St. Petersburg
In 1903, Gandy followed fellow Philadelphian trolley entrepreneur,
F. A. Davis, to
St. Petersburg, Florida, leading several of Davis's companies including St. Petersburg's trolley system. The $150,000 theatre drew such attractions as
John Philip Sousa's band and the controversial landmark film
The Birth of a Nation. Within a few years, he had obtained
right-of-way at either end of the bridge but needed to garner support for the rights over the bay itself. After obtaining the backing of numerous local businessmen as well as both
U.S. Senator Duncan U. Fletcher and
U.S. Representative Herbert J. Drane, Gandy's plans were finally approved by the
Department of War on February 11, 1918. Financing for the bridge stalled, however, due in part to Gandy's refusal to spend his own considerable savings. In September 1922, Gandy hired a team to sell
stock in the bridge and, after $2 million was raised in only 122 days, construction began in 1923. When
Florida Governor Cary A. Hardee ceremonially opened the bridge on November 20, 1924, it was the longest over-water highway in the world. ==Late life and legacy==