Read The History of Florida Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
Tags: #History, #United States, #State & Local, #Americas
21 March 1949. Inside the venerable Capitol Theatre in downtown Miami,
technicians broadcast the first television signals from Florida.
Before the war, few Floridians had ever flown in an airplane. The war
ushered in an era of flight, and Florida benefited handsomely from the avia-
tion boom. Scores of New Deal and World War II–era air fields became
municipal airports. By 1947, the commentator John Gunther proclaimed
Miami “one of the great international airports of the world.”30 The conver-
sion of air fields to international airports il ustrated the conversion of hun-
dreds of World War II instal ations to civilian use. Civic leaders scrambled
proof
to hold on to their economic lifelines. “Crestview,” philosophized the editor
of the
Okaloosa
News
Journal,
“like all other small towns of around 2,500,
wil have to sink or swim after the war is finished. What wil we do af-
ter the war?” Crestview need not have worried. Congressman Bob Sikes
vowed to take care of his hometown like a He-Coon protects the defenseless
coons.31 Many small towns—Arcadia, Lake City, and Naples—did lose their
beloved military bases. Other communities found creative ways to utilize
abandoned barracks and aircraft runways. Sebring’s Hendricks Field had
welcomed crews learning to fly B-17 bombers. In 1950, the Sebring Grand
Prix was born. Marianna Air Field became a tuberculosis hospital. Dale
Mabry Field housed the first males to attend the Florida State College for
Women, which would soon become Florida State University. The Richmond
Naval Air Station exchanged blimps and seaplanes for tigers, lions, and the
Miami Metro Zoo. Lakeland’s Lodwick School of Aeronautics became the
new spring training home for the Detroit Tigers basebal team. The Vero
Beach Naval Air Station became the legendary “Dodgertown,” spring home
for the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Perhaps most dramatical y, the romantic-sounding Banana River Naval
Air Station was closed and then reappeared as Patrick Air Field. Its new
350 · Gary R. Mormino
mission was to protect Cape Canaveral. For centuries, Cape Canaveral
stood as a lighthouse and geographic destination, and one of the most iso-
lated places in Florida. In 1946, a reporter had described the place: “Canav-
eral, a small community on the sparsely populated cape of a scrub-covered
key . . . has no port, and no commerce, nothing but a battered pier.”32 The
fol owing year, the Joint Chiefs of Staff identified 15,000 acres of Brevard
County as a site for the Joint Long Range Proving Ground. A vanguard of
scientists arrived in 1947.
America’s space race began there in 1949.
Notes
1.
Tal ahassee
Democrat,
9 December 1941.
2. “How Tough Is a Hero?”
Time
, 9 February 1942.
3. Hemphil ,
Aerial
Gunner
from
Virginia
, 9.
4. Helen Muir,
Miami
U.S.A.
(Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2000), 205. For
an overview of the U-boat Atlantic campaign, see Michael Gannon,
Operation
Drumbeat
(New York: Harper and Row, 1990).
5. Robert Bil inger,
Hitler’s
Soldiers
in
the
Sunshine
Stat:
German
POWs
in
Florida
(Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2000).
6. “The South Looks Up,”
Fortune
, July 1943, 95.
7. Gary R. Mormino,
Hil sborough
County
Goes
to
War:
The
Home
Front,
1940–1945
proof
(Tampa: Tampa Bay History Center, 2001), 51–58.
8. “Careful with DDT,”
Time
, 22 October 1945.
9.
Tampa
Morning
Tribune,
27 November 1942.
10. Chandler quoted in
Miami
Herald,
26 July 1943.
11. Harry Crews,
A
Childhood
(New York: Harper and Row, 1978), 128.
12.
Miami
Herald,
26 July 1943.
13. Nixon Smiley,
Knights
of
the
Fourth
Estate:
The
Story
of
the
Miami
Herald
(Miami: E. A. Seamann Publishing, 1974), 209; Gary R. Mormino, “Midas Returns: Miami Goes to
War,”
Tequesta
57 (1997):5–53.
