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Today, Stranahan House
is the eastern anchor of River Walk, a linear waterfront park connecting
Fort Lauderdale's historic district with the soon to be created
cultural district anchored by the Performing Arts Center and the
Museum of Discovery and Science.
Built as a trading post
for settlers and the Seminole Indians in 1901, it quickly evolved
into the post office, community center and town hall as Frank became
Fort Lauderdale's first postmaster, a banker and businessman. He
married another pioneer, Ivy Julia Cromartie, the area's first school
teacher, and it was not long before dances and community festivals
were held on the upper floor of the house. In 1906, it became the
Stranahan's personal residence and remained so until Ivy Stranahan's
death in 1971.
Following
Frank's suicide during the depression, Ivy leased the first
floor of the house to outsiders for use as a restaurant, while
she continued to live upstairs. In 1973, the house was named
to the National Register of Historic Places. In 1979, the restaurant
closed and the Fort Lauderdale Historical Society took possession.
After a thorough restoration, Stranahan House, Inc. was incorporated
in 1981 to preserve and manage the property.
The structure, built of Dade County pine, is an excellent example
of Florida vernacular architecture in a tropical wilderness
setting. Expanded and renovated numerous times, it presently
represents its 1913-1915 configuration. At that time the Stranahan's
home had electric wiring, indoor plumbing and running water,
interior stairways, bay windows and wide porches. All woodwork,
flooring and paneling have been refinished and the exterior
repainted in the original white with green trim. A new roof,
a prototype for other historical properties, was completed in
1996 and meets current hurricane specifications. Although many
of the original furnishings were sold or given away over the
years, the house is furnished with fine examples of period Victorian
furniture and decorative pieces. |

Ivy Julia Cromartie at the age of 18
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