Prologue
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Key West, like the other Florida Keys, began as a coral forest under the sea
water - marine life was its population. As the polar ice caps reformed and the
sea level dropped, terrestrial plant and animal life found its way. Soil was
formed by decaying organic matter and storm actions. For millenniums the ocean
continued to drop and the ocean currents, wind currents, birds, etc. continued
to propagate the islands. Eventually human life forms found their way. This pyramiding
of trillions of life cells, along with the forces of nature, produced an island
called Cayo Hueso by early Spanish travelers.
A note on the word "Key" used to identify an island. Its origin is
not well established except by usage. Most believe that it began by the Spanish
adapting the word "cayo' from the Taino Indians of Hispanola and Cuba referring
to small islands. The Spanish normally used "isla" for island and "islet" for
small island. At least in the New World, they appear to use "cayo" and "cayuelo" for
a very small island. The English used "Cay" or "Kay" such
as Cay Sal Banks. Cay is pronounced as the letter "K." English maps
of the Keys made just prior to the Revolutionary War of 1776 used the word "Key." A
Colonial American court record of the "Libel of Dennis and Allen vs the
snow St. Fermin alias Britanis" in 1744 used the word "Keys" referring
to the Florida Keys. See the Admiralty Papers, Vol. 2, 1743 -1744.
The native aborigines and subsequent native groups were
the first settlers of Key West. The Europeans were tourists
for its first 300 odd years of historic existence. Europeans
stopped for fresh water on these islands, which stood as
silent as the martyrs for which they were first named.
The silence was broken occasionally by those seeking refuge
from being shipwrecked, to fish, to lumber, to salvage,
etc. Other than the Native Americans, apparently no one
settled permanently until about the time Florida became
a United States territory in 1821. There are scattered
references, but no specifics, to New Englanders and Bahamians
as permanent settlers before the early 1800s.
The history of Key West is much like the rest of the
Keys until 1821. Its natural deep water port was the deepest
port between New Orleans and Norfolk, Virginia. Key West
quickly became an economic center, was settled rapidly
and became Florida's largest populated city. It had professional
residents such as doctors, lawyers, insurance representatives,
politicians, military personnel, journalists, publishers,
etc. most of whom by vocation made some written documentation.
These documentation's have made Key West history easier
to be 'history', not fable. Politically, Key West was Monroe
County. In population alone it overwhelmed all the remaining
Keys for about a century and a half. Therefore, the following
is nowhere a complete outline of its history.
Genesis
From a capitalist point of view, Key West had an interesting
beginning. John W. Simonton purchased the island on January
19, 1822 from Juan Pablo Salas, who had acquired it as
a Spanish Land Grant in 1815. John Simonton soon took on
three northern partners: John Whitehead, John Fleeming
and Pardon Greene. On the scene arrived General John Geddes
of Charleston who had also purchased Key West. It was discovered
that Don Juan Salas had sold it twice, first to John Strong,
a lawyer no less, and then to Simonton. As if this were
not bad enough, Strong had also previously sold Key West
to George Murray before John Geddes. In summary, Salas
sold it twice, Strong and Simonton, and Strong twice, Murray
and Geddes. Simonton had already divided it up amongst
three others: Whitehead, Fleeming and Greene. On May 23,
1828, Congress ruled Simonton as the legal owner. We might
surmise that this was Florida's first land scam.
Here Comes the Navy
When England possessed Florida in 1763, the Spanish contended
that the Keys was North Havana. On March 25, 1822, Navy
Lt. Matthew C. Perry sailed the Navy schooner Shark to
Key West and planted the U.S. flag, physically claiming
the Keys as United States property. There were no protests
so the Keys were United States property. The same year
the president authorized a custom house at Key West. Mr.
Joel Yancy was the first collector of customs.
For history purposes, Lt. Perry
did cause a minor confusion. He renamed Cayo Hueso (Key
West) to "Thompson's Island" for
the Secretary of the Navy Smith Thompson and the harbor "Port
Rogers" for the president of the Board of Navy Commissioners.
As to the name Key West, there is little doubt that it
was some form of translation from the Spanish 'Cayo' (Key)
and 'Hueso', if indeed the name was Hueso. The Spanish
word Hueso [Way-so] means bone in English. A few believe
that it came from the seven-year apple tree found in the
Keys, which was also called hueso by the Spanish. Regardless
of its origin, the name Key West prevailed with time.
Piracy was a problem in the West Indies open waters and
Congress decided to protect US shipping. The task was given
to the Navy. Partly on reports by Lt. Perry, the Navy on
February 1, 1823, ordered Commodore David Porter to establish
a depot in Key West to end piracy. Slave ships were included
as an act of piracy.
The aforementioned civilians preceded
the military into Key West. However, they were having
problems deciding who
was the rightful owner. Commodore David Porter arrived
in April 1823 with his West Indies Squadron to establish
the depot. Porter envisioned Key West's position in the
Florida Straits as the "Gibraltar of the Gulf."
