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The Destin family and Destin, Florida have
been intertwined since Dewey’s great,
great grandfather, Leonard Destin, founded the
town in 1835. The adventure began a few years
earlier when Leonard, his father George, and
his brother William set out from New London,
Connecticut with three ships and ran into a
hurricane near Cape Canaveral, Florida. Two
of the ships, and Leonard’s father and
brother, were lost at sea. Stories had long
circulated in the port of New London about the
excellent fishing to be found off the Florida
coasts and Leonard decided to continue on and
look for the best fishing he could find as well
as a place to settle down.
In 1845, Leonard Destin met and married Martha
McCullom from South Carolina and built a lovely
home for a growing family (It was located 100
yards to the north of the current restaurant). As
a Yankee, Leonard was suspected of being a spy
and was imprisoned near Freeport, Florida during
the Civil War. Scheduled to be hung, the circuit
judge decided to spare Leonard’s life
because he was a fellow Mason. Following the
war, Leonard returned to the area and lived
here with his family of 4 sons and 3 daughters
until his death in 1884.
By the late 1870’s Leonard had built
a thriving commercial fishery and employed many
people in the area which was then called East
Pass. In 1879, Leonard hired a 13 year old boy
named William Marler who proved dependable and
hard working. In a few short years Leonard gave
William command of his own ship. Over the years
Captain “Billy” sailed the mail
in and out of East Pass and, to make things
easier for locals, created an informal post
office. In 1904, Captain Billy was formally
made postmaster. An inquiry from Washington
requested the name of the official new post
office and Captain Billy responded with “Destin” in
honor of his first employer.
Destin remained undiscovered and pretty much
an island unto itself until the mid-1930’s
when the Marler Bridge was built and the world
began trickling into the Emerald Coast. In the
1940’s and 50’s most of the growth
came from an influx of military retirees who
became familiar with the appeal of Destin’s
white sand beaches and cool sea breezes while
stationed in the area. Condominium developers
in the 70’s and 80’s provided the
next growth spurt with Destin becoming officially
incorporated in 1985.
During the post World War II era, Buck Destin,
great grandson of Leonard, continued building
the family commercial fishing enterprise. Buck’s
only son, Dewey Destin, started working the
boats and the processing plants at an early
age. Following college at Auburn University,
Dewey returned to the family business where
it continued to grow by catching and providing
bait fish for charter captains in the region
as well as selling all types of favorite fish
to the local restaurants.
In 2000, a ban on net fishing by the Florida
Fish and Wildlife Commission effectively put
the Destin fishing enterprise of 11 commercial
fishing boats, 30,000 square feet of freezers
and ice houses, and over 40 employees, out of
business.
Following the ban, Dewey Destin along with
his wife Rebecca, his sister Nina, and all
the kids focused their energies on running two
retail seafood stores and concentrated on providing
the highest quality fish to the local inhabitants
and restaurants of the surrounding area. Dewey’s
knowledge of fish and how it is best served
led to expanding the Destin market into this
small, specialized restaurant.
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