FLORIDA AND THE ENVIRONMENT: FROM LA FLORIDA TO GLOBAL WARMING

The Florida Historical Society

2008

Annual Meeting

May 21-May 24, 2008

Lakewood Ranch

Holiday Inn

6231 Lake Osprey Drive

Sarasota, Florida 34240

___________________________________________________________

VISIT THE FLORIDA HISTORICAL SOCIETY PRESS DISPLAY IN THE HERON ROOM DURING THE ANNUAL MEETING.

To order individual books or to receive a free color catalogue, call (321) 690-1971, Extension 211. For resale orders, please contact Barbara West at (321) 690-1971, Extension 203.

For Florida books from other presses, please visit our Print Shoppe Bookstore at www.floridabooks.net

Visit our website at www.FHSPRESS.org

 

MAY 21

WEDNESDAY

1:00—5:00 p.m.

Registration [Hallway]

BOOK VENDORS SET UP

NOTE: Book Vendors located in the Heron Room

DINNER ON YOUR OWN!

 

THURSDAY

8:30 A.M.—5:00 P.M.

Registration [Hallway]

8:30—9:00 a.m.

Coffee and Conversation [Manatee]

 

9:00—10:00 a.m.

Osprey Room A

SESSION 1: THE LONG MARCH FORWARD: THE BLACK

STRUGGLE FOR DIGNITY AND RIGHTS IN FLORIDA SINCE

STATEHOOD

Chair: Joe Knetsch, Florida Department of Environmental Protection

“The African-American Struggle for Dignity and Freedom in Florida’s

Civil War”

Irvin D. S. Winsboro, Florida Gulf Coast University

“Justice Delayed or Justice Denied: The Johnnie Mae Chappell

Murder”

Abel A. Bartley, Clemson University

Comments: Joe Knetsch

9:00—10:00 a.m.

 

Osprey Room B

SESSION 2: EXPLORING NATURE, EXPLOITING NATURE:

FLORIDA ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY

Chair: Steven Noll, University of Florida

“Silver Springs: Imagining Nature”

Tom Berson, Stetson University

“Founding Fathers & Mothers: The Origins of Florida Audubon

and The Development of an Environmental Ethic”

Leslie Poole, Rollins College

Comments: Steven Noll, University of Florida

 

10:00—10:15 a.m. Coffee Break

 

10:15 a.m.—11:15 p.m.

Osprey Room A

SESSION 3: THE FICTION AND NON-FICTION OF ARCHIE CARR

AND JOHN D. MacDONALD

Chair: Gary R. Mormino, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg

“The Naturalist’s Place: Archie Carr and Conservation in Florida”

Frederick R. Davis, Florida State University

“The Novelist’s Place: John D. MacDonald and the First Ecological

Novel”

Jack E. Davis, University of Florida

Comments: Gary R. Mormino

 

11:15—11:20 a.m. Coffee Break

 

11:20 a.m.—12:20 p.m.

Osprey Room B

SESSION 4: SAVING BARRIER ISLANDS AND ESTUARIES

Chair: Chris Meindl, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg

“Saving Clam Bayou”

Cathy Salistri, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg

“Clearwater Beach: An Environmental History”

Peyton Jones, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg

“Dredging Dreams: An Environmental History of Marc Island and

Coastal Collier County”

Nano Riley, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg

Comments: Chris Meindl

 

11:20 a.m.—12:20 p.m.

Osprey Room C

SESSION 5: LANDSCAPE OF DREAMS?: ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT,

RACE AND ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS

Chair: Mike Butler, South Georgia College

“The Gas Plant: Many Dangers, Toils and Snares”

Zanetta Starks, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg

“An Expressway Runs Through It: An Environmental History of

Booker Creek, St. Petersburg”

Justin Whitney, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg

Comments: Mike Butler

 

12:20—1:00 p.m. Break

 

1:30—3:00 p.m. SOCIETY AWARDS LUNCHEON

Osprey Rooms B and C

Presiding: Nick Wynne, Executive Director

Rembert Patrick Book Award

Charlton Tebeau Book Award

Dorothy Dodd Lifetime Achievement Award

Patrick D. Smith Literature Award

Caroline P. Rossetter Outstanding Woman in Florida History

Award

Harry T. and Harriette Moore Book Award

LeRoy Collins Graduate Essay Award

Carolyn Mays Brevard Undergraduate Essay Award

Samuel Proctor Oral History Award

James J. Horgan Youth Book Award

Hampton Dunn Media Award

Golden Quill Award

Marinus Latour Outstanding Volunteer Award

Arthur Thompson Award for Outstanding Article in

The Quarterly

Herman and Celia Chapin Award

 

3:00—5:00 P.M.

Manatee Room

THE FLORIDA HISTORICAL SOCIETY BOARD OF DIRECTORS

MEETING

TOUR 3:00—5:00 p.m.

