
Today St. Augustine is celebrated as one of America's most distinctive small cities — historic, walkable, sea-aired, and unmistakably first. Our St. Augustine designs gather that identity into wearable form: the coquina fort, the lanterns on Aviles Street, the lighthouse off Anastasia, and the winter glow of the Nights of Lights. Explore the collection and carry a little of the nation's oldest city wherever you go.
The nation's oldest city — four and a half centuries of stone, light, and survival. St. Augustine, Florida sits on the Atlantic barrier-island coast, on the western shore of Matanzas Bay. On September 8, 1565, the Spanish admiral Pedro Menéndez de Avilés came ashore with several hundred settlers and named the new town for the saint on whose feast day they had arrived — forty-two years before the English reached Jamestown and fifty-five before the Pilgrims touched Plymouth Rock. It is the oldest continuously occupied European-established city in the continental United States, and it has never stopped being a town. Every winter, from November into January, the Nights of Lights drapes the whole old quarter in white light until the four-hundred-year-old streets glow.
Why People Visit St Augustine Florida
St. Augustine brings four and a half centuries of American history into one compact, walkable city. Visitors come for the coquina fort that was never taken, the oldest streets in the country, Flagler's Gilded-Age architecture, the lighthouse and the bayfront, and the winter glow of the Nights of Lights. It is historic, scenic, and unmistakably first. The road of American history runs back further here than anywhere else in the continental United States.