The City of Sarasota has proclaimed October 24 – 30, 2011, “John Hamilton Gillespie Week”. Events will feature Continue reading
Be honest. When was the last time you enjoyed a museum?
Be honest. When was the last time you enjoyed a museum? Was it when you had winter visitors three years ago? When you moved here mumble-mumble years ago? Or maybe you’ve never even seen GWiz or the Mote?
During the month of September, 30 Days of Discovery offers printable coupons for
2-for-1 admission at museums in our area.
Great way to spend some time these waning weeks of September.
Official Historical Society of Sarasota County recommendation: the South Florida Museum isn’t just Snooty the Manatee. It has terrific displays of artifacts, tools, and other memorabilia… and an old-timey service station any guy will love. And the coupon will save you $16.
Which you can then earmark for the Historical Society, where admission is free but donations are oh-so-gratefully accepted.
Volunteer for Clean-Up Day!
Every so often, we get all of our members together for a Clean-Up Day, and we hope you can lend a hand next time.
All sorts of help is needed, from painting to dusting. Working together on a Clean-Up Day is the ideal time to learn what we have planned, to chime in with your thoughts and ideas, and to interact with some really cool folks: your fellow Historical Society members. Even if all you can do that day is pour the lemonade or take pictures, we urge you to come on down!
We scheduled a clean up day for Saturday – September 10, 2011 from 10am until 1pm. We had a very good turn out of working folks who did lots of furniture moving and rearranging the Bidwell -Wood house to be ready for docent tours.
October meeting at the Historical Society is all about… YOU!
“Yes, You! An Entertaining Autobiography in Three Easy Steps.”
Come early (the Gift Shop is all fresh and ready for your browsing delight starting at 6pm) and stay late (our Hospitality Volunteer offers refreshments after the presentation).
I should write about my grandmother and me… maybe Liz will show me how!
Spirit Voices from Old Manatee
Love history? Love to act? If you’re a fan of teaching history through entertainment, they’re looking for you! Here’s the info:
The Manatee County Historical Commission invites dedicated actors and actresses to volunteer their time and talent by auditioning for a dramatic guided cemetery tour titled “Spirit Voices from Old Manatee”. The production will be directed by professional actor, musician and stage director Preston Boyd.
ABOUT THE SHOW:
“Spirit Voices from Old Manatee” is an original artistic production and program of Festival sARTée*. It will take place Continue reading
Sunday Concert!!
The Sarasota Senior Theater Choral Group invites you to a concert in the Crocker Memorial Church on Sunday – August 28, 2011 at 2pm. Please join us for their departing event before becoming the Sarasota Silver Stars.
Which Historic Marker do you live near?
Do you have a bit of history in your back yard?
The Sarasota County Historical Commission is a group of civic-minded Sarasotans who suggest historical markers around our county. These markers contain some fascinating information… so next time you see one, stop and linger!
SarasotaHistoryAlive has catalogued the text of our historic markers on their fascinating site. This text is from there. Many thanks! You can also see photos of markers on Wikimedia Commons.
How about YOU? Which historic marker is close to your home?
Find it at SarasotaHistoryAlive, and add it below, in the comments.
Here’s the marker in my neighborhood. Even though Continue reading
How being long-winded probably saved Teddy Roosevelt’s life.
Theodore Roosevelt was President of the United States of America from 1901 to 1909, when the Crocker Memorial Church was Continue reading
Sell What You Craft Event!
Crafters and artists are welcome to set up shop inside the Crocker Memorial Church during our Nov. 12th Pioneer Day, from 10 – 4.
Click for info on Pioneer Day in Pioneer Park.
A nominal fee for your space will be collected in advance. Click here to get vendor details. When spaces are filled INSIDE the church, we’ll tuck you under the pines near our “Oldest House in Sarasota”. Contact us at mailto:hsosc@yahoo.com to reserve your space now!
Approx. size: a pew length square…. $40.00 per square inside the air conditioned church. Under the trees….10×10 $25.00
This Day in History: Howitzer on the Manatee River

This is the Wanderer, a schooner of the Civil War era, as was the USS Stonewall. Click to read about the Wanderer.
Aug 2 1864 The schooner, U.S.S. Stonewall, moved up the Manatee River and destroyed a sawmill, a gristmill, and a sugar mill that reportedly belonged to Confederate President Jefferson Davis. No Federal casualties were reported. Read about the U.S.S. Stonewall.
This Day in History
July 27 1886 The first plat of the new town of Sarasota (December 1885) was recorded.
Lewis Colson came to Sarasota with his wife Irene. He drove the first stake into the ground to assist Richard Paulson in platting the town of Sarasota at Five Points in 1885. Sarasota was platted by the Florida Mortgage and Investment Company, a Scottish entity. More on Lewis Colson.
This photo was taken in 1886 of the Whitaker family, considered the first documented permanent residents of European descent in this area, and the Brownings, who came from Scotland with the Ormiston Colony in December 1885. By this time, William Whitaker and his wife and children had lived in Sarasota for over 40 years. More on the Whitakers.
“Anything I can do to help?”
