Welcome to St. Augustine, Florida: The Nation’s Oldest City

Traveling solo in the midst of a pandemic, I forget to ask people to take my photo and I even forget to do so. This is my only photo, a selfie, at the St. Augustine Foot Soldiers statue with the open pavilion Slave Market behind me. I took this early Monday morning before leaving when the area was minus protestors and tourists. (Aug. 31, 2020)

After spending a month in Rockledge with my brother David and sister-in-law Justine, along with my niece Danielle and working out my childhood friend and wellness coach, Jeanette, it was time for me to hit the road again. And that meant making one last Florida travel stop before relaxing in Fort Walton Beach for a few days with my other brother Hermes. 

That last Florida stop was St. Augustine, considered our nation’s oldest city.

Even though, St. Augustine was occupied by Native Americans,  some estimate as early as 10,000 years before the first Europeans arrived in Florida, Christopher Columbus is credited for ‘discovering’ the islands of the “New World,” in 1492. But the Spanish exploration of Florida began in 1513 with expeditions near present day St. Augustine

The Spanish explorer was searching for the “Fountain of Youth,” a fabled water source that was said to bring eternal youth. Ponce de León named the peninsula he believed to be an island “La Florida” because his discovery came during the time of the Easter feast, or Pascua Florida.

In pursuit of a rumored fountain of youth located on an island known as Bimini, Ponce de León led an expedition to the coast of what is now Florida in 1513. Thinking it was the island he sought, he sailed back to colonize the region in 1521, but was fatally wounded in an attack by the Native Americans soon after his arrival. He is also credited for naming the region “La Florida” or Florida either because the word ‘florido’ means ‘full of flowers’ or ‘flowery,’ in Spanish or because his ‘discovery took place around the Catholic holiday of Easter and was named for its ‘flowering Easter’ in relation to Palm Sunday. 

But, the first European settlement in Florida was established by the French Protestants in 1564. They were led by French explorer Rene de Laudonniere and built Fort Caroline near current day Jacksonville. Then, a year later, in 1565, Spanish Admiral, conquistador and  explorerPedro Menéndez de Avilés established the first permanent European settlement in St. Augustine in 1565.

European settlements and conflicts had a devastating effect on Native Americans and set the stage for the later Seminole Wars.

There’s more to the history, but in all honesty, I plan to stop right here…for now. And, even include a bit of present-day news making. 

The one thing that I did not expect was a Black Lives Matter protest that occurred at the corner of the former Slave Market, an open-air pavilion where enslaved Africans were bought and sold. The protest in support of the Black Lives Matter movement was being conducted by a predominantly white human rights group, while the pro-Trump supporters, also predominantly white, were shouting “All Lives Matter,” waving flags with the president’s face on it and signs about saving monuments, to which I attribute confederate monuments since one had just recently been removed from the nearby the Plaza de la Constitución.

At any rate, there’s just so much history in St. Augustine that it is truly difficult to unpack without going back hundreds of years, so I will hit the highlights of what caught my attention during my two-night, three day stay…even with several places closed due to the Coronavirus. 

So, let’s unpack the oldest European inhabited U.S. city of St. Augustine together.

