86 St. Francis Street

Dublin Core

Title

86 St. Francis Street
86 St. Francis Street, St. Augustine, Fla. 32084

Subject

Ford, Eddie D. and Alean M.
Undertaker, Funeral Home

Description

The eastern section of Dumas Tract Subdivision, the genesis of Lincolnville, is bounded on the north by Bridge Street, and 18th century thoroughfare which led to one of three late colonial San Sebastian River ferry crossings. The subdivision is also in the vicinity of the early 18th century Indian village of Palica. The tract evolved out of two early 19th century Spanish land grants to Bartolo Juarez and Gaspar Papy, a prosperous Greek merchant who came to St. Augustine from New Smyrna in 1777.Both soon developed some of the first commercial orange groves in Florida. By the late 1830's, the grants were consolidated by Peter Sken Smith, a prominent Territorial period land speculator, who subdivided much of the tract and commenced selling lots. The economic depression of the 1840's ended attempts to develop the areas on the fringes of the old city, and by 1840 Phillip Weedman and Peter Dumas, county clerk and post-civil war leader of the Florida Radical Republicans, acquired most of the property formerly belonging to Smith. After the war, the community of Africa soon developed on the marshes of the Maria Sanchez Creek as newly freed Blacks began renting the property from the city. Africa, later called Lincolnville, extended along the banks of the creek and by the early 1870's, Blacks began buying lots and building homes along Central Avenue and Benedict Street. Construction along the Oneida and Bridge Streets commenced later in the decade. By 1885, Lincolnville was a rapidly growing Black community, although some Whites lived along Bridge Street next to the Craddock Hotel. The eastern edge of Lincolnville, Washington Street, became a prosperous Black commercial district in the first several decades of the 20th century. By that time, Lincolnville had extended beyond its original boundaries into adjacent areas, particularly Genovar and Atwood Tract Subdivisions. Today, Lincolnville generally refers to the all Black neighborhoods in the southwest peninsula.
The building at 86 St. Francis Street has been used for several purposes--all for Blacks: Home for the Union Burial League; Baker and Bacon Undertakers; Mt. Pisgah Consistory, 32nd Degree; American Woodmen Camp, No. 29; Arabia Court, No. 66, Daughters of Isis; Benevolent Hall; Queen Isabella Chapter No. 35, Order of the Eastern Star; Bacon and Thomas Funeral Home
This two-story Frame Vernacular residence at 86 St. Francis Street was constructed between 1899 and 1904. The eastern half of Dumas Tract was one of the first residential neighborhoods of Lincolnville and is physically visible as a separate development in terms of its street patterns and lot sizes. The homes here are mostly on a modest scale, but include some nice Victorian examples and some interesting gingerbread patterns, especially along Oneida Street. It is the area of concentration for shotgun-style houses in St. Augustine. There are churches interspersed with residential neighborhoods and a commercial fringe along Washington Street and Central Avenue. The eastern half of Dumas Tract was developed prior to western half. The area is threatened by some housing deterioration, and by traffic along Bridge, Central Avenue, and Washington Street. There has also been a problem of demolition of buildings along Washington Street.
1924-1925 Union Burial League
1927 Baker and Bacon Undertaker
1934 Bacon and Thomas Funeral Home
1940 Funeral Home, Ellie A Johnson
1951 Johnson's Funeral Home
1951 Benevolent Hall

Creator

David Nolan
Alexandria Kledzik

Source

Florida Master Site Files

Publisher

Historic St. Augustine Preservation Board

Date

7811

Identifier

Site No. 8SJ1877

Citation

David Nolan and Alexandria Kledzik, “86 St. Francis Street,” Resilience: Black Heritage in St. Augustine, accessed March 28, 2024, https://blackheritagestaugustine.omeka.net/items/show/183.

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