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Mary Green: The villager who could, and did

CORTEZ – Residents of the last commercial fishing village in Florida will miss the “matriarch of Cortez,” Dr. Mary Frances Fulford Green, but those who knew her – and many who did not – will benefit from her remarkable legacy well into the future.

A commanding personality, Green died on June 9 in Tallahassee surrounded by her family.

God, family and fishing were her touchstones. She could recite whole sections of the Bible, the genealogies, marriages and deaths of the village’s founding families, and who fished with whom on what boats until her death at age 96.

Mary Fulford Green – Cindy Lane | Sun

“Mary definitely was a force to reckon with,” said Karen Bell of A.P. Bell Fish Co. “She was never one to take ‘no’ for an answer. I like to think she symbolized the people of this village – strong, tough, spirited and, at times, somewhat impossible! When she didn’t like the way I was doing something, she had no problem letting me know about it. I believe she was so proud of her family’s history and she wanted to share that story with anyone who would listen. And I mean anyone. I will miss her.”

Born in Cortez in 1925, Green was the granddaughter of 1887 Cortez settlers William Thomas Fulford and Sallie Adams of Carteret County, North Carolina. She was born in the house next door to the one she lived in when she died, the Walton “Tink” and Edith Wilson Fulford house, which the family moved into when she turned 1 year old.

The valedictorian of her Bradenton High School (later Manatee High School) Class of 1942, Green was selected as Manatee High School’s Outstanding Alumna in 2020.

She earned B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. degrees at Florida State College for Women, now Florida State University, in Tallahassee in science, chemistry and education. She taught high school science classes, was a guidance counselor in Florida’s public schools and helped to create the career counseling program at State College of Florida in Bradenton.

The proud redhead raised two sons and two daughters with her husband, who retired from the U.S. Air Force.

She was a licensed mental health counselor and served as president of Manatee County’s Mental Health Association for seven years, volunteering with the Manatee County Drug Court and several Florida prisons to mentor those incarcerated.

Of her many accomplishments, perhaps most important to her was her personal Christian ministry, holding Bible studies at the Manatee County jail, her daughter Carol Kio-Green said, adding that she also formed a group called WINGS to help women leaving prison gain employment.

A champion of women, she was one of the founders of HOPE Family Services in 1979 to assist victims of domestic violence.

Historian par excellence

All her life, Green vociferously expressed her love for and the importance of local history.

A natural step for a woman with an encyclopedic memory, she was instrumental in establishing the Cortez Village Historical Society in 1984.

“Mary’s life was Cortez, and she gave back over many years,” said Kaye Bell, of CVHS. “Mary fiercely defended this little village. She persevered against developers, big industry and anything that would change the footprint of the village and its way of making a living. She was also instrumental in obtaining nearly 100 acres of waterfront land to become a forever preserve for the public. We will miss her energy and are grateful for her many accomplishments.”

Green was one of the founding members of the Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage (FISH), which, over more than three decades, has gradually purchased 95 acres on Sarasota Bay called the FISH Preserve to protect and enhance the habitat for fish, birds and other wildlife.

She led the charge to have the fishing village of Cortez listed as a federal historic district. Green wrote the application and lobbied successfully to have Cortez put on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995.  For that, she was honored by the Manatee Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution in 2020 with the DAR National Historic Preservation Recognition Award. Most of the 97 historic structures in the Cortez historic district were at one time homes of fishing families she grew up with. If not for Green’s efforts, many Cortez village buildings would likely have been lost.

Mary Fulford Green displaying a Cortez Village Historical Society T-shirt. – Cindy Lane | Sun

“She was so proud to have gotten Cortez on the National and State Registry of Historic places,” FISH board member Jane von Hahmann said. “She was such a wealth of knowledge. I don’t think there was anything about the village, the FISH Preserve or the families that settled here in the late 1800s that she didn’t know. If you had a question about the past, she was definitely the go-to person. But she worried about the future as well, as it was tied to the past. Our history was beyond important to her. The pride she exuded of being a native-born Cortezian was contagious! But she did worry about who was going to keep the story of this village alive as the older past generations left this earth.”

To that end, Green became a driving force behind the creation of the Florida Maritime Museum, formerly the Cortez Rural Graded School, dedicated to preserving the state’s seafaring culture. When Manatee County took over the museum, she led the Cortez Village Historical Society to obtain the historic Monroe cottage and have it moved from Bradenton Beach to Cortez and renovated as the Cortez Village Historical Society’s Cortez Cultural Center. There, she worked to create a Cortez Family Life Museum to preserve the fishing history and heritage of Cortez, with a special exhibit on veterans. She dressed in vintage clothing as her grandmother to tell stories of old Cortez to groups visiting the center. Her storytelling was captured on video in “Gone Fishing For Old Florida: Voices of Cortez,” which aired on the WEDU series, “Diamonds Along the Highway” in 2019.

