
Our Marco Island logo carries the Florida alligator over “Florida Territory · Est. 1845,” the year Florida became a state — the shared emblem of every Merlin Classics Florida town. Printed in clean retro black-and-white that reads like an old crate label, the alligator stands for Florida as a whole; what makes this one Marco Island is everything behind it — the Calusa shell mounds and Indian Hill, the six-mile sugar-sand beach, the canal-laced planned island, and the Ten Thousand Islands at its back door.
What’s with the Key Marco Cat? In 1896 an archaeologist named Frank Hamilton Cushing led a Smithsonian expedition into a muddy pond on the edge of this island and pulled out one of the great treasures of American archaeology. The waterlogged, airless muck had preserved what almost never survives: wood. More than a thousand carved wooden objects came up — masks, animal figureheads, tools a thousand years old — and among them a six-inch statuette of a kneeling, half-human, half-panther figure. Many of the other wooden objects, preserved only by the airless muck, dried out and fell apart soon after they reached the surface — which is part of why the surviving Cat is treasured as it is. The Key Marco Cat is now counted among the finest works of pre-Columbian art in North America. It sits today in the island’s history museum, on loan from the Smithsonian — a small wooden cat that has watched over Marco’s story for a thousand years.
Why People Visit Marco Island
Marco Island rewards visitors who want wide white sand, warm shallow water, and shells underfoot, with a rare depth of history close by. Add the boat trips into the Ten Thousand Islands and the year-round Gulf sun, and the case makes itself.