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Conch Republic

The Conch Republic (/ˈkɒŋk/) is a micronation declared as a tongue-in-cheek secession of the city of Key West, Florida, from the United States on April 23, 1982. It has been maintained as a tourism booster for the city. Since then, the term "Conch Republic" has been expanded to refer to "all of the Florida Keys, or, that geographic apportionment of land that falls within the legally defined boundaries of Monroe County, Florida, northward to 'Skeeter's Last Chance Saloon' in Florida City, Dade County, Florida, with Key West as the micronation's capital and all territories north of Key West being referred to as 'The Northern Territories'".[6]

Conch Republic
Micronation
Flag
Motto: "We Seceded Where Others Failed"
(also: "The Mitigation of World Tension
Through the Exercise of Humor")
Anthem: Working in the Conch Republic
Location in Monroe County and the state of Florida
StatusIntegrated into the United States
CapitalKey West
24°33′33″N 81°47′3″W / 24.55917°N 81.78417°W / 24.55917; -81.78417
Official languagesEnglish
Organizational structureRepublic
• Prime Minister
Dennis Wardlow (founder)
• Speaker of the House
Paul Joseph Menta[1]
• Secretary of State
James R. Gilleran[2]
Establishment
• Declared
April 23, 1982
Area claimed
• Total
15.4 km2 (5.9 sq mi)
Population
• Census
68,071 (est. by adding the total population of all of its claimed land)
Purported currencyConch dollar[3][4][5]
(US dollar de facto)
Time zone(EST) (UTC-5)
The sign "WELCOME TO THE CONCH REPUBLIC" greets those arriving at Key West International Airport.

While the protests that sparked the creation of the Conch Republic (and others since then) have been described by some as "tongue-in-cheek", they were motivated by frustrations over genuine concerns. The original protest event was motivated by a U.S. Border Patrol roadblock and checkpoint that greatly inconvenienced residents and tourists.

The Conch Republic celebrates Independence Day every April 23 as part of a week-long festival of activities involving numerous businesses in Key West [7] including local rum distilleries like Chef Distilled.[8] The organization—a "Sovereign State of Mind", seeking only to bring more "humor, warmth and respect" to a world in sore need of all three according to its late secretary general, Peter Anderson—is a key tourism booster for the area.[9]

History Edit

In 1982, the United States Border Patrol set up a roadblock and inspection point on US 1 just north of the merger of Monroe County Road 905A/Miami-Dade County Road 905A onto US 1 (they are the only two roads connecting the Florida Keys with the mainland), in front of the Last Chance Saloon just south of Florida City. Vehicles were stopped and searched for narcotics and illegal immigrants.

The Key West City Council complained repeatedly about the inconvenience for travelers to and from Key West, claiming that it hurt the Keys' important tourism industry. Eastern Air Lines, which had a hub at Miami International Airport, saw a window of opportunity when the roadblocks were established; Eastern was at the time the only airline to establish jet service to Key West International Airport, counting on travelers from Key West to Miami preferring to fly rather than to wait for police to search their vehicles.

When the city council's complaints went unanswered by the U.S. federal government and attempts to get an injunction against the roadblock failed in court, as a form of protest Mayor Dennis Wardlow and the council declared Key West's independence on April 23, 1982. In the eyes of the council, since the U.S. federal government had set up the equivalent of a border station as if they were a foreign nation, they might as well become one. As many of the local citizens were referred to as Conchs, the micronation took the name of the Conch Republic.

As part of the protest, Mayor Wardlow was proclaimed prime minister of the republic, which immediately declared war against the United States (symbolically breaking a loaf of stale Cuban bread over the head of a man dressed in a naval uniform), quickly surrendered after one minute (to the man in the uniform), and applied for one billion dollars in foreign aid.

Conch Republic officials were invited to the Summit of the Americas in Miami in 1994, and Conch representatives were officially invited to 1995's Florida Jubilee.[10]

The faux secession and the events surrounding it generated great publicity for the Keys' plight—the roadblock and inspection station were removed soon afterward. It also resulted in the creation of a new avenue of tourism for the Keys.

