February 17, 2022 - Tarpon Springs Dock |
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An AirBnB in the little town of Tarpon Springs, north of Clearwater, was our base for five days. The region, with a series of bayous feeding into the Gulf of Mexico, was first settled by farmers and fishermen around 1876. Some of the newly arrived visitors spotted tarpon jumping out of the waters and so named the location Tarpon Springs. The name is said to have originated with a remark of Mrs. Ormond Boyer, an early settler from South Carolina, and who, while standing on the shore of the Bayou and seeing fish leaping exclaimed, "See the tarpon spring!' On February 12, 1887, Tarpon Springs became the first incorporated city in what is now Pinellas County. In the 1880s, John K. Cheyney founded the first local sponge business. The industry continued to grow in the 1890s. Many people from Key West and the Bahamas settled in Tarpon Springs to hook sponges and then process them. A few Greek immigrants also arrived in this city during the 1890s to work in the sponge industry. In 1905, John Cocoris introduced the technique of sponge diving to Tarpon Springs by recruiting divers and crew members from Greece. The first divers came from the Saronic Gulf islands of Aegina and Hydra, but they were soon outnumbered by those from the Dodecanese islands of Kalymnos, Symi and Halki. The sponge industry soon became one of the leading maritime industries in Florida and the most important business in Tarpon Springs, generating millions of dollars a year. In 1947, a red tide algae bloom wiped out the sponge fields in the Gulf of Mexico, causing many of the sponge boats and divers to switch to shrimping for their livelihood, while others left the business. Eventually, the sponges recovered, allowing for a smaller but consistent sponge industry today. In the 1980s, the sponge business experienced a boom due to a sponge disease that killed the Mediterranean sponges. Today there is still a small active sponge industry. Tarpon Springs -- population 23,484 in 2010 -- has the highest percentage of Greek Americans of any city in the US. Lynnette standing by a sponge boat at the Tarpon Springs Sponge Docks. |
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Yay, Tarpon Springs! | ||||||
Across Dodecanese Street -- i.e., Main Street -- from the docks are some Greek restaruants. We had dinner at Hellas; it was excellent.
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The Sponge Exchange where you can buy sponges, and get a beer for a buck. | ||||||