LaBelle, Florida - The Citrus Capital of Florida
FIRST POPULATED: Late 1800s
CITY POPULATION: 3,400 GREATER LABELLE: 12,000 HENDRY COUNTY:
28,000

INTERESTING
FACTS: LaBelle, located in a vast oak hammock on the shores of the
Caloosahatchee River, at the intersection of State Roads 29 and 80, 26 miles
east of Ft. Myers. The town and unincorporated communities within a 15-mile
radius watch the number of inhabitants rise to 12,000 or more during the winter
growing season. The area was originally settled by the Caloosa Indians, who held
religious rites here. LaBelle mean "the beautiful" in French.
According to Florida history books, Capt. Francis Asbury Hendry named the area
in 1896 for his daughters, Laura and Belle. The greater LaBelle area includes
North LaBelle on the north side of the Caloosahatchee River and Port LaBelle, 3
miles east of downtown LaBelle.

Citrus, mainly oranges and grapefruit, and vegetable growing drive the town's
economy. Until the late 1940s, LaBelle, and nearly all of Hendry County, was
owned by cattlemen. But cattle ranches then began to downsize and range land
gradually turned to farmland. Since 1986, citrus plantings in the county have
more than doubled, from 40,000 to more than 90,000 acres. Today, Hendry has more
than 15 million citrus trees, more than any other Florida county. (St. Lucie
County has 12 million while Polk county has 11 million.) Hendry is third in
citrus acreage with 100,000 acres. St. Lucie county has 107,000 acres while Polk
county has 104,000 acres.

Music is an important part of the culture of the area. LaBelle's schools are
noted for their outstanding music programs and the large number of students who
play in the school bands. The LaBelle Middle School had over one hundred
students in the band, about forty percent of the student body. LaBelle has a
local jazz ensemble that plays at many events. Lots of fine bluegrass and
country musicians can be heard at local restaurants and community events. In the
background on this page can be heard an example of exciting bluegrass banjo
pickin'!

Port LaBelle, a 31,000-acre single-family community three miles east of LaBelle,
brings a modern, country club atmosphere to the town. It was developed by
General Development Corp. in the 1980s and includes a golf course, marina,
tennis courts and hotel and a growing residential community.

LaBelle is also home to the annual
Swamp Cabbage Festival held on the last full weekend of each February.
Visitors from all over the world attend this big festival. The Festival is named
in honor of Florida's prolific state tree, the Sable Palm, nicknamed the
"cabbage" palm because of it's sweet, tender pulp, the "heart of
palm" found inside the trunk. The Sabal palm and the mighty Live Oak trees
help give LaBelle it's famed scenic beauty.