Author Topic: Lost Jacksonville  (Read 60915 times)

jbovinette

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #60 on: February 10, 2009, 08:00:53 AM »
I wish I was able to see these old buildings. I never really got the chance to see these. I'm only 28 and since i've been coming to Jacksonville I can only remember the tearing down and the construction that has continued for as long as I can remember. It's sad that they are all being demolished. Those buildings said so much about Jacksonville and the growth of the south and the tourism of Florida. Im so happy that the Jacksonville Terminal was spared.
« Last Edit: February 10, 2009, 08:46:21 AM by jbovinette »
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Ocklawaha

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #61 on: February 10, 2009, 09:33:52 AM »
Nice work then.  Sounds like you are doing your part.

I will tell you that the best thing that a city can do is raise taxes on derelict buildings.  Simple as that.  Less incentive to buy and hold which is the main problem downtown.  If I am an investor and I can buy a building downtown and keep a low tax basis, I have less risk just sitting on it than someone that spends money rehabbing, leasing, paying expenses, only to get dinged by the city.  They will tell you that the historic designation holds taxes for 10 years, which it does but it is a pain in the ass!  Just hold the taxes for 10 years anyway.  Or raise taxes on unimproved buildings and lower them for improved.

This is also exactly why untold thousands of miles of railroad were abandoned between 1960 and 1990. They couldn't afford to continue to pay taxes on land, interstate commerce, transportation, and school districts, if the lines fell below a certain level. So we simply lost them. Today we are spending BILLIONS to rebuild many of those same lines.

Watch the old Seaboard Route along North Main all the way to Savannah (it's also mostly abandoned) but being the shortest route, bet this is where the high speed rail will be laid out.


OCKLAWAHA

mtraininjax

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #62 on: March 17, 2009, 12:31:47 AM »
Number 50 shows the great downtown post office on the left side. It was a shame to tear it down for a bank building....
And, that $115 will save Jacksonville from financial ruin. - Mayor John Peyton

“This is a game-changer. This is what I mean when I say taking Jacksonville to the next level.”
-Mayor Alvin Brown on new video boards at Everbank Field

stjr

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #63 on: May 05, 2009, 01:54:53 AM »
Here is another view of the Germania Building on Riverside Avenue, Brooklyn:

Hey!  Whatever happened to just plain ol' COMMON SENSE!!

barberofdeville

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #64 on: June 28, 2009, 05:57:44 AM »
Makes me want to cry. WoW downtown JAX was beautiful. Reminds me of Louisville...well before they tore down all those buildings.
Farrell Stephens~Master Barber~

Ocklawaha

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #65 on: June 28, 2009, 10:28:09 AM »
I wish I was able to see these old buildings. I never really got the chance to see these. I'm only 28 and since i've been coming to Jacksonville I can only remember the tearing down and the construction that has continued for as long as I can remember. It's sad that they are all being demolished. Those buildings said so much about Jacksonville and the growth of the south and the tourism of Florida. Im so happy that the Jacksonville Terminal was spared.

Great avatar jbovinette. Welcome aboard!  wish I could walk all of you through a movie of that terminal when it was live. They tore down much more then remains today as it contained much more then the headhouse station (the big 1919 vintage - so called Prime Osbourne). There were hundreds of platforms, tunnels, extra buildings, interlocking towers every where... Beaver Street Tower lasted until your lifetime, but Myrtle Interlocking was even larger then today's "Amshack". There was St. Johns Interlocking tower, Roundhouse, Shops, Coach yards, the Railway Post Office with it's own back in tracks, and the Worlds Largest RAILWAY EXPRESS station. JIA has never seen the day when it was half as busy as Jacksonville Terminal. We REALLY dropped the ball when we allowed Amtrak to dictate stops and location, and allowed the railroads just to take it all down. 

An average of 15 MILLION passengers a year came through that station in it's lifetime... They're all "flying" through Orlando today. Yesterday while in Mickeyville, I watched the Silver Meteor at the platform with 300+ passengers on and off... Thinking all along, HOW STUPID CAN WE BE??


OCKLAWAHA
« Last Edit: June 28, 2009, 10:31:05 AM by Ocklawaha »

Flipside

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #66 on: June 28, 2009, 12:02:39 PM »
Did anyone know that Ocklawaha Valley Railroad is Florida's Lost Railroad? In fact, Robert Mann not only knew this but launched a fan club in its honor in 2007. As of this date, he is still its only member.

“A railroad history, big plans, great route, all combined to make this the little train that couldn’t fail.  Evil forces, empires, nabobs and just plain dumb bad luck, made it the little train that couldn’t win”.

Apparently, the Ocklawaha Valley Railroad also has a fan club that can't win.

