Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
In 1890, Flagler built a steel railroad bridge across the St. Johns River in
The First Developers · 281
downtown Jacksonville, making it possible for travelers to reach St. Augus-
tine from New York in just thirty-one hours without changing trains. They
rode in plush Pullman cars on trains with names such as the “Florida Spe-
cial.” The way had been opened for development of one of Florida’s now
primary industries: Tourism.
Flagler extended his empire southward, reaching Palm Beach in 1894
where he built, first, the Hotel Royal Poinciana overlooking Lake Worth and
then the Breakers on the shore of the Atlantic. Flagler’s St. Augustine ho-
tels had attracted the elite of northern high society (and some noted politi-
cians, including President Grover Cleveland), and now Palm Beach became
known as a premier winter resort for the country’s millionaires.2
Julia Tuttle had been imploring both Plant and Flagler to build their rail-
roads to her pioneer settlement of Miami when, in December 1894 and Feb-
ruary 1895, two kil er freezes struck, devastating Florida’s citrus industry.
Tuttle may have (as a story has it) sent Flagler a sprig of orange blossoms
to show him that the frost had not reached Miami, but, in any case, Tuttle
and Biscayne Bay’s other pioneer, William Brickel , made an agreement to
donate half of their large land holdings to Flagler if he would build his rail-
road to Miami. Flagler’s railroad, now named the Florida East Coast Rail-
way, reached Miami in April 1896. There he built the Hotel Royal Palm and
proof
Henry Flagler’s Hotel Ponce de Leon opened in January 1888 as the most luxurious
winter resort in the country. Today Flagler College coeds live in rooms once occupied
by millionaires. Courtesy of the State Archives of Florida,
Florida Memory
, http://flori-
damemory.com/items/show/24086.
282 · Thomas Graham
dredged a channel across shallow Biscayne Bay so that his steamships could
carry passengers to his Hotel Colonial in Nassau.
Unfortunately, Flagler’s private life was struck by tragedy when his sec-
ond wife, Alice, became incurably insane. In 1901, Flagler lobbied the state
legislature to change state law to include insanity as grounds for divorce,
and, shortly after passage of the law, he married his third wife, Mary Lily Ke-
nan, and built a palatial home for her, Whitehal , in Palm Beach. Afterward,
what came to be called the “Flagler divorce law” emerged as a political issue
since it was charged that Flagler had bribed the legislature to secure passage
of a bill tailor-made to fit his personal needs. It seemed to be a blatant ex-
ample of how rich special interests control ed the state government. Flagler’s
railroad building would terminate with his overseas extension to Key West
in 1912.
The Panhandle region of the state benefited from its own foremost devel-
oper, William D. Chipley. Born in Georgia but raised in Kentucky, Chipley
had fought for the Confederate army. After the war he became involved
in constructing railroads in Georgia, and then settled in Pensacola, from
which he expanded his road-building efforts. Plant merged his railroads
with the Louisville and Nashville Railroad. Then he obtained a charter from
the State of Florida in 1881 for the Pensacola and Atlantic Railroad to build
proof
a railroad linking Pensacola with the rest of the state. To encourage this ef-
fort, the state granted the P & A more than 2 million acres of land. By 1883,
Chipley’s road had bridged the Apalachicola River and linked with lines in
Georgia and the rest of Florida. Plant also built docks and warehouses in
Pensacola to make it an important seaport.
Unlike Plant and Flagler, Chipley inserted himself personal y into Flor-
ida politics. He was elected mayor of Pensacola and later became a state
senator. In 1891, he failed to unseat U.S. Senator Wilkinson Call in a contest
that pitted a railroad man against an anticorporation politician. Six years
later, while serving in the Florida Senate, Chipley again contested Call for
his U.S. Senate seat. He was able to block Cal ’s reelection, and Stephen R.
Mallory II won as a compromise candidate. Shortly thereafter Chipley died
unexpectedly.
The Civil War and Reconstruction had forced al white Floridians to unite
within the Democratic Party in common cause against the Republicans.
However, forced unity in the Democratic Party pushed politicians of widely
varying philosophies and interests into an artificial alliance. As the Repub-
lican Party’s influence in Florida began to wane, fractures appeared among
the Democrats, leading in the early 1880s to an “Independent” movement.
The First Developers · 283
The Independents claimed to speak for the common people and voiced their
opposition to railroads, banks, corporations, and the politicians who sup-
ported these “special interests.” The Disston land deals became an additional
issue highlighting supposed favoritism for the rich. Another question was
the constitution of 1868, which gave the governor power to appoint county
officials. Independents declared that this led to domination of the whole
state by a “Tal ahassee Ring.”
In June, a convention of disaffected Democrats met in Live Oak and
nominated Frank Pope, a young former mayor of Madison, for governor.
The Independents’ only hope for victory in the election lay in an alliance
with the Republicans, but this raised the race issue because most Republican
voters were black. The Republicans realized they were in a predicament.
If they nominated their own slate of candidates, they would split the anti-
Democratic vote. If they nominated the same ticket as the Independents,
they would brand Pope as the “black man’s candidate.” Thus the Republicans
fielded no separate ticket and only “endorsed” the Independent nominee.