14. “‘Welcome’ and ‘Keep Out’ Signs to Dot Florida Winter Scene,”
New
York
Times,
27 July 1941.
15. “Around Florida,”
Miami
Herald
, 26 July 1943.
16. Gary R. Mormino, “GI Joe Meets Jim Crow: Racial Violence and Reform in World
War II Florida,”
Florida
Historical
Quarterly
74 (July 1994):23–42.
17.
Fort
Myers
News-Press
, 18 August 1942.
18. State Defense Council, Record Group 191, Series 419, Box 5, p. 7, Florida State Ar-
chives, Tal ahassee.
19. Krensky memoir in
Miami
Herald
, 7 May 1985.
20. Mil ard F. Caldwell Papers, Florida State Archives, Tal ahassee.
21.
Daytona
Beach
Evening
News
, 5 October 1942.
22. “700 Women Work On County Farms,”
Tampa
Morning
Tribune
, 14 March 1943.
World War II · 351
23. “Lady Lumberjacks Work in Forests,”
Miami
Herald
, 22 August 1943.
24. Muir,
Miami
U.S.A.
, 211.
25. Ibid., 201.
26.
New
Republic
, 21 February 1944.
27. Philip Wylie, “True Greatness,”
Miami
Herald
, 5 December 1943.
28. “Lee Offers Base to Bomb Storms,”
Tampa
Daily
Times,
9 August 1945.
29.
Miami
Herald
, 1 June 1947.
30. John Gunther,
Inside
U.S.A.
(New York: Harper and Bros., 1947), p. 655.
31.
Okaloosa
News
Journal,
5 May 1944.
32. “Canaveral,”
Tampa
Morning
Tribune
, 17 February 1946.
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Newspapers constitute an invaluable source for studying the war on the home front. Al-
most any town of significance published a newspaper during the industry’s golden age of
the 1940s. Two out-of-state newspapers, the
Pittsburgh
Courier
(Florida edition) and the
Atlanta
Daily
World
, offer valuable insights into race relations.
The P. K. Yonge Library of Florida History at the University of Florida and the State His-
torical Library and the State Archives in Tal ahassee provide the best holdings of primary
materials related to the home front. The Archives’ Mil ard Caldwell and Spessard Hol and
Papers are especial y interesting. The Claude Pepper Library houses the papers of a power-
proof
ful and influential Floridian and can be accessed at Florida State University.
Secondary Sources
Billinger, Robert D., Jr.
Hitler’s
Soldiers
in
the
Sunshine
State:
German
POWs
in
Florida.
Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2000.
Craft, Stephen G.
Embry-Riddle
at
War:
Aviation
Training
during
World
War
II.
Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2009.
Davis, Jack. “‘Whitewash’ in Florida: The Lynching of Jesse James Payne and Its After-
math.”
Florida
Historical
Quarterly
68 (January 1990):277–90.
Freitus, Joseph, and Anne Freitus.
Florida:
The
War
Years
. Niceville, Fla.: Wind Canyon
Publishing, 1998.
Gannon, Michael.
Operation
Drumbeat:
The
Dramatic
True
Story
of
Germany’s
First
U-Boat
Attacks
along
the
Atlantic
Coast
in
World
War
II.
New York: Harper and Row, 1990.
George, Paul S. “Submarines and Soldiers: Fort Lauderdale and World War II.”
Broward
Legacy
14 (Winter-Spring 1991):2–14.
McGovern, James R.
The
Emergence
of
a
City
in
the
Modern
South:
Pensacola,
1900–1945.
DeLeon Springs, Fla.: E. O. Painter, 1976.
Mormino, Gary R. “G.I. Joe Meets Jim Crow: Racial Violence and Reform in World War
II Florida.
Florida
Historical
Quarterly
73 (July 1994):23–42.
