The National Park Service has documented 120 archaeological sites within the seashore. Their analysis shows Paleo-Indians began hunting and gathering and later cultivating in the area as early as 2000 B.C.E. Mounds and middens remain today as evidence of from this era. Snyder's Mound at
Seminole Rest dates to their earliest period. Castle Windy is a 17 foot tall midden located on the barrier island, which dates from 1200 CE and continued for another 300 years.
Turtle Mound, at 35 feet in height, is the largest midden. It dates to the historical period, called
Surruque by early Spanish mapmakers, named for native people residing in the area. Later it became known as Turtle Mound as an obvious navigational landmark for sailors along the Florida Coast. The names
Canaveral and
Los Moquitos, now Cape Canaveral and Mosquito Lagoon, noted by Spanish explorers in the sixteenth century are among the oldest place names in North America. Turtle Mound was documented by early naturalists
William Bartram in 1774, and
Andre Michaux in 1788. As early as 1934, the National Park Service began investigating areas suitable for "national beach parks", leading to the establishment of
Cape Hatteras National Seashore in 1937. In 1955, the National Park Service published
Our Vanishing Shoreline (1955), which made the case for protecting undeveloped coastal areas for conservation and recreation. Following its publication, 126 undeveloped areas were identified with sixteen as a priority. One of those sites was Mosquito Lagoon and the undeveloped portions of the barrier island associated with it. In 1961 NASA selected
Cape Canaveral as the primary launch location for space exploration. Soon afterwards, NASA undertook acquisition of over 100 square miles of lands along the barrier island, Mosquito Lagoon, and mainland areas as a launch buffer. In 1963 NASA and the Department of Interior reached agreement to dedicate 25,000 acres as
Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge. Over the next decade the refuge was expanded to 140,000 acres. That same year Florida passed a bond issue to acquire lands for state parks and began purchasing lands along the barrier island south of Turtle Mound which had previously been acquired a state historical site. By 1968 there was growing community support for establishment of a national seashore. During this time artist-environmentalist
Doris Leeper led efforts to stop proposed developments on the barrier island. On April 26, 1968, the Volusia County Board of Commissioners passed Resolution No. 68-51 requesting the Department of the Interior to establish a National Seashore on the east coast of Volusia County, Florida. In 1968,
William "Bill" Chappell and
Lou Frey were elected to Congress and introduced legislation to establish the seashore. On April 5 and 6, 1974, Congressman
Roy Taylor, chairman of the house subcommittee on National Parks and Recreation, brought a congressional party to review the proposed site. A second group, including chairman of the Senate National Parks and Recreation Committee, Senator
Alan Bible, visited on April 19. Things then began to progress quickly. Florida State Parks committed to transfer approximately 4,000 acres of lands it had already acquired to the proposed seashore. On the other hand, the Department of Interior raised questions about possible conflicts with rocket launches at Cape Canaveral. The House passed the Seashore Act on December 3, with the Senate following suit on December 17. Still objecting, Department of Interior urged a veto of the bill, but on January 3, 1975, President Gerald Ford signed the bill into law. For many years Rep. Frey credited Doris Leeper as "the driving force behind establishment of Canaveral National Seashore". ==Recreation==