The Democrats held their convention in Pensacola just days after the
Independents. Realizing that the Independent-Republican al iance posed
a serious threat, they passed over controversial Governor Bloxham and
nominated General Edward A. Perry of Pensacola, who had commanded
proof
the Florida Brigade during the Civil War. He ran as a war hero rather than
as a politician.
The election was hard fought, but the Democrats prevailed. The black
vote diminished from previous contests and did not go completely to the
Independents, probably because of intimidation by Democrats at the pol s.
Also, the Democrats partly defused the question of a new constitution by
vowing that, if elected, they too would call a constitutional convention. Af-
ter their defeat, the Independent politicians moved back into the ranks of
the Democrats, but the issues that put the “common folk” and the special
interests at odds did not go away.
In June 1885, delegates elected from the various counties met in Tal a-
hassee to draft a new constitution. Only 20 of the 108 delegates were Re-
publicans, and only 7 were black. Conservative Democrats dominated the
proceedings. Considering the controversial atmosphere in the state at the
time, the delegates did their work well and the constitution they drafted and
that the voters ratified stayed in effect until 1968.
In an overreaction to the control the governor had wielded under the
1868 constitution, the powers of the executive office were curtailed in several
ways. The governor was limited to a single term in office. An elected cabinet
284 · Thomas Graham
would share decision making with the governor, making cabinet officers,
who could be reelected indefinitely, very powerful. The office of lieutenant
governor was abolished. On the legislative side, the practice of the state
legislature meeting only every other year was written into the constitution.
The most controversial measures dealt with restoring home rule. The
power to appoint county officers had been given to the governor in 1868
to prevent “Negro rule” in the old plantation-belt counties that had large
populations of black residents. Restoring the right to elect county officers
would mean the election of some black officeholders unless some way could
be devised to minimize the black vote. The solution was a poll tax. Although
the tax would not be high, it would discourage black men from registering
to vote, especial y if they knew that other pressures would be brought upon
them to keep them away from the pol s. In the ratification election, black
voters strongly opposed the new constitution. After the poll tax was imple-
mented by law, black voting dropped off precipitously. In some areas, such
as the city of Jacksonville, black citizens continued to vote, but over the next
decade white Floridians made a concerted effort to eliminate black voting
once and for al . By the turn of the twentieth century, black voting had been
reduced to just a few citizens, and black officeholding on both the state and
local level ended.
proof
When the pol tax was proposed, some lower-income white men pro-
tested that the tax would also discourage white voting. While black voter
turnout dropped between the elections of 1888 and 1892 from 62 percent to
11 percent, white voting also fell from 86 percent to 59 percent.3 Segregation
of the races had always been the norm, but the color line was drawn more
severely in the late nineteenth century. In 1887, the legislature passed an
ordinance requiring separate cars for white and black passengers in railroad
trains.
Florida’s economy received a stimulus in the mid-1880s when deposits
of phosphate were found along the Peace River in the central part of the
state. Phosphate comes from the bones and shells of ancient animals so
that the prospectors who rushed into the area found the bones of ancient
beasts such as mastodons along with the phosphate. They dubbed the area
“Bone Valley.” Phosphate could be used in fertilizers and as an ingredient in
a wide variety of products. Soon large companies using huge steam shovels
to scoop out the mineral-rich earth replaced the early independent prospec-
tors. Towns such as Arcadia and Dunnellon boomed, and the port of Tampa
enjoyed profits from exporting phosphate to the world.
Some traditional enterprises continued to flourish. The cattle population
The First Developers · 285
thrived in the pine barrens and prairies west of Lake Okeechobee. Florida
remained “open range,” meaning cattle owners did not have to fence in their
stock. Most of Florida’s beef was exported on the hoof to the Cuban market.
Lumbering entered a period of extensive activity.4 The advent of railroads
made it easier to ship lumber out of Florida to more northerly states, and
timber companies sent many temporary spur railroads snaking into remote
areas to haul out logs. Some of the most valuable trees cut were cypress,
but most of the lumber was yel ow pine, often cal ed heart pine. The de-
struction of Jacksonville by fire in 1901, to cite just one of many examples,
resulted from the prevalence of buildings constructed with pine lumber. By
the twentieth century, the cutting of the old-growth forests had become so
rampant that concerns were raised about destruction of the environment.
The first national forest east of the Mississippi River, the Ocala Forest, was
created by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1908.
Naval stores had a long history in Florida. For centuries pine trees had
been tapped for their resin to be turned into tar for use on wooden ships.
With the advent of the Industrial Revolution, many more applications were
found for the pine sap. Workers would be sent into the woods with sharp
blades to hack “cat faces” into the trunks of pine. The sap would run down
the scarred face of the trunk into clay cups and then would be taken back to
proof
a camp to be distilled into turpentine. Turpentine camps became notorious
for their abysmal living conditions.
The making of tobacco products, especial y cigars, ranked as the largest
manufacturing industry in Florida.5 With the outbreak of the first war of
Cuban independence in 1868, some Cuban cigar manufacturers had moved