Swampy takes the historic tour of Greenwood Cemetery in Orlando this past Friday. Above is Swampy during the tour with tour guide and cemetery keeper, Don Price, with the City of Orlando. Don gives a lively tour with much history Orlando, Florida and the United States.
Here’s Swampy and tour guide extrodinaire Don Price.
Below are more photos from Friday’s nonstop rainy night. Swampy had to duck for cover during the rain. The large crowd there wouldn’t have liked to have a wet Swamp Ape around.
Here’s a postcard from the collection of what is still known as Port Tampa City. All of this developed because of the wealth of Henry B. Plant. He named the area Port Tampa City. The rail lines are also Plants and ran folks from up north to Tampa and other parts of Florida. It’s at Port Tampa City that folks could stay in one of two of Plant’s hotels. The St. Elmo Inn is in the foreground and the Port Tampa Inn is the larger structure. Both buildings are long gone now. There was a trolley that would transport folks from hotels into Tampa itself.
Carol was kind enough to correct something I was very confused about. hank you Carol!:
“Port Tampa and Port Tampa City, located to the west of present-day MacDill Air Force Base, were established in the late 1880s, and for a number of years Port Tampa was the natural deepwater port for Tampa.
Then, in the early 1900s the port was dredged at the mouth of the Hillsborough River in downtown Tampa, and most of the port business moved there. (Starting in 1904 the Federal government, in part, funded the dredging of the channels in Tampa and Tampa Bay, opening it up again to be a significant port. Tampa quickly rebounded and boomed. In 1909, the channel up the Hillsborough River was deepened to 12 feet from Tampa Bay to Jean Street Shipyard.)
Today, the port at Port Tampa City is still in operation but on a much smaller scale than that at the bustling Port of Tampa. The two ports are about ten miles apart.”
The postcard is postmarked 1909 and was mailed with a penny stamp to “Miss Mable Seavey, Punta Gorda, Fla”. No actual address needed in Punta Gorda at the time, I guess.