Commodore Porter had no problem knowing who owned Thompson's
Island, the United States did, and he simply took charge.
He supported the name of Thompson's Island and Port Rogers;
and further named the naval depot 'Allenton' after Lt.
William Allen who was killed by pirates. For some it was
difficult to determine who disliked Commodore Porter more,
the pirates or the residents of 'Thompson's Island.' It
should be noted that the civilian residents knew that their
success totally depended on the military defending the
island. Porter lost his command in 1825 and in 1826 the
Navy moved the Navy base to Pensacola. A coal and supply
facility remained at Key West.
In October 1824 one of Porter's officers heard stolen
goods were stored in Fajardo, Puerto Rico. When he landed
without permission, he was seized, imprisoned as a pirate
and later released. Enraged, Porter marched ashore with
200 men and compelled the Spanish to make atonement for
their actions. It is a long story but it was deemed that
he exceeded his authority and was suspended by court-martial.
In August 1826 he resigned and became the General of Marine
for Mexico's navy. In this capacity he also haunted the
residents of Key West in the years to come.
However, Commodore Porter was extremely successful in
protecting Key West from pirates, but he could not protect
it from yellow fever, lack of fresh water and the 'wrecking'
industry. (See the General History page on wrecking.) Key
West was a 'natural' for the relatively new US industry
of salvaging wrecked ships. It had a natural deep water
seaport, was situated on the primary shipping route and
had a natural resource in its front yard - the Florida
Reefs. The Gulf Stream route was irresistible as a shipping
route and in many cases practically unavoidable. Some of
the richest cargoes passed and wrecked in its front yard.
All they had to do was sit back and wait.
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Legalizing Wrecking
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Location, location, location is the cry of any good businessman. Then, in 1825
the Federal Wrecking Act prescribed that all property wrecked in US waters
be taken to a US Port of Entry. Commodore Porter left the same year for Pensacola.
1828 was a pivotal year. On January 13, 1826 a harbor lighthouse was lit on
Whitehead's Point. In 1828 Key West was designated a Port of Entry. Key West
grew from a desolated island into a bustling city within a few years. Congress
ruled Simonton as the owner and Key West incorporated twice, once as a city
then as a town. Congress created the 'Superior Court of the Southern District'
with admiralty power. Judge James Webb was its first judge, but his successor,
William Marvin, will be the most remembered. He authored the Law of Wreck and
Salvage and later was provisional governor of Florida at the close of the Civil
War. In 1832, Key West reverted to a charter type city government.
During this time John Whitehead's brother, William, surveyed the city in 1829.
Southard was the Secretary of the Navy, hence Southard Street and Eaton was
Secretary of the Army, hence Eaton Street. William Duval was the first Territorial
Governor of Florida, hence Duval Street.
Wrecking could provide quick monetary rewards. One of
the early Charleston settlers in Key West was Richard Fitzpatrick.
Fitzpatrick was 30-years old when he arrived in Key West.
He became the only authorized auctioneer for wrecking property
before the 1828 law. Reportedly in one year he made around
$10,000 in fees alone. This would be equivalent to about
$280,000 today. We will read of his name later.
Two years after the aforementioned 1828 events, the census
of 1830 revealed Key West's population was 517. The year
before, 258 acres were mapped as a town with 64 blocks.
These early settlers were primarily from the New England
states, not the Bahamas. Key West grew as a maritime, a
military and a county seat community. By 1850 there were
2,645 and in 1890 there were 18,080 residents.
The following from the United States "Enumeration's" provides
an insight into the early population growth of Key West.
YEAR WHITES FREE BLACKS SLAVES TOTAL1830 368 83 66 517
1840 516 76 96 688 1850 2,088 126 431 2,645 1860 2,302
160 451 2,913 1870 4,631 1,026 --- 5,675
For reference some later decades of population are: 1880 = 9,890; 1890 = 18,080;
1900 = 17,114; 1910 = 19,945; 1920 = 20,000; 1930 = 12,831; 1940 = 12,927;
and 1950 = 21,792 (excluding military).
Key West had its first newspaper, the Register, in 1829. The Key West Gazette
followed in 1831, then the Enquirer in 1834. The present day Key West Citizen
began as The Citizen in 1904 and consolidated with The Inter-Ocean.
Around 1830, salt production began in the present day
airport's general area. There was a large need for salt
for food preservation. About 50,000 bushels of salt was
usual, however an early rainy season could 'wash' away
the profits. William Whitehead and Richard Fitzpatrick
were prominent salt producers. Wrecking remained the economy
of Key West of which Fitzpatrick owned several wrecking
ships. The military history continued with the arrival
of the US Army in 1831. Major James Glassel commanded two
companies camped on North Beach. This was good timing as
the Second Seminole War was approaching. The Army was to
be a larger influence that originally expected.
Wrecking however was the real industry of the Keys. A
sad but curious wreck occurred in 1831. In December, the
ship Maria wrecked on the reef and the wreckers save all
of its 250 passengers and crew. They were brought to Key
West which according to the 1830 census had a total population
of only 517. Somehow, the residents took care of all the
survivors until arrangements could be made.