Invasions of 1995 Edit

On September 20, 1995, it was reported that the 478th Civil Affairs Battalion of the United States Army Reserve was to conduct a training exercise simulating an invasion of a foreign island. They were to land on Key West and conduct affairs as if the islanders were foreign. However, no one from the 478th notified Conch officials of the exercise.

Seeing another chance at publicity, Wardlow and the forces behind the 1982 Conch Republic secession mobilized the island for a full-scale war, sending the schooner Western Union out to attack an incoming Coast Guard cutter with water balloons, conch fritters and stale Cuban bread (to which the Coast Guard responded with their fire hoses, quickly ending the battle), and protested to the Department of Defense for arranging this exercise without consulting the city officials. The leaders of the 478th issued an apology the next day, saying they "in no way meant to challenge or impugn the sovereignty of the Conch Republic", and submitted to a surrender ceremony on September 22.[11]

During the U.S. federal government shutdown of 1995 and 1996, as a protest, the republic sent a flotilla of Conch Navy, civilian, and fire department boats to Fort Jefferson, located in Dry Tortugas National Park, to reopen it. The action was dubbed a "full-scale invasion" by the Conch Republic. Inspired by efforts of the Smithsonian Institution to keep its museums open by private donations, local residents had raised private money to keep the park running (as a closed park would damage the tourist-dependent local economy), but could find no one to accept the money and reopen the park.[12]

When officials attempted to enter the monument, they were cited. When the citation was contested in court the following year, the resultant case, The United States of America v. Peter Anderson, was quickly dropped.[13]

Annexation of Seven Mile Bridge Edit

 
Seven Mile Bridge

On January 13, 2006, Peter Anderson (the defendant in the Dry Tortugas case from 1995 to 1996) purported to annex the abandoned span of Seven Mile Bridge, which had been replaced by a parallel span in 1982. The move was in response to a recent event regarding Cuban refugees. On the previous January 4, fifteen Cuban refugees reached the bridge, but were returned to Cuba by the U.S. Border Patrol because the U.S. government had declared the bridge a "wet feet" location under the wet feet, dry feet policy. The rationale was that, since two sections of the span had been removed and it was no longer connected to land, it was not part of U.S. territory subject to the "dry feet" rule, and thus the refugees could not stay.

Anderson, seizing upon the U.S.'s apparent disavowal of the abandoned span, claimed it for the Republic. He expressed hope to use the bridge for affordable, ecologically friendly housing. In response, Russel Schweiss, spokesman for Florida governor Jeb Bush, declared, "With all due respect to the Conch Republic, the bridge belongs to all the people of Florida, and we're not currently in negotiations to sell it."[14] The refugee decision was later overturned, but only after the refugees had been returned to Cuba.

Recent history Edit

In another protest, beginning in 2008, the northern keys including Key Largo formed a separation of the Conch Republic known as the Independent Northernmost Territories of the Conch Republic. Proponents claim this separation is a result of disagreements over the definition and use of the term "Conch Republic".[15]

As of 2022, the southernmost point buoy mentions the Conch Republic.

Souvenir passports and vehicle registration Edit

 
A Conch Republic flag hanging from a balcony.

Through their website, the republic issues passports as souvenirs, but some have evidently bought them in the mistaken belief they are legitimate travel and identity documents. Shortly after the September 11 attacks, FBI investigators thought that hijacker Mohamed Atta had possibly purchased a Conch Republic passport[16] from the website. International vehicle registration code stickers can also be purchased from vendors in Key West, bearing the initials "KW" and "CR"—the country codes for Kuwait and Costa Rica, respectively.

