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Moffett Street
Admiral William A.
Moffett (1869-1933) commanded the Great Lakes Naval Training Center
1914-18, and was appointed Director of Naval Aviation in 1921.
Fletcher Street
Admiral Frank F.
Fletcher (1855-1928) was commander of US naval forces in the Atlantic
before the US entered World War I.
Mayo Street
Admiral Henry T. Mayo
(1856-1937) was commander of the Atlantic Fleet during World War I.
Wiley Street
Admiral Henry A. Wiley
(1867-1943) commanded the battleship USS WYOMING during World War I. He
was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the US Fleet in 1927.
Plunkett Street
Admiral Charles P.
Plunkett (1864-1931) commanded the US Naval Railway Batteries in France
during World War I.
Rodman Street
Admiral Hugh Rodman
(1859-1940) was commander of the Atlantic Fleet's 9th Division during
World War I. He was named commander of the Pacific Fleet in 1919.
Funston Street
General Frederick
Funston (1865-1917) fought in the Philippines, led relief efforts after
the San Francisco Earthquake, and commanded the Mexican Punitive
Expedition.
Dewey Street
Admiral George Dewey
(1837-1917) was commander of the Asiatic Squadron. In the Spanish American
War he destroyed the Spanish fleet in Manila Bay.
Washington Street
President George
Washington (1732-1799), served 1789-1797. He led the Continental Army in
the Revolutionary War to victory and independence.
Adams Street
President John Adams
(1735-1826), served 1797-1801 (Federalist).
Jefferson Street
President Thomas
Jefferson (1743-1826), served 1801-1809 (Democratic-Republican).
Madison Street
President James
Madison (1751-1836), served 1809-1817 (Democratic-Republican).
Monroe Street
President James Monroe
(1758-1831), served 1817-1825 (Democratic-Republican).
Jackson Street
President Andrew
Jackson (1767-1845), served 1829-1837 (Democrat). Jackson was also the
first pre-territorial governor of Florida in 1821.
Van Buren Street
President Martin Van
Buren (1782-1862), served 1837-1841 (Democrat).
Harrison Street
President William
Henry Harrison (1773-1841), served 1841 (Whig).
Tyler Street
President John Tyler
(1790-1862), served 1841-1845 (Whig).
Polk Street
President James Knox
Polk (1795-1849), served 1845-1849 (Democrat).
Taylor Street
President Zachary
Taylor (1784-1850), served 1849-1850 (Whig).
Fillmore Street
President Millard
Fillmore (1800-1874), served 1850-1853 (Whig).
Pierce Street
President Franklin
Pierce (1804-1869) , served 1853-1857
(Democrat).
Buchanan Street
President James
Buchanan (1791-1868), served 1857-1861 (Democrat).
Lincoln Street
President Abraham
Lincoln (1809-1865), served 1861-1865 (Republican).
Johnson Street
President Andrew
Johnson (1808-1875), served 1865-1869 (Democrat/National Union).
Grant Street
President Ulysses S.
Grant (1822-1885), served 1869-1877 (Republican). He also led Union forces
to victory over the Confederacy in the Civil War.
Hayes Street
President Rutherford
B. Hayes (1822-1893), served 1877-1881 (Republican).
Garfield Street
President James A.
Garfield (1831-1881), served 1881 (Republican).
Arthur Street
President Chester A.
Arthur (1829-1886), served 1881-1885 (Republican).
Cleveland Street
President Grover
Cleveland (1837-1908), served 1885-1889 and 1893-1897 (Democrat).
McKinley Street
President William
McKinley (1843-1901), served 1897-1901 (Republican).
Roosevelt Street
President Theodore
Roosevelt (1858-1919), served 1901-1909 (Republican).
Taft Street
President William
Howard Taft (1857-1930), served 1909-1913 (Republican). He also served as
Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court.
Wilson Street
President Woodrow
Wilson (1856-1924), served 1913-1921 (Democrat).
Harding Street
President Warren G.
Harding (1865-1923), served 1921-1923 (Republican). He was the first
president to visit Hollywood, in March 1923.
Coolidge Street
President Calvin
Coolidge (1872-1933), served 1923-1929 (Republican). He was in office when
Hollywood streets were finished being named after presidents.
Scott Street
General Winfield Scott
(1786-1866) was commander of US forces during the Mexican War (1846-48)
and ran for president in 1852.
