A Brief History of Boca Grande's Development
and Influences on its Architecture
 
 
The 
Boca Grande Historic District is situated in the center of Gasparilla Island, a 
seven mile long barrier island in Charlotte Harbor.  Two-thirds of the island 
lies in Lee County; the northern one-third lies in Charlotte County.  Throughout 
the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century there were three 
separate and distinct villages on Gasparilla Island.  On the north was the 
village of Boca Grande, home of the Gasparilla Inn and haven for the wealthy 
winter residents.  In the south was the Port Boca Grande which is one of 
Florida's deepest natural passes.
The story of Boca Grande is closely related to phosphate rock.  In the 1880s 
phosphate rock was discovered on the banks of the Peace River, north of 
Arcadia.  Phosphate was barged down the Peace River to Port Boca Grande and 
loaded onto four or five masted schooners.  In 1890 a lighthouse was erected on 
the southern tip of Gasparilla Island to aid this industry.
By 1900 the American Agricultural Chemical Company (AAC), which dominated the 
phosphate industry of Central Florida, determined that a railroad would be more 
efficient in transporting phosphate to the port rather than the ricer barges.  
The AAC determined that the proposed terminus of the railroad should be located 
about a quarter mile north of the lighthouse on the harbor side of Gasparilla 
Island.  The Charlotte Harbor and Northern (CHN) railroad was completed in 
1907.
Prior to the discovery of phosphate, Gasparilla Island was a government 
reserve.  In 1878 the central section of Gasparilla Island was releases from 
reserved status.  The homestead lands conveyed from the federal government to 
various individuals eventually were all acquired by either John Wall, an 
attorney in Tampa, or by Albert Gilchrist, a Punta Gorda politician (who became 
governor of Florida in 1909).  In January of 1897, Gilchrist filed a plat 
consisting of six blocks along the Gulf front in the south central portion of 
Gasparilla Island, where the island is widest and best suited for residential 
development.  In 1907, Wall and Gilchrist teamed up with officers of the AAC 
(among them Peter Bradley) and formed the Boca Grande Land Company as part of 
the AAC corporate entity.
In 1909 the officers of the Boca Grande Land Company decided to build a 
resort hotel on Gasparilla Island.  This was to be the Gasparilla Inn.  By that 
time the Charlotte Harbor area, specifically the area south of Gasparilla 
Island, was known for unexcelled tarpon fishing and was famous among sportsmen.  
By 1912 the officers of the company decided to change the Gasparilla Inn from a 
small hotel housing visiting directors and company officers to a world class 
hotel.  The renowned architect Francis J. Kennard of Tampa, Florida designed the 
enlargement.  The hotel was such a success that in 1915 Kennard was called again 
to draw plans to double the size of the Gasparilla Inn. Hotel clients came year 
after year; for many of them staying at the Gasparilla Inn became life-long 
habit.
In 1914 a casino was built near the Gasparilla Inn, and a boat house on the 
bayou.  Gilchrist Avenue was lined with coconut palms and hibiscus as was Palm 
Avenue south of the Inn.  The block between Gilchrist Avenue and Park Avenue on 
Second Street was lined with banyan trees.  (Today known as Banyan Street)
The Boca Grande School was built in 1911.  A second story was added to the 
building in 1914 so that the school could qualify to be a junior high.  It was 
closed in 1929 when the new Boca Grande School was built.  The K-12 school was 
closed in 1964 because of declining enrollment.  Today it serves as Boca 
Grande's Community Center and central focus for the island's recreation 
programs.

The 
architecture of Boca Grande was influenced by a number of physical and social 
issues.  The early buildings are a compilation of these many influences.  Being 
remote from the mainland, early buildings relied on simple designs to make the 
subtropical environment habitable.  Wide eaves, covered porches at the main 
entrances and louvered shutters were common characteristics.  The early 
buildings were commonly raised above the ground to allow for circulation of 
breezes and the passage of water under the house during times of high tides or 
storms.  Ceilings were typically high and open, allowing for hot air to escape 
during the day.  Another climatic factor was the lack of fresh water.  This 
required the use of gutters, which funneled the rain water into cisterns for 
future use.
Game fishing and tourism are responsible for most of the development during 
the 1920s.  By 1925 more and more Florida east coast residents were becoming 
disenchanted with the Florida boom and wanted to give up their east coast homes 
for more quiet, more quaint atmospheres.  Since Boca Grande had remained 
unspoiled and exclusive, it attracted many tourists from the northeast and, with 
the added attraction of unparalleled tarpon fishing, Boca Grande became a very 
desirable location.
The Gasparilla Inn and other hotels accommodated the tourists and winter 
residents who enjoyed fishing and participating in the social life of Boca 
Grande.  Many of these visitors remained and built waterfront estates along the 
Gulf of Mexico, introducing a wider variety of decorative architectural styles, 
but mostly building in the Mediterranean Revival style.
Boca Grande also had a demand for worker housing.  As a result, bungalow 
style houses were concentrated to the south of the commercial district; many of 
there houses were built by the railroad to house the railroad workers.  This 
style of architecture borrowed from the early vernacular housing, such as the 
raised floors, covered porches and high ceilings.  One of the reasons it was 
such a popular style was because it was available through mail order plans and 
was simple and inexpensive to build.  On some of the structures it is common to 
see more decoration than would be observed on vernacular homes, such as trim 
elements on the gable ends, dentils and wood window surrounds.
As with other communities across the state, development tapered off after the 
Florida Land Boom.  But because of the many attractions that Boca Grande and the 
surrounding area still offers, Boca Grande continues to grow.  Fortunately, due 
to the sensitivity of the island's residents, much of the early architectural 
heritage still remains today.