A portrait of Spanish Admiral, conquistador and explorer Pedro Menéndez de Avilés (1519-1574) who founded St. Augustine in 1565 thus establishing the first permanent European settlement. This was the first successful Spanish settlement in La Florida and the most significant city in the region for nearly three centuries. This portrait is at The Old House Museum Complex inside the Manucy Museum. (Aug. 30, 2020)
Even trees have a deep rooted history in St. Augustine. This magnificent live oak tree, called the Old Senator, is reputed to be well over 600 years old and can claim witness to the moment in 1513 when Juan Ponce de Leon was said to ‘discover’ the famed Fountain of Youth just 600 feet from this incredible tree. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The Old Senator, is reputed to be well over 600 years old and can claim witness to the moment in 1513 when Juan Ponce de Leon was said to ‘discover’ the famed Fountain of Youth just 600 feet from this incredible tree. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The Fountain of Youth Archaeological Park in St. Augustine is said to be the forest area explored by Juan Ponce de Leon in 1513 where he sought to find the Fountain of Youth. I did not visit this park, for a variety of reasons, including the fact that I don’t believe in a fountain of youth and I just saw no point in paying to see something I don’t believe in. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The Old City Gate, constructed of coquina, a light and porous shell-stone rock, was built in 1808 as a line of defense for St. Augustine. The gates open onto the northern end of St. George Street which leads through the heart of the old city. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The Old City Gate, constructed of coquina, was built in 1808 as a line of defense for St. Augustine. The gates open onto the northern end of St. George Street which leads through the heart of the old city. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The Old City Gate, constructed of coquina, was built in 1808 as a line of defense for St. Augustine. The gates open onto the northern end of St. George Street which leads through the heart of the old city. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The Castillo de San Marcos in St. Augustine, considered the oldest masonry fort in the United States, was designed by the Spanish engineer Ignacio Daza, with construction beginning in 1672, 107 years after the city’s founding by Spanish Admiral and conquistador Pedro Menéndez de Avilés, when Florida was part of the Spanish Empire. The fort’s construction was ordered by Governor Francisco de la Guerra y de la Vega after a raid by the English privateer Robert Searles in 1668 that destroyed much of St. Augustine and damaged the existing wooden fort. (Aug. 31, 2020)
A watchtower at the Castillo de San Marcos in St. Augustine. Access to the interior of the fort, maintained by the National Park Services, was closed due to the Coronavirus. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The Castillo de San Marcos was constructed from 1672 to 1695 near the shores of St. Augustine’s Matanzas Bay. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The Castillo de San Marcos was constructed from 1672 to 1695 near the shores of St. Augustine’s Matanzas Bay. (Aug. 30, 2020)
This Arch spans the entrance to Aviles Street, the oldest platted street in the United States is located in historic downtown St. Augustine, Florida. This simple, but charming brick street is just across the street from the Plaza de la Constitución. It has been recorded on maps since the 1570’s. It was renovated in the summer of 2010 and features restaurants with outdoor dining and Art Galleries exhibiting the work of local artist. (Aug. 30, 2020)
This Arch spans the entrance to Aviles Street, the oldest platted street in the United States is located in historic downtown St. Augustine, Florida. This simple, but charming brick street is just across the street from the Plaza de la Constitución. It has been recorded on maps since the 1570’s. It was renovated in the summer of 2010 and features restaurants with outdoor dining and Art Galleries exhibiting the work of local artist. (Aug. 30, 2020)
Aviles Street, the oldest platted street in the United States, is located in historic downtown St. Augustine, Florida. (Aug. 30, 2020)
Art work along Aviles Street, the oldest platted street in the United States, is located in historic downtown St. Augustine, Florida. (Aug. 30, 2020)
Looking toward to the entrance arch of Aviles Street, the oldest platted street in the United States, is located in historic downtown St. Augustine, Florida. (Aug. 30, 2020)
Looking toward to the entrance arch of Aviles Street, the oldest platted street in the United States, is located in historic downtown St. Augustine, Florida. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The bricked Aviles Street, the oldest platted street in the United States, in historic downtown St. Augustine. (Aug. 30, 2020)
