Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library

St. petersburg's piers, Nevin D. Sitler

Label
St. petersburg's piers, Nevin D. Sitler
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
St. petersburg's piers
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Nevin D. Sitler
Summary
Commerce, tourism, recreation, and even the quest for eternal youth were the primary incentives for building piers along St. Petersburg's downtown waterfront as early as 1854. For more than 160 years, developers and entrepreneurs pushed wooden or concrete structures from the shoreline to the deeper waters of Tampa Bay. Railroads were behind the early development, allowing cargo loads to be transferred from ship to rail with the least amount of effort. A large and profitable fishing industry evolved. Electrically powered trolley cars shuttled tourists to and from cruise ships. Promoters built bathhouses, spas, and bait houses to entice locals and visitors, and casino gathering halls of various, often controversial, styles were proposed, built, destroyed, loved, and detested. Competing piers were built only 10 feet apart. Mother Nature's elements, including a hurricane, and politics ravaged most of the remaining structures
Target audience
adult
Content

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