Boca Grande is a small residential community on Gasparilla Island, southwest
Florida. Gasparilla Island is a part of both Charlotte and Lee Counties,
while the actual village of Boca Grande, which is home to many seasonal
and year-round residents, is entirely in the Lee County portion of the
island.
Its name - Spanish for "Big Mouth" - comes from the mouth
of the waterway, called Boca Grande Pass, at the southern tip of the
island. The pass was used as a busy shipping point for many years as
the waters in the pass are naturally deep. Processed phosphate from
the Bone Valley region would be loaded onto waiting cargo vessels via.
the Seaboard Air Line Railway at the dock located on the southern tip
of the island. Shipping business to the island declined when the Port
of Tampa was later dredged and phosphate shipping operations moved north
to locations along Tampa Bay. Evidence of the island's industrial past
can still be seen.
Space is at a premium in the village of Boca Grande, so many local residents
use a golf cart as their main mode of transportation. On any given day
in Boca Grande, you will see golf carts, as well as automobiles, making
their way throughout downtown. A Lee County ordinance designates all
but two streets as golf cart paths. Drivers must be 14 to operate a
golf cart on these designated streets.
Boca Grande also provided the backdrop for Denzel Washington's movie,
Out of Time, where the quiet village was re-named 'Banyan Key' in reference
to the banyan trees that populate the island. Scenes for the 2006 film
based on Carl Hiaasen's book Hoot were also filmed on the island, which
was again re-named for the filming. This time it became Coconut Cove.
Hurricane Charley hit Boca Grande heavily on August 13, 2004, causing
some 20 billion US dollars' worth of damage to Southwest Florida. There
were no deaths or injuries on the island, but many buildings were damaged
and most of the banyan trees were heavily damaged.
Boca is very popular with affluent holiday makers, many of whom keep
a second home on the island. There is a degree of animosity between
year-round residents and those who come to spend the winter months on
the island.
The sleepy community sometimes hosts members of Former Governor Jeb
Bush and President George W. Bush's family, who occasionally spend the
week between Christmas and New Year's on the island. Marvin P. Bush
owns a house on Lee and 4th.
Boca Grande Pass is world famous for Tarpon Fishing
in the May & June. The Profession Tarpon Tournament Series is held
here every year and aired on the Sunshine Network. Captain Jimmy Burnsed
has been involved with these Tournaments from the start.
Hammerhead sharks
Hammerhead sharks are common in Boca Grande Pass. A Port Charlotte,
Florida man named Bucky Dennis caught a new world record 1,280 pound
hammerhead shark on May 23, 2006, in Boca Grande, Florida. Mr. Dennis
was alone on his boat when the 12-and-a-half foot animal took the bait
-- a 25-pound slongray. A friend on a nearby vessel climbed aboard Mr.
Dennis boat to help. The five-foot-nine, 180-pound man also used shoulder
harnesses. Mr. Dennis says they finally got the shark on the boat after
about five hours [1]. The female was pregnant with a record litter of
55 unborn pups. Her reproductive tract alone weighed nearly 250 pounds
[2].
Boca Grande History
Gasparilla Island's first inhabitants were the Calusa Indians. They
were living on nearby Useppa Island by 5,000 B.C. and on Gasparilla
Island by 800 or 900 A.D. Charlotte Harbor was the center of the Calusa
Empire, which numbered thousands of people and hundreds of fishing villages.
The Calusa were a hunting and fishing people who perfected the art of
maritime living in harmony with the environment. They were a politically
powerful people, dominating Southwest Florida during their "golden
age." Since the Calusa had no written language, the only record
we have of their lifestyle and ceremonies comes from the oral history
of the (much later) Seminoles, from written accounts of Spanish explorers,
and from the archaeological record. The first contact the Calusa had
with the white man came during Spanish explorations at the beginning
of the 16th century. By the mid 1700s the Calusa had all but disappeared,
the victims of European diseases, slavery and warfare.
Just like the Indians, the earliest settlers came to Gasparilla Island
to fish. By the late 1870s several fish ranches were operating in the
Charlotte Harbor area. One of them would later be at the north end of
Gasparilla Island in the small village called Gasparilla. The fishermen,
many of them Spanish or Cuban, caught huge catches of mullet and other
fish and salted them down for shipment to Havana and other markets.
In the 1940s the Gasparilla Fishery was moved to Placida across the
bay, where it still stands today, and the fishing village died out.