Ocklawaha

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #67 on: June 28, 2009, 12:53:59 PM »
WELCOME ABOARD FLIPSIDE!

http://ocklawahavalley.ning.com/


BURBANK FLORIDA, the station isn't shown, and talk about loss, someone just tore down the old gingerbread church within the last 10 years... It WAS a home. Burbank was part of the huge land company promotion of "colonys" anchored to the RR.

THAT was the whole idea... hee, hee. I didn't think it would draw a soul, as not even the railroad nutz in Florida have a clue about that most interesting line. OOPS blew my cover.

Of course anyone can join, but don't expect any fan trips or newsletters. The site is updated as I uncover more of the weird twisted story of this line. One of the latest twists is the CORPORATION COMMISSION reports the company was "active" until 1974!  If you want to hike it, it's got several great entry points and the old Rodman site is now a preserve, they are very proactive presservationists and love guests. Word of warning, that preserve has Rattle Snakes longer then the OV trains, better wait till COLD weather.


OCKLAWAHA
« Last Edit: June 28, 2009, 01:00:21 PM by Ocklawaha »

heights unknown

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #68 on: June 28, 2009, 06:53:57 PM »
What a travesty, crown jewels 80% of them and demolished, torn down, obliterated for the sake of parking lots (most of them) and failed developments or plans.

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mtraininjax

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #69 on: June 30, 2009, 08:58:33 AM »
Quote
Makes me want to cry. WoW downtown JAX was beautiful. Reminds me of Louisville...well before they tore down all those buildings.

Yes, we did have some great buildings at one time, but the problem is not the buildings, its the people. When the people stop using the buildings, they become outdated, eyesores, maintenance begins to lag and they are seen as expendable.

The lesson is to go see the buildings in exhistence, celebrate them with others. City Hall is still alive because the City leadership chose to use it and save it. Same for the Haverty's building.

Forget about saving what is already down, worry about saving what still remains and is not in the public favor.
And, that $115 will save Jacksonville from financial ruin. - Mayor John Peyton

“This is a game-changer. This is what I mean when I say taking Jacksonville to the next level.”
-Mayor Alvin Brown on new video boards at Everbank Field

nonamegrl

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #70 on: July 08, 2009, 10:00:04 AM »
Just so everyone knows... the mayor is threatening to get rid of ALL of the city's efforts for historic preservation if the tax increase isn't approved...

this could rid the city of landmarks, historic districts and a loss of anything and everything else that's left of Jacksonville's hey day.

nagrom73

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #71 on: February 05, 2010, 11:21:36 AM »
I could be mistaken, but the picture of the Mason lodge you have appears to be the Mason Lodge at the NW corner of Broad and Duval, built in 1913, which is still standing. Did the original get moved? Were there two?

Timkin

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #72 on: June 19, 2010, 02:24:47 AM »
It is just heartbreaking to look at all of the beauty that once stood and was mindlessly razed... City Hall for the Haydon Burns Library??  Forgive me if I cannot appreciate the "Fin Wonder"  but this building was just incredible.  I know not only Jacksonville , but practically no other large city would have saved all of these, but had we saved even 20 % of them,  We would sure have a much better look into our past, coupled with modern.  Now all we have are pictures and memories. I guess that is good.. but it just makes me sick that decisions to raze these incredible structures to replace them with Glass /Concrete structures that have no particular style is just sad....do not know any other way to put it. 

 We cannot afford to demolish any more of our past, folks.

SightseerLounge

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #73 on: June 22, 2010, 01:28:17 AM »
Wasn't there a Wendy's Downtown? Talk about lost Jacksonville!!!!!

Wacca Pilatka

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Re: Lost Jacksonville
« Reply #74 on: June 22, 2010, 08:26:54 AM »
It is just heartbreaking to look at all of the beauty that once stood and was mindlessly razed... City Hall for the Haydon Burns Library??  Forgive me if I cannot appreciate the "Fin Wonder"  but this building was just incredible.  I know not only Jacksonville , but practically no other large city would have saved all of these, but had we saved even 20 % of them,  We would sure have a much better look into our past, coupled with modern.  Now all we have are pictures and memories. I guess that is good.. but it just makes me sick that decisions to raze these incredible structures to replace them with Glass /Concrete structures that have no particular style is just sad....do not know any other way to put it. 

 We cannot afford to demolish any more of our past, folks.

The real killer in the loss of City Hall is the destruction of its four "lunettes" representing the destruction of the Great Fire and the city's subsequent reconstruction and growth.  There are great pictures of these at the front of Bob Broward's "Architecture of Henry John Klutho," but it's very sad that these only survive in photos.
The tourist would realize at once that he had struck the Land of Flowers - the City Beautiful!

Henry J. Klutho