The name "St. Lucie" is originally derived from the name of a
settlement near
Jupiter Inlet, which was founded on
St. Lucia's Day in 1566. Due to numerous errors, the name later came to be associated with the present-day town of
St. Lucie Village, Florida, north of present-day Port St. Lucie. After
La Florida and
St. Augustine, it is the oldest still-in-use European place name in the United States. In the early 1890s, an early
pioneer settlement named Spruce Bluff was located along the St. Lucie River, which consisted of a community of several families with a school, post office, pineapple plantation, and
sawmill. Currently, the land the settlement was located on is part of the Spruce Bluff Preserve. Along with an old cemetery near the old settlement, the
preserve also contains a hiking area, canoe access, observation areas, and a prehistoric
Ais Indian mound located on the southern end of the preserve. In the 1950s, the land that eventually became Port St. Lucie was a largely uninhabited tract of land south of
White City, composed of a fishing camp (Burt Pruitt's Fishin' Farm) along the St. Lucie River, a few farms and businesses near
U.S. 1. In 1958, with a budget of $50 million, the
General Development Corporation (GDC) purchased the River Park development and along the North Fork of the St. Lucie River. In 1959, the GDC opened its first bridge over the St. Lucie River, allowing for direct automobile access to Port St. Lucie. By February 25, 1961, 250 homes were in the new city. GDC requested the state legislature to incorporate , along with the River Park settlement, into the City of Port St. Lucie. River Park did not incorporate into the city at the request of its residents. Port St. Lucie became a city on April 27, 1961, with the passage of House Bill No. 953, proposed by State Representative Rupert Smith and approved by Florida Governor
C. Farris Bryant. In the early 1990s, Core Communities (CC), acquired and began planning what would become
St. Lucie West. Originally, St. Lucie West was to have contained about 14,000 homes over a 20-year period on , but after realizing the community's strategic position, they began developing it into more than just a residential area. CC began building business sectors and places of entertainment and leisure. That resulted in 7,000 jobs being brought to the small town, helping it into its boom during most of the early 2000s. In 2006, CC started development of its newest community,
Tradition, which sits west of the
Interstate 95 interchange with Gatlin Blvd., and was a large cattle ranch before CC began to develop it. Around of commercial area were built, with room for over 18,000 residences. According to CC's website, Tradition is the largest fully entitled residential development area from the tip of Interstate 95 to the
Canada–U.S. border. It is modeled after a 1950s-era town. According to its website, Tradition Square, the town center of the community, holds festivities year-round. It was also chosen as the site of
HGTV's Green Home in 2009. In 2007, the housing market began to collapse and unemployment started to rise. As of February 2009, unemployment was about 10.5%, and in 2008, nearly 11,000 homes went into
foreclosure. This prompted the county government to consider declaring itself a disaster area. Doing so would have given county administrators access to $17 million in county emergency reserve funds. That money, combined with a transportation fund and other accounts, would give St. Lucie $20–$30 million to spend on building projects -
research parks, highways, and other infrastructure improvements. In 2008, Tradition and Core Communities welcomed the Florida Center of Innovation (later renamed Tradition Center for Innovation), a 150-acre privately owned research park dedicated to drug discovery, immunology and medical devices, and healthcare. TCI initially composed of
Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies, Oregon Health and Science University's Vaccine and Gene Therapy Institute (VGTI), Martin Health System Hospital (Tradition Medical Center), and Mann Research Center. In 2015, VGTI shut down their TCI facility, and Mann Research Center soon followed. As of 2019, only Torrey Pines and the Tradition Medical Center remain in TCI. In 2017, TAMCO, a subsidiary of City Electric Supply, a family-owned electrical
wholesale business, created plans with the Port St. Lucie city council to construct a $38 million, 400,000-square-foot manufacturing and distribution center located in the Tradition Commerce Park. Construction of the TAMCO facility began in 2018 and was completed in late 2019. ==Geography==