City checking costs to move Plaza memorial

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Published by former Mayor George Gardner                January 15 2014
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Monumental move

     City checking costs for war dead memorial

War dead monument washed
American Legion's David Israel and Freddy Rychlock pressure wash  memorial  
Photo: Phil Whitley

 

The Florida State Master Site File for the memorial identifies ownership in the City. That ownership is consistent with the City's acceptance of the donations of other monuments which become City property upon acceptance.

City Attorney Ron Brown

The disregard for one of our Veteran Memorials in the Plaza de la Constitución seems to be indicative of an attitude towards Veterans by local and state government.

Veterans Council Chair Bill Dudley

 

City commissioners Monday agreed to the need but didn't commit to pay for a move of the war dead memorial in a corner of the Plaza de le Constitucion, shrouded behind electric panels.

Commissioner Don Crichlow said he's been contacted by veterans who want to contribute to a move, and Mayor Joe Boles urged potential contributors to "call Don Crichlow."

Monday morning a proactive American Legion team went to work cleaning the coquina memorial.

City staff will look into costs of moving the memorial erected by the Pilot Club in 1946 and carrying the names of war dead from World War Two through Viet Nam.

(Ed. Note: the proper recognition is memorial. A monument is usually built as a tomb for the dead king or a monarch. A memorial is constructed to celebrate the uniqueness and the value of life, as  a memorial built for the soldiers who have given up their lives during a major war.From differencebetween.com)

Fire Chief Arnold

Fire Chief 

to retire

So much has changed during the three decades I have served St. Augustine as a firefighter, and yet one thing has not changed at all and that is the department's unwavering commitment to keeping our community safe. 

With those words St. Augustin Fire Chief Mike Arnold announced his retirement after 30 years with the department, the last seven as chief.

"During Mike's time at the helm of the department we have seen significant upgrades in equipment, from new fire trucks to the safety equipment used by firefighters themselves," said City Manager John Regan.

"We have seen a dramatic increase in training to keep our firefighters safe as they perform their duties in the most dangerous situations, and an increased emphasis on fire prevention through smoke detector giveaways and a stepped up fire inspection program throughout the city's commercial properties."

In December the city's insurance-based rating moved from 3 to 2, placing the department in the top 1.3% of the nation's 47,000 fire departments.

Photo: St. Augustine Record

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50 years later - celebration of civil rights

Here's the lineup for Martin Luther King Jr. Day and activities kicking off the 50th anniversary year of the signing of the Civil Rights Act of 1964:

Thursday 7 pm - Lecture by Flagler College Associate Professor of History Michael Butler, Beyond Integration: The Black Freedom Struggle in Pensacola, Florida, 1960-1980, in the Flagler Room of at Flagler College.

Sunday 5 pm - Dr. King Birthday Celebration at St. Paul AME Church, 85 M.L. King Ave.

5:30 pm - Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration during Vespers at St. Cyprian's Episcopal Church, 37 Lovett St., with speaker David Nolan and the Mt. Moriah Gospel Choir. 

7 pm - Let Freedom Ring First America series at Lewis Auditorium of Flagler College.  

Monday 7:30 am - MLK Jr. Breakfast, Solomon Calhoun Center, 1300 Duval St..  Speaker will be Dr. Gary L. Williams, First Baptist Church of Mandarin.  

9 am - Journey: 450 Years of the African-American Experience exhibit opens at the Visitor Center.

11:45 am - Silent March leaves St. Paul's AME Church, 85 MLK Jr. Ave. arriving at the Plaza at noon. Speaker: Rev. Greg James.

2 - 5 pm - Accord Open House at 79 Bridge St., proposed Civil Rights Museum, former dental office of Dr. Robert Hayling.

 

Costumed hosts at a cost

City staff promised commissioners Monday to fashion a new program to train, outfit and deploy period-dressed on-street hosts in the historic district, while commissioners looked to pass additional costs for the program to the Tourist Development Council.

The provision for period-dressed hosts "in accordance with all applicable local regulations" is in a city/county contract for $160,000 in bed tax funding to support the St. Augustine St. Johns County Visitor Information Center (VIC). That contract was approved.

