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© Welcome To Ft Lauderdale 2003-2004
Fort Lauderdale Visitor and Tourism Museum Things To Do Fort Lauderdale
Fort Lauderdale
Things To Do
Bonnet House
This 35-acre beachfront estate (named for the bonnet lily once blooming in swamplands) was the winter residence of the late Frederic and Evelyn Bartlett, artists whose whimsical taste permeates the breezy two-story home. (Lore has it that when alligators peek from the water, lilies sometimes cling to their heads like bonnets.) Evelyn loved monkeys and such a motif runs all over, with two monkey statues from New York’s Plaza Hotel flanking the den entrance. Decor melds with the colony of Brazilian monkeys outside, to this day adding swinging high notes to weddings and other outdoor celebrations. The estate first belonged to Hugh Taylor Birch, a Chicago lawyer arriving in 1893, enchanted by Fort Lauderdale’s untamed coastline. In 1919, when his daughter Helen married artist Bartlett (also from Chicago), Birch gave the property to the couple for a winter cottage.

Bonnet House was completed in 1920, but Helen soon died unexpectedly. In 1931, Bartlett married Evelyn Fortune Lilly, who wintered at Bonnet House until 1995. She died in Beverly Mass. two years later at age 109, but not before making sure her outpost of romantic eccentricity was accorded protection from developer encroachment. Bonnet House, on the National Register of Historic Places, is a property of the Florida Trust. Peaceful surroundings insulate Bonnet House from city bustle. East of the boathouse is a fruit grove. As the main gate opens, the grand entrance is framed with stately melaleucas. Wetlands to the west have a mangrove jungle preventing erosion and supporting wildlife. Tours pass through the gift shop, stocking a cookbook for entertaining in Bonnet House style.

900 North Birch Road. (954) 563-5393