Historic Spanish Point
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member DangerousDale
N 27° 12.129 W 082° 29.432
17R E 352372 N 3009703
A new sign for the Historic Spanish Point in Osprey Florida. There is a museum a short distance away.
Waymark Code: WM2YDM
Location: Florida, United States
Date Posted: 01/10/2008
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member tiki-4
Views: 61

I stopped for a geocache nearby and found this marker and the museum as well. I enjoyed reading the marker, and finding the geocache, but I didn't have the time or money to visit the museum. The text from the marker is:

This 30 - acre preserve includes prehistoric shell middens and a burial ground dating from 3000 B.C. to 1000 A.D., buildings from the homestead of John Greene Webb, and gardens from the winter estate of Mrs. Potter Palmer. In 1975, it became the first nomination in Sarasota County to the National Register of Historic Places. Five years later the heirs of Mrs. Palmer donated the historic site to Gulf Coast Heritage Association, Inc., which today operates Historic Spanish Point as an accredited museum.
Archaeological excavations by Ripley P. and Adelaide K. Bullen and others document this place as one of the largest preserved prehistoric Indian village sites on Florida's west coast. The early Floridian's harvested huge quantities of seafood, hunted deer and raccoon, collected native fruits and berries, made tools from shell, bone and wood, and lived in thatched huts. They abandoned the village around 1000 A.D.
In 1867, John and Eliza Webb and their five children, Anna, Will, Lizzie, Jack and Ginnie, arrived here from Utica, New York, claiming 145 acres under the Federal Homestead Act.
The Webbs named their homestead "Spanish Point", because a Spanish trader in Key West had told them about a high point of land extending out into the bay. Over the next 43 years, three generations of the Webb family cultivated citrus groves, sugar cane, and vegetable crops, built and maintained boats for transportation, and ran the region's first tourist operation known as "Webb Winter Resort." In 1884 the Osprey post office opened. John Webb, the community's first postmaster, chose its name.
In 1910, Mrs. Potter (Bertha Honore) Palmer of Chicago purchased the site as part of her Osprey Point estate. Over the next eight years, Mrs. Palmer and her two sons, Honore and Palmer II, acquired some 90,000 acres in today's Sarasota County for agriculture, farming and real estate development. Adjacent to her winter home, The Oaks, Mrs. Palmer created beautiful gardens among the prehistoric middens and pioneer-era buildings. She died at her Osprey Point estate in 1918. Her grandson Gordon operated Palmer Nurseries at the site and sponsored the archaeological work done by the Bullens in 1960s.
Marker Number: None

Date: None

County: Sarasota

Marker Type: Roadside

Sponsored or placed by: Sarasota County Historical Commission

Website: [Web Link]

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Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log User Rating  
Markerman62 visited Historic Spanish Point 08/07/2015 Markerman62 visited it
mandello visited Historic Spanish Point 12/29/2012 mandello visited it
BONSAIRAD visited Historic Spanish Point 02/21/2010 BONSAIRAD visited it
crackergals visited Historic Spanish Point 03/16/2009 crackergals visited it
SearchN visited Historic Spanish Point 07/31/2008 SearchN visited it
DangerousDale visited Historic Spanish Point 01/13/2008 DangerousDale visited it

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