| Houston Street: Jacksonville's Red Light District |
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| Tuesday, 22 January 2008 | |
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Today, there's not much left, but 100 years ago Houston Street was the epicenter of the city's bustling Red Light District. Houston's Street interesting history can be traced back as far as 1863, when a gun emplacement named Fort Hatch was set up near the present day location of the Houston and Lee Street intersection. This location also served as a tent camp for the 54th Massachusetts Infantry (see the movie "Glory"). During the early 20th century, this section of downtown looked and felt much different than it does today.
Cora Taylor Crane & The Court
Cora Taylor Crane and Stephen Crane
Houston Street Today Today there's not much left that relates to Houston Street's colorful past. The area is now dominated by poorly maintained surface parking lots on demolished building foundations, the Salvation Army, and a few warehouses.
Looking towards Forysth: During Houston Street's heyday, the Interline Brands site served as the home of the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad's offices and freight terminal.
The corner of Forysth & Jefferson in 1950. If it could have survived, the old terminal warehouses would have made a nice centralized location for a farmer's market.
This warehouse, on the corner of Houston and Davis Streets, occupies the site of a bordello that was once known as "The House of Spanish Marie". Constructed in 1885 as the Shiloh Baptist Church, the religious structure was converted into a bordello after the congregation fled its unsavory surroundings. Spanish Marie is also known as one of the last prostitution houses to remain open before being shut down in the 1950s.
The foundation and a few worn bricks are all that remain of this block of buildings that served as the Spanish-American War Provost Headquarters & Jail in 1898. This historic site came down in the 1990s as a part of a failed plan to revitalize LaVilla.
Despite the widespread swath of destruction, there are a few brick structures that still stand, despite being vacant and boarded up.
At one time railroad tracks ran along Houston Street providing service to several industrial buildings in the area. Today, this building is the home of Sally Industries.
These buildings are located on Forsyth Street in the same vicinity as many of the Houston Street bordellos. One can only imagine about the events that took place in these buildings during that era. |

January 22, 2008, 8:49 am
Re: Houston Street: Jacksonville's Red Light District
OMG! I remember now! Only you left off the coolest of the railroad terminals and the most Easterly? It was the Atlantic and East Coast Railroad station, AKA: Florida East Coast freight Terminal. I could have been many things including a modern Amtrak or Commuter Rail station. Oh, I know the Union Terminal is WAY better but since they insist on once a month home show crowds there, we could have USED the old FEC FREIGHT STATION. The railroad entrance to those tracks or the A&EC was just west of the prime Osbourne parking lot, one can still see the bridge abutment along Bay street, when they tore out the bridge, they also filled in the street, it used to go down under the railroad. Before they came and "REDEVELOPED" the area, I had a friend that runs his train down at the outdoor railroad club track in Bostwick. He was shopping all the cool little stores along there and saw a "backyard" locomotive sitting in the window of one...
He bought it for something like $100 dollars and it worked fine. To buy a used one then or now, would cost a cool $3,0000-$100,000 dollars! He was SO HAPPY, and I was sick for a week... Oh how I wanted to get into that hobby. I miss the tracks in the street (which would have converted to Trolley real easy) and the cool little stores that opened in some of those old buildings before the City bulldozers came along.
I spent many happy hours around Houston Street looking for my "Daddy"... Mom never knew his name but she got his train number! Hee hee!
Just Kidding... Mom and Dad were SAINTS!
Ocklawaha
January 22, 2008, 9:20 am
Re: Houston Street: Jacksonville's Red Light District
Cool story, but so sad! I remember seeing the implosions and things on the news in the 90's (I'd just moved here then), but I was young and didn't really pay much attention to those things. What a shame that the buildings aren't there anymore to house groups of new entrepeneurs or urban living spaces. ~sighs~
January 22, 2008, 9:49 am
Re: Houston Street: Jacksonville's Red Light District
You can see the terminal in the upper middle section of this image. You can also see the commercial building density of Broad, Davis and Adams Streets in LaVilla. The block of residential structures between the demolished railroad terminal and Adams was the epicenter of the bordello district.
Here's an aerial of this same area today.
Some images I scanned for an article on LaVilla in 2006.
we park on this building's foundation today.
link to full article on LaVilla's destruction: http://www.metrojacksonville.com/content/view/250/120/
January 22, 2008, 10:11 am
Re: Houston Street: Jacksonville's Red Light District
WE had a second-empire style structure in JAX?
January 26, 2008, 5:26 pm
Re: Houston Street: Jacksonville's Red Light District
Indeed sad! Which is why im like a broken record about the few historic pieces that remain.
February 1, 2008, 9:14 am
Re: Houston Street: Jacksonville's Red Light District
Shouldn't someone go to jail over this!
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