Gasparilla Island

Gasparilla Island is a barrier island in southwest Florida, United States, straddling the border of Charlotte and Lee Counties. Its largest town is Boca Grande, and it is the location of the Gasparilla Island State Park. The island has been an important part of Florida folklore due to its connection to the pirate Gasparilla (José Gaspar), and has been a significant tourist destination since the early 20th century.

Gasparilla Island
The Gasparilla Inn in Boca Grande, Gasparilla Island
Gasparilla Island
Gasparilla Island
Gasparilla Island
Gasparilla Island (Caribbean)
Geography
LocationLee County, Florida
Coordinates26.76427°N 82.26543°W / 26.76427; -82.26543
Adjacent bodies of waterGulf of Mexico
Administration
StateFlorida
CountyLee

Location

Gasparilla spans the border of Charlotte and Lee Counties in Southwest Florida. To the west is the Gulf of Mexico, while to the east and south is Charlotte Harbor. To the north is Gasparilla Sound, separating Gasparilla from Little Gasparilla Island and the mainland.

History

Gasparilla was sparsely inhabited until the late 19th century, with the only permanent residents being local fishing families.[1] In 1848 the United States military established an outpost at Boca Grande. In 1897 Albert W. Gilchrist, future Governor of Florida, purchased land at Boca Grande and platted it for development as a town.

According to Florida folklore, Gasparilla Island gets its name from the legendary pirate captain José Gaspar ("Gasparilla", c. 1756–1821), who had his base on the island and purportedly hid his fabulous treasure there. Much of the development of this legend is the result of promotion by a local hotel and railroad line. The folklore account does not appear in writing until about 1900, when it was included in an advertising brochure for the Charlotte Harbor and Northern Railway company.[2] This brochure was given to the guests of the Boca Grande Hotel.[2] It mentions that Gaspar's massive treasure, hidden somewhere on the island, had never been found. The version of the Gasparilla story told in the pamphlet influenced all later accounts, but is likely apocryphal. The name "Gasparilla" appears on maps dating to well before the time of the buccaneer; anthropologist Andre-Marcel d'Ans suggests it was actually named for a Spanish missionary named Gaspar or Gasparillo.[2]

In 1905 harbor dredging began and a Charlotte Harbor and Northern Railroad line was constructed, connecting Boca Grande to the outside world.[1] Afterward Gasparilla was an important stop for phosphate shipping, and would remain so until the dredging of the Port of Tampa in the 1970s. In 1911 the first hotel, the Gasparilla Inn, opened, and the island became a major vacation destination for the elite from Tampa and Fort Myers.[1] Though shipping has declined substantially since the last quarter of the 20th century, tourism remains important to the island's economy.

The Wall Street Journal selected Gasparilla Island as one of the 10 Best Places for Second Homes.[3]

gollark: You can't send information faster than light with quantum entanglement (or quite possibly at all), and systems which can use magic ultra-secure communications channels will not magically be immune to hacking.
gollark: Apparently lockpicks are pretty cheap and most locks are terrible and quite vulnerable to them. Which is worrying.
gollark: What's a "GE supervirus"?
gollark: That probably crosses into politics somewhat?
gollark: Oh, the thing with... rescuing Freya, or whatever, if I remember right?

References

  1. Stephens, p. 9.
  2. D'Ans, Andre-Marcel (1980). "The Legend of Gasparilla: Myth and History on Florida's West Coast" Archived 2007-05-07 at the Wayback Machine. Tampa Bay History.
  3. Sears, Steven M. (March 8, 2010). "10 Best Places for Second Homes". The Wall Street Journal.
  • Stevens, Mary Kaye (2009). Lee County Islands. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-6632-2. Retrieved February 9, 2011.
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