Every organization needs volunteers and their help, of course, and all members realize this. Trouble is, we don’t always know what we can do for our organization, and when, and whether our skills and talents can be properly utilized.
So here on the Historical Society site, we’ll let you know if we need buildings swept, brownies baked, or a polished press release created. If you have unrecognized skills that you would like to keep honed by participating, let us know. You can comment here, or you can call the Historical Society’s office, or simply collar a board member at one of our meetings.
Maybe you’re a master storyteller or a graphic artist. A lawyer or a gardener (or maybe your spouse is and is willing to help!) Or you organized bus tours in a former life, or are an expert on retail or costuming or organizing …
The History of Sarasota in less than 2 minutes
Sarasota is a young place, by anyone’s standards. Most of us have come from towns and counties with much more history, and some visitors are amused by what we consider “old.” But there’s an up-side to having a short history: it can be told, amusingly, Continue reading
Sarasota in Postcards
Matt Greenwood, a Sarasota history buff, collector, and friend of HSoSC Director Greg Dickinson, has set some of his extensive collection of vintage postcards of Sarasota to music in this great video and invited us to present it for your enjoyment.
Sue Blue is a Historical Society VIP
A hearty welcome to the tourists, the visitors, the weary travelers from a native Sarasotan. We year-round occupiers of paradise really feel sorry for you. There you go, running out to the beach to soak up some sun, tearing down Tamiami to oogle the Ringling digs, hopping that bridge to St. Armands for some heavy duty shopping. You haven’t even strolled through Selby Gardens, swung on the treetops trapeze in Myakka, or put your paws on a baby stingray at Mote Marine! And, oh yes, you need to look at Bertha Palmer’s pergola down at Historic Spanish Point, put in an appearance at the Opera, experience theatre at half a dozen venues and catch a show at the Van Wezel.
The what? You know, that giant purple structure on the Bayfront. The purple cow. The purple people seater. No time to take in a show? Well, you really should at least poke your head in the lobby and view the shell ensconced in an illuminated glass case. It is said that Mrs. Frank Lloyd Wright envisioned the color tones of this shell as the palette for the Van Wezel. Notice its iridescence…its shades of purple and lilac and lavender. She thought the Sarasota sun, over a period of time, would affect the building’s paint job resulting in an iridescent shell-like appearance. Well, wouldn’t you know, whenever the paint does begin to fade and take on a kind of interesting mottled tone, somebody down at City Hall says, “The Van Wezel needs paint! Right now! It’s beginning to look all streaky!” And they paint it purple. It’s our purple cow; Sarasota’s purple people seater. Our very own show boat.
There are some amazingly weird stories about Sarasota. The best ones, I think, involve the early pioneers. Of course, it also helps that those early pioneers aren’t around any more to argue the authenticity of the tale. So, prop your feet up on a crystal Siesta sand castle and allow me to tell you about our first white settler, Mr. William Whitaker.
Bill left his Savannah, Georgia home at the age of twelve having taken a distinct disliking for his new step-mother. He worked on a tramp steamer, headed down to Key West and wound up in Tallahassee where his half brother placed him in school. After graduation, he joined the US Army and served during the First Seminole War. The Army awarded him, along with other veterans, deeds to Florida property if he would live on and work the land for at least five years. Bill took the bait. At last, a home of his own.
Sailing in the Gulf down the west coast of Florida, he came upon an aquamarine bay and a dune of yellow limestone which he called Yellow Bluffs. This is where he built his first home. Yellow Bluffs is located on Sarasota bay in the area of today’s 12th Street. After building a barge, he sailed across to Longboat Key where he cut cedar trees for his house. He was a fisherman, a farmer, and later, a very successful cattleman. He also cultivated the first orange grove in this area of Florida. The orange tree seeds were obtained from Cuban fisherman in trade for Bill’s tasty smoked mullet. Cattle became his main source of income though and gave him the wherewithal to educate his eleven children.
About the time that Bill received the deed from the government for his property, he journeyed to upper Manatee County to court and wed tiny Mary Jane Wyatt. She might have been diminutive but Mary Jane evidently knew no fear. As a teenager she had hobnobbed with Billy Bowlegs (not his Seminole name!) on her father’s ranch. He was the chief of the Seminole tribes in this area. As a married lady she invited him to share a meal now and then at the Whitaker home. As tensions mounted between Federal troops and the local Seminoles, Mary Jane began to think about this friendship. She is purported to have inquired (note, I said purported since there is no way of knowing if this conversation actually took place) in her melting southern voice, “Now Billy, you wouldn’t kill me, would you?”
To which he is purported to have replied, “Yes….But I would do it quickly!”
Drive about a half block east of Tamiami Trail on 12th Street today and you will see a small, enclosed family cemetery. Here lies William Whitaker and a host of his descendants. Next door east is the 1901 Crocker Memorial Church. Adjacent is the oldest house in Sarasota, the Bidwell-Wood House of 1882. The Historical Society of Sarasota County has restored those buildings. If you see me there I’ll tell you about the 1884 murder-most-foul that was planned in Mr. Bidwell’s parlor!