This Tabby Wall on St. George Street is made of whole oyster shells and is said to be the last known free standing wall of this type in St. Augustine. The Spanish, who arrived in St. Augustine in 1565, first referenced tabby in 1580, which was also when the Spanish discovered coquina, the natural shell stone in the area that could be quarried and was frequently used as building material. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The González–Alvarez House, also known as The Oldest House, is a historic house museum at 14 St. Francis Street in St. Augustine, Florida. With a construction history dating to about 1723, it is believed to be the oldest surviving house in St. Augustine.
The Oldest House Museum Complex owned and operated by the St. Augustine Historical Society, was built on this site since the early 1650s. This present structure, with coquina walls and hand-hewn cedar beams, dates from the early 1700s. The house is known locally as the González-Alvarez House after its owners during the first and second Spanish occupations. A number of alterations brought the house into its current shape and size, reflecting both Spanish and British architectural styles. The house is furnished to represent its different periods. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The original one story room inside The Oldest House in St. Augustine with its coquina walls and hand-hewn cedar beams, dates from the early 1700s after the 1702 fire destroyed an earlier wooden structure. Instead, a one-story, flat-roofed house, typical of Spanish St. August was built and the first documented residents of the house was the Gonzalez family. (Aug. 30, 2020)
By 1763, Florida was ceded by Spain to England. The Gonzalez family and most Spanish residents left for Cuba. This is when the second known residents, Sargeant-Major Joseph Peavett and his wife, purchased the home in 1775 and turned the downstairs into a tavern while adding this room to the first floor and also adding on a second floor. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The courtyard entrance to The Oldest House in St. Augustine called “The Gonzalez-Alvarez House” on St. Francis Street. Geronimo Alvarez purchased the home around 1790 and began the alterations that would bring it to its final 18th century form. Constructing it entirely of coquina, Alvarez added a two-story tier containing six rooms to the rear side of the house. On the east end of the house, Alvarez added a framed porch that sat on top of a one-story room coquina addition. The new rooms included a chapel, three bedrooms, a loggia, and a pantry. Alvarez, his family, and his descendents lived in the home for almost 100 years. (Aug. 30, 2020)
With a construction history dating to about 1723, The Oldest House also called “The Gonzalez-Alvarez House” on St. Francis Street in St. Augustine is an important example of Spanish colonial architectural style, with continued alterations that brought it to its final 18th century form. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The interior courtyard of The Oldest House also called “The Gonzalez-Alvarez House” on St. Francis Street in St. Augustine with an outdoor and detached reproduction kitchen to the right. (Aug. 30, 2020)
Inside the reproduction outdoor kitchen building with its cooking fireplace and oven, would have been typical of the detached kitchens of the second Spanish period (1784-1821) and later. By this time utensils in any St. Augustine kitchen could include American iron pots and candle molds. Spanish olive jars and wooden bowls; the older Indian clay containers were still useful. (Aug. 30, 2020)
An example of the coquina stone The Old House Museum Complex inside the Manucy Museum in St. Augustine. Pretty much all of the earliest surviving structures in St. Augustine are built of the coquina stone. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The Checchi House on St. Francis Street, just across from The Old House in St. Augustine, was ordered through a Sears & Roebuck catalogue. From 1908 to 1937, Sears Roebuck and Co. had houses in its catalogue. Yes, the same catalogue that sold kitchen appliances, furniture, record players and power tools also listed the structures to store the items. The company shipped the building materials as numbered parts along with a leather-bound construction manual. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The Bridge of Lions, spans the Intracoastal Waterway connecting downtown St. Augustine to Anastasia Island across Matanzas Bay.
A pair of copies of the marble Medici lions guard the bridge, begun in 1925 and completed in 1927. In 2010, the bridge was renovated by the city and the lions were removed in February 2005 and returned in March 2011. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The Bridge of Lions in St. Augustine gets its name from two Carrara marble Medici lion statues that are copies of those found in the Loggia dei Lanzi in Florence, Italy. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The Bridge of Lions in St. Augustine is a double-leaf bascule bridge, also known simply as a drawbridge, which allows commercial and recreational boats to pass through a center channel when the moveable span is in the up position. (Aug. 30, 2020)
A close-up of the Bridge of Lions in St. Augustine is a double-leaf bascule bridge, also known simply as a drawbridge, which allows commercial and recreational boats to pass through a center channel when the moveable span is in the up position. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The small Clarissa Anderson Gibbs Park on the west side of the Bridge of Lions in St. Augustine. (Aug. 30, 2020)

