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2008
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Publié par
Date de parution
01 février 2008
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781618586841
Langue
English
Poids de l'ouvrage
12 Mo
Founded in the late nineteenth century as a railroad town, St. Petersburg quickly emerged as the "Sunshine City," a preferred west-coast destination for Americans seeking Florida's sun, sand, and surf.
The images collected in Historic Photos of St. Petersburg combine to form a remarkable portrait of this unique community. Among numerous subjects key to the city's past are an early Mirror Lake, the Detroit Hotel, the Million Dollar Pier, the Snell Arcade, shuffleboard courts, Whitted Airport, the Aquatarium, Festival of States parades, the Orange Belt Railway, Roser Park, and of course, the famous green benches.
In stunning black-and-white photography, this handsome coffee-table book details the historical growth of St. Petersburg from its early days up to recent times. Spanning two centuries and nearly 200 images, the book follows the building of this history-rich city, offering a compelling look into the past for any longtime resident and every history buff of St. Petersburg.
Publié par
Date de parution
01 février 2008
Nombre de lectures
0
EAN13
9781618586841
Langue
English
Poids de l'ouvrage
12 Mo
HISTORIC PHOTOS OF
ST. PETERSBURG
T EXT AND C APTIONS BY A NDREW N. E DEL
Shown here in 1926, beautiful Mirror Lake supplied most of the city s fresh water from early days forward. As the city outgrew this source, the Cosme-Odessa basin, some thirty miles away, was tapped to supply St. Petersburg s water. Twelve wells and 26 miles of 36-inch pipe were capable of supplying 14 million gallons of water daily.
HISTORIC PHOTOS OF
ST. PETERSBURG
Turner Publishing Company
200 4th Avenue North Suite 950
Nashville, Tennessee 37219
(615) 255-2665
412 Broadway P.O. Box 3101
Paducah, Kentucky 42002-3101
(270) 443-0121
www.turnerpublishing.com
Historic Photos of St. Petersburg
Copyright 2008 Turner Publishing Company
All rights reserved.
This book or any part thereof may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2007938664
ISBN-13: 978-1-59652-423-1
Printed in the United States of America
08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15-0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
C ONTENTS
A CKNOWLEDGMENTS
P REFACE
S UNRISE : T HE F OUNDING OF THE S UNSHINE C ITY (1888-1918)
S UNNY S KIES : T HE B OOM Y EARS (1919-1926)
O VERCAST : B UST AND D EPRESSION Y EARS (1927-1940)
C LEARING S KIES : W ORLD W AR II AND P OSTWAR B OOM (1941-1979)
N OTES ON THE P HOTOGRAPHS
B IBLIOGRAPHY
Tom Benoist s Type XIII flying boat merged the wings, tail, and engine of his Type XII airplane to a boat-hull style fuselage. Percy Fansler proposed to Benoist to use flying boats for an airline service between St. Petersburg and Tampa. Fansler arranged the financial support while Benoist built an improved flying boat, the larger Type XIV.
A CKNOWLEDGMENTS
This volume, Historic Photos of St. Petersburg , is the result of the cooperation and efforts of many individuals and organizations. It is with great thanks that we acknowledge the valuable contribution of the following for their generous support:
Library of Congress
St. Petersburg Museum of History
State Archives of Florida
P REFACE
The photographic history of St. Petersburg is well documented thanks in large part to the founding of the St. Petersburg Historical Society in 1920. Numerous books with historic photographs of St. Petersburg have been published, thousands of area photographs are available online at the Florida Photographic Archives, and thousands of additional photographs are on websites. Why another book of historic photographs of St. Petersburg?
There are two compelling reasons. First, because of the sheer numbers of extant photographs, even those familiar with the city s history will likely find new images. Those unfamiliar with the city s past will get a fresh glimpse into the rich photographic history of the community. Second, in addition to its unique compilation of photographs, every book offers its own focus of interest and commentary on each photograph included. The focus of this volume is on the development of St. Petersburg through the drive, spirit, and optimism of its citizens, allowing the viewer to visually experience the continuity of St. Petersburg s past and present. As one of the nation s largest metropolitan areas, St. Petersburg is a growing and vibrant city still luring thousands of tourists annually. For all those newcomers and tourists wishing to discover more about St. Petersburg, the goal of this work is to provide some insight and perspective about its traditions, history, people, and culture.
The photographs are from the Florida Photographic Collection of the State Archives of Florida, the St. Petersburg Historical Society, and the Library of Congress. With the exception of cropping images where needed and touching up imperfections that have accrued over time, no other changes have been made. The caliber and clarity of many photographs are limited by the technology of the day and the ability of the photographer at the time they were made.