Jacob Housman, also a wrecker, did not get along well
with the Key West wrecking courts, so he sought to establish
a port of entry on Indian Key. He did not succeed; however,
he upset the tranquility, such as it was, of Monroe County.
He was not alone in this feat as by now Richard Fitzpatrick
had been elected several times to Florida's Legislative
Council. Housman and 56 others had petitioned for the division
of Monroe County. One of the main stated objections was
traveling to Key West for jury duty.
One reason for presenting this history is our current
tendency of thinking of Monroe County only as it exists
today. Fitzpatrick had become Monroe County's Territorial
Council Representative at Tallahassee. In 1836 he was elected
the council president and easily pushed through a bill
dividing Monroe County. This established the entire eastern
section of former Monroe County as Dade County on February
4, 1836. The size of Monroe County was reduced by about
half with Key West as its major settlement. Fitzpatrick
had since the 1830s acquired extensive land holdings in
the new county of Dade. Indian Key was the county seat.
In December 1835 the Second Seminole War commenced with
the killing of Major Francis Dade. (See web page on the
Seminoles.) Throughout the entire Florida War, Key West
was never attacked. However, on August 7, 1840, Indian
Key was attacked and burned except for one house. (See
web page on Indian Key.)
One of the outcomes of the War of 1812 was a coastal
defense system. Extensive plans followed developing usually
brick fortifications. Construction of Fort Taylor by the
US Army began in 1845 only to experience major destruction
the next year by the Hurricane of 1846. Work continued
on the brick structure in time to be a major influence
at the outbreak of the Civil War. Another 1845 brick structure
was the completion of the two-story Marine Hospital on
August 2, 1845. Originally built for the U.S. Merchant
Marine the 40-bed hospital served many until its closure
in February 1943.
A new industry was looming for Key West - the sponge
industry. The value of processed sponges was realized in
the 1840s. The Bahamians were well adapted for this occupation
and came to Key West in droves. Key West quickly became
a sponge center and this industry helped Key West when
the wrecking industry slowed down. It was also an alternate
job while the wreckers were awaiting a wreck to occur.
As the 1850 census records indicate, Key West rebuilt after
the destruction of the 1846 hurricane. The construction
of Fort Taylor, the sponge industry and the highly successful
wrecking industry contributed to Keys West's rapid growth.
Key West began to lose the sponge monopoly to Florida's
west coast around 1870.
Some experts estimate that if today's measuring devices
had been available, the Great Hurricane of 1846 (October
11 and 12) would have been a category-5 hurricane. The
collector of customs, Steven Mallory, wrote that of 600
houses all but eight were destroyed or damaged. The offshore
Sand Key and harbor lighthouses were destroyed. Water rose
to about 8-feet in the lower streets. The harbor lighthouse
location moved and completed on January 15, 1848. For a
1849 map of Key West - CLICK HERE.
Did this discourage the residents? Evidently not as the above enumeration's
indicate about a 300 percent growth between 1840 and 1850. In May 1859 Key
West experienced the first of its large fires. A fire in the L.M. Shaefer
warehouse burned all but two houses in the two blocks formed by Green, Front,
Simonton and Whitehead streets. -
The Civil War Looms
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The work at Fort Taylor was the first federal permanent building in Key West
since Commodore Porter. At the outset of the Civil War, Florida was a confederate
state. It was expected that Key West would be also. The Union had a considerable
force in Key West because of the construction of Fort Taylor under Captain
E. B. Hunt (Corps of Engineers). Key West was taken easily when at night on
January 13, 1861, Captain James Brannan took possession of the city while it
slept. Key West played a major role during the war because of it strategic
location. A special city election was conducted to replace all the previously
elected officers. Alexander Patterson was elected mayor.
The military took over the economy from the wrecking
industry, in fact Key West was a military community. The
Army, in the form of the Provost Marshall and Fort Taylor,
ran the city while the Navy ran the port and controlled
all shipping. Warehousing became even more important as
the cargoes seized by the Navy had to be warehoused.
Key West in the 1860s had a population of about 3,000
citizens. Control of the large group of southern sympathizers
required strong measures. In 1863, Union Col. Thighman
Good generated an order which he later rescinded to transport
600 Key West citizens to Charleston, South Carolina to
be held behind Confederate lines.
Yellow fever was always a problem along the early Florida
seacoasts. In 1864 it was especially high among the military
personnel. By the end of the summer there had been about
1,000 cases resulting in the death of about 200.
The Civil War was largely responsible for Key West becoming
Florida's largest city. Competing cities in size were to
the north and some, as Jacksonville, suffered considerably.
Key West was the center of the Union's Gulf and East Gulf
blockading forces and profited economically. Many ships
from many nations were seized and brought into Key West's
harbor for disposition. Work finally began on the two Martello
Towers. Key West also was the support base for Fort Jefferson.
How the city government of Key West functioned is not clear.
