Everything about Cape Canaveral totally explained
Cape Canaveral from the
Spanish Cabo Cañaveral, is a
headland in
Brevard County, Florida,
United States, near the center of that state's
Atlantic coast 45 minutes East of Orlando by car. It sits due east of
Merritt Island, separated from it by the
Banana River. It is part of a region known as the
Space Coast, and is the site of the
Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. Since many
United States spacecraft are launched from both the station and the
Kennedy Space Center on nearby Merritt Island, the term "Cape Canaveral" or "Canaveral" has become a
metonym that refers to both as the launch site of spacecraft.
Other features of the cape include
Cape Canaveral lighthouse and
Port Canaveral. The city of
Cape Canaveral is a few miles south of the cape.
Mosquito Lagoon, The
Indian River,
Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge and
Canaveral National Seashore are also features of this area.
History
As early as the 16th century Cape Canaveral has been noted on nautical maps. A point of land jutting out into the Atlantic
ocean with swift currents and coral shoals this area of Cape Canaveral became a landing spot for many shipwrecked sailors. It
was named by
Juan Ponce de Leon's historian as Cape of Currents. Author Henrietta Carr stated in her book that English
privateer Master John Hawkins and his journalist John Sparke gave an account of their landing at Cape Canaveral in the
1500's. Robert Ranson in his book "East Coast Memoirs" writes about a Presbyterian missionary who was wrecked and lived
among the Indians. Other histories tell of French survivors from Jean Ribault's
Fort Caroline whose ship the "Trinite"
wrecked on the shores of Cape Canaveral and from whose timbers a fort was built.
Due to the hazardous of the Cape for shipping the first
Cape Canaveral Lighthouse was built and completed in 1843.
The 1890 graduating class of
Harvard University started a gun club called the "Canaveral Club" at the Cape. This was founded by C.B. Horton of Boston and George H. Reed. A number of distinguished visitors including presidents
Grover Cleveland and
Benjamin Harrison were reported to have stayed here. In the 1920s the grand building fell in disrepair and later burned to the ground.
In the 1900s several communities sprang up in Cape Canaveral. The area was predominately a farming and fishing community. One community was called
Artesia and records indicate the following residents and their occupations:
- Burns, M.B. (fruit grower),
- Burns, R.G. (fisherman),
- Chandler, Wyatt. (fruit grower),
- Franklin, A. (painter),
- Holmes, G.W. (apiarist),
- Honeywell, CP. (lighthouse keeper),
- Jeffords, S.L. (assistant lighthouse keeper),
- Peterson, W.C. (apiarist),
- Praetorious E. (assistant lighthouse keeper),
- Quarterman, O.A. (Fishery),
- Thompson, T. (engineer),
- Wilson, F.A. (fisherman),
- Wilson, H. (fruit grower).
In the 1930s a community of wealthy journalists started a community called "Journalista" which is now called "Avon by the Sea". The Brossier brothers built houses in this area and started a publication entitled the Evening Star Reporter that was the forerunner of the
Orlando Sentinel.
The first rocket launch from the Cape was
Bumper 8 from Launch Pad 3 on
24 July,
1950. On
February 6,
1959 the first successful test firing of a
Titan intercontinental ballistic missile was accomplished here. All manned
U.S. government (
NASA)
spaceflights have launched from Kennedy Space Center on nearby Merritt Island.
Cape Canaveral was chosen for rocket launches to take advantage of the earth's
rotation. The
linear velocity of the Earth's surface is greatest towards the
equator; the relatively southerly location of the Cape allows rockets to take advantage of this by launching eastward, in the same direction as the earth's rotation. It is also highly desirable to have the downrange area sparsely populated, in case of accidents; an ocean is ideal for this. Although the United States has sites closer to the equator with expanses of ocean to the east of them (for example
Hawaii,
Puerto Rico), the east coast of Florida has substantial logistical advantages over these island locations. The tip of the cape is at
LC-46 in
Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.
Name changes
From 1963 to 1973 it was called
Cape Kennedy. President
John F. Kennedy was an enthusiastic backer of the space program, and after his assassination in 1963, his widow
Jacqueline Kennedy suggested to President
Lyndon Johnson that renaming the Cape Canaveral facility would be an appropriate memorial. However, Johnson recommended the renaming not just of the facility, but of the entire cape. Accordingly, Cape Canaveral
was renamed Cape Kennedy.
Although the name change was approved by the
United States Board on Geographic Names of the
Interior Department in 1964, it wasn't popular in
Florida, especially in the
city of
Cape Canaveral, Florida. In 1973 the state passed a law restoring the former 400-year-old name, and the Board went along. The
Kennedy family issued a letter stating they "understood the decision"; Jacqueline Kennedy also stated if she'd known that the Canaveral name had existed for 400 years, she never would have supported changing the name of the Cape. The Space Center itself retains the "Kennedy" name.
Name origin
The name "Canaveral"
(Cañaveral in
Spanish) was given to the area by Spanish explorers. It literally means "
canebrake". The name can be interpreted as "Cape of Canes".
The City
The City of Cape Canaveral is relatively small, with a population of around 10,000. Highway A1A runs through the City, and serves as the main link to other cities. Many houses in the City were built during the
Apollo days in the 1960s and 1970s. However, in recent years, many houses are either being modernized, or demolished and replaced with new houses or condos. The City has a high divorce rate and a history of drug problems, but this detraction is largely overcome by proximity to the beach,
Kennedy Space Center, and
Orlando.
In pop culture
In The Simpsons episode "Deep Space Homer", a fictitious sign shows its pre-Canaveral name as Cape Arbuckle. In another episode, Ned Flanders greets Homer, with whom he's competing via craft rocket, "Greetings from Neddidy Space Center on Cape Flandaveral."
Made in 1964, but set in 2064, cult British TV series Thunderbirds refers to Cape Kennedy.
The "Cape Kennedy" name shows up in some 1960s TV shows, at least in episodes of "Flipper" and "I Dream of Jeannie", both of which were set on the Space Coast.
The name is also mentioned in the 1967 film "The Reluctant Astronaut".
Cape Canaveral is referred to in the Descendents song "Blast Off", from the album Cool to Be You.
Cape Canaveral is referred to in the Jack's Mannequin song "Cellular Phone".
One of the stops in the FOX television show Drive, references Cape Kennedy as a clue, with 1973 and the name change cited as the Death of Kennedy, leading the racers to Cape Canaveral.
Conor Oberst from Bright Eyes recently performed a song called Cape Canaveral live with the Mystic Valley Band.
Trivia
The telephone area code for Cape Canaveral is, appropriately, 321.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Cape Canaveral'.
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