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Island Hotel & Restaurant Island Hotel & Restaurant Michelle Pearson image The Island Hotel sits across the street from the old L & W Saloon. The Island Hotel was built on 2nd Street out of cypress and "tabby", a mix of lime rock and crushed oyster shells. According to http://www.civilwaralbum.com/misc6/cedarkey1.htm : The structure that is now the Island Hotel was built sometime between 1859 and 1860. Records indicate that Major John Parsons bought the property in 1859. It is likely that construction was finished the following year. The Florida pioneers who settled Cedar Key made the building to last. They mixed oyster shell, limestone and sand to pour tabby walls 10 inches thick. Massive 12-inch oak beams were framed in the basement to support the wooden structure. (Their workmanship has withstood the ravages of time for more than 140 years. The building has survived innumerable hurricanes, floods, storms and other disasters. The floors are uneven. The building contracts and expands with the seasons and has all the "aches and pains" of an elderly lady. Development of Cedar Key had begun in 1859 in anticipation of the prosperity that completion of the Florida Railroad was expected to bring to the port on the Gulf. Major Parsons and his partner and co-owner Francis E. Hale (died 1910) were among businessmen hoping to take advantage of the economic opportunity when they opened Parsons and Hale's General Store. The outbreak of the Civil War forced an abrupt halt to Cedar Key development. Union troops considered it a strategic port. They invaded the town and burned down almost every building that wasn't needed to quarter troops or store supplies. The fact that Parsons and Hale's General Store survived the war lends credence to the strong probability that it served as a barracks and warehouse for the Yankees. It may have been used by Confederate troops as well during the times they managed to retake Cedar Key, since building owner Major Parsons was commander of a detachment of Confederate volunteers defending the Gulf Coast against Federal gunboats and troops. On November 23, 1984, it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. http://www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com/FL/Levy/state.html Some history of the Island Hotel: http://www.islandhotel-cedarkey.com/history.html 224 2nd Street Cedar Key, Levy, Florida 9/2/09 1:13:04 PM IMG_0027618 4x6 Island Hotel & Restaurant Island Hotel & Restaurant Michelle Pearson image Established 1859, the Island Hotel sits across the street from the old L & W Saloon. The Island Hotel was built on 2nd Street out of cypress and "tabby", a mix of lime rock and crushed oyster shells. According to http://www.civilwaralbum.com/misc6/cedarkey1.htm : The structure that is now the Island Hotel was built sometime between 1859 and 1860. Records indicate that Major John Parsons bought the property in 1859. It is likely that construction was finished the following year. The Florida pioneers who settled Cedar Key made the building to last. They mixed oyster shell, limestone and sand to pour tabby walls 10 inches thick. Massive 12-inch oak beams were framed in the basement to support the wooden structure. (Their workmanship has withstood the ravages of time for more than 140 years. The building has survived innumerable hurricanes, floods, storms and other disasters. The floors are uneven. The building contracts and expands with the seasons and has all the "aches and pains" of an elderly lady. Development of Cedar Key had begun in 1859 in anticipation of the prosperity that completion of the Florida Railroad was expected to bring to the port on the Gulf. Major Parsons and his partner and co-owner Francis E. Hale (died 1910) were among businessmen hoping to take advantage of the economic opportunity when they opened Parsons and Hale's General Store. The outbreak of the Civil War forced an abrupt halt to Cedar Key development. Union troops considered it a strategic port. They invaded the town and burned down almost every building that wasn't needed to quarter troops or store supplies. The fact that Parsons and Hale's General Store survived the war lends credence to the strong probability that it served as a barracks and warehouse for the Yankees. It may have been used by Confederate troops as well during the times they managed to retake Cedar Key, since building owner Major Parsons was commander of a detachment of Confederate volunteers defending the Gulf Coast against Federal gunboats and troops. On November 23, 1984, it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com/FL/Levy/state.html A little history of the Island Hotel can be found: http://www.islandhotel-cedarkey.com/history.html 224 2nd Street Cedar Key, Levy, Florida 9/2/09 1:13:04 PM IMG_0027618 Antique 4x6 Tabletop Collage Tabletop Collage image RE-EDIT replaces original October 28,2007 upload. Size 20 X 20 ,trimmed with brass french nailhead & sealed with High Gloss Polyurethane. The Jekyll Island Club The Jekyll Island Club Graceann Macleod image Arctic Club Arctic Club Robert Frank image


Fountain Fountain Marie Gibbs image Fountain in Atlantis The moon The moon Marie Gibbs image Sculpture of the moon in Atlantis Sea Horse Sculpture Sea Horse Sculpture Marie Gibbs image Not your normal Sea Horse. Sculpture in Atlantis. Dolphin Fountain Dolphin Fountain Marie Gibbs image Dolphin Fountain in Atlantis The Sun The Sun Marie Gibbs image The Sun Sculpture in Atlantis


Flying Fish Flying Fish Marie Gibbs image Flying Fish fountain at Atlantis Glass Sculpture Glass Sculpture Marie Gibbs image Glass sculpture in Atlantis
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