 

During my two-night, three days stay in At. Augustine, I stayed here at the Cedar House Inn bed and breakfast. The location, the hospitality and the breakfasts were all great. Linda, who checked me in and Robin, who greeted for my first day of breakfast, were incredibly kind and helpful. (Aug. 29, 2020)
My second floor room at the Cedar House Inn bed and breakfast in St. Augustine. (Aug. 29, 2020)
My room, the Grove, on the second floor at the Cedar House Inn bed and breakfast in St. Augustine. (Aug. 29, 2020)
The Cathedral Basilica of St. Augustine. In 1793 the present Roman Catholic Church, or cathedral, as it is commonly called, was completed and formally dedicated in 1797. The disastrous fire of 1887 left little of this old building besides the walls. In 1888, the cathedral was rebuilt with the addition of wings and a bell tower. The exterior façade is relatively unchanged from the 1793 design and is typical of 18th-century Spanish church architecture, which is a combination of Moorish and Baroque styles, with a belfry of four bells set in open niches. (Aug. 29, 2020)
Inside the Cathedral Basilica of St. Augustine. (Aug. 29, 2020)
The altar of the Cathedral Basilica of St. Augustine. (Aug. 29, 2020)
The main altar inside the The Cathedral of St. Augustine The three statues that dominate the main altar inside the Cathedral Basilica of St. Augustine are Christ Triumphant in the center and St. Peter and St. Augustine on each side, all covered in gold leaf. (Aug. 29, 2020)
The front door or entryway to the Cathedral Basilica of St. Augustine with its distinctive murals designed by Hugo Ohlms. (Aug. 29, 2020)
The front door or entryway to the Cathedral Basilica of St. Augustine with its distinctive murals designed by Hugo Ohlms. The top-center mural showing Pedro Menendez kneeling before the altar as Father Lopez hands him a cross commemorating the diary entry of the parish’s first pastor on Sept. 8, 1565. (Aug. 29, 2020)
Now the Flagler College, this was once the Ponce de Leon Hotel in St. Augustine. It was once the most famous hotel of the South noted for its originality of design and luxurious appointments. (Aug. 30, 2020)
Henry M. Flagler (1830-1913) was the builder of the Florida East Coast Railway. The Ponce de Leon Hotel (now Flagler College) and the Hotel Alcazar, across the street (now the Lightner Museum) in St. Augustine. This bronze statue was installed to recognize his achievements in developing the state of Florida. Erected in 1959 by the National Railways Historical Society. (Aug. 29, 2020)
Inside the front gates of the former Ponce De Leon Hotel, now Flagler College, was erected between 1885 and 1887 by Henry M. Flagler, the hotel and railroad magnate whose activities contributed greatly to the development of Florida’s eastern coastal area. Designed by the New York architectural firm of Carrere and Hastings, the building reflects the Spanish Renaissance style throughout. The hotel was the first major edifice in the he United States to be constructed of poured concrete, a mixture of cement, sand and coquina shell. In 1968, this historic landmark was converted into Flagler College, an accredited liberal arts institution. (Aug. 29, 2020)
The former Ponce de Leon Hotel, now Flagler College, erected between 1885 and 1887 in St. Augustine, is positioned prominently across the street from the former Alcazar Hotel in St. Augustine. (Aug. 29, 2020)
The former Alcazar Hotel/City Hall in St. Augustine. Built by Henry Flagler, the Alcazar Hotel opened as a companion to the Ponce de Leon Hotel (located just across the street) in 1888. The building, one of the first multi-storied structures in the country was constructed with poured concrete and designed by John Me. Carrere and Thomas Hastings who modeled its facade after a Moorish palace in southern Spain. (Aug. 29, 2020)
Statue of Don Pedro Menendez De Aviles (1519-1574) who is credited for ‘founding’ St. Augustine on Sept. 8, 1565. This statue was a gift of the people of the City of Aviles, Spain, to the people of St. Augustine. (Aug. 30, 2020)
Governor’s House, Cultural Center and Museum located on King Street adjacent to the Plaza de la Constitución in St. Augustine. Unfortunately, it was closed. (Aug. 29, 2020)
Governor’s House, Cultural Center and Museum located on King Street adjacent to the Plaza de la Constitución in St. Augustine. Unfortunately, it was closed. (Aug. 29, 2020)
The sign on the door to the Governor’s House, Cultural Center & Museum stating that it will be closed until further notice due to the Covid-19 virus. (Aug. 31, 2020)

Black Lives Matter protesters, which consistently of predominately white protestors and pro-Trump supporters also predominantly white supporters/protestors both gathered and rallied their causes at the former Slave Market, an open-air pavilion where enslaved Africans were bought and sold, at the corner of St. Augustine’s Plaza de la Constitución, the town square on which the market sits.

