Bonita Springs Historical Society

Bonita Springs Historical Society Historic McSwain Home Museum & Gardens
Downtown Bonita Springs walking history tours
Operated by the Bonita Springs Historical Society

Bonita Springs has long been inhabited. Archaeological discoveries place people here about 8000 years ago and mound building was well underway by 4000 years ago. By the time Ponce de Leon sailed along our beaches and first made contact with the Calusa Indians in 1513, this area was home to thousands. Native American village remains and mounds attest to their centuries of prosperity. However, withi

n a couple of centuries, the once mighty Calusa Chiefdom was decimated by European diseases and slave trading. In the 1870’s, Army Corps of Engineers’ surveyors mapped remote Southwest Florida and pitched camp along the upper Imperial River. After the crew left, the area, and later community, became known and recorded on maps as “Survey”. The river became known as “Surveyor’s Creek”. Over the years, Survey developed from a scattering of homesteaders into a village. In 1901, a Post Office was opened, and in 1910 the two-story, Eagle Hotel was in business catering to visitors attracted to the unspoiled area’s bounty of hunting and fishing. Later, developers decided that the name, “Survey”, lacked sales appeal, so the town was renamed “Bonita Springs”; Indian Spring Branch became the “Oak River”; and Surveyor’s Creek was renamed the “Imperial River”. In the early 1920’s, Barron Collier, wanting to expand his empire, extended his Fort Myers-Southern Railroad south to include Bonita Springs. This, along with the completion of the new Tamiami Trail in 1928, brought another land boom to the area. During this period, Bonita Springs was briefly incorporated as a city. Later, roadside attractions enticed visitors to stop in Bonita Springs. The first major tourist attraction to open was the Everglades Reptile Gardens in 1936. This roadside tourist attraction, featuring local and exotic animals, helped put Bonita Springs “on the map”. The Everglades Wonder Gardens is one of the few remaining historic resources of this type in Florida. Also, on December 27, 1957, the Naples-Fort Myers Greyhound Track was opened in the city. Bonita Springs remained a quiet, small town for decades. But, as the years passed, the rush to build was about to start. With the advent of air conditioning, the opening of Interstate 75, a nearby major airport, along with the new US 41 bypass, the growth in population by the 1980’s and 90’s ushered in shopping malls, modern office facilities, and golf courses. In 1999, residents voted to incorporate Bonita Springs for the second time. Today, the City of Bonita Springs is an attractive, affluent area with beautiful beaches, fine restaurants, excellent recreational facilities, and beautiful homes. It’s hard to realize that, a little more than three generations ago, the roots of this thriving community were a scattering of homesteaders’ shacks by a creek in the backwaters of nowhere – in a place called Survey.

Bonita By Numbers63That's how many people lived in Survey (now Bonita Springs) in 1910.Just 14 families called this comm...
06/18/2026

Bonita By Numbers

63

That's how many people lived in Survey (now Bonita Springs) in 1910.

Just 14 families called this community home.

Today, tens of thousands live here, but every town starts somewhere.

Photo: Survey School 1910
This is a 1910 photograph of the Survey school, which was actually the second school in the community. The first school in the area was a log cabin with a dirt floor and thatched roof. Early settler T. J. Barnes, whose children attended the school, acquired desks, a blackboard and stovepipe from Fort Myers. The newer building was built near the town cemetery on land donated by the Walker family.

06/17/2026

Marco Island's local marine and estuarine resources were so abundant that the Calusa had no need for large-scale farming?

What did the Calusa eat besides seafood and game? They likely kept small gardens of papaya, chili peppers, and squash, and gathered other nutrient-rich vegetarian options including coontie plants, sea grapes, grasses, prickly pears, maypop (passionflower) fruits, palmetto berries, and sabal palms. The Calusa were also known to drink a strong tea called 'cassina' made from the yaupon holly.

📷: "Calusas in Southwest Florida: Preparing a Feast" (detail) by Paul Arsenault, 2016. "Windows and Doors to History" outdoor exhibit, Marco Island Historical Museum.