Military Edit

The Conch Republic actively maintains an Army, Navy, and Air Force whose primary duties are to help re-enact the Great Sea Battle of 1982 and the retaking of Fort Jefferson. The Conch Republic Navy comprises no fewer than 10 civilian boats and the schooner Wolf under the command of Admiral Finbar Gittelman. The Army consists of the 1st Conch Artillery, garrisoned in Fort Taylor.[citation needed]

The Conch Republic Air Force has more than a dozen appointed aircraft in its fleet. The flagship, a 1942 Waco, was flown by Fred R. Cabanas, a legendary stunt pilot and ambassador for the Conch Republic at air shows worldwide.[17] He flew "Conch Fury" in the 2005 Reno Air Races. Fred was declared General of the Air Force by the mayor of Key West after intercepting a defecting Cuban MiG-23 with his Pitts Special in 1991.[18] Following his death in January 2013,[19] Fred was succeeded by his son, Raymond Cabanas.[20]

In literature Edit

Some of the action in Joe Haldeman's 1989 science fiction novel Buying Time (published in UK as The Long Habit of Living) takes place in the Conch Republic, a lawless place where assassination and other activities are perfectly legal.

Science fiction writer Spider Robinson's Callahan's Crosstime Saloon series—about an Irish bar full of time travellers, aliens and musicians—find themselves relocated to the Conch Republic in the 2000 novel Callahan's Key.

National anthem Edit

In 1994, Joe and Meri-Lynn Britz wrote the national anthem for the Conch Republic, "Conch Republic".[21] It was recorded by the Key Lime Pie band and voted on and accepted by the city of Key West City Commissioners.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Florida Keys celebrate 40th anniversary of Conch Republic". Tamp Bay Times. Associated Press. April 16, 2022. Retrieved November 20, 2022.
  2. ^ "The Official Website of the Conch Republic". Retrieved June 3, 2021.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on October 11, 2007. Retrieved December 7, 2006.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on November 3, 2007. Retrieved December 7, 2007.
  5. ^ Triviaballer. "Key West Trivia". Retrieved December 7, 2006.
  6. ^ "A brief history of the Conch Republic" November 2, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Cruz, Georgina (March 27, 2009). "Around Florida in late April: Conch Republic celebration in Key West plus events in Venic, Daytona, Orlando and St. Augustine". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved March 20, 2019.
  8. ^ "Chef Distilled – Key West First Legal Rum Distillery". Stogie Press. February 1, 2015. Retrieved January 18, 2023.
  9. ^ Reno Gazette-Journal
  10. ^ John Ryan, George Dunford & Simon Sellars (2006). Micronations. Lonely Planet Publications. p. 131. ISBN 1-74104-730-7.
  11. ^ John Ryan, George Dunford & Simon Sellars (2006). Micronations. Lonely Planet Publications. p. 133. ISBN 1-74104-730-7.
  12. ^ "Key West to Conch-er closed federal park".
  13. ^ . conchrepublic.com. Archived from the original on March 4, 2015. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  14. ^ "Conchs roar to bridge annexation". Associated Press. January 14, 2006.
  15. ^ . KeysNews.com. December 30, 2008. Archived from the original on December 31, 2008.
  16. ^ Babson, Jennifer (October 3, 2001). "Atta May Have Obtained Conch Republic Passport". The Miami Herald. Retrieved November 29, 2006.
  17. ^ "Remembering aviation great Fred Cabanas". Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association. January 16, 2013. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
  18. ^ Jones, Lindsay (June 12, 2004). "Key West's 'General' to fly in St. Lucie air show". The Palm Beach Post. West Palm Beach, FL. p. 1B. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
  19. ^ Clark, Cammy (January 16, 2013). "Key West stunt pilot Fred Cabanas dies in plane crash in Mexico". The Miami Herald. Miami, FL. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
  20. ^ "Raymond Cabanas Declaired General of the Conch Republic Air Force". Key West Biplanes. Key West, FL. March 26, 2013. Retrieved October 31, 2013.
  21. ^ Shearer, Victoria (2008). It Happened in the Florida Keys. Globe Pequot Press. p. 82. ISBN 978-0762740918.[permanent dead link]