Walking Tour of Historic Bradenton - leave the hotel by bus coach and

spend a delightful trip to historic downtown Bradenton, walking tour

led by a wonderful local historian. Arrive back at the hotel by 5:00 in

time to freshen up for the evening events.

Cost per person $30.

...REMEMBER…

Credit cards can be used to pay for all Annual Meeting

functions

 

6:00—8:00 p.m. RECEPTION

Reception hosted by the Manatee County Historical Commission.

The Commission welcomes Society members to Manatee

County at a fun mix and mingle social at the Manatee County

Agricultural Museum and Palmetto Historical Village. Buildings

will be open for viewing. Travel to and from on your own,

maps and directions provided. Cost is free.

 

FRIDAY

8:30 a.m.—5:00 p.m.

Registration [Hallway]

8:30—9:00 a.m.

Coffee and Conversation [Manatee]

9:00—9:30 a.m.

Manatee Rooms A and B

Welcome

 

9:30—10:15 a.m.

Manatee Rooms A and B

PLENARY SESSION

Dr. Duane DeFreese

Former Executive Director

The Hubbs-Seaworld Research Institute

JILLIAN PRESCOTT MEMORIAL LECTURE

 

10:15—10:30 a.m. Coffee Break

 

10:30 a.m.—12:00 noon

Osprey Room A

SESSION 6: WOMEN ON THE 19TH CENTURY FLORIDA FRONTIER

Chair: Tracy Revels, Wofford College

“The Brown Sisters and Attitudes About Marriage on Florida’s Antebellum

Frontier”

Keith L. Huneycutt, Florida Southern College

Victoria Seward Varn Brandon Sherrill: South Florida Women as

Community Builders”

James M. Denham, Florida Southern College

Comments: Tracy Revels

 

 

10:30 a.m.—12:00 noon

Osprey Room B

SESSION 7: FLORIDA ENVIRONMENTAL WRITERS: SAVING LA

FLORIDA

Chair: James Cusick, University of Florida

“Writing Nature: Zora Neale Hurston as a Nature Writer”

Kathryn Seidel, University of Central Florida

“Ernest Lyons: Voice in the Wilderness”

Joe Crankshaw, St. Lucie Historical Society

“Paradise Screened: Winds Across the Everglades and A Flash of

Green

Cynthia A. Melendy, University of South Florida

Comments: James Cusick

 

10:30 a.m.—12:00 noon

Osprey Room C

SESSION 8: FLORIDA’S URBAN ENVIRONMENT

Chair: Robert Cassanello, University of Central Florida

“Marketing the Environment for Social Change: Central Florida

Women and the City Beautiful Movement in the Early 1900s”

Amy E. N. Darty, University of Central Florida

“Resource and Renewal Lessons from Ehren and the Ghost Towns of

Pasco”

Jim McKenzie, University of South Florida

“Evolution of Tourist Zone Maps in St. Augustine, Florida, 1883-2006”

Dori Griffin, Arizona State University

Comments: Robert Cassanello

 

12:00—1:00 p.m. LUNCH ON YOUR OWN

[On site—The Alamo Steak House]

 

1:00—2:00 p.m.

Osprey Room A

SESSION 9: MANAGING FLORIDA’S FORESTS AND WATER

Chair: Tom McFarland, Florida Institute of Technology

“Florida Forests Aflame: Using Fire to Fight Fire from Paleo-Indians

to Present Day Foresters”

Barry Walden Walsh, Longboat Key

“Lessons Learned From the Comprehensive Everglades Restoration

Plan (CERP)”

James W. Vearil, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

Comments: Tom McFarland

 

1:00—2:00 p.m.

Osprey Room B

SESSION 10: FLORIDA IN THE ERA OF CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION

Chair: Irvin D. S. Winsboro, Florida Gulf Coast University

“Racially Integrated Education in Reconstruction Florida: Ester Hill

Hawks’ Port Orange Experiment”

Leonard Lempel, Daytona Beach Community College

“’I Have Given and Taken Some Hard Blows’: Jonathan C. Gibbs and

Political Unrest in Florida”

Learotha Williams, Jr., Armstrong Atlantic University

 

1:00-2:00 p.m.

Osprey Room C

SESSION 11: BOATS AND BOATING: USING THE WATERS FOR

RECREATION AND LIVELIHOOD

Chair: Ben Brotemarkle, Brevard Community College

“Coming Untethered: Current Issues in Pinellas Marinas and the

Environment”

Jon Kile, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg

“’More a Nailer than a Sailor’: A History of Wooden Boat Building in

the Tampa Bay Area of Florida”

Lucy D. Jones, Florida History, LLC

TOUR

2:30—5:00 p.m.

Visit beautiful DeSoto Point National Park. Enjoy learning

about Hernando DeSoto and his quest through the Southern

United States during a short movie in the Welcome Center.

Spend the rest of your visit enjoying the great view of the

water and touring the nature walk through the mangroves

where you will find lots of sand hill cranes and fiddler

crabs. Arrive back at the hotel by 5:00 in time to freshen up for

the evening's Society Banquet. Cost per person is $30.

