1900s & 1920s Tampa would see significant changes in it between 1900 and 1920. The
Gasparilla Pirate Festival would be organized for the first time in 1904 and is still held yearly. It was created by George W. Hardee who worked for Tampa's municipal government and made it in an attempt to try and draw larger crowds for festivities held on
May Day. Seddon Island would be created as a result of a dredging project in 1906 when sediment excavated would be placed on the eastern side of Little Grassy island which was split in half. The town of Fort Brooke would end up annexed in 1907. At about the same time Sparkman Channel would also be created. A railroad bridge would be built in 1908 to Seddon Island. Seddon Island would be a location where phosphate was often shipped out of until the late 1960s. Politically, this period would also see the introduction of the White Municipal Party as well starting in 1908 with one of its key founders being
Donald Brenham McKay. Prior to the party's existence there was several coalition groups. The primary goal of the White Municipal Party was to exclude African-Americans from participating in the city's political system. It would become practically integrated in with the municipal government. Despite the fact municipal elections were non-partisan, voters were required to be registered with the party to vote in municipal primary elections. Although a candidate not from the White Municipal Party could run in the general election, it was generally accepted they could not win. Despite this, the
Socialist Party would run two candidates unsuccessfully for mayor in the general elections for 1912 receiving 29.8% of the vote but suffered a reduction in 1916 as they got 17.4%. World War I would impact Tampa. Many of the city's young "Latin" men would attempt to avoid military conscription by leaving on boat's via Tampa's port. This led Governor
Sidney J. Catts who opposed entering the war into a dilemma but ended up requiring all ships leaving Tampa for foreign countries to be inspected. Up until the American entry into World War I, Tampa would be a stronghold for the Socialist Party in Florida. As the party decided not to support the war, this led to the party being weakened all the way from Tampa to the national level. By 1920 the party would become irrelevant in the state.
1920s until the end of the Florida Land Boom In 1921, a
hurricane hit Tampa for the first time since 1848. Despite this, the 1920s saw the
Florida Land Boom. During this time,
Davis Islands, two man-made islands, were built by developer and Tampa native
D. P. Davis. After the bubble burst, in 1926, the Tampa Municipal Hospital on Davis Islands was opened, now
Tampa General Hospital. In 1924, the
Gandy Bridge to St. Petersburg was built. Also in 1924 the
Old People's Home was built. In 1922, the WDAE
radio began broadcasting and the WFLA radio began broadcasting in 1925. Also in 1925, the Municipal Auditorium was built and Tampa annexed the neighboring town of West Tampa. This approximately doubled the size and population of the city.
Great Depression and the 1930s As the market for cigars began to wane during the
Great Depression, other industries came to the fore, especially shipping and, of course, tourism. By 1929, Maas Brothers dominated Florida's West Coast. It was known as "Greater Tampa's Greatest Store." During 1930, Plant's hotel would close to do renovations on it and the
city's present flag would be adopted. In 1931, a
strike would happen among the city's cigar workers ending the usage of lectors at cigar factories. Starting in the early 1930s and ending in the early 1950s, every municipal election was tainted by electoral abnormalities, most with alleged mob connections. The first widespread example of this was Tampa's mayoral election of 1931, when over 100 people were arrested for "cheating at the polls". Most were supporters of the winning candidate, Robert E. Lee Chancey, who his opponents claimed had close ties to Tampa's "underworld". After the election, all of the charges were either reduced or dropped altogether. Many of those involved had been on the city payroll at the time of their arrest, and most remained there. In the end, the Tampa Election Board determined that Chancey had easily won re-election. They had reached these results by throwing out all ballots from 29 precincts due to "fraudulent voting". The Board may not have been the most impartial judge of the matter, however, as Chancey had appointed the members himself. Plant's former hotel would be reopened in 1933 as the University of Tampa. Davis Causeway which's construction began in 1927 would finally be finished in 1927 as the crash of the Florida land boom and later the Great Depression halted it. Its builder, Ben T. Davis would get a Reconstruction Finance Corporation in 1933 to help with its completion and the bridge would end up opening on June 28, 1934. and starting in November 1935 and continuing for the next 3 years general improvements would be made towards Bayshore Boulevard. During the 1935 municipal elections it would be more chaotic that the last one. Starting prior to election day when Tampa's chief of police (who supported the incumbent mayor) and the Hillsborough County Sheriff (who supported the challenger) both claimed to be the proper authority to monitor the actual voting. Anticipating trouble, Governor
David Sholtz mobilized the