Considering black faces were already in short supply while I was in St. Augustine, seeing a Black Lives Matter protest without black faces was a bit unusual and gratifying, even though I know this movement has seen people from all races, ages, religions and backgrounds coming together in support of racial justice. And, this group of white human rights activists, protesting in favor of equal justice for Black Lives Matter, were extremely vocal in their support, as were the pro-Trump supporters/protestors. 

As a black woman it was odd to see these two groups of white people yelling at one another in support of their causes. But by the same token, many whites throughout the Civil Rights Movement have protested against racism and still continue to do so through the Black Lives Matter movements like this one. Yet when I looked at these two groups, of the same race, arguing about racism and justice for all, I realized that as much as Black Lives Do Matter, and the people who hate see color first, racism is something we must all fight together. As a human race, we must understand that what hurts one, will hurt all.

No one is born hating another person because of the color of his skin, or his background, or his religion. People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be taught to love, for love comes more naturally to the human heart than its opposite,” Nelson Mandela.

This open-air pavilion at the east end of the Plaza de la Constitución is called the Slave Market in St. Augustine.
“St. Augustine was the hub of the slave trade in Spanish colonial Florida, a distinction that continued through the early 1800s. The slave trade was part of the city’s economy from its founding in 1565, when Spanish explorer and founder Pedro Menendez de Aviles included black slaves among the New World’s first Spanish settlers. In fact, said St. Augustine historian Susan Parker, the Spanish Crown was one of the largest slaveholders, putting slaves to work on the city’s defenses,” by Margo Pope, St. Augustine Record from Dec. 2, 2001. A fire destroyed the area in 1887 and the city rebuilt the structure in 1888. Although the structure was initially built to house the exchange of foods and commercial goods, newspaper reports and city records document enslaved men, women, and children were sold at auction.
In addition to people being sold, the Ku Klux Klan, commonly known as KKK or Klan, also met there to rally and intimidate local blacks. (Aug. 31, 2020)
A side view of open-air pavilion at the east end of the Plaza de la Constitución is called the Slave Market in St. Augustine. (Aug. 31, 2020)
At the east end of the Plaza de la Constitución in St. Augustine is the Public Market Place, called the Slave Market. This is also where Black Lives Matter protestors and pro-Trump protestors gathered to demonstrate on a Sunday morning. (Aug. 30, 2020)
At the east end of the Plaza de la Constitución in St. Augustine is the Public Market Place, called the Slave Market. This is also where Black Lives Matter protestors and pro-Trump protestors gathered to demonstrate on a Sunday morning. (Aug. 30, 2020)
At the east end of the Plaza de la Constitución in St. Augustine is the Public Market Place, called the Slave Market. This is also where Black Lives Matter protestors and pro-Trump protestors gathered to demonstrate on a Sunday morning. (Aug. 30, 2020)
At the east end of the Plaza de la Constitución in St. Augustine is the Public Market Place, called the Slave Market. This is also where Black Lives Matter protestors and Trump/Confederate monument supporter gathered to demonstrate on a Sunday morning. A Confederate War Memorial obelisk just behind the Slave Market, commissioned by the Ladies’ Memorial Association, was erected in 1872, but was recently relocated in August to private property. (Aug. 30, 2020)