On December 8, 1866, Monroe County
got part of its original land back when its present boundary
was established starting "at
the mouth of Broad Creek, a stream separating Cayo Largo
from Old Roads [sic] Key, extending thence in a direct
line to Mudd Point." This places the north boundary
at about Mile Marker 114.
Shipping lanes connected Key West with the world, but
in 1866 another step was taken. Key West became the hub
for the International Ocean Telegraph Company. The line
connected Havana, Cuba to Punta Rassa on Monroe County's
west coast to the United States.
After a half century of settling, the 1870 census shows
Key West's population as 5,675. In the same half century
the total Upper Keys for five islands population was 133.
No one lived on Lower Matecumbe Key, the sixth principal
island.
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The Key West Cigar
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One should not overlook the influence of the Cuban population.
They had continually grown since William Wall, an Englishman,
started a Key West cigar factory in 1831. The Cuban Independence
War of 1868 (Ten Years War) assured Key West of becoming
a cigar capital. Spanish became the second language. The
El Republicano newspaper was printed in Spanish is 1870.
It went farther than this; in 1875 Carlos Cespedes was
elected mayor. The economic timing of this new force was
great as lighthouses were being built and the wrecking
industry was destined to decline. The coming of the steam
ship also greatly reduced the number of ships that wrecked.
By time the 1885 Florida Census was taken, over a third
of the 13,558 residents of Key West were born in Key West
- Key West natives. It is estimated that about 200 factories
produced about 100 million cigars annually. The new industry
was booming.
Cuban cigar workers were accustomed to unions, but they were weak at first.
As labor union membership grew, their power grew. In 1885 there was a major
cigar worker's strike which lasted for months and Vicente Ybor, a principal
manufacturer, moved to Tampa. Of course, Tampa offered a variety of 'good deals'
and other cigar companies or individual workers followed.
Fire was no stranger in Key West and Key Westers were
always vigilant for fire in their mostly wooded city. Recorded
in 1843 was the burning of a waterfront warehouse. The
simple fire fighting equipment proved almost useless and
was thrown into the water in disgust. Again in 1859 the
city was tested by flames which took out a small section.
One person intentionally blew up his house to make a fire
gap. Then in 1886 a fire destroyed the entire downtown
section in the early morning hours of April 1. This was
not April fools. The fire started at 2 a.m. in the San
Carlos Hall on Duval Street between Fleming and Southard
streets. High winds fanned the flames while an inadequate
fire fighting system fought almost in vain - the primary
steam operated fire engine was in New York for repairs.
Again, blowing up buildings was done, but three people
died in the process. Twelve hours later over 50 buildings,
one the cigar box manufacturer, and six wharves were destroyed.
Four lost their lives. When one sees a historic red brick
building in Key West, most likely it was constructed after
1886.
One example was the red brick Key West Customs House
at the end of Whitehead Street which has been wonderfully
restored today. The contract for its construction was let
in December 1888 and was occupied three years later. Its
total cost was $107,955.96.
- Public Transportation -
The cigar industry also led Key
West into the twentieth century in transportation. Eduardo
Hidalgo Gato introduced
a mule powered streetcar system to connect "Gatoville" to
the downtown area in the 1880s. I am not certain of the
exact date. Signs on the streetcars exhibited in early
photos denotes it as the "K-W St Car Association."
The cigar industry was fraught with strikes. It was during
one, or the threat of one, that Gato was more or less forces
to sell mule driven system during a boycott of the line
in 1894. A Cincinnati company purchased it and converted
it to electric streetcars. The name Stone and Webster comes
to my mind. The electric streetcars were removed from service
in 1927 and the tracks removed.
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You Can't Beat Success
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By this time Key West was the largest
city in Florida. To make it even larger in May 1889 the
Florida Legislature
granted a new charter to the city placing the entire island
within the city limits. This change also provide power
to float bonds for street improvements. Another charter
change in 1891 authorized a mayor and made the city clerk,
marshall, tax collector and assessor, treasurer and chief-of-police
elected offices. Jacksonville eventually exceeded the population
of Key West by incorporating most of Duval County - a numbers
game. Successful cities spring back from almost overwhelming
odds. Within a few years after the fire, Key West appeared
to be better than ever. Mule drawn street cars appeared
and the Peninsular and Occidental Steamship Company (P&O)
began biweekly sailing's between Tampa, Key West and Havana.
An electric power plant was operational as were, a new
courthouse, a turtle canning plant, a new post office.
They had to be new as they had been destroyed or damaged
so badly that replacement was the only answer. In 1889
the Florida Legislature granted Key West a new charter
expanding the city's boundaries to include the entire island.
Partly due to the city limit boundary change, the population
almost doubled between 1880 (9,890) and 1890 (18,080).
In the 1890s, the sponge market thrived. One entrepreneur
was A. J. Arapian, a Greek immigrant known locally as the
'sponge king.' His annual sales approached $500,000.
