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Celebrate Safety Harbor E-mail
Tuesday, 01 May 2007

Safety Harbor this month celebrates the 90th anniversary of its incorporation as a city. Commemorative events will be noted throughout the year, but it was May 1917 when the city completed the paperwork that made it a legal entity. The anniversary is noteworthy for the very fact the city has survived, if nothing else. Newcomers to Florida often are unaware of the boom and bust cycles that have shaped the state and the profound effect they have had on municipalities such as Safety Harbor. It also is noteworthy in this state that has experienced such tremendous growth and change that there is a legitimate and interesting history to this community. It is most emphatically not the creation of a developer who converted orange groves or pasture land into a planned community with well-designed cul de sacs and a central shopping area. Safety Harbor is a town with an identity that stretches back into prehistory, of which the past 90 years are only the latest incarnation.

Begin with the mound at Philippe Park, named after Pinellas County's first settler, Odet Philippe. He is honored as the first to cultivate citrus crops in Florida, groves first planted in what is now the park. The mound was a landmark built by the Tocobaga Indians and offered deep water anchorage for Philippe's sailing ship, the Ney. It now is recognized as the spiritual and ceremonial heart of a native American culture that today is called "the Safety Harbor culture." It is estimated that tens of thousands of Tocobagans lived and thrived here before the first contact with Spanish explorers.

Safety Harbor first began to develop as a modern community, known informally first as Bailey's Bluff and then Green Springs, during the late 1800s. Besides Philippe's efforts, the attraction was the natural springs. They gave the area a reputation as a center for healing and are believed to be the source of legends of the Fountain of Eternal Youth, which brought the Spanish to the area 500 years ago. The springs were well-known to native Americans, including the Seminoles, who were successors to the Tocobaga. Commercial development began after the Civil War and the predecessors to today's Safety Harbor Resort and Spa were in operation before the city was incorporated.

In 1917 Pinellas County was only five years old, just separated from Hillsborough County. Transportation across Tampa Bay primarily was by ferry. One of the ferry stops was at Safety Harbor, but not at the site of today's Pier. The first commercial pier was about a half-mile to the north near the mouth of a small creek that today is the southernmost boundary of Philippe Park. Downtown was located in what is now a residential neighborhood. Following World War I, Florida was in the midst of a tremendous boom. Safety Harbor was growing rapidly and plans were made for a complex of buildings on the Bay that would not only house the springs, but would be a center for commerce and industry. Streets and subdivisions were platted, brick streets with granite curbs were built and the city's potential for growth rivaled that of any other city in the county.

Before 1929's stock market crash plunged the nation into the Great Depression, Florida's land boom collapsed in the mid-1920s. Construction halted in Safety Harbor, but not before the completion of a complex of buildings at the east end of Main Street. One building survives, the former St. James Hotel, today called the Harbor House. Buildings recently erected by Olympia Development echo the three-story structures that once flanked the hotel. Across the street, the spa was evolving. It was to experience ownership changes, consolidation of other health-related businesses and worldwide fame for its waters.

In addition to the grinding poverty of the Depression years, which culminated in the City of Safety Harbor declaring municipal bankruptcy in 1938, the city suffered the insult of being cut off the main route into northern Pinellas County as an entrepeneur named Ben Davis built a causeway, today's Courtney Campbell Causeway. The small town languished until the 1970s when residential growth returned. Safety Harbor's population doubled in that decade and doubled again in the next, bringing it near its current size. It resisted efforts by Clearwater to annex it, even when sewer and water systems were used as weapons to control growth.

As the Tampa Bay area has become a single metropolitan entity, Safety Harbor has survived and thrived at its very center. It has a beautiful location on Old Tampa Bay, surrounded by major roadways that provide access to two major airports and all of the amenities of big cities. Yet, at its heart, it is still a small town shaded by centuries-old oaks and home of the healing waters.

 
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