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Published by the Department of Public Affairs, City of St. Augustine. Florida                          April 12 2011

Carriage ordinance passes on 3-2 vote

   In a 3-2 vote the City Commission Monday enacted a horse carriage ordinance, with promises to immediately address changes to that ordinance.

The action came following two hours of public hearing and discussion in a 5 1/2 hour meeting that included discussion of an "Andrew Young Crossing" memorial, plans to apply for an estimated $2.5 million in bayfront traffic flow improvements, and agenda items for a joint city/county meeting in May.

Festival in 2010

Rhythm & Ribs

   Pig kissing, rib sampling and music stomping are on tap at the 2011 Rhythm & Ribs Festival at Francis Field.

   Sponsored by Sunrise Rotary Club to benefit numerous community services, the festival opens Friday 5 - 10 pm and continues Saturday 11 am - 10 pm and Sunday 11 am - 6 pm.

   Admission is $2; Saturday beginning at 3 pm admission is $5, with JJ Grey & Mofro on the main stage at 8:30.

   A good option is to click here and volunteer to help this great annual event.

Photo: Concert audience at 2010 Rhythm & Ribs Festival

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More changes expected

in approved ordinance

   Mayor Joe Boles, Vice Mayor Leanna Freeman, and Commissioner Errol Jones supported passage of the carriage ordinance, while Commissioners Bill Leary and Nancy Sikes-Kline opposed.

A single modification passed with the ordinance - an extension of its effective date to June 1, but three other proposed changes would be substantive and require the ordinance going through the second reading process again, City Attorney Ron Brown said.

Those changes, outlined by Leary, include deleting a 4:30 to 6 p.m. carriage curfew, a franchise extension from five to 15 years, and allowing assignability of permits.

The mayor urged passage of the ordinance and then introduction of new ordinances to address those concerns, "so we're not going through the entire ordinance all over again, but rather those specific concerns."

Sikes-Kline countered, "I'm ready to discuss them right now, and the public is here," referring to the roomful of citizens, many of whom spoke during the public hearing.

Leary said of traffic prompting the 4:30 to 6 p.m. curfew, "It's not bad then; it's bad when the bridge goes up."  

He added that franchises are "like a long-term lease, something you can count on, and these businesses require substantial investment that should be protected for a longer term."

Young memorial can kick off national

civil rights museum fundraising effort

   Dedication of a planned "Andrew Young Crossing" memorial along 20 feet of walkway into the Plaza de la Constitucion "can be a national event, a major promotion of St. Augustine for the 2014 (Civil Rights) commemoration and kick-off to fundraising for a Civil Rights museum here," City Manager John Regan said Monday as city commissioners approved a design for the project.

Planning included a visit to Atlanta by Regan, City Commissioner Errol Jones, and memorial designer Jeremy Marquis, where the 1960s civil rights leader and former ambassador walked across a sheet of paper in inked shoes to create impressions for footsteps in the memorial.

Commissioners two weeks ago approved up to $10,000 for the memorial, which Jones noted "is not memorializing Young, but rather the event." Previously approved was designation of the King and St. George streets intersection as "Andrew Young Crossing," where Young was beaten while marching with civil rights demonstrators in June 1964.

$2.5 million sought for bayfront

The city will apply for an estimated $2.5 million in federal funds for "planning and implementation" of scaled back traffic and pedestrian improvements along the bayfront. But if awarded it will likely be a year before that money is received, City Manager John Regan told commissioners.

Jeremy Marquis of Halback Design Group outlined a three-phase project for funding through the Paul S. Sarbanes Transit in Parks Grant Program, designed to improve traffic and pedestrian flow around national parks and monuments.

   The $2.5 million would apply to Orange Street improvements, a widened bayfront walkway, sidewalks, and bulb-outs - sidewalk extensions between parking spaces. Another $150,000 application will be for planning around a redesigned Castillo parking area in 2015 and roadway improvements in 2016.

   The applications are due May 9.

Joint workshop agenda developing

   City commissioners Monday identified three agenda items for a joint city/county workshop officials hope to schedule sometime in May.