At the east end of the Plaza de la Constitución in St. Augustine is the Public Market Place, called the Slave Market. This is also where Black Lives Matter protestors and Trump/Confederate monument supporter gathered to demonstrate on a Sunday morning. A Confederate War Memorial obelisk, commissioned by the Ladies’ Memorial Association, was erected in 1872, but was recently relocated in August to private property. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The Plaza de la Constitución in St. Augustine is located near the center of the city, from which the streets radiate, north, south, and west. Overlooking Matanzas Bay and the approach to the Bridge of Lions, the Plaza de la Constitucion has been a central part of public life in St. Augustine since the late 16th century. (Aug. 30, 2020)
The bronze footprints at the Plaza de la Constitución in St. Augustine mark the path called the “Andrew Young Crossing’ where civil rights leader Andrew Young tried to march in peaceful protest before being knocked unconscious.
Young had been sent to St. Augustine at the request of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to help quell riots while the Civil Rights Act was being debated in Congress. Young’s peaceful protest march from the Lincolnville neighborhood to the Plaza de la Constitución was terminated when he was beaten by a large white mob that had been waiting for the marchers.
Young would go on to become America’s first African-American U.N. Ambassador and the mayor of Atlanta. (Aug. 29, 2020)
The Constitution Monument of 1838 in the Plaza de la Constitucion in St. Augustine. On March 19, 1812, the Spanish Parliament in Cadiz, Spain, wrote the first Spanish Constitution and issued a Royal Decree for all Spanish towns throughout the empire to build monuments and rename their main plazas Plaza de la Constitución. (Aug. 30, 2020)
A close-up of the St. Augustine Foot Soldiers Remembrance Project at the Plaza de la Constitución. The four bronze busts represent the activists of St. Augustine’s 1960s Civil Rights Movement. Facing oppression, these foot soldiers for freedom and justice helped pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Their courage changed America. The monument was erected in 2011 thanks to many supporters and the city of St. Augustine. Artist: Brian R. Owens.
The life-size portraits feature four anonymous foot soldiers placed shoulder to shoulder, in front of a relief illustrating a protest in the Plaza de la Constitución where the monument is installed. The portraits represent an approximate demographic profile of the foot soldiers: A Caucasian college student, and three African Americans: A male in his thirties, a female in her sixties and a 16-year-old female.
The plaque reads: “Dedicated to those who participated in the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s in St. Augustine. They protested racial discrimination by marching, picket, kneeling-in at churches, sitting-in at lunch counters, wading-in at beaches, attending rallies, raising money, preparing meals and providing safe haven. They persisted in the face of hailing’s, beatings, shootings, loss of employment, threats, and other dangers. They were Food Soldiers for Freedom and Justice whose efforts and example helped to pass the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964.” (Aug. 31, 2020)
The St. Augustine Foot Soldiers at the Plaza de la Constitución with the Slave Market behind it. (Aug. 31, 2020)
Traveling solo in the midst of a pandemic, I forget to ask people to take my photo and I even forget to do so. This is my only photo, a selfie, at the St. Augustine Foot Soldiers statue with the open pavilion Slave Market behind me. I took this early Monday morning before leaving when the area was minus protestors and tourists. (Aug. 31, 2020)

