Digital subscriptions provided by the City of Gulfport THE GABBER.COM July 6, 2023- July 12, 2023
No. 2820
History Matters Articles in the March 16 and March 23 issues of The Gabber Newspaper profiled “sundown towns” in lower Pinellas County. This article describes a Black community that disappeared a century ago, when Pass-a-Grille also became a “sundown town.” William Bradley moved to Passa-Grille around 1900. At that time, the sparsely settled island had a few wooden homes, plenty of undeveloped land, flocks of free-roaming chickens, millions of sand fleas, and countless mosquitoes. Bradley married, started a family, built a rooming house for visitors from the mainland, and became an expert at crabbing and fishing. Bradley and his neighbors lived near present-day Pass-a-Grille Way and 20th Avenue. Decades before dredges sculpted Mud Key into Vina del Mar, those who settled in that area fished along Boca Ciega Bay and its many keys. They welcomed large weekend gatherings of people who visited from St. Petersburg, and worked in the growing number of hotels and restaurants that opened south of 13th Avenue.
PINELLAS MEMORY
By James Schnur
Pass-a-Grille’s Casino, shown here in 1924, became the backdrop for some Klan gatherings by the mid-1920s.
Leaving a Growing Community A few of Bradley’s neighbors returned to the mainland after William D. “Bill” McAdoo opened the first bridge that connected the island with the mainland in February 1919. This narrow, wooden toll bridge
spanned from Villa Grande Avenue to 87th Avenue, near Blind Pass. More of Bradley’s neighbors departed after an October 1921 hurricane ravaged the coastline. Bradley sold his home and business in 1923. He moved his family History continued on page 7
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