
Our Naples logo carries Florida's alligator over "1845," the year of statehood and the shared emblem of every Merlin Classics Florida place. The alligator is the Everglades in shorthand — and Naples sits right at the gateway to the Everglades, the Ten Thousand Islands, and Big Cypress, where the gladesman frontier meets the Gulf-coast resort. Printed black-and-white with the worn look of an old crate label or a piece of marsh-camp signage, it reads as Old Florida. What makes this one Naples is the place behind it: the 1886 winter colony, the 1888 pier, the swamp buggy, and the home by the Gulf.
A few landmarks carry the early colony into the present. Historic Palm Cottage, built in 1895 of tabby mortar — a mix of lime, crushed shell, and beach sand — is the oldest house in Naples and today the home of the Naples Historical Society. Out past the edge of town, the gladesman country gave Naples its other identity: the Swamp Buggy Races, first run formally on November 12, 1949, when home-built marsh machines tore through the mud at the start of a tradition that still runs today. And after mid-century growth nearly buried the old main street, the 1990s brought a celebrated revival of Fifth Avenue South — a redesign that turned the historic town-to-pier street into one of the country's most admired walkable downtowns.
Why People Visit Naples Florida
Most people come to Naples for the beaches, the golf, and the Gulf sunsets — but the city rewards anyone who looks for the older layer underneath: a winter colony planted in 1886 and named for an Italian bay, a pier rebuilt through more than a century of hurricanes, and a frontier-grit swamp-buggy tradition at the edge of the Everglades. It's bright, warm, and welcoming, with its real history sitting quietly alongside the resort polish.