
The Calusa fished, gathered shellfish, and built shell mounds along the Imperial River and Estero Bay coast for thousands of years before European contact; the great shell-mound capital at Mound Key, just north of Bonita in Estero Bay, still rises more than thirty feet above the water. The Spanish arrived in 1513 with Juan Ponce de León and made their first serious attempt to establish a foothold at Mound Key in 1567; the British took Florida in 1763 and gave it back in 1783; the United States annexed the territory in 1821; and Florida became the 27th state on March 3, 1845. U.S. Army surveyors first crossed the area during the Third Seminole War in the 1850s, and a second crew came through in the 1870s and pitched their long camp along what they called Surveyor's Creek — the camp that gave Survey its name, and the river the name it carried until 1912.
Our Bonita Springs retro logo carries Florida's alligator and the date "1845" stamped beneath, for the year Florida became the 27th state of the Union. The black-and-white styling is retro, in the vocabulary of crate labels, mid-century beach signage, and the painted wooden roadside placards that once stood along Old 41 between the Liles Hotel and the Wonder Gardens. The alligator and the date do the work of placing the design in the founding generation of the state — and the city that grew up as a U.S. Army survey camp on a quiet southwest-flowing river, was rebranded by Tennessee investors in 1912, and has carried one of Florida's oldest roadside attractions through every decade since 1936.
Why People Visit Bonita Springs Florida
- Walk Riverside Park and Old 41 — the historic downtown corridor on the Imperial River, with the 1926 Liles Hotel housing the Bonita Springs Historical Society, the bandshell, and the original Cracker-style wooden-frame buildings that line the original Tamiami Trail spine through town.
- Visit the Everglades Wonder Gardens on Old 41 — the 1936 roadside attraction founded by brothers Bill and Lester Piper as the Everglades Reptile Gardens, now a non-profit on city-owned land with banyan trees, rescued reptiles and birds, and the original mid-century roadside-Florida signage. One of the oldest continuously operating roadside attractions in the state.
- Kayak the Imperial River from Imperial River Park — the kayak launch on the river inside the city, with shaded paths under the cypress and oaks and herons in the shallows.
- Walk Bonita Beach Park — the public Gulf shoreline at the western end of Bonita Beach Road, with shelling, sunset views, and dolphin sightings offshore.
- Walk Lovers Key State Park — the four-barrier-island state park between Estero Bay and the Gulf, with 2.5 miles of beach, 5 miles of multi-use trails through maritime hammock on Black Island, kayak and boat launches into Estero Bay, and a Discovery Center. The land was donated to Florida and preserved as a state park in 1983 after being saved from luxury condominium development. Check current park status; some facilities continued post-Hurricane-Ian recovery into 2025.
- Walk Barefoot Beach Preserve just south of the city line in Collier County — 342 acres of Collier County park along two miles of natural Gulf shoreline north of Wiggins Pass, with the Saylor Trail boardwalk, gopher tortoise habitat, and quiet dunes.
- Paddle out to Mound Key Archaeological State Park in Estero Bay — the 30-foot Calusa shell mound that was the believed capital of the Calusa chiefdom, just north of Bonita in Estero Bay. Accessible by kayak from Lovers Key or Koreshan State Park.
- Visit Koreshan State Park up the road in Estero — the historic site of Dr. Cyrus Teed's 1894 commune along the Estero River.
- Drive Old 41 from the Liles Hotel north past the Wonder Gardens and the historic downtown blocks to Estero, then up to Fort Myers.
- Drive south on US-41 to Naples (10 minutes), or north to Estero / Fort Myers Beach / Sanibel and Captiva Islands.