City Coat of Arms
Published by the Department of Public Affairs, City of St. Augustine. Florida                       February 23 2010
 Seaworthy symposium and gala for founder
 
St. Augustine Lighthouse St. Augustine & the Sea is next in our Historical Society's series of symposiums in preparation for our 450th commemoration.
     The two-day free symposium February 26-27 dovetails into our Noche de Gala celebrating the birthday of Founder Pedro Menendez Saturday evening.
     The symposium is presented in cooperation with the St. Augustine Lighthouse and Museum, Lighthouse Archaeological Maritime Program, and City of St.Noche de Gala parade Augustine Dept. of Heritage Tourism & Historic Preservation. 
     A host of historians will discuss Exploration, Discovery, and Rivers in the Atlantic, St. Augustine's British Period Port Records, Warships off the Coast during World War II, Prehistoric Shell Mounds, Social History of Oysters in Florida, and Coquina for Homes and Private Projects.
     Symposium venues include the Flagler Room at Flagler College Friday at 7 p.m. and the Alcazar Room at City Hall Saturday at 10 a.m. Information at 824-2872.
     Our Noche de Gala steps off at 5 p.m. at our city gate with a 16th century procession to Lightner Museum, led by Pedro Menendez. TV actor Chaz Mena has been studying hard to fulfill the role as Pedro himself would have it. Details on the gala are on our city website.
Skateboard area reopens 

    Back on track
     Skateboarders enjoyed mild weather and a reopened skateboard area Sunday at Hamilton Upchurch Park - against the backdrop of a sound-deadening 12-foot wall.
     The area, open weekends only as crews finished work on the wall, was returned to regular hours Friday: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Sunday. 
     Work yet to be done includes installation of shrubbery and vines on the wall to further deaden sound from neighboring Flamingo Drive residents.
     Youths under the age of 17 must sign a consent waiver, available under Forms and Applications on the city website or at the Financial Services Center.

Sign on for Report
 
Previous Issues
Commission debates 
outside meeting rules
     A delegation from our sister city Aviles, Spain, will be visiting this week for our annual celebration of Founder Pedro Menendez' birthday, and two or more city commissioners may attend a Saturday morning "City-to-City" meeting - but only one - likely Mayor Joe Boles - will be taking part in the discussion.
     City commissioners wrestled with the state's public meetings law Monday, deciding the intercity meeting will be publically noticed, but not an official city meeting.
     City Attorney Ron Brown said that, by law, the public should be notified "if two or more commissioners might be attending an outside meeting, while legal notice is required if commissioners are going to participate in a meeting."  
     The procedure is designed to avoid even informal discussion of topics that may later go before the commission for action.
     Aviles Vice Mayor José Fernando Díaz Rañón and Roman Antonio Alvarez, Councilman for Culture and Sports, will be here for the birthday festivities and Saturday meeting at 9:30 a.m. at Government House.
Bounty for moorings?
     Mooring ball debate continued Monday as city commissioners heard from boater Jay Bliss - who urged that debris from previous mooring ball removal be removed from the Salt Run floor, and from Commissioner Don Crichlow - who suggested a bounty be offered for mooring equipment removal.
     During the commission's regular meeting, commissioners also passed into law a 6 a.m. opening time for alcohol sales every day but Sunday, and authorized the city's share in sealing two unused wells under the Toques Place parking area at a cost of $5,000 each.
     A proposed ordinance to extend from five to ten days amendments to applications going before our Planning and Zoning Board was also advanced to later public hearing.
Mooring ball removal
    Our city recently published a schedule for removing existing mooring balls to make way for authorized mooring fields in Salt Run and Matanzas Bay. Reacting to Bliss' and Crichlow's comments, Mayor Joe Boles said, "We can explore our options after we see the public response" to the schedule, which urges boaters to remove their moorings. City Manager Bill Harris said of any remaining moorings, "The city will pull up entire mooring equipment except those anchored too heavily for our winch."
 
Capping those deep wells
     The two wells at Toques Place, long abandoned from the days of a bottling plant located there, "are some 300 feet deep," City Manager Bill Harris said. "By state law, we have to fill those wells with concrete to prevent seepage from the Florida Aquifer."
     Public Works Director Martha Graham said the capping fittings are corroded, "and if they break open could flood the parking lot and cause a sinkhole." Harriss suggested the sealing cost could be $10,000 to $12,000. The St. Johns River Water Management District will cover the cost beyond $5,000 each under agreement with the city. 
 
