|
|
|
Spanish explorer Ponce de Leon first arrived in the Tampa Bay area in 1513,
but the Spaniards focused their attention on settling eastern Florida and left
the western areas alone. In 1824, only two months after the arrival of the first
American settler, four companies of the U.S. Army established Fort Brooke to
protect the strategic harbor at Tampa Bay.
Development of the Tampa Bay region began after the territory became part of the
United States in 1845. In spite of the blockade and Federal occupation during
the Civil War, the area grew steadily. Henry B. Plant's 1884 railroad extension
to the Hillsborough River provided access to new areas, and he built lavish
hotels along his rail line to attract visitors.
Tampa owes its commercial success to Tampa Bay and the Hillsborough River. When
phosphates were discovered nearby in the late 1880s, the resulting mining and
shipping industries prompted a boom of growth and wealth that lasted through the
1890s. Tampa's port is now the seventh largest in the nation; today phosphate
shipping is supplemented by trade in shrimp. A pleasure cruise line operates as
well.
In 1886 Vicente Martinez Ybor established a cigar factory in Tampa. From the
steps of Ybor's factory, José Marti, sometimes called the George Washington of
Cuba, exhorted the cigar workers to take up arms against Spain in the late
1800's. Hispanic culture enlivens Ybor City, which covers about 2 square miles
between Nebraska Avenue, 22nd Street, Columbus Drive and East Broadway.
The military has also had an ongoing role in Tampa's development. The city was
the primary outfitting and embarkation port for U.S. troops bound for Cuba
during the Spanish-American War. Today the U.S. Operations Command is
headquartered nearby at MacDill Air Force Base.
In 1914 Percival Ellicott Fansler introduced the world's first scheduled
commercial airline service with the St. Petersburg-Tampa Airboat Line. Piloting
the airline's Benoist "flying boat" was Tony Jannus, the namesake of
the Tony Jannus Award presented each year by the Tampa Chamber of Commerce for
achievement in commercial aviation.
The advent of the automobile soon clipped Jannus' wings but was responsible for
a large settlement wave that occurred 1923-26. Many subdivisions were built
during this era; one of the most notable was Davis Island, a man-made island
created by D.P. Davis. The elegant homes Davis built remain some of Tampa's
loveliest.
The main Tampa downtown business district has grown phenomenally since the
1960s. Major banks and an increasing number of other corporations occupy large
glass, steel and concrete buildings that tower high above the bay. The Tampa
Convention Center, overlooking the Hillsborough River, offers meeting facilities
and features an erupting fire and water sculpture.
Thus Tampa has evolved into a multi-cultural, diverse business center with
sustainable communities for its citizens. People of all ages arrive here to
escape the worries and winters of wherever they came from, and an increasing
number of them stay.
|
|