National Guard to prevent violence. Still, both sheriff's officers and city police were deployed at polling places, resulting in police officers arresting sheriff's deputies and vice versa. The Tampa Shipyard Company would secure a $750,000 loan from the Public Works Administration in 1938 to construct a 10,000 ton dry dock so it could compete for getting shipbuilding contracts that were made available through the
US Maritime Commission and were authorized by the
Merchant Marine Act of 1936. In 1939 it would be awarded a $8 contract by the federal government to build four cargo ships. The contract would generate a large amount of jobs (2,000) for the city's unemployed workers. The US military would announce it was creating a military airfield at Catfish Point on July 15, 1939. Construction would begin on November 28 with 100 WPA workers being assigned to clear the close to 5,800 acres the base covered. Two days later on November 30 it was announced the airfield would be named MacDill Field instead of Southeast Air Base. Within a few days, Tampa's Shipyard would convert its previous civilian operations to those that were needed for the war effort. After this the company running the shipyard would run into two controversies, one relating to the shipyard's ownership and another relating to the Florida Attorney General wanting to make the contract the company had between the
American Federation of Labor to be closed shop, where employees would have to be in a union to join. Along with economically benefitting from the war it would also have sizable amounts of prostitution, venereal diseases, illegal gambling and more demands for city's services. Rationing would also affect city residents too. Although the city gained many new job opportunities for its residents, there would be a labor shortage as the local area could not provide enough workers. There would also be a housing shortage as well. After World War II ended, the city would recover and grow tremendously. Drew Field would be deactivated soon after the war ended and on March 1, 1946, the federal government would give it to the municipal government. Once Tampa's municipal government got control of the airport they began work at once to convert it into a municipal airport for the city. The airport would start seeing its first airlines in it during April and May. Drew Field would be renamed on October 15, 1947, to
Tampa International Airport.
Growth after World War II in the 1940s & 1950s By 1950 Tampa would be the third largest city in Florida with a population of 124,681. Between 1940 and 1950 its population would grow by 15% but lagged behind other cities in Florida such as: St. Petersburg which grew by 59% and Miami by 45%. Areas along South Dale Mabry Highway, Sulphur Springs and the Interbay peninsula would start to become developed. Tampa would remain a compact city with a land area of until the mid-1950s. Its northernmost boundary was the Hillsborough River, in the northern part of the
Seminole Heights neighborhood. In 1953, the city annexed over of unincorporated land, including the communities of Sulphur Springs and Palma Ceia. As a result, Tampa grew rapidly, growing by 150,289 residents during the 1950s. The growth also reflected on the city's national ranking. Tampa jumped from 85th in 1950 its peak ranking to date. The television stations WFLA-TV and WTVT began broadcasting in 1955. The
Britton Plaza Shopping Center opened the year of 1956. Lowry Park Zoo opened in 1957.
Busch Gardens theme park opened in 1959. In 1961, Tampa annexed Port Tampa.
1967 riots Tampa, during the
Long, hot summer of 1967 would experience rioting in it like many other cities in the US starting on June 11, 1967, and ending on June 15. The initial cause of the riots was the death of Martin Chambers who died after being shot by a police officer who claimed that he was trying to aim above his shoulder but had missed hitting his body instead. Chambers was one of three black suspects in robbing a camera supply warehouse and he was unarmed. Initially after the chase there was protests that were peaceful but later by the evening it would become violent. For the next few days rioting would continue and ended after Claude R. Kirk ordered in the National Guard, Florida Highway Patrol and other local municipalities on June 14. The rioting would end the next day. Over 100+ were arrested and $2 million in damage would happen. Judicial investigations would happen afterwards. The Hillsborough County District Attorney's office said that the shooting was justified after a two-day investigation. Florida Attorney General, Paul Antinori would say that his office investigated the incident. Antinori would state that using deadly force against Chambers was justified as he was a felon fleeing from being arrested. He asserted that those who would break laws would need to accept the possibility law enforcement would use deadly force.
City-county consolidation attempts Four attempts to
consolidate Tampa with Hillsborough County (1967, 1970, 1971, and 1972) all failed at the ballot box. The biggest margin was 33,160 for and 73,568 against the proposed charter in 1972.
1970s population declines Further problems in the 1970s lead to the first decline of the city's population in a century, falling to 271,523 in 1980. Tampa's national ranking dropped from 50th in 1970 to 53rd in 1980. In contrast, suburban areas such as
Brandon,
Carrollwood, and other areas of Hillsborough County experienced rapid growth.
Urban renewal and suburbanization Urban renewal programs were on the horizon. Despite this, the city only grew three percent in the 1980s to reach 280,015 in 1990.