The Spanish American War
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In December of 1891 Jose Marti arrived from Tampa in Key West for his first visit
to continue the work he had started in New York - organizing a Cuban revolution
in earnest. He also visited and worked until he had the expatriated Cubans from
all parts taking an active role. On February 25, 1895, the "Liberator of
Cuba" gave the word for the revolution to start. Marti himself went to Cuba
and was killed in the battle of Dos Rios in May 1895.
Attempts were made to draw America into the confrontation. US owned participants
such as the ships Three Friends and Dauntless participated as filibusters. In
an attempt to avoid neutrality laws, arms were taken on one ship and troops on
another taking different routes. Covert actions became overt when The USS Maine
left Key West, met with the Atlantic Fleet on training maneuvers in the Tortugas,
and sailed into Havana Harbor on a peaceful mission. After 21 days at anchor,
on February 15, 1898 at 9:40 P.M. she exploded sinking with a crew of 355. Only
94 survived. Key West citizens dedicated a monument in the city cemetery on March
15, 1900 to the heroes who died in the harbor of Havana on that February 15,
1898.
"Remember the Maine" became
the rallying cry and Spanish - US negotiations were in
motion. Formal fighting
began on April 22, 1898 and ended August 12, 1898. Key
West became a focus of activities and drinking the supply
of drinking water became a problem. A lemon aid was 20
cents and a beer 25 cents. Tampa was the primary support
city but Key West was the center of activity. The U.S.
Navy at Key West was again beefed up and played a significant
role during the Spanish American War. After the war ended
the navy facilities were downsized again. Years of Cuban
revolutionary activity was over. Key West returned to some
degree of normalcy but she began to loose some of the sponge
market to Tarpon Springs.
Nearing the close of the 19th century, Key West found
its primary economic force of wrecking dwindling. Almost
10,000 Cubans had made Key West their home which was almost
half of its population. The cigar industry dominated Key
West. An example was Pohalski village which was almost
a town in itself including the cigar manufacturing buildings.
Its center would be today in the area of White Street and
Truman Avenue. (The Germans did much of the art work for
the cigar labels.) Cigar making would continue to dominate
Key West until the 1920s when cigarette use brought it
to its knees. After the Great Fire, public buildings were
mostly of brick construction. Many of those constructed
of wood added tin roofs to protect from blowing sparks
from other houses on fire. This practice continues. Examples
of brick structures are the US Customs House (1891), the
Old City Hall (1891) and Old Monroe County Courthouse (1890).
The military continued in Key West as the US took more
of an active interest in the Caribbean. Winter training
was conducted in the Caribbean area and in 1906 a wireless
communication system was started. Key West was a major
center and continued to grow. The Key West Electric Street
Railway Company operated its first street car on Duval
Street on February 13, 1899. It transported nearly 500
passengers its first day. The same year the county constructed
a road through the eastern portion of Key West - now Flagler
Avenue.
-
The Iron Horse Arrives
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Henry Morrison Flagler gave Key West its next shot in
the arm. In 1905 men and material began spanning the Keys
for a railroad to Key West. With this expectation, a new
Chamber of Commerce met and elected W.D. Cash as president.
Since land was scarce in Key West, Flagler dredged in new
land for his railroad yard and docks. He thought on a large
scale and had 1,700 foot docks for ocean liners plus for
his future train ferries to Cuba. Miami was the headquarters
for construction, but its destination with the huge land
and sea terminal was Key West.
When Flagler was told there was not enough land for his massive rail terminal,
he instructed his work force the "build some." Key West was enlarged
with 134 acres of land fill pumped up the bottoms of the Gulf now called
Trumbo. Trumbo was the dredging contractor. During the railroad construction
period, Key West and the other Keys experienced three hurricanes - 1906,
1909 and 1910. As a result of building the railroad, Key West and Stock Island
was connected the first time by a road in February 1906. The October 1909
hurricane did considerable damage to downtown Key West. In May 12, 1910 the
first spike was driven for the railroad from the Key West end and the first
train arrived with pomp and ceremony on January 22, 1912. (The railroad is
covered on a separate web page. To access the page of Flagler and the Key
West Extension Click Here and then the back arrow to return to this spot.)
Mr. Flagler died in 1913 and the Florida East Coast Railway
was just getting its operation going when WW-I brought
in more military to Key West again. On July 13, 1917, ground
was broken for a coastal air patrol station on land rented
from the F.E.C. Rwy. On September 22 the first naval flight
was logged in - A Curtis N-9 seaplane piloted by Lt. Stanley
Parker. Seaplane training and 'lighter-than-air' craft
facilities were constructed for submarine patrol. On December
18, 1917, the Naval Air Base Key West was commissioned
with Lt. Parker as its commanding officer. Naval Air Facility
planes flew from rented land of the railroad yard at Trumbo
Point. On January 8, 1918, the first flight of naval flight
students arrived for seaplane training. The downtown Naval
Station was expanded for destroyers and submarines. This
marked the beginning of Key West as a naval training facility.