Lee Street
General Robert E. Lee
(1807-1870) was a West Point graduate and army engineer. He commanded the
Confederate forces during the Civil War.
Thomas Street
General George H.
Thomas (1816-1870) was a Civil War commander
who led the Army of the Cumberland in 1863 in Tennessee and Georgia.
Sherman Street
General William
Tecumseh Sherman (1820-1891) was a Civil War commander who led his famous
campaign through Georgia, and later fought Indians in the West.
Sheridan Street
General Philip H.
Sheridan (1831-1888) was a Civil War commander, appointed Chief of Cavalry
in 1864. He later succeeded Sherman as head of the US Army.
Hood Street
General John B. Hood
(1831-1879) was a Confederate general during the Civil War. He
unsuccessfully fought Gen. Sherman’s campaign in 1864. Also the Hood family
was one of the most famous in British naval history in the 18th-20th
centuries.
Raleigh Street
Raleigh, North
Carolina
was a city with a
large African-American population, and may have been the hometown of
original Liberia residents (or of city engineers) in the early 1920s when
Liberia streets were first laid out.
Farragut Street
Admiral David G.
Farragut (1801-1870) captured New Orleans in 1862, where he said "Damn the
torpedoes, full steam ahead!" and was a national hero in the Civil War.
He was of partial Spanish descent.
Simms Street
Admiral William S.
Sims (1858-1936) was commander of US naval
forces in Europe during World War I.
Or Raphael Semmes
(1809-1877), commander of the Civil War Confederate raider SUMTER and
cruiser ALABAMA.
Atlanta Street
Atlanta, Georgia
was a city with
a large African-American population, and may have been the hometown of
original Liberia residents (or of city engineers) in the early 1920s when
Liberia streets were first laid out.
Forrest Street
General Nathan Bedford
Forrest (1821-1877) was a Confederate commander in the Civil War. He
commanded at the massacre of black troops at Fort Pillow TN and started
the KKK.
Douglas Street
Stephen Douglas
(1813-1861) represented Illinois in the US House and
Senate, and is known for his debates with Abraham Lincoln for the Senate
seat in 1858.
Cody Street
William F. "Buffalo
Bill" Cody (1846-1917) is remembered for his successful wild west shows
which he began in 1882. He was world famous.
Greene Street
General Nathanael
Greene (1742-1786) was a Revolutionary War leader. At Valley Forge,
General Washington named him Quartermaster General.
Charleston Street
Charleston, South
Carolina
was a
city with a large African-American population,
and may have been the hometown of original Liberia residents (or of city
engineers) in the early 1920s when Liberia streets were first laid out.
McClellan Street
General George B.
McClellan (1826-1885) was a commander during the Civil War, and led
campaigns until 1864 in Virginia and Maryland.
Pershing Street
General John J.
Pershing (1860-1948) led the Mexican Punitive Expedition forces in 1916
and led the American Expeditionary Forces during World
War I.
Custer Street
General George
Armstrong Custer (1839-1876) was a Civil War hero and afterwards went west
where he lost the Battle of Little Big Horn, "Custer's Last Stand."
Meade Street
General George G.
Meade (1815-1872), was a Civil War commander and led the Union Army at the
Battle of Gettysburg.
Allen Street
Ethan Allen
(1739-1789) led the capture of Fort Ticonderoga from the British at the
outbreak of the American Revolution in 1775.
Evans Street
Admiral Robley D.
Evans (1846-1912) commanded the YORKTOWN during the Chile crisis (1891-92)
and commanded the Asiatic Fleet and then the Atlantic Fleet.
Perry Street
Oliver Hazard Perry
(1785-1819) led the victory over the British on Lake Erie in the War of
1812. His famous quote was "We have met the enemy and they are ours." His
younger brother Matthew Calbraith Perry (1794-1858) led American naval
forces during the Mexican War. He is most noted for his expedition to
Japan in 1853.
Madison Starke Perry
(1814-1865) was Florida’s 4th state governor from 1857 to 1861.
Edward Aylsworth Perry (1831-1889) was Florida’s 14th state governor from
1885 to 1889.
Franklin Street
Benjamin Franklin
(1706-1790) was a printer and inventor. He represented the Colonies in
London and Paris, and helped draft the Declaration of Independence.
Stirling Road
Frank Stirling (1878-1949) was the city of Davie's first mayor in 1925 and
later represented Broward County in the state legislature. |