 

FRIDAY EVENING

May 23, 2008

6:00—7:00 p.m. CASH BAR

Osprey Room

7:00—9:30 p.m. Annual Banquet

Osprey Room

President Jose Fernandez, Presiding

CATHERINE PRESCOTT MEMORIAL LECTURE

Keynote Address

Dr. Wayne Flynt

Professor Emeritus

Auburn University

“The Project That Would Not Die: The Cross-Florida Barge

Canal”

 

SATURDAY

MAY 24, 2008

8:30—11:00 a.m.

Registration

Hallway

 

8:00—8:30 a.m. Coffee and Conversation

Manatee Room

8:30—9:30 a.m.

Osprey Room A

SOCIETY ANNUAL BUSINESS MEETING

9:30—10:30 a.m.

Osprey Room A

SESSION 12: WOMEN AND THE ENVIRONMENT: FROM LAND

SPECULATORS TO LAND PROMOTERS

Chair: Leslie Poole, Rollins College

“The Ladies of Thompson Creek: The Use of Land Speculation to Reinforce

a Gendered Social Hierarchy in British West Florida”

Deborah L. Bauer, University of Central Florida

“Mounted on a Pedestal: Bertha Honoré Palmer”

Hope L. Black, University of South Florida, St.

Petersburg

Comments: Leslie Poole

 

9:30—10:30 a.m.

Osprey Room B

SESSION 13: FISHING IN THE FLORIDA WATERS

Chair: Robert E. Snyder, University of South Florida

“Fishing in Boca Grande: From Pre-History to the Present Day”

Benjamin D. Brotemarkle, Brevard Community College

“The Mullet Wars”

Terry Tomalin, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg

“Tarpon Fishing”

Kevin, Kokomoor, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg

Comments: Robert E. Snyder

 

9:30—10:30 a.m.

Osprey Room C

SESSION 14: FLORIDA’S ROLE IN THE ADVANCE OF ECOLOGY

AND PUBLIC POLICY

Chair: Gary R. Mormino, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg

“Selling Out: U.S. Betrayal of the Treaty to Save the Ozone Layer”

Margaret Brown, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg

“Florida’s Place in the Development of Modern Ecology: Daniel

Simberloff’s Ecological Field Experiments, 1969-1981”

Darryl Myers, Florida State University

 

10:30—10: 40 a.m. Coffee Break

 

10:40—12:00 Noon

 

Osprey Room A

SESSION 15: THREE MARJORIE(Y)S: RAWLINGS, CARR AND

DOUGLAS AND THE GREENING OF FLORIDA

Chair: Dr. Ron Cooper, Central Florida Community College

“For This Enchanted Land: Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings and the

Florida Environment”

Florence M. Turcotte, George A. Smathers Library

“’Our Lady of the Rivers’: Marjorie Harris Carr and the Struggle to

Protect Florida’s Wilderness”

Peggy McDonald, University of Florida

“Of Braudel and Odum: Marjory Stoneman Douglas and the Idea of

Nature as Historical Agent”

Jack E. Davis, University of Florida

Comments: Dr. Ron Cooper

 

 

 

10:40—12:00 noon

Osprey Room B

SESSION 16: CURING THE COUGH, TAKING THE WATERS AND

RIDING THE RAILS: ANTEBELLUM TOURISM IN FLORIDA

Chair: Len Lempel, Daytona Beach Community College

“The Funeral Cough: Tuberculosis Tourism in Antebellum St.

Augustine”

Tracy Revels, Wofford College

“Sea Breezes and Spring Water: Tourism in Antebellum Pensacola”

Brian Rucker, Pensacola Junior College

“Railroad Promotions of Tourism in the 19th Century”

Joe Knetsch, Florida Department of Environmental Protection

 

10:40—12:00 noon

Osprey Room C

SESSION 17: PERCEPTIONS AND REALITIES: SPANISH

EXPLORERS AND COLONISTS AND THE SETTLING OF FLORIDA

Chair: James M. Denham, Florida Southern College

“First Impressions, Second Time Around: Settlers’ Hopes for Spanish

East Florida in the Late Colonial Period”

James Cusick, University of Florida

La Florida as Depicted by Spanish Colonial Writers”

Jose Fernandez, University of Central Florida

“The Development of East Florida’s Agricultural Industry and Post-

Hurricane Demand in Cuba, 1784-1800”

Sherry Johnson, Florida International University

 

END OF ANNUAL MEETING SESSIONS

 

1:00—3:00 p.m. SOCIETY PICNIC

Society Picnic at Manatee Village. Tour this wonderful pioneer

village with its historical exhibits after enjoying a picnic lunch

with deli sandwiches, sides, soft drinks and dessert with all the

trimmings. Plan to say your final good-byes to Nick as he

closes his final Annual Meeting for the Society. Travel to and

from on your own, maps and directions provided. Cost per person

is $15.