New Tampa A big expansion in the size of city came with the development of
New Tampa, annexed in 1988. The addition added a 24-square mile (mostly rural) area between
I-275 and
I-75, increasing the city's total land area from to nearly 109.
Aviation Tampa holds a unique distinction in the history of
aviation.
Tony Jannus Just ten years after the
Wright Brothers first took flight in
Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. On January 1, 1914, pioneering aviator
Tony Jannus captained the inaugural flight of the
St. Petersburg-Tampa Airboat Line, the world's first commercial
passenger airline. The airline flew scheduled flights from downtown
St. Petersburg, Florida, across the bay to just south of where
Tampa International Airport sits today, carrying just the pilot and a single passenger in a flying boat biplane. The airline's historic significance is officially recognized by the
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, and its pilot is memorialized annually by the awarding of the
Tony Jannus Award to individuals of outstanding achievement in scheduled
commercial aviation. A permanent exhibit honoring the award recipients is maintained at Tampa International Airport, which also hosts a painted
mural from the 1930s titled, ''History's First Scheduled Airline Passenger Arrives in Tampa'', depicting the events of New Year's Day, 1914.
World War I Tallahassee native
Dale Mabry was a World War I airship pilot and captain. Mabry died piloting the Army airship
Roma, in 1922. The crash killed 34 people in
Norfolk, VA.The
Dale Mabry Highway was named after him, along with the Dale Mabry Elementary School, and a restaurant named originally Dale 1891.
WPA During the Great Depression,
WPA projects were underway which included
Drew Field (later named Tampa International Airport) and
Peter O. Knight Airport, on Davis Islands. Knight helped get the airport built. Its Jannus Administration Building was constructed in 1938.
World War II During World War II,
MacDill Air Field opened up for military operations. There was also
Hillsborough Army Air Field, also known as Henderson Air Field, today the site of
Busch Gardens.
Churches, schools, and libraries Churches In 1905,
Sacred Heart Catholic Church was built by
Nicholas J. Clayton. In 1907, the modern St. Andrews Episcopal Church was built by
Francis J. Kennard and
Michael J. Miller.
Schools In 1908 the V. M. Ybor school opened for immigrants. Henry Mitchell Elementary School was founded in 1915.
Henry B. Plant High School opened in 1927. Hillsborough High moved to its current campus in 1928. From 1911 to 1927, it was at the site of the
D. W. Waters Career Center.
Libraries The
West Tampa Free Public Library was built in 1914. The
Tampa Public Library, built in 1915 by James.
John F. Germany Public Library opened in 1968. The
Tampa-Hillsborough County Public Library System started in 1984.
Hotels and theaters Hotels The
Downtown Post Office was built by
James Knox Taylor in 1905. In 1912,
Union Hotel was built across from
Union Station, which was built by
Joseph F. Leitner in 1912. The
Palmerin Hotel was founded in 1926. In 1927, the
Sulphur Springs Water Tower was built.
Theaters The
Rivoli Theater opened in 1917. The
Rialto Theatre opened in 1924. The
Tampa Theater opened in 1926. Opera singer Norma Russo arrived in Tampa in 1932. The
Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center started in 1987, as did the
Tampa International Gay and Lesbian Film Festival. The
Tampa Bay Jewish Film Festival also started in 1996.
Universities University of Tampa With Plant's death in 1899, the Tampa Bay Hotel's fortunes began to fade. The city of Tampa purchased the resort in 1905 and used it for community events, including the first
state fair.
University of South Florida The
University of South Florida (USF), established in 1956 on the site of an World War II airstrip - the Henderson Air Field, is Florida's fourth-largest public university. It began the
Graphicstudio and
Botanical Gardens in 1969 and has since sparked in northern Tampa and nearby
Temple Terrace. USF was awarded Preeminence" in 2019 by the state university system. The school infuses $582 million annually into Florida and has an overall annual economic impact is measured at $4.4 billion according to analysis by the Washington Economics Group.
Museums In 1962, the
Museum of Science and Industry was founded. The
Cracker Country museum started in 1978 and the
Tampa Museum of Art began in 1979. The Ybor City Museum Society was established in 1982. The
Children's Museum started in 1987. Tampa's first history museum were started in 1989. The
Florida Aquarium opened in 1995.
High rises Tampa's first high rise, the
Citizens Bank Building was built in 1913 by
Francis J. Kennard.
City Hall was built in 1915 by
Franklin O. Adams. In 1927, the
Hotel Floridan opened. The
Franklin Exchange Building was constructed in 1966. The
Park Tower (opened in 1973) was the city's only substantial skyscraper (460 feet/36 stories) constructed until the building boom of the 1980s.