The submarine base was not completed until 1932. Key West
was abuzz with military once again. Much of the activity
subsided when the war ended.
The Florida Land Boom during the 1920s brought increased
tourist activity to Key West. One new addition was the
F.E.C. Casa Marina hotel. In February 1918, the F.E.C.
Railway purchased the property for $1,000. Construction
began in the spring and the formal opening was New Years
Eve, December 31, 1921. Louis Schutt was moved from the
Long Key Fishing Camp to be the manager. It closed indefinitely
in the spring of 1932 - the Great Depression had arrived
in Key West. Afterwards it opened for a few months each
winter until leased to support the US Navy in World War-II.
John Spottswood purchased the Casa Marina in June 1966
to begin operation by others than the F.E.C. The hotel
was completely renovated in 1978.
While construction for the Casa Marina had just gotten
underway, Key West experienced the severe Hurricane of
1919 on September 9. More than $2 million of damages were
incurred by the category 4 hurricane.
Through out Florida a land boom was just awakening and
land sales and building flourished. The Keys had a lot
of vacant land but was available only by the railroad.
The need for a vehicular highway was seen and in 1923 Monroe
County approved $300,000 as a beginning. Also in 1923,
Key West experienced another severe fire destroying about
43 houses in the White Street area. The estimate was $125,000
of damage and 40 families homeless.
In 1924 the La Concha hotel was created on Duval Street. After the 1926 hurricane
more funds were needed for the highway so an additional $2,500,000 was approved.
This would include three ferry boats to span a 40-mile open water space. The
stock market crash of 1929 delivered the final blow to the 'Boom', but for
south Florida the hurricane of 1926 signaled the end. Miami was the hub to
support new development, was devastated by the hurricane and could not support
the building process. In July of 1926, Key West replaced its aging electric
street cars with buses. The Overseas Highway was completed and officially opened
in 1928 for two-way traffic to and from Key West via three ferry boats serving
about 40 miles of the trip. In May 1929 the overland bus company, Florida Motor
Lines began an extensive campaign to promote Key West as the tourist Mecca
of Florida. Signs that Key West was really moving into the twentieth century
was dozed in 1929 when Miss Lena Johnson, was the first woman to be elected
to its city commission, was defeated for reelection, but it was only by 40
votes.
More transportation news was made in Key West at this
time. In June 1927 the highway from Big Pine Key to Key
West was opened. On October 28, 1927, Pan American Airline
(PAA) pilots Huey Wells and Eddie Musick delivered 772
pounds of air-mail from Key West to Havana in a Fokker
trimotor. The dream of pioneer Juan Terry Trippe and his
airline Pan American was in operation and it began in Key
West. Trippe was born in Seabright, N. J. in 1899, graduated
Yale University after serving in the Naval Air Service
in WW I and joined a firm of investment bankers. With his
financial support of those such as the Whitneys, Vanderbuilts
and Rockefellows, he gained the Key West to Havana U.S.
mail contract on June 16, 1927 for PAA and the rest is
history. Monroe County entered into the air transportation
mode when it purchased the Key West International Airport
in November 1952. The Navy made its last flight of an airship
and all blimps were moved out in March 1959. In April 1968,
National Air Lines made its first landing on extended runways
using a Boeing 727. To see more Key West airport photos
Click Here and then use the back arrow to return to this
spot.
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Lean Times
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The 1930s brought The Great Depression which had severe
effects on Key West. The tourists and associated building
of the 1920s evaporated. This was followed by the Navy
reducing its base to maintenance status in 1932 (the Navy
ordered it in August 1930). Only the radio station remained
in full operation. Cigarettes replaced cigars and a disease
threatened the local sponge activity. On July 1, 1934 Key
West officially declared insolvency and threw itself into
the hands of the state. The 1935 state census showed the
population of Key West as 13,118 and the remainder of the
Keys as 865. In 1945 the population was 19,755.
The state was no better off than
Key West and neither was the country. So it was up to
President Franklin Roosevelt
and his New Deal programs with acronyms such as the CWA,
WPA, PWA, CCC, and FERA. Julius Stone headed the Florida
division of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration
(FERA) in Jacksonville, but he found special favor in Key
West. It appears that he spent more time in Key West than
the rest of Florida and Key West realized the benefits.
Where Commodore Porter envisioned Key West as the "Gibraltar
of the Gulf" for its military position, Stone saw
Key West as the "Bermuda of Florida" for its
tourist potential. Many programs were started and continued
through the Works Progress Administration (WPA) period.
One project was the Key West Aquarium besides Mallory Dock
which was started in 1933.
As if things were not bad enough, the Hurricane of 1935
cut Key West off from the mainland. Forty miles of railroad
were destroyed in the Upper Keys and Key West was back
to depending on maritime transportation. Some degree of
help was provided by the new industry of air transportation.
Temporary vehicle ferry landings were provided and two
Mississippi River stern-wheelers were converted to link
Key West to the mainland. Fortunately, Key West possessed
a great harbor and was accustomed to living by the sea.