External links Edit

  • Official Website of the Conch Republic
  • Conch Republic Military Forces website

conch, republic, micronation, declared, tongue, cheek, secession, city, west, florida, from, united, states, april, 1982, been, maintained, tourism, booster, city, since, then, term, been, expanded, refer, florida, keys, that, geographic, apportionment, land, . The Conch Republic ˈ k ɒ ŋ k is a micronation declared as a tongue in cheek secession of the city of Key West Florida from the United States on April 23 1982 It has been maintained as a tourism booster for the city Since then the term Conch Republic has been expanded to refer to all of the Florida Keys or that geographic apportionment of land that falls within the legally defined boundaries of Monroe County Florida northward to Skeeter s Last Chance Saloon in Florida City Dade County Florida with Key West as the micronation s capital and all territories north of Key West being referred to as The Northern Territories 6 Conch RepublicMicronationFlagMotto We Seceded Where Others Failed also The Mitigation of World TensionThrough the Exercise of Humor Anthem Working in the Conch RepublicLocation in Monroe County and the state of FloridaStatusIntegrated into the United StatesCapitalKey West24 33 33 N 81 47 3 W 24 55917 N 81 78417 W 24 55917 81 78417Official languagesEnglishOrganizational structureRepublic Prime MinisterDennis Wardlow founder Speaker of the HousePaul Joseph Menta 1 Secretary of StateJames R Gilleran 2 Establishment DeclaredApril 23 1982Area claimed Total15 4 km2 5 9 sq mi Population Census68 071 est by adding the total population of all of its claimed land Purported currencyConch dollar 3 4 5 US dollar de facto Time zone EST UTC 5 Summer EDT UTC 4 The sign WELCOME TO THE CONCH REPUBLIC greets those arriving at Key West International Airport While the protests that sparked the creation of the Conch Republic and others since then have been described by some as tongue in cheek they were motivated by frustrations over genuine concerns The original protest event was motivated by a U S Border Patrol roadblock and checkpoint that greatly inconvenienced residents and tourists The Conch Republic celebrates Independence Day every April 23 as part of a week long festival of activities involving numerous businesses in Key West 7 including local rum distilleries like Chef Distilled 8 The organization a Sovereign State of Mind seeking only to bring more humor warmth and respect to a world in sore need of all three according to its late secretary general Peter Anderson is a key tourism booster for the area 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 Invasions of 1995 1 2 Annexation of Seven Mile Bridge 1 3 Recent history 2 Souvenir passports and vehicle registration 3 Military 4 In literature 5 National anthem 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Conch Republic news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1982 the United States Border Patrol set up a roadblock and inspection point on US 1 just north of the merger of Monroe County Road 905A Miami Dade County Road 905A onto US 1 they are the only two roads connecting the Florida Keys with the mainland in front of the Last Chance Saloon just south of Florida City Vehicles were stopped and searched for narcotics and illegal immigrants The Key West City Council complained repeatedly about the inconvenience for travelers to and from Key West claiming that it hurt the Keys important tourism industry Eastern Air Lines which had a hub at Miami International Airport saw a window of opportunity when the roadblocks were established Eastern was at the time the only airline to establish jet service to Key West International Airport counting on travelers from Key West to Miami preferring to fly rather than to wait for police to search their vehicles When the city council s complaints went unanswered by the U S federal government and attempts to get an injunction against the roadblock failed in court as a form of protest Mayor Dennis Wardlow and the council declared Key West s independence on April 23 1982 In the eyes of the council since the U S federal government had set up the equivalent of a border station as if they were a foreign nation they might as well become one As many of the local citizens were referred to as Conchs the micronation took the name of the Conch Republic As part of the protest Mayor Wardlow was proclaimed prime minister of the republic which immediately declared war