| Galleries
with works of local artists, restaurants
featuring the freshest local seafood, coral
streets lined with 80-year-old Banyan trees
are irresistible. As well, the 104-year-old
lighthouse will bring you back over and
over again
Boca
Grande - an island paradise
Just by chance, if you havent been
sold on Boca Grande as the perfect destination
for your vacation, perhaps the thrill of
plentiful year-round fishing will. Known
as the "Tarpon Capital of the World",
sports fishermen travel each spring to Bocas
rich waters to participate in tournaments
with grand prizes up to $100,000. If youre
looking for spectacular sunsets, natural
beauty and somewhere to fall in love with,
then you have found the perfect place, Boca
Grande
Boca Grande - Florida's
best kept secret
The History of Boca Grande, provided by
the Boca
Grande Chamber of Commerce, is as unique
as the island it's self. Gasparilla Island's
first inhabitants were the Calusa Indians.
They were living on nearby Useppa Island
by 5,000 B.C. and on Gasparilla Island by
800 or 900 A.D. Charlotte Harbor was the
center of the Calusa Empire, which numbered
thousands of people and hundreds of fishing
villages. The Calusa were a hunting and
fishing people who perfected the art of
maritime living in harmony with the environment.
They were a politically powerful people,
dominating Southwest Florida during their
"golden age." Since the Calusa
had no written language, the only record
we have of their lifestyle and ceremonies
comes from the oral history of the (much
later) Seminoles, from written accounts
of Spanish explorers, and from the archaeological
record. The first contact the Calusas had
with the white man came during Spanish explorations
at the beginning of the 16th century. By
the mid 1700s the Calusas had all but disappeared,
the victims of European diseases, slavery
and warfare.
Early
Settlers Were Fishermen Just like the Indians,
the earliest settlers came to Gasparilla
Island to fish. By the late 1870s several
fish ranches were operating in the Charlotte
Harbor area. One of them would later be
at the north end of Gasparilla Island in
the small village called Gasparilla. The
fishermen, many of them Spanish or Cuban,
caught huge catches of mullet and other
fish and salted them down for shipment to
Havana and other markets. In the 1940s the
Gasparilla Fishery was moved to Placida
across the bay, where it still stands today,
and the fishing village died out. Today,
many of Boca Grande's early fishing families
are still represented in third, fourth and
even fifth generation descendants who pursue
many different vocations, including fishing.
Phosphate
and Tarpon put Boca Grande on the Map In
1885 phosphate rock was discovered on the
banks of the Peace River just above Punta
Gorda, east of Gasparilla Island across
Charlotte Harbor. It was this discovery
that would turn the south end of Gasparilla
Island into a major deep water port (Boca
Grande Pass is one of the deepest natural
inlets in Florida) and become responsible
for the development of the town of Boca
Grande. Wealthy American and British sportsmen
began discovering the Charlotte Harbor area
for its fantastic fishing (notably for the
world class game fish tarpon) and hunting.
It was these two discoveries - phosphate
rock and fishing - that would put Boca Grande
"on the map."
Phosphate was a valuable mineral for fertilizers
and many other products, and was in great
demand worldwide. At first the phosphate
was barged down the Peace River to Port
Boca Grande, where it was loaded onto schooners
for worldwide shipment. But by 1905 it was
felt that building a railroad to Port Boca
Grande and carrying the phosphate to it
by rail should improve the method of shipment.
1905
officials of the Agrico subsidiary Peace
River Mining Company, along with engineers
from the U.S. Engineering Corps and 60 laborers,
landed on Gasparilla Island and surveying
and construction of the railroad began.
Probably the only buildings on the island
at this time were the lighthouse and the
assistant keeper's house at the extreme
southern tip of the island. The railroad
terminus with its 1,000-foot long pier would
be built nearby. The Charlotte Harbor and
Northern Railroad was completed in 1907.
For the next 50 years phosphate would be
shipped out of the state-of-the-art port
virtually without disruption. Phosphate
laden trains were off loaded directly onto
ocean going freighters, and the ships took
the valuable commodity to ports all over
the world. In 1969 Port Boca Grande ranked
as the fourth busiest port in Florida.
In the 1970s phosphate companies increasingly
switched their interest to ports in Tampa
and Manatee County. As more money was put
into developing these ports, traffic into
Port Boca Grande began to dwindle, and in
1979 the line was abandoned and the phosphate
industry in Boca Grande came to an end.
