Thursday, December 15, 2011

City of Tampa is Dissolved

1855 Map of Tampa (TBHC Collection)
Following the end of the Civil War, Tampa’s leaders attempted to return their shattered city to some level of normalcy. Not surprisingly, Federal authorities had their own plans for bringing the South back into the United States. The era that would come to be called Reconstruction was highlighted by the national government’s attempts to bring what they considered equality to the Southern states. Those attempts were met with resistance and even open hostility throughout the South.

John T. Lesley (TBHC Collection)

Though involved with Tampa’s resurgence in the 1880s, John T. Lesley is perhaps best-known for his political actions during the initial post-war period. In his return to civilian life, he played an instrumental role in how Tampa received the concept of Reconstruction.

Florida’s Reconstruction legislature passed a law in 1869 calling for the reorganization of municipal governments. Lesley and other former Confederates felt that this would lead to Republican and African American control of city government. In an effort to eliminate that threat, Lesley ran for mayor on the platform that if was elected he would abolish Tampa’s city government. He won in a landslide and, true to his word, he saw that the city’s charter lapsed, therefore ensuring that it would not fall into the hands of Carpetbaggers (Northerners) and Scalawags (Southerners aiding the Carpetbaggers). Tampa would not become a city again until July 1887.

Rodney Kite-Powell
Saunders Foundation Curator of History
Tampa Bay History Center

Friday, December 2, 2011

History Center Holiday Festivities

In celebration of the holiday season, choral ensembles from several local schools will perform in the Lykes Atrium at the History Center on select Sundays in December.

Dec. 4 - Riverview High School Choral Ensemble
Dec. 11 - Gulf Coast Children's Choir
Dec. 18 - Cambridge Christian School
Drama Ensemble

All choirs will perform from 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.

There will also be holiday-themed children's crafts available for children and parents on December 17, 18, 19, 22, 26, 27, and 28, and Jan. 1. Children's crafts are included with admission and free to members. Please join us in celebrating the holidays at the History Center.

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