352 · Gary R. Mormino
Rogers, Ben F. “Florida in World War II: Tourists and Citrus.”
Florida
Historical
Quarterly
39 (July 1960):34–41.
Patterson, Gordon. “Hurston Goes to War: The Army Signal Corps in Saint Augustine.”
Florida
Historical
Quarterly
74 (Fall 1995):166–83.
Shofner, Jerrell H. “Forced Labor in the Florida Forests.”
Journal
of
Forest
History
25 (January 1981):14–25.
Sikes, Bob.
He-Coon:
The
Bob
Sikes
Story.
Pensacola: Perdido Bay Press, 1984.
Taylor, Robert A. “The Frogmen in Florida: U.S. Navy Combat Demolition Training in
Fort Pierce, 1943–1946.”
Florida
Historical
Quarterly
75 (Winter 1997):289–302.
Waldek, Jacqueline Ashton. “How Boca Won the War.”
Boca
Raton
37 (Winter 1988):140–
47.
“War! How World War II Changed the Face of Florida.”
Forum:
The
Magazine
of
the
Florida
Humanities
Council
(Fall 1999):1–42.
Wynne, Lewis N., ed.,
Florida
at
War
. Saint Leo, Fla.: Saint Leo College Press, 1993.
proof
20
Florida by Nature
A Survey of Extrahuman Historical Agency
Jack E. Davis
The abolitionist author Harriet Beecher Stowe is best known for her abiding
interest in the human condition. The foremost example of this sentiment
is
Uncle
Tom’s
Cabin
, her searing indictment of the American tolerance of
slavery. Two decades later, her
Palmetto
Leaves
fol owed familiar formula
by attending to the abject conditions of the formerly enslaved. Yet the state
of the nonhuman world moved Stowe, too.
Palmetto
Leaves
was inspired
proof
by winters she spent on Florida’s picturesque St. Johns River. A best seller
in its day, the book devotes considerable attention to the wildlife, wilder-
ness, water, and climate of her adopted state. “Nature,” Stowe wrote, “has
raptures and frenzies of growth, and conducts herself like a crazy, drunken,
but beautiful
bacchante
.1
Implicit in her statement is the idea of nature as an independent force.
That idea put her one conceptual step ahead of historians of more recent
times. It is hard to write about Florida without including a line or clause
about its natural aura. Any researcher experiencing the state firsthand en-
counters its visual, aural, and aromatic assertions. This is to say nothing
of his or her source material. A diary, letter, or postcard of the past would
be from another place if it failed to give due to colors at sunset, a flight of
shorebirds, a rush of fish, or the bellow of alligators. That said, historians
may paint the natural backdrop behind their human subjects or mention
civilization’s impact on the environment, but typical y they show little cu-
riosity in nature’s imposition in the human journey. They seldom reflect on
its historical agency.
Yet consider this: the geological character and the ecology of twenty-
first-century Florida is only around 2,500 years old. In the preceding age,
· 353 ·
354 · Jack E. Davis
Florida was the flip side of the sunshine state. It was cold, dry, and wind-
swept. Ten thousand years ago, the peninsula was twice as wide, expanding
as much as 100 miles into the Gulf of Mexico from the present-day coastline.
Imagine if Florida were still the same. Imagine if it had winters as cold as
Minnesota, a rocky shoreline similar to Maine’s, or a terra firma as parched
as the Arizona desert. The narrative of Florida’s past would be very different
from the one we read and write today. Marjory Stoneman Douglas put it
this way: Florida constitutes a “region in the greatest possible contrast to the
others of this continent. It has shaped uniquely the history of man within
it.”2
Florida has a history all its own in part because it has wild flora and fauna
and a climate found nowhere else in the country. It is the only continental
state that reaches below the temperate climate zone and supports the growth
of tropical plants, which have attracted tropical animals and tropical people.
It has white-sand beaches and warmth, and quantities of insistent sunshine