For the more fortunate, Pan American Airways had just established
regular service between Miami and Key West. On a smaller
scale, in November 1935 the Thompson Fish Company purchased
the Overseas Transportation Company as a freight service
since the railroad was destroyed.
The damaged railroad right-of-way and bridges were converted
to what I call the second Overseas Highway. The narrow
railroad bridges were widened to 20-foot two-lane vehicle
bridges. It was completed in 1938 and one could for the
first time drive all the way to and from Key West without
the use of car ferries. A gala highway celebration took
place of the weekend of July 2-4 and Bernice Brantlt, Miss
Key West, served as the queen, Visitors, delivery trucks
and buses frequented all the principal Keys.
The new highway opening Key West to and from the nation
was brought to national attention when on February 18,
1939, President Franklin Roosevelt passed through the Upper
Keys in route to Key West to board the cruiser Houston
to observe war games in the Caribbean. Poor Ole Craig waved
to the entourage when in passed through Craig Key in an
open convertible at about 2 p.m. Key West mayor, Willard
Albury, met the president at the west end of the Bahia
Honda bridge on West Summerland Key. From there, Mayor
Albury accompanied the president to tour much of the then
inactive naval facilities. Former Florida F.E.R.A./W.P.A.
director Julius Stone's 1934 exhortation to Key West of
its tourist potential was now a reality. The Gibraltar
of the South had a usable vehicle artery to and from the
mainland
The Overseas Highway is covered on a separate web site
page at (Click here and then the back arrow to return to
this spot.) .
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World War II
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In early 1941 Paramount Studios
had photographers in Key West filming scenes for the
future movie "Reap
the Wild Wind." As with most of the nation, WW-II
lifted Key West out of its sagging economy. President Roosevelt
had driven the converted Overseas Highway and visited Key
West in 1939. On October 14, 1939, Navy Headquarters announced
the closed Navy Station would reopen November 1. The same
year the Navy signed a contract for Trumbo Point for use
as a Naval Air Station. The first spade full of dirt was
turned on March 12, 1940. The base served as an training
and operating base for the U.S. Navy's fleet aircraft squadrons.
The Navy was back in Key West and no one knew what would
happen a little more than a year later.
One such valuable military resources at Key West was the Fleet Sonar School
at the naval station in 1940. The school was invaluable for training sonar
operators for the country's struggle against German U-boats a few years later.
Pearl Harbor occurred almost two years later. The country was at war again.
The sonar school closed in the early 1970s. The Key West economy was damaged
when a mysterious blight attacked the sponges. The sponges disintegrated when
touched by the retrieving hook.
In summary, once again Key West
was on a military economy. Military and civilian workers
flooded the streets making
Key West once again the "Gibraltar of the Gulf" as
Commodore Porter saw it in 1823. Without all the details,
World War II expanded the naval operations from around
50 acres to over 3,000 acres, including 1700 acres of Boca
Chica. Harbor dredging created another island to store
explosives - Fleming Key. Meacham Field became Key West
Airport and the old Marine Hospital became quarters for
the Navy's women corps - the WAVES. The Navy took over
the old F.E.C. Trumbo Point railroad yard and improved
Sigsbee Park. The Casa Marina as rented for its officer
personnel. In March 1945 one naval operational entity was
established - U.S. Naval Air Station, Key West. The Fleet
Sonar School was in full operation. About 15,000 military
and 3400 civilian personnel supported these operations.
After WW-II the navy retained its training facilities.
The needs of the Navy in Key West helped all the Keys.
To support its wartime mission the Navy needed fresh water,
so it paid for and operated an 18-inch pipeline the length
of the Keys. Support equipment was larger and heavier than
before so an improved highway US-1 was constructed. A total
of 17 miles was cutoff by eliminating the out-of-the-way
Lower Keys route via Pirates Cove and the Upper Keys route
via the old wooden Card Sound bridge. More or less this
is the US-1 route that we drive today. (Fopr details of
the Overseas Highway cllick: {OSH}, public water {FKAA}
and electricity {FKEC} or go to separate web pages under
General History.)
After WW-II, the whole country increased in mobility.
New churches and schools sprang into life. Things were
not all peaches and ice cream as in the summer of 1946
Key West suffered it worst polio epidemic ever. Twenty
cases were reported with two deaths. Restrictions barred
children under 16 from public places. Mosquito control
was put into effect as a county agency in 1951. At first
it was spraying with trucks but by 1960 the Beech type
18 aircraft were used. All the elements for growth were
present. But the economy of Key West was once again on
the wane. The free-spirited sailors that were on liberty
went back to their homes to regain their lost time. The
US Navy was again down sizing. 1951 was not a dull year
for Key West as as the 1000-unit Navy housing project on
former Dredger's Island was renamed Sigsbee Park. Navy
Captain Sigsbee was the captain of the USS Maine sank in
the harbor of of Havana in 1898. The old Army barracks
on Palm Avenue was named Peary Court after the discoverer
of the North Pole. Incidentally, at this time tourism was
ranked fourth.