   They include utilities extension in West Augustine, disposition of the Galimore pool, and the area emergency communications system.

   A renewed focus on West Augustine utilities developed after the city and county failed to reach agreement on the potential sale of the city's service area to the county.

   County staff offered to pay the city $400,000 to take over the Galimore pool, subject to County Commission approval, but city commissioners want to negotiate directly with county commissioners.

   And financing of broadband technology for the area's emergency communications system is the third concern.

 

Wendler lawsuit deadline passes

   City Attorney Ron Brown told commissioners the deadline has passed for Scott and Donna Wendler to file suit against the city for denying demolition of seven homes to build a boutique hotel on King Street.

   Wendler earlier gave notice of intent to file suit under the Bert Harris Property Rights Act, but missed the deadline of April 5 established by the act.

     

 Ideas sought for Alcazar Room redesign

   City Manager John Regan will gather ideas in coming weeks from commissioners on potential redesign of the Alcazar Room, City Commission chambers.

   Lightner Museum's request for return of the mahogany table on loan to the city since 1972 prompted Regan to suggest the opportunity to update the former Alcazar Hotel Ladies Parlor to 21st century uses.

 

Retired architect appointed to HARB

   City Commissioners Monday appointed retired architect Robert Boerema to fill a vacancy on the Historic Architectural Review Board (HARB) left with the resignation of architect Ken Smith. Boerema was selected from a list of six applicants.

   HARB oversees new and modification construction in the city's historic preservation districts as well as demolition applications for properties 50 years or older anywhere in the city.

History's Highlight    
Daniel McGirth and his prized Gray Goose

        4 years, 4 months, 28 days to St. Augustine's 450th anniversary   

     

From Georgia History Stories by Joseph Harris Chappell, c.1890 

  

   Daniel McGirth was another notorious Tory of Georgia. Born in South Carolina, he was an ignorant, uneducated man, but a good woodsman and as active and lithe as a panther. He was a fine horseman and a splendid shot.

   He was among the first to take up arms in the American cause, joining a little band of Georgia Patriots that so bravely resisted the invasion of the British from Florida.

   He brought with him from South Carolina a thoroughbred horse of which he was very proud - an iron gray mare with a snow white blaze in her forehead. He called her Gray Goose.

   A captain in the American army took a great fancy to the animal and tried to buy her from McGirth, offering him a large price. But McGirth refused to part with her. McGirth escapes captors

   This angered the captain who, out of spite, mistreated McGirth in petty ways. McGirth was so irritated that one day he insulted the officer and raised his arm to strike him, but some one intervened and stopped the blow.

   To strike a superior officer is a grave crime in the army, so McGirth was tried by court martial and sentenced to receive ten lashes with a cowhide on his bare back three days in succession. The first whipping was administered and he was put in the guard house to await his second humiliation.

   About twilight, through his prison bars he spied Gray Goose, hitched to a tree not far away. He gave a low peculiar whistle and Gray Goose, recognizing the signal, raised her beautiful head and uttered an affectionate whinny in response. This was more than he could stand.

   With a broken trowel he found in his cell, and with his bare hands, he tore the masonry from around the prison bars, pulled one out and squeezed through the narrow crack. As he sprang on Gray Goose, the guards called to him to halt, but he only shook his fist at them, yelled a dreadful curse, and dashed away in the darkness, heedless of the musket balls that whistled about his head.

   His whole nature seemed perverted by the bad treatment which he had received. He deserted to the enemy and to the end of the war fought ferociously against the Americans.

   He was made a colonel in the British army and was put at the head of a powerful Tory band which for months was the scourge of the state. From the Florida line to Elbert County and over into South Carolina his name was a terror to the people. He was twice wounded but was never taken prisoner.

   After the war he went to Florida, now owned by the Spaniards. For some offense or crime there he was arrested and thrown into prison in the old fort of St Augustine.

After five years imprisonment he was released so weak and broken in health that he could barely drag himself back to his wife in their rude country home in Sumter District, South Carolina There he soon died in peace and now lies buried.

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