against the United States symbolically breaking a loaf of stale Cuban bread over the head of a man dressed in a naval uniform quickly surrendered after one minute to the man in the uniform and applied for one billion dollars in foreign aid Conch Republic officials were invited to the Summit of the Americas in Miami in 1994 and Conch representatives were officially invited to 1995 s Florida Jubilee 10 The faux secession and the events surrounding it generated great publicity for the Keys plight the roadblock and inspection station were removed soon afterward It also resulted in the creation of a new avenue of tourism for the Keys Invasions of 1995 Edit On September 20 1995 it was reported that the 478th Civil Affairs Battalion of the United States Army Reserve was to conduct a training exercise simulating an invasion of a foreign island They were to land on Key West and conduct affairs as if the islanders were foreign However no one from the 478th notified Conch officials of the exercise Seeing another chance at publicity Wardlow and the forces behind the 1982 Conch Republic secession mobilized the island for a full scale war sending the schooner Western Union out to attack an incoming Coast Guard cutter with water balloons conch fritters and stale Cuban bread to which the Coast Guard responded with their fire hoses quickly ending the battle and protested to the Department of Defense for arranging this exercise without consulting the city officials The leaders of the 478th issued an apology the next day saying they in no way meant to challenge or impugn the sovereignty of the Conch Republic and submitted to a surrender ceremony on September 22 11 During the U S federal government shutdown of 1995 and 1996 as a protest the republic sent a flotilla of Conch Navy civilian and fire department boats to Fort Jefferson located in Dry Tortugas National Park to reopen it The action was dubbed a full scale invasion by the Conch Republic Inspired by efforts of the Smithsonian Institution to keep its museums open by private donations local residents had raised private money to keep the park running as a closed park would damage the tourist dependent local economy but could find no one to accept the money and reopen the park 12 When officials attempted to enter the monument they were cited When the citation was contested in court the following year the resultant case The United States of America v Peter Anderson was quickly dropped 13 Annexation of Seven Mile Bridge Edit nbsp Seven Mile BridgeOn January 13 2006 Peter Anderson the defendant in the Dry Tortugas case from 1995 to 1996 purported to annex the abandoned span of Seven Mile Bridge which had been replaced by a parallel span in 1982 The move was in response to a recent event regarding Cuban refugees On the previous January 4 fifteen Cuban refugees reached the bridge but were returned to Cuba by the U S Border Patrol because the U S government had declared the bridge a wet feet location under the wet feet dry feet policy The rationale was that since two sections of the span had been removed and it was no longer connected to land it was not part of U S territory subject to the dry feet rule and thus the refugees could not stay Anderson seizing upon the U S s apparent disavowal of the abandoned span claimed it for the Republic He expressed hope to use the bridge for affordable ecologically friendly housing In response Russel Schweiss spokesman for Florida governor Jeb Bush declared With all due respect to the Conch Republic the bridge belongs to all the people of Florida and we re not currently in negotiations to sell it 14 The refugee decision was later overturned but only after the refugees had been returned to Cuba Recent history Edit In another protest beginning in 2008 the northern keys including Key Largo formed a separation of the Conch Republic known as the Independent Northernmost Territories of the Conch Republic Proponents claim this separation is a result of disagreements over the definition and use of the term Conch Republic 15 As of 2022 the southernmost point buoy mentions the Conch Republic Souvenir passports and vehicle registration Edit nbsp A Conch Republic flag hanging from a balcony Through their website the republic issues passports as souvenirs but some have evidently bought them in the mistaken belief they are legitimate travel and identity documents Shortly after the September 11 attacks FBI investigators thought that hijacker Mohamed Atta had possibly purchased