Delray Beach, Florida Delray Beach, Florida City of Delray Beach Location in Palm Beach County and the state of Florida Location in Palm Beach County and the state of Florida County Flag of Palm Beach County, F Palm Beach Incorporated (Town of Delray Beach) October 9, 1923 Incorporated (City of Delray Beach) May 11, 1927 Delray Beach is a coastal town/city in Palm Beach County, Florida, United States.

The populace was estimated at 66,255 in 2015. Delray Beach is part of the Miami urbane area.

In 1896 Henry Flagler extended his Florida East Coast Railroad south from West Palm Beach to Miami, with a station at Linton. Partly in an attempt to change the community's luck, or to leave behind a bad reputation, the settlement's name was changed in 1901 to Delray, after the Detroit neighborhood of Delray ("Delray" being the anglicized spelling of "Del Rey," which is Spanish for "of the king"), which in turn was titled after the Mexican-American War's Battle of Molino del Rey. Settlers from The Bahamas (then part of the British West Indies), sometimes referred to as 'Nassaws', began arriving in the early 1900s. After 1905, journal articles and photographs of Delray affairs reveal that Japanese pioneer from the close-by Yamato farming colony also began participating in Delray civic activities such as parades, going to the movies, and shopping.

In 1915, Palm Beach County and Dade County contributed nearly equal portions of territory to problematic what is now Broward County between the two, leaving Delray situated inside the southeastern portion of Palm Beach County. At that time Delray was the biggest town on the east coast of Florida between West Palm Beach and Fort Lauderdale.

Delray was separated from the Atlantic Ocean beach by the Florida East Coast Canal (now part of the Intracoastal Waterway).

In 1923 the region between the canal and the ocean was incorporated as Delray Beach.

In 1927 Delray and Delray Beach consolidated into one town titled Delray Beach. Beginning in the mid-1920s, a cyclic Artists and Writers Colony was established in Delray Beach and the adjoining town of Gulf Stream.

Other well-known artists and writers of the era who had homes in Delray Beach include: Herb Roth, W.J.

The Artists and Writers Colony flourished and Delray Beach's fame as a resort town grew.

This era is regarded as Delray Beach's "golden age of architecture"; a reconstructionin which the town/city ranked 50th in populace but 10th in building permits in Florida. Prominent architectural styles in Delray Beach from this reconstructioninclude Art Deco, Mediterranean Revival, Mission Revival, Monterey Colonial, Streamline Moderne, 'Key West style' cottages, and bungalows.

During WWII Delray Beach also saw an influx of service personnel stationed at the close-by Boca Raton Army Airfield.

Some of the veterans who had trained at the airfield returned to settle in Delray Beach after the war.

By the early 1960s Delray Beach was becoming known for surfing.

Atlantic Avenue was the biggest seller of surfboards in Florida at the time. Delray Beach's surfing fame increased somewhat serendipitously after a 1965 shipwreck.

In the 1970s, Interstate 95 between Palm Beach Gardens and Miami was fully instead of and evolution began to spread west of the town/city limits.

These include the Colony Hotel and Old School Square (the former ground of Delray Elementary School and Delray High School, since turned into a cultural center). The town/city also established five Historic Districts, listed in the Local Register of Historic Places, and took in several other historic residentiary neighborhoods between U.S.

Downtown Delray, positioned in the easterly part of the city, along Atlantic Avenue, east of I-95 and stretching to the beach, has undergone a large scale renovation and gentrification.

The Delray Beach Tennis Center has brought company to the area.

Sweden), the Delray Beach International Tennis Championships (ATP Event), and the Chris Evert / Bank of America Pro Celebrity. In 2012, Rand Mc - Nally "Best of the Road" titled Delray Beach America's Most Fun Small Town. Delray Beach was rated as the 3rd Happiest Seaside Town in America by Coastal Living in 2015. In 2007, Delray Beach was labeled as the drug recovery capital of the United States because it had one of the country's biggest recovery communities and relative number of halfway homes. As a result of the article, as of July 7, 2009, the town/city government allowed ordinances that made it illegal for sober homes and other transient rentals to operate in the area. These ordinances may be tested in the courts in the future. Delray Municipal Beach, 2015.

The Crest Theatre is part of Old School Square in downtown Delray Beach.

Many residences and businesses inside this suburban corridor of unincorporated Palm Beach County possess a Delray Beach postal address despite technically lying outside the town/city limits. This region is sometimes referred to collectively and informally as "West Delray." Delray Beach's locale in Southeastern Palm Beach County is in the middle of Florida's Gold Coast region. According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city of Delray Beach has a total territory area of 15.81 miles (25.44 km). In earlier years downtown Delray was centered along Atlantic Avenue as far west as Swinton Avenue and as far east as the intracoastal waterway.

Delray Beach has a tropical climate, more specifically a tropical rainforest climate (Koppen climate classification Af), as its driest month (February) averages 64.8mm of precipitation, meeting the minimum standard of 60mm in the driest month needed to qualify for that designation. Delray Beach has hot and humid summers and warm winters, with a marked drier season in the winter.

