| |
The
first of Henry Flagler's three great hotels, the Ponce de
Leon, was adapted for use as an institution of higher learning
in 1971. As Flagler College, it expanded to embrace a student
body of some 1,700 by the end of the century, offering a
traditional four-year arts and science degree program. The
second of his hotels, the Alcazar, has since 1948 contained
the Lightner Museum, (and in 1973 the City of St. Augustine
municipal offices). The third Flagler hotel, originally
called the Casa Monica, stood vacant for thirty-five years
before St. Johns County converted it for use a county courthouse
in 1965. In 1999, under private ownership, the building
was restored to its original function, and is now the only
one of Flagler's three great hotels still serving that purpose.
Some 2 million visitors annually make their way to St. Augustine,
lured by the sense of discovering a unique historic part
of America. While the venerable Castillo de San Marcos remains
the traditional magnet for visitors, there are many other
appealing historical sites and vistas.
When
the Spanish departed in 1821 after peacefully transferring
Florida and St. Augustine to the United States, some 300
buildings stood in the town. A century later, all but thirty-six
had perished, victims to fire, age, and urban change. St.
Augustine set out in the 1930's to preserve those remnants
of the colonial presidio. Under the banner of "Restoration,"
St. Augustine, with the help of state and federal governments,
set out in 1935 to preserve what remained of the colonial
city and even to reconstruct many buildings that had previously
disappeared. It was in great part a tribute to such efforts
that King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia made this small city
a part of their 2001 visit to the United States.
The
City of St. Augustine maintains architectural control over
the colonial city, insuring that the inevitable change which
occurs in a living urban area respects the past.
Page
1 | 2
| 3 | 4
| 5 | 6
|