“The veterans and fishermen of Cortez were two of her biggest loves, with her goal yet to be realized of providing for a Cortez Veterans Memorial Center,” von Hahmann said. “With her gone now we shall see whether that dream can come to fruition.”

In another building move, Green pioneered the preservation and relocation of the 1890s-era Burton/Bratton store from the west end of Cortez village to the east end at the Florida Maritime Museum. The store now serves as a music stage at the annual Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival, where she volunteered.

The history devotee authored “Cortez – Then and Now” with Linda Molto in 1997. The two also produced the “Walking Tour Map of the Cortez Fishing Village.” Green also was a cookbook author, locally famous for her strawberry shortcake.

A project she did not have time to realize was writing the book, “The Little Fishing Village That Could – and Did.” It was to detail the many challenges that development posed to the village’s historic district, which she actively opposed.

With her razor-sharp mind and matching speaking manner, Green protested planned marinas and condos and a plan to demolish the Cortez Trailer Park and other proposed encroachments into the village. She opposed the planned closure of the Cortez post office in 2021, voicing the concerns of senior residents like herself with limited mobility who would have to arrange travel to the Palma Sola branch 4 miles away. She also opposed efforts to replace the Cortez Bridge with a larger one. The marina and condo plan were scrapped. The Cortez Trailer Park remains intact. The post office remains open. And neighbors residents have taken up the charge against a new, larger Cortez Bridge.

The Manatee County Commission gave the Cortez native her own day; April 14, 2012 was named Dr. Mary Fulford Green Day. But Green’s impact on Cortez will last lifetimes.

“She was amazing,” von Hahmann said. “Some might say a pain once in a while because of her passion, but boy, what an incredible life she lived, and what a loss I for one feel at her passing. I will miss her but I know how faithful she was and that she is now in her new Heavenly home! She closed every conversation we ever had with “God Bless” and He did that for me just in my knowing her. I will miss her!”

Repeal the 1995 net ban

As you present the facts about the mesh sizes of the gill net that releases the juvenile fish compared to the cast net that catches them, thus reducing the fresh from Florida fish being harvested; as you plead for the right of fishermen to make a living fishing full time as so many want to do, also consider this:

Before the net ban, mullet was 45¢ a pound in the round and today it sells for $3 a pound. Before the ban, twice a week a truck full of fish on ice – not just mullet but pompano, grouper, sheepshead, trout, mackerel, redfish – went by road to fish markets in Plant City, Riverview, Brandon, Live Oak, Lakeland, Orlando and many others. They were bringing fresh from Florida fish for working people to eat.

This does not exist today. Many shop for fish at the supermarkets. Are these fish fresh from Florida? For the past 20 years, much of these fish came from an island off the coast of Bangladesh where fishermen were kept as slaves. This was written up by The Associated Press. One man had not seen his mother for 20 years. There is a cemetery with 70 bodies. The companies were identified that bought the fish harvested for over 20 years by slaves. The fish were sold in our supermarkets. Look at the source of shrimp sold at Walmart. It is China. As one writer asked: Are your shrimp from the Gulf of Mexico or the Gulf of Thailand? Not Fresh From Florida.

It is reported that 77% of what is sold in the restaurants as redfish is not redfish. How much of what is sold in our supermarkets is raised in ponds polluted with mercury or lead?

In Cortez, there are 12 places where one can buy fresh or cooked seafood. About 5,000 people come every day to eat at the restaurants. Most of them are tourists – people who can afford to pay the price. These are not the people who live in Florida and work in our hospitals, our 7/11s, our hotels, grocery stores and our auto repair shops. Most folks cannot afford to eat fresh from Florida seafood.

Repealing the net ban will give Floridians the opportunity to again eat fresh fish. The trucks will ride to fish markets. Fish with the Omega 3 is good brain food. I am convinced we could use some.

Dr. Mary Fulford Green

Cortez, Florida

Mary Fulford Green

Green named 2020 MHS Outstanding Alumna

CORTEZ – Dr. Mary Frances Fulford Green, valedictorian of the Bradenton High School Class of 1942, has been selected as Manatee High School’s 2020 Outstanding Alumna.

Bradenton High is one of the former names of Manatee High.