a Conch Republic passport 16 from the website International vehicle registration code stickers can also be purchased from vendors in Key West bearing the initials KW and CR the country codes for Kuwait and Costa Rica respectively Military EditThe Conch Republic actively maintains an Army Navy and Air Force whose primary duties are to help re enact the Great Sea Battle of 1982 and the retaking of Fort Jefferson The Conch Republic Navy comprises no fewer than 10 civilian boats and the schooner Wolf under the command of Admiral Finbar Gittelman The Army consists of the 1st Conch Artillery garrisoned in Fort Taylor citation needed The Conch Republic Air Force has more than a dozen appointed aircraft in its fleet The flagship a 1942 Waco was flown by Fred R Cabanas a legendary stunt pilot and ambassador for the Conch Republic at air shows worldwide 17 He flew Conch Fury in the 2005 Reno Air Races Fred was declared General of the Air Force by the mayor of Key West after intercepting a defecting Cuban MiG 23 with his Pitts Special in 1991 18 Following his death in January 2013 19 Fred was succeeded by his son Raymond Cabanas 20 In literature EditSome of the action in Joe Haldeman s 1989 science fiction novel Buying Time published in UK as The Long Habit of Living takes place in the Conch Republic a lawless place where assassination and other activities are perfectly legal Science fiction writer Spider Robinson s Callahan s Crosstime Saloon series about an Irish bar full of time travellers aliens and musicians find themselves relocated to the Conch Republic in the 2000 novel Callahan s Key National anthem EditIn 1994 Joe and Meri Lynn Britz wrote the national anthem for the Conch Republic Conch Republic 21 It was recorded by the Key Lime Pie band and voted on and accepted by the city of Key West City Commissioners See also EditForgottonia a secessionist movement in Illinois in the 1970s Maritime Republic of Eastport a secessionist movement in Annapolis MarylandReferences Edit Florida Keys celebrate 40th anniversary of Conch Republic Tamp Bay Times Associated Press April 16 2022 Retrieved November 20 2022 The Official Website of the Conch Republic Retrieved June 3 2021 Fodors Key West Travel Guide Archived from the original on October 11 2007 Retrieved December 7 2006 Unlocking Key West Archived from the original on November 3 2007 Retrieved December 7 2007 Triviaballer Key West Trivia Retrieved December 7 2006 A brief history of the Conch Republic Archived November 2 2012 at the Wayback Machine Cruz Georgina March 27 2009 Around Florida in late April Conch Republic celebration in Key West plus events in Venic Daytona Orlando and St Augustine Orlando Sentinel Retrieved March 20 2019 Chef Distilled Key West First Legal Rum Distillery Stogie Press February 1 2015 Retrieved January 18 2023 Reno Gazette Journal John Ryan George Dunford amp Simon Sellars 2006 Micronations Lonely Planet Publications p 131 ISBN 1 74104 730 7 John Ryan George Dunford amp Simon Sellars 2006 Micronations Lonely Planet Publications p 133 ISBN 1 74104 730 7 Key West to Conch er closed federal park The Conch Republic conchrepublic com Archived from the original on March 4 2015 Retrieved January 11 2022 Conchs roar to bridge annexation Associated Press January 14 2006 Insurrection in the Conch Republic KeysNews com December 30 2008 Archived from the original on December 31 2008 Babson Jennifer October 3 2001 Atta May Have Obtained Conch Republic Passport The Miami Herald Retrieved November 29 2006 Remembering aviation great Fred Cabanas Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association January 16 2013 Retrieved October 31 2013 Jones Lindsay June 12 2004 Key West s General to fly in St Lucie air show The Palm Beach Post West Palm Beach FL p 1B Retrieved October 31 2013 Clark Cammy January 16 2013 Key West stunt pilot Fred Cabanas dies in plane crash in Mexico The Miami Herald Miami FL Retrieved October 31 2013 Raymond Cabanas Declaired General of the Conch Republic Air Force Key West Biplanes Key West FL March 26 2013 Retrieved October 31 2013 Shearer Victoria 2008 It Happened in the Florida Keys Globe Pequot Press p 82 ISBN 978 0762740918 permanent dead link External links EditOfficial Website of the Conch Republic Conch Republic Military Forces website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Conch Republic amp oldid 1176508182, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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