Collection: Tallahassee Florida

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Florida classics inspired by Tallahassee, Florida — the canopy roads, the candy-striped Old Capitol, and the Red Hills capital. Read the full history behind the design, or browse all cities and towns.


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Merlin Classics is a volunteer-run, AI-assisted apparel project celebrating timeless local style. Every item is made to order, and profits (revenue minus external product/marketing cost) support hunger-relief programs in the communities our collections spotlight. Classic looks, real local impact—every purchase helps.

Tallahassee Florida — Retro Vintage History

SCROLL TO BOTTOM FOR TRAVEL GUIDE

What's with the Canopy Roads? Tallahassee has nine official canopy roads — more than seventy-eight miles of them — where huge live oaks, sweet gums, and hickories lace their moss-draped limbs into a green tunnel overhead. They began as footpaths worn by the Apalachee and the tribes after them; Old St. Augustine Road dates to the 1600s, when it linked the Spanish missions to St. Augustine, and Meridian Road follows a survey line chained through the forest in 1824. Drive Centerville, Miccosukee, or Old Bainbridge today and the canopy closes over you like a cathedral nave, the light going dim and dappled and old. It is the truest picture of Tallahassee: a capital city that grew up under the oaks.

Wear the History

The name means something close to ‘old town’ or ‘old fields’ in the Creek tongue, and it was old long before it was a capital. Tallahassee was chosen in 1824 as the seat of territorial Florida for a plain reason of geography: it sat roughly halfway between St. Augustine and Pensacola, the two old colonial capitals of East and West Florida that the United States had just joined together under the 1819 treaty with Spain. Surveyors laid out a grid in the Red Hills, the town incorporated in 1825, and a frontier capital took root in the Leon County woods.

A vintage view of Monroe Street in downtown Tallahassee, Florida, with mid-century capital-city life
Tallahassee, Florida — a vintage view of Monroe Street downtown, mid-century capital-city life.

But people had lived on this ground for thousands of years. The Apalachee built earthen mounds here — the great ceremonial center now preserved at Lake Jackson Mounds — and farmed the rich red soil. In the winter of 1539, Hernando de Soto's expedition seized the Apalachee town of Anhaica, on a site about half a mile east of today's Capitol, and kept what is often called the first Christmas in the continental United States. It is worth saying plainly that de Soto's march brought violence and disease to the Apalachee; the ‘first Christmas’ was also the opening of a long and ruinous contact.

The Spanish came back not with armies but with friars. Through the 1600s a chain of Franciscan missions ran across Apalachee country, and the largest, Mission San Luis, served from the 1650s as the western capital of Spanish Florida — a fortified hilltop town of Spanish colonists and Apalachee Christians, a council house and a church side by side. It was abandoned and burned around 1704 amid English-led raids from the north. Today San Luis is the only reconstructed Spanish mission in Florida, rebuilt on its original ground as a living-history site — the deepest layer of the city, walkable again.

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.

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.

Today Tallahassee is a green capital that runs on government and learning. The Legislature meets under the dome; two universities — Florida State and the historic Florida A&M — fill the city with students and shade their campuses with the same oaks. Around them are camellias and reflecting pools at Maclay Gardens, fountains and an amphitheater at Cascades Park, studios and murals at Railroad Square, the Museum of Florida History downtown, and, a short drive south, the vast clear bowl of Wakulla Springs. For a state capital, it stays remarkably unhurried and leafy.

Our Tallahassee logo carries Florida's alligator above ‘Florida Territory — Est. 1845,’ the shared retro emblem of our Florida towns; the gator is the state's wild icon, and 1845 marks the year Florida joined the Union. Rendered in the black-and-white of an old crate stamp, it ties Tallahassee to every other Florida town we make. What makes this one the capital is the setting behind it — the canopy oaks, the candy-striped dome, and the Red Hills rolling away to the north.

So Tallahassee gathers more history under its oaks than almost anywhere in Florida: an Apalachee old town, a Spanish mission rebuilt on its hill, a candy-striped capitol, and nine roads roofed in moss. Our Tallahassee designs gather that into wearable form. Wear the history. This is the capital under the canopy oaks.


A packed stadium and marching band on a game-day afternoon in Tallahassee, Florida
Tallahassee, Florida — a packed stadium and marching band on a game-day afternoon in the capital.

Tallahassee, Florida — Travel Guide

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Visiting Tallahassee Today

Tallahassee is Florida's capital, set in the rolling Red Hills of the Big Bend rather than on any coast. It pairs the candy-striped Old Capitol and the modern Capitol tower with moss-draped canopy roads, a reconstructed Spanish mission, gardens and springs, and two lively university campuses, all within an easy walk or short drive of downtown.

The Canopy Roads, the Capitol & the Mission

For visitors looking for things to do in Tallahassee, Florida:

  • Drive a canopy road — Old St. Augustine, Centerville, or Miccosukee — under the moss-draped live oaks.
  • Tour the Old Capitol, now the Florida Historic Capitol Museum, then ride to the 22nd-floor observatory of the New Capitol.
  • Walk Mission San Luis, the reconstructed 17th-century Spanish-Apalachee mission, on its original hilltop.
  • Wander Maclay Gardens for camellias, reflecting pools, and forested paths.
  • Stroll Cascades Park, with its fountains, amphitheater, and downtown lawns.
  • Explore Railroad Square Art District's studios, murals, and galleries.
  • Visit the Museum of Florida History and the Knott House Museum downtown.
  • Day-trip south to Wakulla Springs, one of the world's largest and deepest freshwater springs.

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.



Wear the History

Kindred Cities

KINDRED CITIES — SCROLL UP FOR HISTORY & TRAVEL GUIDES

A warm welcome to visitors from Cambridge, England and Heidelberg, Germany (willkommen) — fellow towns of learning and leafy calm.

Tallahassee is a capital that runs on its universities, and Cambridge and Heidelberg are its scholarly kin. Cambridge has gathered its colleges along the Cam for eight centuries; Heidelberg cradles Germany's oldest university beneath a romantic castle on the Neckar; Tallahassee shades its own student city of Florida State and Florida A&M under live oaks and canopy roads, the seat of state government among the rolling hills of the Panhandle. Three towns where the young and the studious set the tone.

Tallahassee delights the visitor who likes a green and lively capital: oak-canopied roads and rolling hills, a couple of spirited university towns rolled into one, the old and new capitol buildings, and the wild springs and trails just beyond the city. Come and visit us soon.

When you plan the trip, Visit Tallahassee is the place to start.




Wear the History



For deeper reading on the Tallahassee history described here — the Apalachee and Lake Jackson Mounds, de Soto's 1539 winter at Anhaica, the 17th-century Mission San Luis and the Apalachee mound-builders of Lake Jackson, the choice of Tallahassee as Florida's capital in 1824, the 1845 Old Capitol, and the Red Hills cotton-and-emancipation story — it may be useful to consult (1) the Tallahassee Historical Society, (2) the Florida Historic Capitol Museum, (3) the Museum of Florida History and its Florida-history collections, (4) Mission San Luis de Apalachee, and (5) the State Archives of Florida and its Florida Memory program and the Florida Division of Historical Resources. For travel and visitor information, it may be useful to contact (1) Visit Tallahassee (Leon County Tourism), (2) VISIT FLORIDA, (3) the City of Tallahassee Parks & Recreation Department, (4) the Florida State Parks (Maclay Gardens and Wakulla Springs), and (5) Tallahassee International Airport (TLH).