Among her accomplishments, Green has been instrumental in preserving the historic fishing village of Cortez, where she was born. She was a driving force in creating the Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage (FISH) that purchased 100 acres on Sarasota Bay to protect and enhance the habitat for fish, birds and other wildlife, and she wrote the application and lobbied successfully to have Cortez put on the National Register of Historic Places. She also is among the founders of the Cortez Village Historical Society.

Green helped to create the career counseling program at State College of Florida and was one of the founders of HOPE Family Services. She was a licensed mental health counselor and served as a full-time volunteer with the Manatee Mental Health Association, volunteering with the Manatee County Drug Court and several Florida prisons to mentor those incarcerated.

When class reunions became too difficult for aging classmates to attend, Green began calling all her 1942 classmates and still sends a newsletter to keep them informed about each other.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the annual Outstanding Alumni Banquet has been postponed, but organizers hope to honor Green later this year.

The Manatee High Alumni Association has recognized and honored outstanding MHS alumnus/alumna with achievement awards since 1994.

Here are all the MHS Outstanding Alumni from 1994-20.

DAR recognizes Cortez women with awards

DAR recognizes Cortez women with awards

CORTEZ – Three Cortez women, local historian Dr. Mary Fulford Green, artist Linda Molto and former Manatee County Commissioner Jane von Hahmann, were honored on Friday by the Manatee Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution, based in Anna Maria.

The March awards highlight both Manatee History Month and Women’s History Month in recognizing women’s contributions to the preservation of the historic fishing village of Cortez, according to Manatee Chapter DAR Regent Kathy Doddridge, who presented the awards at the Kirby Stewart American Legion Post in Bradenton.

The trio are “ordinary women who have achieved extraordinary things,” she said.

Dr. Mary Fulford Green

The DAR National Historic Preservation Recognition Award was awarded to Dr. Mary Fulford Green, who was unable to attend for health reasons.

DAR recognizes Cortez women with awards
Dr. Mary Fulford Green, dressed as her grandmother during a history talk she gave recently at the Cortez Cultural Center, was awarded the DAR Historic Preservation Recognition Award. – Cindy Lane | Sun

Doddridge detailed highlights of her life. Born in Cortez in 1925, Green is the granddaughter of 1887 Cortez settlers William Thomas Fulford and Sallie Adams of Carteret County, North Carolina, whose Cortez home Fulford lives in.

She was valedictorian of her 1942 Bradenton High School class (now Manatee High School) and earned a B.A. in science, M.A. in chemistry and Ph.D. in education from Florida State College for Women (now Florida State University) in Tallahassee.

She was a founder of Hope Family Services in 1979 and served as president of Manatee County’s Mental Health Association for seven years.

Green was instrumental in establishing the Cortez Village Historical Society (CVHS) in 1984 and in getting the village of Cortez on the south side of Cortez Road on the National Register of Historic Places in 1995.

With fellow award-winner Linda Molto, Green wrote “Cortez – Then and Now” in 1997; they also produced the Walking Tour Map of the Cortez Fishing Village.

Robin Schoch, who accepted the award for Green, said that Green has also worked on successfully opposing a 65-foot-tall bridge from Cortez to Anna Maria Island, a proposed marina development in the village, and the proposed purchase of the Cortez Trailer Park.

Linda Molto

Originally from Toronto, Canada, Cortez artist Linda Molto also received a National Historic Preservation Recognition Award.

She moved to Florida in 1965 and purchased a 1920s home in Cortez village, next to the parsonage of the Church of God. When the parsonage was slated for demolition in 1992, she protested at a CVHS meeting, joined the group and remains an active member.

Molto worked with Green on obtaining National Register of Historic Places status for Cortez.

She has served on the board of FISH (Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage) since its inception in 1991, and was instrumental in purchasing land east of Cortez village to create the FISH Preserve. She organized the Cortez Historic Homes Tour in 2004-05 to help pay for preserve property.

Molto is currently involved in protesting the proposed 65-foot-tall bridge from Cortez to Anna Maria Island.

Molto showed the DAR group a piece of artwork she created of the first person she met in Cortez, a young boy selling mangos for 2 cents each.

Cortez is “a place that you don’t see anymore, where it feels like home,” she said.

While residents have their differences, above all, they are neighbors who are there for each other, she said.

Jane von Hahmann

FISH board member and former Manatee County Commissioner Jane von Hahmann was presented the DAR Community Service Award for her longstanding support for FISH.

Established in 1991, FISH sponsors the annual Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival, which provides funds to restore, maintain and enlarge the 98-acre FISH Preserve.

This year, the festival netted about $60,000, von Hahmann told the group, close to last year’s net, and attracted more than 20,000 people over the two-day event in February. She has been the co-chair of the festival for the past nine years.

