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Tag: Carolyne Norwood

Mayor hopes to celebrate Bridge Street’s 100th anniversary

Mayor hopes to celebrate Bridge Street’s 100th anniversary

BRADENTON BEACH – Mayor John Chappie wants to recognize the 100th anniversary of Bridge Street with a celebration.

The street was once at the foot of the bridge leading to Anna Maria Island from Cortez before a new bridge was built. The Bradenton Beach pier now stands in the footprint of the original bridge.

Chappie, a member of the city’s Community Redevelopment Agency (CRA), asked the board last month for $10,000 to purchase holiday banners to place on light poles down Bridge Street. He hopes some of the money will be used to purchase banners commemorating the 100-year anniversary of the historic commercial area. CRA members approved the funds and expressed preliminary support for the proposed celebration.

During the CRA meeting on July 6, he provided additional details on his anniversary celebration plans.

Mayor hopes to celebrate Bridge Street’s 100th anniversary
Mayor John Chappie is leading the efforts to recognize and celebrate Bridge Street’s 100th Anniversary. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

“We just are finishing up with our hundredth year of Bridge Street existing,” Chappie said, adding that Bridge Street is believed to be the longest existing commercial area on Anna Maria Island. “100 years is pretty cool.”

Chappie told the board he recently spent a couple of hours doing research at the Anna Maria Island Historical Society Museum and he couldn’t find any specific details as to exactly when the street was renamed Bridge Street, so he’s using the construction of the original Cortez Bridge, which began in 1921, as a start for the 100-year timeline.

“As the bridge was being built, a hurricane came late in 1921 and they had to rebuild what was destroyed in 1922, so we’re still within that 100-year timeframe,” he said.

Mayor hopes to celebrate Bridge Street’s 100th anniversary
In 1956, the original Cortez Bridge on the right was replaced with the new drawbridge being built on the left. – Manatee Public Library Digital Collection | Submitted

Construction of the Cortez Bridge was completed in 1922, according to the book “Anna Maria Island: The Early Days, 1893-1940,” written by late Island historian Carolyne Norwood.

“The bridge from Cortez to Cortez Beach (now known as Bradenton Beach) was completed in 1922. Cortez Beach soon became the commercial center of the Island – just in time for the Florida boom and prohibition! By 1927, Cortez Beach had a population of 75. There was a village store, a gas station, the Bayside Inn (now The Bridgetender Inn), the Bath House and the popular Pagoda Dance Hall. Among the many characters were carpenters, bookkeepers, bootleggers and ladies of the night,” Norwood wrote.

Mayor hopes to celebrate Bridge Street’s 100th anniversary

This photo of the Bath House was taken in 1922 in the city then known as Cortez Beach. – Manatee Public Library Digital Collection | Submitted“The Bath House was on the Gulf beach at the end of Bridge Street. South of the Bath House stood the huge Pagoda Dance Hall. People were charged to dance and be served setups for the rum, homebrew and moonshine they bought from the locals. Weekends and holidays, as many as four hundred Model T’s a day would cross the bridge from four surrounding counties, since Cortez Beach had the only bathhouse and dance hall on the midwest coast of Florida. This was the heyday of Cortez Beach. Al Capone stayed at the Albion Inn (in Cortez) in 1928 amid rumors of his arranging for illegal rum to go to the Midwest from Cuba,” Norwood wrote.

Mayor hopes to celebrate Bridge Street’s 100th anniversary
This photo is included in Carolyne Norwood’s book, “The Early Years, 1893-1940.” – Submitted

In 1956, the original bridge was replaced with the current drawbridge, now slated to be replaced with a higher fixed-span bridge.

Chappie told the CRA members he’s already discussed with some Bridge Street business owners the prospect of hosting an anniversary celebration event in September.

“I’m putting out feelers and I’ll be reporting back,” he said.

Carolyne Norwood was Anna Maria’s preeminent historian

Carolyne Norwood was Anna Maria’s preeminent historian

ANNA MARIA – Carolyne Norwood played a vital role in preserving the history of Anna Maria Island. She also made a lot of friends during her decades on the Island.

Carolyne Norwood was Anna Maria’s preeminent historian
George and Carolyne Norwood loved Anna Maria Island. – The Norwood Family

Norwood, who passed away on Jan. 4, authored two books about the Island: “Anna Maria Island, The Early Days, 1893-1940” and “Anna Maria Island, 1940-1970, Tales of Three Cities, From Bean Point to Bridge Street.”

She and Pat Copeland co-founded the Anna Maria Island Historical Society and the Historical Museum.

Beginning in 1970, Norwood spent many years sharing stories and photographs about the Island while working as a reporter for publisher Don Moore at the original Islander newspaper.

In a “Remember When” column she wrote in 2000, Norwood said her time as a reporter made her realize how many “priceless artifacts from the early days on this island were disappearing,” and that inspired the formation of the Historical Society in 1990.

An Island icon

Historical Society member and museum volunteer Evelyn Hoskins met Norwood after moving to Anna Maria in 2007.

“Carolyn was so knowledgeable about the Island and she was such a wonderful, gracious, pleasant and friendly lady. She will be greatly missed. She was such an asset to this whole Island. She did such a wonderful thing taking the time to write those books and explain the history of the Island. She and Pat started the Historical Society. Without their hard work, we would not have the museum we have now,” Hoskins said.

Carolyne Norwood was Anna Maria’s preeminent historian
Carolyne Norwood co-founded the AMI Historical Society and the Historical Museum. – The Norwood Family | Submitted

Island restaurauteur and businessman Ed Chiles provided the Historical Society with the financial support it needed to get started.

“Carolyne was an unflinching advocate for retaining the character of our Island. The Anna Maria Historical Society would not be what it is today without her passion,” Chiles said.

Seasonal Anna Maria resident Judy Hildman was close friends with Norwood and often visited her at her home in Bradenton.

“Her recording of the history of the Island is what made me fall in love with the Island. When I was reading her first book, I went exploring the places she wrote about, including the estate of ‘Miss Eddy the millionairess,’ which is now Banyan Tree Estates,” Hildman said.

“I had already read her book when I first met her at the museum. I said, ‘Carolyne, you’re my idol on the Island.’ I frequently told her that throughout the years and I was grateful that I was able to tell her that the day before she died. What a gift she left to the Island with the museum and the preservation of our history,” Hildman said.

Norwood and her husband George raised their four children on Anna Maria Island.

“As a mom, she was fun-loving and very adventuresome,” said her daughter, Linda Kinnan.

Carolyne Norwood was Anna Maria’s preeminent historian
Carolyne Norwood, second from left, celebrated her 90th birthday in 2017 with her sons John, Nick and Bill and her daughter Linda. – The Norwood Family | Submitted

“She really came to life once the family moved to Anna Maria back in 1956, when I was seven. My brothers and I all grew up on the Island. She loved the beach and our parents loved the Island lifestyle. They loved to fish, waterski and go boating, and they had a great group of friends. She was very creative, artistic and multi-talented and she always had projects going on,” Kinnan said.

Daryl Van Ostenbridge and her husband, John were close friends with the Norwoods.

“We had so many adventures. She arrived here from the Baltimore area not knowing anybody. We each had four children and Carolyne and I were both stay at home mothers, so we often were on the beach,” Van Ostenbridge said.

“She amazed me. She was a great journalist. She was co-founder of the Historical Society and she wrote two books. She could paint and she took classes all the time. She did calligraphy, art and stained glass. She was very talented. She’s at peace,” Van Ostenbridge said.

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Carolyne Norwood – dedicated to Island history