Although Florida has the longest shoreline within the contiguous United States, with 1,260 miles of shoreline operating from Amelia Island on the northeast Atlantic coast to Gulf Seaside on the Gulf of Mexico, for years state legal guidelines forbade Blacks full utilization of its publicly owned segregated seashores.
On Jan. 31, 1935, a pristine tract of land nestled in a maritime forest close to the southern finish of Amelia Island was bought by members of Jacksonville-based Afro-American Life Insurance coverage Firm’s Pension Bureau. Abraham Lincoln Lewis, president, together with William Henry Lee, secretary and vice-president; Louis Dargan Ervin, cashier and vice-president; and M. Evangeline McDonald Johnson, stenographer, signed the deed to this 33-acre beachfront tract that grew to become American Seaside.
Immediately individuals piled onto American Seaside from all throughout America. Summertime crowds swelled the inhabitants on this group to a whole lot of hundreds. Individuals felt as welcomed in American Seaside as they did of their church, their dwelling and their neighborhood.
It was greater than a day seashore. Venues for meals, lodging, leisure and recreation accommodated the needs of joyous beachgoers.
Pullman automobile porters, in addition to faculty professors, shortly unfold the phrase of this protected, Black-owned seaside trip haven. Function tales appeared in a plethora of media codecs: Colour, Ebony and Jet Magazines, The Chicago Defender and The Pittsburgh Courier newspapers, the Negro Motorist Inexperienced E-book journey information, radio, billboards, phrase of mouth and different numerous sources. Beachgoers described American Seaside as “Mecca” or “paradise.”
Many presidents and professors of Traditionally Black Schools and Universities continuously vacationed on American Seaside. These included Mary McLeod Bethune, of Bethune Cookman School; George W. Gore, Florida A & M College; Nathan W. Collier, Florida Regular and Industrial Institute; Fredrick Douglass Patterson, Tuskegee Institute; and William B. Stewart, Edward Waters School.
American Seaside immediately
By way of the years, the social tempo has subsided on American Seaside. Eclipsed by the rambunctious sights and sounds of individuals by the hundreds, American Seaside has turn into greater than a summer season seashore — it’s also dwelling. The architectural façade is altering and building of towering houses may be seen on each road.
Melodies of the songbird have lengthy since changed the as soon as vibrant sounds bellowing from nightclub piccolos and jukeboxes. Ospreys perched atop utility poles devouring a day’s catch have dominion the place as soon as bustling eating places like Evans’ Rendezvous and Reynold’s Sandwich Store served fish dinners to the plenty.
Darkish clouds
Not daily on American Seaside is crammed with sunshine and gaiety. Subliminal ways quickly resulting in the eradication of American Seaside are noticed.
In 2019 the Nassau County Board of County Commissioners handed an ordinance banning tenting, campfires and cookouts, in addition to limits on seashore driving to Nassau County residents. A guard is posted on the drive-over ramp to the ocean, maintaining non-county residents away.
This can be a gateway to different obstacles designed to maintain extra of the general public out than in. Thereby, limiting entry to beachgoers wanting to get pleasure from Historic American Seaside, the attractive.
The county’s program to tax American Seaside property house owners for water and sewer by the use of a mortgage, reasonably than the use of the American Rescue Plan Act, will pressure many to promote or lose their property.
My hopes and prayers are that I’m able to stay out the total of my life on American Seaside, and never need to relocate because of the excessive value of infrastructure and neighborhood upkeep.
For a extra full story, learn “An American Seaside for African People” or go to Coastonetoursllc.com for Ron Miller’s jaw-dropping tour of American Seaside.
Thanks be to God for the recollections.
Marsha Dean Phelts, writer of “An American Seaside for African People,” was a contributor to the Florida Star newspaper and spent a few years as a librarian within the Florida family tree division of the Jacksonville Public Library.