Today the port is used as an oil terminal
of the Florida Power and Light Company.
Soon this too will end, and the southern
tip of the island will be restored to its
natural state.
The
Railroad was Boca Grande's Link to the World
The Charlotte Harbor and Northern Railroad
not only brought phosphate and supplies
to Gasparilla Island; it also brought wealthy
people from the north. By 1910 Boca Grande
Pass was already famous for its unequaled
tarpon fishing among fishermen, who stayed
on nearby Useppa Island. The Agrico Company,
having begun to see the potential of the
idea of developing Gasparilla Island beyond
the port, began to develop the village of
Boca Grande.
The railroad station in what would become
downtown was built; roads, sidewalks, streetlights,
shops, a post office, and water and telephone
service were not far behind. The town was
landscaped, including the now famous section
of Second Street called Banyan Street. The
railroad company built several cottages
downtown and a few wealthy families from
"up north" purchased land and
built winter residences. The train stopped
at Gasparilla, the fishing village at the
north end of the island, at the railroad
depot in downtown Boca Grande, and at the
south end phosphate terminal.
In
1929 the Boca Grande Hotel was built just
south of downtown Boca Grande. It was a
three-story, brick resort hotel where most
of the island weathered the hurricane of
1944. The Boca Grande Hotel changed hands
and was demolished in 1975. It took six
months to raze the building by means of
fire and the wrecking ball, as it had been
built to withstand fire and great storms.
The
railroad continued to bring the grand visitors
from all along the eastern seaboard until
the Boca Grande Causeway opened in 1958.
The depot was restored in the 1970s and
a number of shops, offices and a restaurant
now occupy the old building. The railroad
continued to run work trains to the south
end until the phosphate port closed in 1979.
The Gasparilla Island Conservation and Improvement
Association transformed the old bed of the
railroad into a new use, Boca Grande's popular
Bike Path. Boca Grande has become a unique
community, with a large number of wealthy
winter residents rubbing elbows with the
fishermen and railroad and port workers
who formed the permanent, year-round working
class of the island.
Boca Grande - Tarpon
capital of the world
Expert Fishing guides may be found through
the Boca
Grande Fishing Guide Association web
site. Following is an article from that
Association. The Boca Grande Fishing Guides
Association, Inc. was founded in 1988. The
original charter and continuous members
total 19 and are noted by the designation
"CC" on the posted membership
lists.
Today, they have 56 voting members who are
professional guides specializing in various
types of fishing, with tarpon being the
common bond for almost every member during
the world famous Boca Grande tarpon season
that exists from late April through July
and sometimes into early August.
As most know, Boca Grande is known
internationally for being the tarpon capital
of the world. Visitors come from all walks
of life and many places, both in the United
States and from foreign countries. Also,
our area has some of the finest shallow
water inshore fishing and deep-sea offshore
fishing to be found.
Boca Grande is proud of our great natural
resource. One of the foremost goals of the
People of Boca Grande is to preserve this
fishery and see that it is protected and
productive for future generations…
future generations of guides, clients and
enthusiasts.
The association is very vocal pertaining
to the issues regarding our industry and
its protection. Not only do our individual
members take the time to participate in
programs such as the Marine Fisheries Commission
Advisory Board, the Florida Marine Research
Institute, several tagging programs and
various other endeavors, We are also actively
involved in supporting such activities.
We respond to state and federal governmental
agencies as necessary to effectively voice
our opinion.
The Boca Grande Fishing Guides Association,
Inc. welcomes enthusiasts to our area. They
wish you a great time filled with fond memories.
They ask that you leave our paradise as
you found it. A strict attention to following
marine protection regulations and bag limits
is expected. In addition, They ask that
common sense conduct be the rule regarding
boat operation, proper disposal of your
trash, local ordinances, etc.
For your enjoyment, Boca Grande has expert
professional guides that can add great fishing
memories to your Boca Grande visit. The
guides are experts in their field and hold
all necessary regulatory licenses. They
are proud of Their ability to give you and
your family the best in fishing. Take the
time to call one of Their knowledgeable
members and make the most of your Boca Grande
vacation.
Visit Boca Grande and escape to an
oasis of tranquility, serene natural surroundings,
wide, uncrowded beaches, magnificent sunsets!
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