Near North Ocean Boulevard (Florida Route A1A) near Bay Drive, on the right when traveling north.
One of the most historic locations in Pompano Beach, the Hillsboro inlet was given its name by surveyor William de Brahm in the early 1870's. The name honored British aristocrat Lord Wills Hill, the Earl of Hillsborough. It is not clear how the . . . — — Map (db m213478) HM
Bird Sanctuary
This mound was constructed as a place for ceremonial burial by prehistoric Indians about the year 1300 A.D.- It is believed that they were ancestors of the tribe known as the "TEQUESTA INDIANS"
Given to the people of Pompano . . . — — Map (db m128278) HM
On Hibiscus Avenue, 0.1 miles west of State Road A1A, on the right when traveling north.
Side One:
The Pompano Beach Indian Mound is a prehistoric sand burial mound that was used by the Tequesta tribe and their ancestors for burial of their dead. Located nearby was their associated village and midden dating as far back as AD . . . — — Map (db m100403) HM
On North Riverside Drive at Colony Club Road, on the right when traveling north on North Riverside Drive.
The recreation area encompassed by Colony Club Road, during World War II (1941-1945), was the site of the corrals and paddocks for the United States Coast Guard’s Silver Thatch Mounted Beach Patrol. The mounted beach patrol protected the coast from . . . — — Map (db m127514) HM
On Northwest 7th Terrace at Northwest 6th Street, in the median on Northwest 7th Terrace.
(Side 1)
The first school for Pompano Beach’s African American students was a two-room wooden building that was destroyed in the 1926 Great Miami hurricane. Classes were held in the Psalters Temple AME Church until a new schoolhouse could . . . — — Map (db m137400) HM