FISH has removed invasive plant species from the preserve, planted native vegetation and created tidal channels.

Outside the preserve, FISH projects include the restoration of the 1890 Burton Store, turning the Church of God into Fishermen’s Hall, renovating the FISH Boatworks and the Cortez firehouse and more.

Von Hahmann also has volunteered with the Sarasota Bay Estuary Program and opposed large developments including Aqua on the Bay and the 65-foot-tall bridge proposed from Cortez to Anna Maria Island.

Cortez has been battling encroachment for 135 years, von Hahmann told the group, adding, “You can’t know where you’re going if you don’t know where you’ve been.”

Mary Fulford Green

Saying goodbye to my first best friend forever

Who is your first best friend? I just submitted the obituary for Jerry Guthrie Cross. She was my first best friend.  She is a first cousin – at one time I had 43 of them; I was the 15th and she was the 16th grandchild of William Thomas and Sallie Adams Fulford – the first family in Cortez.

I do not remember our crawling and taking first steps together at our grandparents house, but I do remember the years afterwards.

In Cortez, one of the best activities was swimming in Sarasota Bay – all day every day – or taking a boat over to a little island and out to the kitchen to pick up scallops. Our grandpa had his leg amputated in 1926 so he had a lot of time to spend with us. He roasted little black conch on the shore and cut out the meat for us to eat. He taught us how to round up fiddler crabs.

Once, Jerry and I decided to open up a bakery under the big net camp on the shore. We were selling mud cakes. Yes, Grandpa bought some with real money. We closed shop and were off to the grocery store to buy candy that we did not share with our siblings.

Along with Cousin Mabel Adams Hipp, we sat together in the Sunday morning Bible class taught by Floy Taylor Bell. Every Sunday we ate dinner together, alternating houses. On Saturdays, we waited for the ice cream man in his little truck. My dad treated all of us to the ice cream. All grieved when the man killed himself and his little dog.

When The War came, we sold war bonds and walked to Bradenton Beach to roll bandages for the Red Cross. Every day we waited at the post office for Mr. Ditmus with our letters from the over 66 men and women who served in WWII from little Cortez. We wrote to all of our cousins and to some special ones too.

I visited Jerry when her first child was born. She attended my wedding at the old Cortez church of Christ building. She’s the one who told me I was pretty – I never thought of myself as pretty… I thought she was. When our youngest sons were about six years old they visited the Greens in Tallahassee and these two cousins had fun together.

In 1936, when Grandma Sallie died, we two lined up with the other granddaughters to take the flowers from the hearse to the grave in the Palma Sola cemetery. We had watched our grandpa as he said goodbye to her. In 1939, we said goodbye to grandpa again at that cemetery. We would forever miss seeing him sitting in the first seat, second row, at the Cortez church of Christ services every Sunday.

In 1977 a voice on my telephone said, “Mary. Mama is dying.” I was so shocked I didn’t recognize her voice. I thought it might be my sister calling me. It was not my sister but my first best friend. I rushed to the hospital and sat with her and her sweet mother until death came. That was the first such experience for us.

Jerry’s severe asthma led her to move to Arizona. She remembered birthdays to all of us via e-mail. Talking had to be with her special telephone. Jerry loved Cortez and wished that she could live here. She loved all of us. She left this world a week after my 90th birthday and three months before hers.

If I could ask, she would reply that yes she remembers the songs we sang, including that one saying we shall meet on that shore in the sweet by and by. There is a saying. “Make new friends but keep the old; one is silver and the other gold.” I couldn’t have but one best friend forever. Thanks, Jerry, for being mine.

– Dr. Mary Fulford Green

Jeraldine ‘Jerry’ Guthrie Cross

Jeraldine “Jerry” Guthrie Cross, 89, native of Cortez and longtime resident of Tombstone, Ariz., died Tuesday, July 7, 2015.

She was preceded in death by husbands, Robert Shiver and Robert Cross; sister, Barbara Holmes; and brothers, Maurice Guthrie and Ralph Scalzo.

Jerry was born Oct. 6, 1925 to J.O. and Grace Fulford Guthrie, the granddaughter of William T. and Sallie Adams Fulford.

A loving mother, grandmother and aunt, she will be deeply missed, especially by her dog, Mimi.

She is survived by sons Paul and Robert Shiver of Efizida, Ariz.; daughter Verna Maldordo of Roswell, N.M.; brother, J.O. “Junie” Guthrie (Betty) of Cortez; grandchildren, nieces, and nephews.

Private services were held Aug. 7 in Arizona.