Individually, these photographs offer an unspoiled glimpse of another place and time along with informative text about specific elements, prompting the viewer to draw his own insights and interpretations. Arranged in chronological order, the individual photographs merge into a collective history of the various aspects of the community s challenges, growth, and development. This collection is organized into four broad periods of time, each with a summary providing a background of the period and historical context for the images. In each era the selection of photographs together with the captions and introduction provide a broad perspective on the development of St. Petersburg. Various aspects are traced from period to period focusing on the economy, civic improvements, education, state government, and social trends. The photographs for section One, Sunrise, span the initial founding and growth of the town to 1918. Section Two, Sunny Skies, covers the boom years and its tremendous impact on city development. Section Three, Overcast, deals with the subsequent bust in 1926 and moves into the years of the Great Depression. The last section, Clearing Skies, starts with World War II and chronicles the postwar boom up to the mid 1970s.
Throughout the years St. Petersburg has prospered in large part owing to its successful crafting of an image as a city of sunshine. Since its inception it has profited from nationwide publicity and promotions designed to attract tourists and new residents. The image portrayed is not imaginary-the city is justifiably proud of its natural beauty and climate, the hospitable and friendly residents, and its rich cultural resources-but the dream and the reality are not always synonymous. Like any American city, the city has faced its share of challenges-control of growth, public financing, the struggle for civil rights, environmental concerns. As a resort community, the city has also had to cope with a fluctuating economy. In Nathaniel Hawthorne s classic short story The Great Stone Face, a young boy grows to emulate the positive personal characteristics that he has projected onto a local geological feature. Similarly, St. Petersburg has developed by trying to live up to its own image, trying to be the perfect city it has promoted. Perhaps it will always fall just short of the goal, but at the same time it will always aspire to be the Sunshine City.
Commissioned in 1960 by MGM for the 1962 movie Mutiny on the Bounty with Marlon Brando, the Bounty was docked here from the 1960s through the mid 1980s. The oceangoing, 180-foot-long, 420-ton H.M.S. Bounty is a faithful re-creation of the original ship, constructed from drawings still on file in the British admiralty archives.
S UNRISE : T HE F OUNDING OF THE S UNSHINE C ITY
(1888-1918)
By the late nineteenth century the lower Pinellas peninsula was still undeveloped land, with a few pioneer inhabitants. There were no towns, no railroads, and no notable history except for the occasional explorers, Native Americans, or military unit generally moving through the area. This would change when a railroad looking for a town site, met someone with a town site looking for a railroad. Peter Demens rickety Orange Belt Railway working its way from Lake Apopka needed a destination on the Gulf, and John C. Williams, after relocating to Florida with plans for founding a city, had lots of Tampa Bay property. The two met and a contract was signed. The railroad would receive half of a 500-acre town site, while the town would receive a wharf, hotel, and depot. The new town was named after Peter Demens Russian hometown, St. Petersburg, and the hotel was named after Williams hometown, Detroit. The railway workers soon completed a Russian-style train depot, a forty-room hotel large enough to house the entire town, and a huge wharf more than half a mile long to carry the railroad tracks to the steamers in the bay. The day the first train pulled into the fledgling town on June 8, 1888, the beginning of St. Petersburg was under way.
The little town faced the usual problems of new communities in America, with little law and less order. Livestock roamed the rough streets, sidewalks and utilities did not exist, and tension mounted between those who wanted to raise their glasses and those who wanted to raise a family. Eventually these problems were solved and the town started to grow, at first settled by railroad workers and a few shopkeepers. The community s main problem remained finding an economic base to ensure future development.
The answer was simple-the town would sell itself. Indeed, the town possessed a great climate in a beautiful outdoor setting, modern transportation linking it to large population centers, and lots of undeveloped real estate-everything needed for a perfect resort community. Frederick Davis, Edwin Tomlinson, and other civic leaders motivated the town to prepare itself as a winter resort through self-promotion and by building a modern infrastructure. Within twenty years the town had electricity, telephones, paved roads, new schools, modern utilities, and a trolley line. Mayor Lew Brown s nickname Sunshine City became the focus for advertising campaigns. As the railroad was absorbed by larger lines, it too was improved, enabling it to contribute its services to the town s growth. Steamers, like the H. B. Plant and the Manatee , connected the town to main ocean routes. The city even started the world s first commercial airport. The growing paused while the nation went to war in 1917-18, but afterward it was ready to resume. The little whistle-stop hamlet had grown, and fast-from 273 in the beginning to 14,000 by 1920-but the real growth was about to start.
By 1885, the lower Pinellas peninsula remained sparsely settled, and various families owned and had tried unsuccessfully to develop land in what is now St. Petersburg. In 1880 there was one g