Celebrating Archaeology Month
     The Ides of March and dates around it will be filled with St. Augustine's unique heritage - archaeological evidence of more than four centuries of history from the grounds where it all happened.
Carl Halbirt     Planned so far, City Archaeologist Carl Halbirt will describe the most significant digs of 2009 Tuesday, March 2, at 7 p.m. in the Flagler Room at Flagler College, then take passengers on a Red Train tour Saturday, March 6, to describe our colonial downtown's development from its establishment by Spanish royal ordinance in 1572.
     Tickets for Saturday's tour are $20 for adults; $10 for children. It's a fundraiser for our St. Augustine Archaeological Association (SAAA). Association spokesman Nick McAuliffe says, "Ripley's folks are donating the train and Carl is donating his Saturday time to raise money for SAAA. Funds raised will help SAAA sponsor additional programs for the community and produce historic markers to increase public awareness of St. Augustine's history.
     Contact Nick  823-1720 for more details and reservations.
 
A busy weekend
     Just a few of this weekend's many events:
     St. Aug Fest - Francis Field Friday 5-10 p.m., Saturday noon-10 p.m., and Sunday noon to 5 p.m., the first annual event, sponsored by The St. Augustine Police Benevolent Organization (PBO) in partnership with Harley-Davidson of St. Augustine, First Coast Honda and Premier Cadillac. Live music, arts and crafts, local food vendors, kids zone, scavenger hunt, and special motorcycle run. Entry $2. Contact Police Commander Barry Fox staugfest2010@gmail.com 825-1073.
     Flight to Freedom - Fort Mose Historic State Park Saturday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Celebrating Black History Month with living history. Reenactors tell the story of Fort Mose and the St. Augustine Spanish Garrison - Colonial Spanish military drills, demonstrations of musket and cannon firing. Fee $4/vehicle or $2/individual. Call 823-2232.
     Women's History Month - Ancient City Poets, led by Glenda Bailey-Mershon, leads off a month-long Festival of Muses with readings and audience participation Sunday from 3 to 5 p.m. at City Coffee. The Festival of Muses will feature special readings and art presentations by local organizations relating to women and women's history.

 
History's Highlights
        Colonial St. Augustine and civic identity
    
     Here are some of author/historian Buff Gordon's "thoughts about colonial St. Augustine and civic identity" in her remarks to a 2005 session of our Historical Society:
 
     Architectural activities tell a story, not just about materials, sizes, and shapes, but about humanity and culture. Inthe absence of the colonial churches, the monastery, and the bishop's house, we forget in our more secular age that the builders of colonial St. Augustine lived in their religion. It was a time far removed from today
     Look at the cathedral with a different eye. In its walls are the very stones of earlier churches. Its proportional system, like that of the Plaza, was inherited from an ancient canon of measure that had spiritual meaning.
Flagler Ponce de Leon Hotel     Flagler's 19th century hotels embody similar Renaissance values of symmetry and geometric harmonies that structured the colonial town. They provide a continuum, a sense of connection and continuity with the 16th century town.
     The colonial St. Augustine style house is America's first original vernacular style of architecture. It responded to the ordinances, to the site, the climate, the coquina, horrific events, and its multi- cultured builders. It was not a rerun, not a revival.
     Elements of the popular "New Urbanism" ideal sweeping the country began here. Long before the Miami architect, Andres Duany, introduced "New Urbanism," there was St. Augustine.
     The Town Plan is the most distinctive colonial feature and oldest remnant of this Spanish town.
     There is magic in St. Augustine's architectural heritage if we can see it through the eyes and times of those who laid out this city. There will be magic in the eyes of tourists, visitors, residents and future magazine and newspaper writers if we can convey to them the awesome breadth and depth of the city's 16th century colonial architectural prologue.

       Elsbeth "Buff" Gordon's research can be found in Florida's Colonial Architectural Heritage (University Press of Florida 2002). Historian Michael Gannon writes, "This first-ever book on Florida's colonial architecture will be an eye-opener to readers who identify American colonial buildings solely with the powdered-wig states of Virginia and New England." Buff is writing a companion book on St. Augustine's sacred sites.
 
     The St. Augustine Report is published by the Department of Public Affairs of the City of St. Augustine each Tuesday and on Fridays previewing City Commission meetings. The Report is written and distributed by George Gardner, former St. Augustine Mayor (2002-2006) and Commissioner (2006-2008) and a longtime newspaper reporter and editor.  Contact The Report at gardner@aug.com