One Tampa City Center and the
Fifth Third Center opened in 1981. One Mack-Cali Center was built in 1983. The
Wells Fargo Center was completed in 1985. The
Bank of America Plaza was completed in 1986. The
Rivergate Tower opened in 1988. In 1992, the
SunTrust Financial Centre and
100 North Tampa, Tampa's
tallest building, went up. The
Tampa Marriott Waterside, the area's largest hotel, was completed in 2000.
Segregation Segregation continued into the 20th century. Most blacks lived in "the Scrub" (Tampa's
Central Avenue district), West Tampa, Ybor City,
Dobyville, and College Hill. According to Benjamin Mays' report
A Study of Negro Life in Tampa, the black population grew from 4,383 in 1900 to 23,323 in 1927. Businessman
Moses White was known as the "Mayor of Central Avenue".
Ole Pete was supposed to live in Port Tampa. The
Jackson Rooming House, the area's only boarding house for blacks, was built in the Scrub in 1901. In 1908,
Clara C. Frye opened a hospital for black patients in her home, assisted by Mack Winton. Her dining room table was the
operating table. A building was secured in 1923 and was purchased by the City of Tampa in 1928. The Clara Frye Memorial Hospital that existed in West Tampa from 1938 to 1967 was named after her. The Tampa Municipal Hospital did not admit black patients until the 1950s. In 1922,
Garfield Devoe Rogers Sr. helped start the Central Life Insurance Company, which sold policies to blacks. In 1938,
Blanche Armwood became the first black woman in Florida to graduate from an accredited law school. Black Cuban Francisco Rodriguez became a lawyer in 1951. In 1952, the NAACP moved its state headquarters to Tampa, and educator Edward Daniel Davis was president of Central Life Insurance Company. In 1919, William W. Andrews opened the
Florida Sentinel newspaper office in Jacksonville. The office was closed during the Depression. In 1945, General Andrews's son, C. Blythe Andrews, re-opened the
Florida Sentinel on Central Avenue. In 1959, he bought the
Tampa Bulletin newspaper, and merged the two newspapers to make the
Florida Sentinel Bulletin. In 1962, the newspaper office was moved to Ybor City. The
C. Blythe Andrews Jr. Public Library was named in his honor.
Cody Fowler formed the Bi-Racial Commission in 1959. His mother Maude helped develop Temple Terrace and is the namesake of
Fowler Avenue.
Women In 1895, Eleanor Chamberlain was president of Tampa's first suffrage organization. In 1900, the Tampa Woman's Club formed. Kate V. Jackson founded the Tampa Civic Association in 1911. In 1923, Elizabeth Dortsch Barnard was the town's first female postmaster. In 1926, the
Junior League of Tampa was founded.
Mafia Beginning in the late 19th century, illegal
bolita lotteries were very popular among the Tampa working classes, especially in Ybor City.
Charlie Wall In the early 1920s, this small-time operation was taken over by
Charlie Wall, whose father was the town's former mayor and a pioneer in yellow fever research,
John Perry Wall, and whose mother was a McKay. Wall's operations thrived as he expanded them to include liquor distribution and speakeasies (this was the era of
Prohibition) and prostitution. Other smaller
organized crime groups tried to muscle in on the action, and long-simmering rivalries were kindled. These organizations were able to operate openly because of kick-backs and bribes to key local politicians and law enforcement officials. Wall was well-connected, and he used those connections to keep his businesses running and put down his competition. Tampa's political elite, which had held an inconsistent but mostly ambivalent attitude toward organized crime, quietly became de facto partners.
Trafficantes and the Era of Blood While Charlie Wall was Tampa's first major crime boss, various factions vied for control of the area in later years. Ongoing power struggles resulted in regular organized-crime related "unsolved" murders of crime-connected figures in what became known as the "Era of Blood". To protect their interests (and keep gangland killings unsolved), crime bosses regularly kept local officials – from state attorneys to top law enforcement personnel and even mayors – on the payroll. The first Italian gang in the Tampa Bay area was created by the Sicilian
Ignacio Antinori in 1925. By the late 1940s, most of the area's crime organizations were under the control of
mafioso Santo Trafficante Sr. and his faction. After his death in 1954 from
cancer, control passed to his son
Santo Trafficante Jr., who established alliances with families in New York City and extended his power throughout Florida and into
Batista-era
Cuba.
