the Red Hills plantations down to the Gulf ports — a cotton economy built on the labor of enslaved people. That history is part of Tallahassee, and it is not glossed over: on May 20, 1865, General Edward McCook read the Emancipation Proclamation from the steps of the Knott House downtown, and the day is still marked every year as Emancipation Day. The same shaded streets carry both stories.
The capital itself grew slowly into stone. The Old Capitol rose in the years around Florida's 1845 statehood, and over time gained its grand portico, its red-and-white striped awnings, and the 1902 dome that still marks the skyline; saved from the wrecking ball in 1978, it is now the Florida Historic Capitol Museum, standing in front of the plain 22-story New Capitol tower finished in 1977. The pairing — candy-striped Victorian dome against a modern slab — is the whole arc of the place in one view. And all of it sits in the Red Hills, the rolling, hardwood-covered ‘first high land’ that makes Tallahassee feel more like south Georgia than the Florida of the postcards.
Why People Visit Tallahassee
Tallahassee blends civic history with surprising green space. Visitors mix the capitol buildings and downtown museums with canopy-road drives, gardens, and easy urban trails. It is scholarly, calm, and quietly scenic, with year-round appeal in its parks, paths, and public spaces. This is Old Florida and the modern capital at once — history and everyday culture sitting side by side under the oaks in a welcoming way.