Today, many of Boca Grande's early fishing families are still represented
in third, fourth and even fifth generation descendants who pursue many
different vocations, including fishing.
In 1885 phosphate rock was discovered on the banks of the Peace River
just above Punta Gorda, east of Gasparilla Island across Charlotte Harbor.
It was this discovery that would turn the south end of Gasparilla Island
into a major deep water port (Boca Grande Pass is one of the deepest
natural inlets in Florida) and become responsible for the development
of the town of Boca Grande. Wealthy American and British sportsmen began
discovering the Charlotte Harbor area for its fantastic fishing (notably
for the world class game fish tarpon) and hunting. It was these two
discoveries - phosphate rock and fishing - that would put Boca Grande
"on the map."
Phosphate was a valuable mineral for fertilizers and many other products,
and was in great demand worldwide. At first the phosphate was barged
down the Peace River to Port Boca Grande, where it was loaded onto schooners
for worldwide shipment. But by 1905 it was felt that building a railroad
to Port Boca Grande and carrying the phosphate to it by rail should
improve the method of shipment.
In 1905 officials of the Agrico subsidiary Peace River Mining Company,
along with engineers from the United States Army Corps of Engineers
and 60 laborers, landed on Gasparilla Island and surveying and construction
of the railroad began. Probably the only buildings on the island at
this time were the lighthouse and the assistant keeper's house at the
extreme southern tip of the island. The railroad terminus with its 1,000-foot
long pier would be built nearby. The Charlotte Harbor and Northern Railroad
was completed in 1907. For the next 50 years phosphate would be shipped
out of the state-of-the-art port virtually without disruption. Phosphate
laden trains were off loaded directly onto ocean going freighters, and
the ships took the valuable commodity to ports all over the world. In
1969 Port Boca Grande ranked as the fourth busiest port in Florida.
In the 1970s phosphate companies increasingly switched their interest
to ports in Hillsborough and Manatee Counties. As more money was put
into developing these ports, traffic into Port Boca Grande began to
dwindle, and in 1979 the line was abandoned and the phosphate industry
in Boca Grande came to an end. The port was also used as an oil storage
terminal by Florida Power and Light Company. This use ceased in 2001.
The oil storage tanks were subsequently removed from the nine-acre site
at the southern tip of Gasparilla Island adjacent to the century-old
Boca Grande lighthouse. Island residents have begun an effort to have
the property preserved as part of the island's state park system.
The Charlotte Harbor and Northern Railroad not only brought phosphate
and supplies to Gasparilla Island; it also brought wealthy people from
the north. By 1910 Boca Grande Pass was already famous for its unequaled
tarpon fishing among fishermen, who stayed on nearby Useppa Island.
The Agrico Company, having begun to see the potential of the idea of
developing Gasparilla Island beyond the port, began to develop the village
of Boca Grande.
The railroad station in what would become downtown was built; roads,
sidewalks, streetlights, shops, a post office, and water and telephone
service were not far behind. The town was landscaped, including the
now famous section of Second Street called Banyan Street. The railroad
company built several cottages downtown and a few wealthy families from
"up north" purchased land and built winter residences. The
train stopped at Gasparilla, the fishing village at the north end of
the island, at the railroad depot in downtown Boca Grande, and at the
south end phosphate terminal.
In 1929 the Boca Grande Hotel was built just south of downtown Boca
Grande. It was a three-story, brick resort hotel where most of the island
weathered the hurricane of 1944. The Boca Grande Hotel changed hands
and was demolished in 1975. It took six months to raze the building
by means of fire and the wrecking ball, as it had been built to withstand
fire and great storms.
The railroad continued to bring the grand visitors from all along the
eastern seaboard until the Boca Grande Causeway opened in 1958. The
depot was restored in the 1970s and a number of shops, offices and a
restaurant now occupy the old building. The railroad continued to run
work trains to the south end until the phosphate port closed in 1979.
Thanks to the generosity of Bayard and Hugh Sharp (members of the Du
Pont family who had been winter residents for many years), the community
purchased the old railroad bed from CSX Corp. (the successor corporation
to the old Chessie System) and transformed it into a new use , Boca
Grande's popular Bike Path. Boca Grande has become a unique community,
with a large number of wealthy winter residents rubbing elbows with
the fishermen and railroad and port workers who formed the permanent,
year-round working population.