Delray Beach has received direct or near direct hits from hurricanes in 1928, 1947, 1949, 1964, 1965, 1979, 1992, 1999, 2004, and 2005. Climate data for Delray Beach Delray Beach demographics 2010 Enumeration Delray Beach Palm Beach County Florida As of 2000, Delray Beach had the sixteenth highest percentage of Haitian inhabitants in the US, with 10.50% of the population. The Delray Beach Open is an ATP World Tour 250 series men's experienced tennis tournament held each year. The Delray Beach Tennis Center has also hosted the Fed Cup, the Davis Cup, and the Chris Evert Pro-Celebrity Tennis Classic. The Delray Beach Tennis Center is a full-service enhance tennis facility with 14 clay courts, 6 difficult courts, and an 8,200 seat stadium positioned near downtown on Atlantic Avenue.

On July 20, 2010, the city's commissioners proclaimed that the city's name would be officially changed to Tennis Beach for one week with respect to its nomination by the United States Tennis Association as one of the top tennis suburbs in the United States. The town/city has 2 miles (3.2 km) of enhance beach accessible from Florida State Road A1 - A. Travel Holiday periodical titled Delray Municipal Beach as the top beach in the southeastern United States. The remains of the Steamship Inchulva that sank on Sept 11, 1903 are positioned in shallow water near the enhance beach, acting as surrounding for native fish and corals. Known today as the Delray Wreck, the site is noted for snorkeling and scuba diving. Downtown Delray Beach has undergone a gentrification program centered on East Atlantic Avenue, also known as simply "The Avenue".

Delray Beach has a street-legal golf cart improve among inhabitants as well as small-town businesses.

The Delray Beach Playhouse, which opened in 1947 in Lake Ida East Park, stages plays, musicals, interactive studio theatre, books on stage, children's theatre productions, classes and camps. Old School Square, the former ground of Delray Elementary School and Delray High School, has since been converted into a cultural center. The Old School Square complex now comprises the Crest Theatre, a venue for the performing arts, in the former High School building; the 1925 Gymnasium, restored to maintain its appearance, which has since turn into a venue for small-town events such as wedding receptions and dances; the Cornell Art Museum, assembled in the restored Elementary School; and The Pavillion, which serves as an outside venue for musical performances and other affairs such as political rallies.

Cason Cottage House Museum, once home to a family of Delray Beach pioneers, offers visitors a glimpse at daily life in South Florida from 1915 to 1935.

The Museum is maintained and directed by the Delray Beach Historical Society. The Spady Museum homes black archives and hosts exhibits and programs designed to recognize the accomplishments of blacks who were instrumental in shaping Delray Beach and Palm Beach County. In 2007 the exhibition was period by renovating a 1935 cottage as a Kid's Cultural Clubhouse, and the assembly of a 50-seat amphitheater titled for C.

The City of Delray Beach maintains five athletic fields, five beach and oceanfront parks, eight improve parks, two intracoastal parks, a teen center and skatepark, a splash park, and a pool and tennis club, offering a range of recreational activities and facilities. Downtown Delray Beach has had a building boom since roughly 2003.

Recent evolution reflects trends of New Urbanism downtown, and mansionization of waterfront property, sometimes creating pressures on Historic Districts and historic sites. New mixed-use evolution projects have recently been constructed, and more are planned, in the areas immediately north and south of Atlantic Avenue.

According to Delray Beach's 2014 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, the top employers in the town/city are: 1 Delray Medical Center 1,540 2 Palm Beach County School District 1,034 4 City of Delray Beach 809 Palm Trail Yacht Club is one of a several Delray Beach structures designed by mid-century undivided designer Alfons Bach.

Delray Beach Municipal Marina.

Hampton and assembled in 1926, is a Delray Beach Historic Landmark. Delray Beach Tennis Center, Tennis stadium capable of seating 8,200 spectators. Delray Beach Public Library Delray Beach Seaboard Air Line Railway Station I-95.svg Interstate 95 bisects the town/city from north to south with two Delray Beach interchanges.

Florida's Turnpike Florida's Turnpike is a north-south toll road passing through unincorporated Delray Beach, with an interchange at Atlantic Avenue.

Tri-Rail commuter rail fitness and Amtrak serve the town/city with stops at Delray Beach Station. The Downtown Roundabout: A no-charge shuttle that joins the Tri-Rail Station to Downtown Delray Beach.

Downtown Delray Beach is accessible by boat via The Intracoastal Waterway.

Steffi Graf, German-born former #1 ranked experienced tennis player, has a second home in Delray Beach. Delray Beach has three sister cities, as designated by Sister Cities International: "Delray Beach, Florida - Tennis, Museums and Agriculture".

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Categories:
Delray Beach, Florida - Cities in Florida - Cities in Palm Beach County, Florida - Populated coastal places in Florida on the Atlantic Ocean - Populated places on the Intracoastal Waterway in Florida - Populated places established in 1911 - Seaside resorts in Florida - Beaches of Palm Beach County, Florida - Beaches of Florida