Cordell Smith was a beloved citizen of Bonita Springs throughout his life. He was well-read with an incredible memory. S...
06/17/2026

Cordell Smith was a beloved citizen of Bonita Springs throughout his life. He was well-read with an incredible memory. Smith contributed years of labor in the development of the town, including volunteering to deliver mail on foot to many remote areas in Bonita Springs. Smith, who lived in a bungalow home on Old 41, was often seen walking around town typically dressed in overalls.

Bonita Beach Before It Was PublicBelieve it or not, Bonita Beach wasn't always public.Until the 1940s, much of Bonita Be...
06/16/2026

Bonita Beach Before It Was Public

Believe it or not, Bonita Beach wasn't always public.

Until the 1940s, much of Bonita Beach was owned by the Koreshan Unity, a religious community based in nearby Estero.

Their influence can still be seen throughout Southwest Florida today.

photo: Bonita Springs Historical Society: Koreshan Settlement

Believe it or not, Bonita Springs was once known as the "Snook Capital of the World."Before the condos, resorts, and sea...
06/15/2026

Believe it or not, Bonita Springs was once known as the "Snook Capital of the World."

Before the condos, resorts, and seasonal visitors, fishing was a way of life for many local families and businesses.

The snook fishery helped shape the identity of this community and attracted anglers from across the country.

Do you have a favorite Bonita fishing memory?

Today is National Flag Day.We honor the American flag and the generations of people whose courage, service, and sacrific...
06/14/2026

Today is National Flag Day.

We honor the American flag and the generations of people whose courage, service, and sacrifice helped shape our nation and our community.

May we continue to preserve the history, heritage, and legacy that connect us to one another.

The Bonita Springs Historical Society is a 501(c) (3) nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting, preserving, and promoting local history.

History stays alive because people care enough to share it.Meet Byron and Linda Liles, volunteer docents at the Historic...
06/13/2026

History stays alive because people care enough to share it.

Meet Byron and Linda Liles, volunteer docents at the Historic McSwain Home Museum & Gardens.

Every Saturday, they help welcome visitors, share local stories, answer questions, and connect people to Bonita Springs' past. Through conversations, artifacts, photographs, and personal memories, they help ensure that our community's history continues to be passed from one generation to the next.

Join us for Open House on Saturday, from 11:00 AM to 5:00 PM.

Explore the museum, discover local artifacts, stroll through our pollinator garden and native food forest, and experience one of Bonita Springs' most important historical resources.

Historic McSwain Home Museum & Gardens
27451 Old 41 Road
Bonita Springs, Florida

The Bonita Springs Historical Society is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting, preserving, and promoting local history.

Preservation happens one donation at a time.We are grateful to the individuals, families, members, sponsors, and donors ...
06/12/2026

Preservation happens one donation at a time.

We are grateful to the individuals, families, members, sponsors, and donors who help us preserve Bonita Springs history for future generations.

Do you have photographs, documents, artifacts, or other items connected to Bonita's past? We'd love to learn more. Please email photos and information about your item to [email protected].

The Bonita Springs Historical Society is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting, preserving, and promoting local history.

Early visitors playing in the shell mound.A different time. A different understanding of history.This early photograph s...
06/11/2026

Early visitors playing in the shell mound.

A different time. A different understanding of history.

This early photograph shows visitors playing on a Calusa shell mound, unaware they were standing on one of Southwest Florida's most important archaeological treasures.

Today, these sites help tell the story of the people who lived here long before Bonita Springs existed.

The Bonita Springs Historical Society is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to protecting, preserving, and promoting local history.

Man-made attractions also helped bring more visitors to Bonita Springs. In 1936, the Piper brothers, Bill and Lester, bu...
06/10/2026

Man-made attractions also helped bring more visitors to Bonita Springs. In 1936, the Piper brothers, Bill and Lester, built a roadside attraction displaying alligators, cougars, other wild animals and native plants, called the Everglades Reptile Gardens. Later named the Everglades Wonder Gardens, the gardens are still operating.

Address

27451 Old 41 Road
Bonita Springs, FL
34135

Opening Hours

Tuesday 10am - 2am
Wednesday 10am - 2pm
Thursday 10am - 2pm
Saturday 11am - 5pm

Telephone

(239) 992-6997

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