Reforms The era of rampant and open corruption came to a head in the early 1950s when the
Kefauver hearings,
Senator Estes Kefauver's traveling investigation of organized crime in America, came to town. Informants (including the retired Charlie Wall) came forward to make startling accusations of corruption throughout Tampa's power structure. The hearings were followed by misconduct trials of several local officials and the "unsolved" murders of some of the government informants (including the retired Charlie Wall).
Athletics The first
athletic venue in Tampa was
Plant Field, a race track and field built by Plant in 1899. In 1908 the YMCA opened.
Curtis Hixon Hall opened in 1965, named for former mayor
Curtis Hixon, hosted basketball, boxing matches, and concerts. In 1992, the
Skatepark of Tampa was completed.
Football Football was brought to Tampa by funeral director J. L. Reed. The first
college football game in the state of Florida happened in 1901 in Jacksonville. Reed was from Jacksonville, and acted as manager as early as
1903 for a Tampa town team which wore red and black. In 1926,
Jim Thorpe led the barnstorming
Tampa Cardinals against
Red Grange and the
Chicago Bears in the first professional football game in Tampa. The next venue after Plant Field was
Phillips Field, which hosted the University of Tampa football team, and was the site of the
Cigar Bowl. In 1967,
Tampa Stadium was built. Tampa was chosen for a team as part of the
National Football League's expansion after the AFL/NFL merger in 1970, and the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers had their first season in 1976, as members of the
AFC West division. The following year, the Bucs were moved to the
NFC Central. The team was the worst in the league until 1979, with a brief period of success from 1979 to 1982 with a defense led by
Hall of Famer Lee Roy Selmon. The team was again the worst in the league from 1983 to 1996, until they hired Hall of Fame coach
Tony Dungy who pioneered the
Tampa 2 defense. From 1976 to 1996 the team was also notable for wearing orange "
creamsicle" uniforms. Since 1997, the team has utilized red and pewter uniforms. In 1998, the team moved to
Raymond James Stadium. In 2002, the Bucs moved to the
NFC South, and under head coach
Jon Gruden the team won
Super Bowl XXXVII. Tampa hosted
Super Bowls
XVIII,
XXV, and
XXXV. Super Bowl
XLIII was hosted in Tampa, and
LV was also played there. In Super Bowl LV, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers beat the Kansas City Chiefs 31-9, winning the first Super Bowl to ever be played in the home stadium of one of the teams. Tampa also hosts the
Outback Bowl. There also used to be the
Tampa Bay Bandits of the
United States Football League, coached by
Steve Spurrier, and the
Tampa Bay Storm of the
Arena Football League. "The War on I-4" refers to both the Tampa-Orlando rivalry in
arena football and
college football.
Baseball In 1913, the
Chicago Cubs moved their
spring training site to the city of Tampa. The original
minor league baseball team in Tampa was the
Tampa Smokers, established in 1919 as a charter member of the
Florida State League. The
New York Yankees train in Tampa at
George M. Steinbrenner Field, formerly Legends Field, which is the home of the
Tampa Tarpons.
Al Lopez Field used to be in West Tampa, named for Hall of Famer and Tampa native
Al Lopez. Lopez's home is now the
Tampa Baseball Museum. USF baseball used to play at
Red McEwen Field. In 1998, Tampa got a
Major League Baseball team, the
Tampa Bay Devil Rays, which plays at
Tropicana Field. Hall of Famer
Wade Boggs grew up in Tampa, as did
Tony La Russa,
Lou Piniella,
Tino Martinez,
Luis Gonzalez,
Doc Gooden, and
Gary Sheffield. The Devil Rays changed their name to the Rays in 2008.
USF Baseball Stadium opened in 2011. The
Tampa Baseball Museum opened in 2014.
Basketball USF basketball plays at the
Yuengling Center, formerly the Sun Dome. During the
COVID-19 pandemic, the
Toronto Raptors spent the
2020–21 season at
Amalie Arena.
Hockey The
Tampa Bay Lightning of the
National Hockey League formed in 1992, and plays at
Benchmark International Arena, formerly the Ice Palace, St. Pete Times Forum, Tampa Bay Times Forum, and Amalie Arena. The Lightning won the
Stanley Cup in 2004 and again in 2020 and 2021.
Soccer There used to be the
Tampa Bay Rowdies and
Tampa Bay Mutiny.
Tennis From 1979 to 1990, Tampa hosted the
Eckerd Open.
Golf Garfield Rogers built
Rogers Park, the first
golf course for blacks in Tampa. In 1974, the City of Tampa took over
Babe Zaharias's golf course in the
Forest Hills neighborhood. ==21st century==