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Pineland's importance to Pine Island
is twofold: (1) historical - there is evidence that the Calusa
Indians lived here two thousand years before Christ until
sometime in the eighteenth century; (2) geographical - it boasts
the highest point of land in Lee County.
Originally, it was
known as Batty's Landing, named for William Batty who bought 142
acres there in 1885. At that time the Calusa mounds were sixty
feet high instead of the present thirty feet and the
cross-island canal built by the Calusa was still quite visible.
Renowned archeologist Frank Hamilton Cushing found this place to
be one of the most extensive mound sites he visited in 1885,
indicating that it may have been the central city of the Calusa
culture.
When the post
office was established in 1902, the name was changed to
Pineland, but the sleepy character of this small settlement has
changed little through the years. United Mineworkers Union
president John L. Lewis, spent his winters enjoying the
seclusion of this area until his death in 1963.
Pineland still has
some of the most valued home sites on the island. a large
marina, Alden Pines Country Club and Golf Course Community, as
well as the historic mounds and buildings make it a desirable
place to live.
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