In 1845, Florida joined the Union as a ‘slave state.’ By the 1860 census, St. Augustine’s people included 1,938 slaves, 1,217 whites and 90 free blacks. Florida joined he Confederacy in 1861, but Union forces took St. Augustine the next year. After the Civil War, and tucked into the southwest corner of St. Augustine, African-Americans developed the Lincolnville community. 

Now known as the Lincolnville Historic District, it is considered St. Augustine’s most prominent historically black neighborhood and is associated with many significant events in the city’s African American history. 

Founded in 1866 by former slaves, Lincolnville started life as Little Africa, a plot of land where freed slaves gathered to build homes and put down roots. It was renamed following Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation.

Segregationist practices that swept the South between 1890 and 1910 spurred the growth of black owned and operated commercial enterprises.

By 1930, Lincolnville had become a major part of the city encompassing both the African-American community and the adjacent white residential areas that had grown up with it. 

In 1964, civil rights demonstrations organized in Lincolnville attracted nationwide attention and influenced the Congressional debate that led to the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Today, the 50-block Lincolnville neighborhood still contains the St. Augustine’s largest concentration of late Victorian Era buildings, most of them private homes.

“This Victorian house in the historic Lincolnville neighborhood on Bridge Street became a civil rights landmark in 1964. It was a gathering place for people in the movement, where they could meet, rest, seek solace and get something to eat courses of John and Cora Tyson,” reads the Freedom Trail marker posted on the lawn of this house. “By day Mr. and Mrs. Tyson worked the cafeteria at Webster Elementary School. They did extra work during their off-hours to support the campaign against racial discrimination.” (Aug. 30, 2020)
The history of Trinity Independent Methodist Church on Bridge Street in the Lincolnville neighborhood of St. Augustine dates back to 1821. A sign out front says it houses the city’s oldest congregation, but the doors of the church have been closed since 2014, when the city deemed the structure unsafe. Over the years, the congregation has dwindled and the building has deteriorated. (Aug. 30, 2020)
A Victorian home at the corner of Bridge and Dumas Streets in the Lincolnville Historic District in St. Augustine. (Aug. 30, 2020)
A Victorian home at the corner of Bridge and Dumas Streets in the Lincolnville Historic District in St. Augustine. (Aug. 30, 2020)
A Victorian home on Bridge Street in the Lincolnville Historic District in St. Augustine. (Aug. 30, 2020)
Now the Preserve Restaurant at the corner of Bridge Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard at the Lincolnville Historic District in St. Augustine. In 1892, President Thomas Jefferson’s great-granddaughter, Maria Jefferson Shine, lived in the house with her husband, Dr. William F. Shine, president of the county’s Board of Health, according to the restaurant’s history page. She founded the Jefferson Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. (Aug. 30, 2020)

Skipping around to oddities, the Ripley’s Believe it or Not! Museum is home to Michelangelo’s gorgeous David. Or The David. I’ve seen the original masterpiece, in all his wonderful flesh, at the Galleria dell’Accademia in Florence, Italy. This copy is hot too, but the original is magical. If you’ve seen the one in Florence, then you can judge for yourself. 

The Ripley’s Believe it or Not! Museum of oddities in St. Augustine. Even though it was open, I did not enter the museum. Instead what I wanted to see was outside the museum hidden behind some tall hedges. (Aug. 31, 2020)
“Magnificence in Marble: David” on the exterior garden area of the Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Museum in St. Augustine encircled by some well-placed bushes, this Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475-1564) copy is dated circa 1963. But the original David, inside the Galleria dell’Accademia in Florence, Italy, was created by the Italian artist Michelangelo himself between 1501 and 1504 by the Italian artist himself. He created David when he was only 26 years old and relatively unknown. According to the plaque regarding this piece, this reproduction was also sculpted in Florence, Italy, and is one of only two copies in the world carved to the exact specifications as the original, 17’ high, weighing 10 tons, and from a solid piece of Carrara mable excavated from the exact same quarry, Fantiscritti, in Miseglia, Tuscany, as Michelangelo’s masterpiece. The statue portrays the Biblical King David in a pensive mood, presumed by art scholars to be the moment just before his battle with Goliath. (Aug. 31, 2020)

And, as I’m leaving St. Augustine to make the more than five hour drive to my brother Hermes’ house in Fort Walton Beach, I pass a historical marker with Zora’s Neale Hurston’s (1891-1960) name on it and of course I had to turn around and come back. pointing to another place noted author Zora Neale Hurston once lived in Florida. 

Best known as the author of the 1937 novel “Their Eyes Were Watching God,” Hurston was one of the most prominent authors to come out of the Harlem Renaissance and she lived in St. Augustine on several occasions. And since I wrote about going to her hometown of Eatonville and to her grave in Fort Pierce, I had to stop check out the sign and where she once lived. 

The vibrancy of Zora and how she chose to live her life so unabashedly during a time of deep racism and sexism is a testament to her complete effervescence.

Author, anthropologist, teacher, researcher and a woman who lived her life on her own terms, Zora Neale Hurston rented a room in this St. Augustine house on King Street in 1942. In fact she lived in St. Augustine on several occasions during the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s. During her lifetime Hurston traveled the back roads of Florida collecting folk stories and songs that she used to write musical plays, short stories and novels. (Aug. 31, 2020)
“Noted author Zora Neale Hurston (1891-1960) rented a room in this house in 1942. One of the few surviving buildings closely linked with Hurston’s life, it is an example of free Vernacular construction, with cool, north-facing porches on both floors. The owners frequently rented to female students at nearby Florida Normal and Industrial Institute (now Florida Memorial College in Miami). While living here Hurston taught part time at the Institute and completed her autobiography, Dust Tracks on a Road,” according to the historical marker at this home on 791 W. King St. in St. Augustine. (Aug. 31, 2020)