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Sun and Surf: Our Stories

08/07/2024 by Tricia Aanderud

For more than two decades, SUN and SURF Magazine has chronicled life in Palm Coast and Flagler County, focusing on the people, places, and stories that define the community.

Selected Magazine Articles

Published quarterly and distributed throughout the area’s neighborhoods and gathering places, the magazine has long served as a local record—capturing everyday history alongside business profiles, features, and reflections on coastal life.

The articles collected on this page were written for SUN and SURF by past-president Kathy Reichard-Ellavsky, whose work appeared across multiple issues. Together, they offer a snapshot of the subjects and stories that mattered to local readers at the time of publication. Each article is presented here as a PDF, preserving the original layout and context in which it first appeared.

Old King’s Road (part 1)

For more than three centuries, King’s Road has carried refugees, enslaved people, settlers, and soldiers, layering human stories onto a path that long predates modern Flagler County.

[Read the entire article ]

Old King’s Road South (part 2)

Built of vitrified brick to exact specifications, including a nine-foot width with concrete curbing, the Old King’s Road reflected a new era, promoted by automobile manufacturers to drive sales and tourism.

[Read the entire article ]

Long Creek Nature Preserve

Within this nature preserve lies part of the same natural corridor that shaped Old King’s Road, where waterways and dry ground guided travel long before roads connected settlements across northeast Florida.

[Read the entire article ]

Welcome Center Opens in October 1970

The opening of Palm Coast’s Welcome Center in October 1970 marked a defining moment, when a largely uninhabited landscape was formally presented as a planned community and the future of Palm Coast was publicly unveiled. Each year we celebrate Founder’s Day.

[Read the entire article ]

Palm Harbor Golf Course

The city’s flagship golf course opened in September 1971. It emerged from land once considered uninhabitable, where swamps and standing water dominated, requiring extensive drainage before recreation and residential development could take root.

[Read the entire article ]

First Residents Arrive in January 1972

What began in 1969 as a large-scale development plan on largely uninhabited land became a community, when Palm Coast welcomed its first residents and daily life replaced planning documents.

[Read the entire article ]

Palm Coast’s Original Yacht Club Opened in December 1972

Completed just in time for Christmas, Palm Coast’s first Yacht Club opened as both a civic centerpiece and a holiday welcome from the developers themselves.

[Read the entire article ]

These articles are shared with thanks to SUN & SURF Magazine, a business member of the Palm Coast Historical Society.

Learn more about the magazine and its history at sunsurfmagazine.com. Businesses interested in supporting Palm Coast history can learn more about business membership opportunities.

Filed Under: Palm Coast History

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Palm Coast Historical Society
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James F. Holland Memorial Park
18 Florida Park Drive North
Palm Coast, Florida

(386) 283-5929

Mailing Address:
PO Box 352613
Palm Coast, FL 32135

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