Here is something for some one
to check out for a "first." In
January 1953 the Key West Citizen reported that Edmond
Albury acquired a building permit to construct on Eaton
Street a CBS house - just wondering? Another marker of
growth in March of 1953 the 6,000th telephone was installed
on the switchboard to the home of Lt. F. E. Mitschke. The
same year the county's population was reported as 29,975.
I do not have the exact numbers, but Key West would have
been about 26,500. Both Key West and the remainder of the
county was growing fast. A strange weather event occurred
on October 12 when the Key West Weather Bureau reported
a record low of 64 degrees.
However, in September of 1955 the
lack of summer tourists prompted a "motel price war" and
eight motels offered free rooms to tourists. In November
of 1955 the
U.S. Navy presented a breakdown of its Key West population:
936 officers, 9,000 enlisted personnel, 6,661 dependents
and 1,725 civil service for a total of 18,322. The civilian
population was 26,433. Things were not that bad as Stock
Island had it first stock car race. There 17 local and
19 Miami car drivers.
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Pink Gold
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The economy of Key West was saved again when 'pink gold'
was found in the Marquesas and Tortugas areas in 1949.
This was a new commercial variety of shrimp considered
delicious, large and pink with fine flavoring. As with
once popular Key West cigars, now there were the 'Key West
Pinks.' Shrimp boats numbered around 500 in the winters
which was the best season for shrimp. In 1953 the tradition
of today's Mallory Square was innocently started when the
Key West Motor Court Association petitioned the city for
use as a public fishing pier. The 1960 census showed Key
West's population at 33,956, more that two time the remainder
of the county at 13,965 - a total of 47,921.
In 1962 John Spottswood arranged for the movie PT 109
to be filmed on nearby Munson Island which he owned. (
Click here ) for additional information.
The Key West NAS responded to the 1962 Cuban Missile
Crisis when on October 22, 1962 reconnaissance flight began
to support the Cuban blockade. After the short burst of
activity caused by the Cuban Missile Crisis, the military
in Key West continued to down size. Destroyer Squadron
12 and Submarine Squadron 12 were decommissioned at a joint
ceremony on June 29, 1973 signaling the beginning of the
end. On March 29, 1974, Admiral John Maurer ordered his
flag lowered terminating 151 years of naval operations
at the Key West Naval Station. Navy Lt. Mathew Perry had
raised the American flag on March 24, 1822. Naval air operations
continued however, and U. S. Coast Guard operations were
expanding.
When the military down sizes there
is a related loss of civilian jobs. To some, the 1970s
correlated with the
rum running days of the 1920s and 30s. Even though rum
running and drug running are similar in actions, the reaction
were quite different. Key West had to look back to Julius
Stone who in 1934 told them that they were missing a gold
mine as the the "Gibraltar of the US." A century
earlier Commodore Porter compared Key West to Gibraltar.
The city fathers and businessmen made historic Key West
into a thriving tourist center to their credit without
destroying their tangible legacy. Not to be forgotten is
that the county seat's local government's economy provides
some stability to Key West's economy.
Tourism is fickle as in May 1880
the Chamber of Commerce asked the governor to declare
the city an economic disaster
because of the adverse impact of the Cuban boat lift mainly
from bad media coverage. Intelligence reported up to 100,000
Muriel refugees awaiting to come to Florida. The U.S. Coast
Guard began its largest peacetime operation by ordering
additional cutters for the area. To add to the problem
a 73 mph squall line passed through the straits killing
an estimated 12 refugees. The same year Governor Bob Graham
concluded that hurricane sheltering in the Keys was "clearly
insufficient" and residents should be evacuated in
case of hurricanes. Tourism was now firmly entrenched.
Even the old small "southernmost sign" (often
stolen by collectors) was replaced with a new and larger
concrete marker in 1983.
The U.S. Border Patrol established a road block near
Florida City to check the citizenship of everyone leaving
the Keys on April 18, 1982. Traffic was being backed for
15 miles or more and legitimate visitors were reluctant
to come. On April 22, 1982 Key West took the lead by forming
the Conch Republic and symbolically seceding from the Union.
Symbolic border passes and visas were issued. Wooden Conch
currency was sold, the pelican was declared the Republic's
bird and then hibiscus the flower. The Conch Republic went
as far as applying for foreign aid.
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Epilogue
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Like a military economy, a tourist economy is unpredictable,
something that Florida well knows, but of which it often
looses sight. Almost weekly the city debates the dichotomy
of huge cruise ships docked near groups of homeless sleeping
in the neighborhoods. A knee-jerk in the world economy
can be a blow to the head for tourism, but fortunately
these blips are usually short lived. An example was the
1974 gasoline shortage. A political knee-jerk can likewise
bring prosperity. Key West, as well as the other Keys,
have survived about every kind of calamity except earthquakes
and avalanches. They will survive others in the future,
that is unless global warming becomes a reality with rising
sea levels.
This content used with permission from
KeysHistory.org.
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