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| Jerry Wilkinson shares the history of the Upper Keys -- his  passion -- with anyone who desires to learn more about the region. Photo  by Belinda Serata/Florida Keys News Bureau. |  | TAVERNIER, Florida Keys - Jerry Wilkinson settled in Tavernier after he  and his wife spent 13 years traveling in a recreational vehicle looking  for a place to settle down. Since then, driven by his passion to uncover  as much history as possible in the Upper Florida Keys town, Wilkinson  has become the area's expert historian and president of the Historical  Preservation Society of the Upper Keys. The society's main purpose is to  preserve prehistoric and historic sites, collect memorabilia and  artifacts and encourage knowledge of the art, culture, literature and  history of the Upper Keys.He's also an entertaining re-enactor who brings Keys history to life by  assuming the personas of figures including railroad baron Henry Flagler.Wilkinson shares his knowledge of regional history and preservation in a  newsletter called "History Talk," now in its 37th issue. The quarterly  16-page glossy piece is sent to libraries, local universities and  museums, the Historical Museum of Southern Florida in Miami and public  and private schools.In addition, his Web site, www.keyshistory.org,  is a fascinating repository of the information he has discovered about  the people, places and events that have shaped the Keys. The site,  visited mainly by students conducting research for projects and papers,  also attracts both a domestic and international audience and a variety  of other browsers including members of the military and folks at  non-profit organizations. These statistics are according to the stats  page on the site.Documentaries provide yet another avenue for Wilkinson to provide  history to the public. He has produced four docudramas, including one  for PBS and two for the History Channel, based on the 1935 hurricane  that hit the Upper Keys and destroyed the Overseas Railway. His  documentary for Home and Garden Television focuses on the William  Matheson House on Lignumvitae Key, featured as one of the 10 most famous  houses in the Keys.Wilkinson's involvement in the community goes far deeper than simply  guiding the dissemination of knowledge about its history."Since I'm retired, I'm available for almost anything," he says."Almost anything" includes presenting a historic program every second  Monday at the Key Largo Library. He also offers presentations at local  schools, and can tailor them to intrigue students of virtually any grade  level."Oftentimes, I will dress up like the historic figure I'm discussing,  like Henry Flagler or Zane Grey, and the kids really get a kick out of  it," Wilkinson says.He also assumed Flagler's persona for a presentation to the wives of  Masonic Lodge leaders when their regional meeting took place in the  Keys, and detailed the Keys' involvement in the Revolutionary War for  members of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Dr. Henry Perrine,  who was killed in an August 1840 Indian massacre on Indian Key, is  another local historic figure he frequently impersonates.Wilkinson's current preservation project in Tavernier is supporting the  county-funded refurbishing of an old school building and its conversion  into a community center."The school building was built to serve as a hurricane shelter as well  as a schoolhouse," he explains. "It's a bunker with 12- inch-thick  concrete walls. All they've done is taken the hurricane shutters off, so  preserving it as a community center serves as both cultural and  historical preservation," he said.Wilkinson was also involved in recent research on former president  Herbert Hoover and his days spent fishing in Florida - research that  revealed a strong Keys connection."The documentation at the Herbert Hoover Library had him fishing in  Florida, but I knew it was in the Florida Keys," says Wilkinson. "It  turns out he had fished at the Key Largo Angler's Club, which is near  Ocean Reef. He had a huge yacht and he would dock it in the Keys. When  he wanted table fish, Hoover fished at Alligator Bay."Wilkinson is currently trying to get a copy of a history of the Keys that's archived in the Herbert Hoover Library."My goal is to force myself to find a new way of getting the message out  about the history," he says. "Sometimes one little bit of info ties to  two or three others and it turns into primary documentation about a  historical fact - much like my research about Herbert Hoover."Given Jerry Wilkinson's constant drive to know and learn more, it's  virtually certain more knowledge of the past lies in his future. |