Vice Mayor Nancy Sikes-Kline noted such hosts should be paid employees. "Employees you can hold accountable." She said.

 

$75,000 OKd for PBS 450th documentary

City commissioners Monday approved $75,000 toward a $200,000 program to provide education plans to secondary schools as part of a Public Broadcasting System (PBS) film documentary project "that will tell the complete 450 year history of St. Augustine."

The University of Florida and PBS are producing a four hour documentary starring familiar faces here and throughout Florida - Historian Michael Gannon, Archaeologist Kathleen Deagan and City Archaeologist Carl Halbirt. Find a video preview here.

 

Casting Comcast for live streaming

 Following a second incident of Comcast technical problems preventing telecast of local meetings, the city is looking into live streaming city meetings.

Comcast's channel 3 serves the county's Government Television programming under a franchise agreement ending in 2016. Other providers are unable to. 

   "Not everyone has Comcast," Said Vice Mayor Nancy Sikes-Kline, "but more have internet access, and live streaming could also allow us to archive meetings for future reference.

 

Boosting city's paving effort   

Vice Mayor Nancy Sikes-Kline wants to see the city's street paving budget increased by $600,000, and City Manager John Regan promised commissioners Monday to put a plan together for consideration.

"We have $100,000 budgeted for street paving," said Sikes-Kline, whose focus has been on roads through membership and now chairmanship of the Northeast Florida Traffic Planning Organization. "But new projects have a way of pushing earlier priorities down the list."

 
History's highlight

Fort Mose - 1st Free Black Settlement

1 year, 7 months, 25 days  to St. Augustine's 450th anniversary 

 

   More than a century before the Emancipation Proclamation, slaves from the British colonies followed the original underground railroad south - not north - to the Spanish colony of Florida.

   Word came aboard ships plying the east coast from Florida through the Carolinas: the governor of Spanish Florida promised freedom to all who would swear allegiance to the Spanish Crown and Catholic faith.

  The flight to freedom began - through the thickets of the Carolinas, and swamps of Georgia, pursued by overseers and hired bounty men - an underground railroad to their promised land, the Spanish garrison of St. Augustine. Fort Mose

   A leader awaited them: Francisco Menendez, brought to the Americas in chains from his native Mandingo, Africa, in the early 1700s, escaped to St. Augustine in 1724, now a captain in the St. Augustine militia, soon to be commander of the first free black settlement in today's America, Fort Mose.

   Responding to this surge of escaped slaves, Spanish Florida's Governor Manuel Montiano established, in 1738, Gracia Real de Santa Teresa de Mose - Fort Mose (Mo-SAY). It would serve as a northern outpost for the garrison two miles to the south. For Montiano, it would be manned by a fighting force fierce to hold its freedom; for its inhabitants, it would be a new, unshackled life.

   Fort Mose became home for more than a hundred freed or fugitive slaves from the British colonies, forming more than 20 households. Together they created a frontier community which drew on a range of African backgrounds blended with Spanish, Native American and English cultural traditions.

   Echoing its host city, it became both a defensive garrison and civilian settlement.

   This first free black settlement was a matter of both religious pressure and military expediency. The powerful Spanish Church had long dictated moral, religious, and social conditions. For slaves, it meant legal rights to full Christian communion, marriage, and parenthood, to personal security, ownership of private property, and the purchase of their own freedom.

   Militarily, Spanish Florida's cedula of freedom would weaken the economy of the British colonies, shifting its labor force from plantation slaves to Spanish soldados.   
   The night of June 26, 1740, this Spanish policy proved its worth, as a force of 300 regulars, militia and Yamasee Indians routed an occupying force during a British siege in the Battle of Bloody Mose.
 

   Image: Artist's rendering of Fort Mose

   Excerpts from Fort Mose in St. Augustine Bedtime Stories. Click for further information on this fascinating historic series. 

 

   The St. Augustine Report is published weekly, with additional Reports previewing City Commission meetings as well as Special Reports. The Report is written and distributed by George Gardner, St. Augustine Mayor (2002-2006) and Commissioner (2006-2008) and a former newspaper reporter and editor.  Contact the Report at gardner@aug.com