In the mid-19th century the Lake Worth Lagoon was a fresh water lake. There were no rivers or streams flowing into the lake; all of the flow into the lake was by ground seepage from the
Everglades to the west. Extreme high tides and waves, high lake water levels and storms occasionally caused the formation of temporary inlets that quickly closed up again. When there was no inlet available, the settlers in the area had to haul their boats over the barrier beaches to move them between the ocean and the lake. In 1866 travelers reported that fresh water was pouring out of the lake into the ocean at a point about south of the Jupiter Inlet. One report is that a settler named August Lang had dug the channel to open an inlet, and it was known as "Lang's Inlet" for a while. This cut drained the lake down to sea level. The limited inflow of ocean water through the inlet and continued seepage of fresh water from the Everglades kept the lake from becoming more than mildly
brackish. Lang's Inlet was unstable, and had to be dug out again every few months. Construction of a stable inlet at the "Black Rocks" north of Lang's Inlet was finally achieved in 1877. The lake immediately began to change to a saltwater lagoon. The completion of a navigation canal from the north end of Lake Worth Lagoon to
Jupiter Inlet in the 1880s resulted in increased freshwater discharges to the lagoon. In the early 1900s, the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway was completed from the south end of the Lagoon to
Biscayne Bay. By 1915, the
Port of Palm Beach had created a permanent inlet four feet deep at the old location of Lang's Inlet, which was deepened to in 1925. In 1917 the South Lake Worth Inlet was created in a failed effort to improve tidal circulation and provide flushing to the south end of the Lagoon. The completion of the West Palm Beach Canal (which connected to
Lake Okeechobee, draining land west of
West Palm Beach as well as the
Everglades) in 1925 resulted in significant freshwater inflow to the lagoon. On January 19, 1930, a
Ryan B-5 Brougham of
Florida Airways crashed in the lagoon during a passenger flight from
West End, Bahamas to
Daytona Beach, killing three of the five occupants. The cause of the crash is unknown. ==Development==