This Document is Published by:
Friends of the Oldsmar Library
Compiled by Paula Geist, Adult Services Librarian
With the Assistance of:
Hilary Wagner and Kathy Benz, Oldsmar Library Reference Staff Nancy
Mellican, Director Oldsmar Library
Ann Lieberman, Marsha Cornelius, Kim Copenhaver, Robert Geiszler, and
Amy Shepper, under the Supervision of Kathleen de la Pea McCook, Director
University of South Florida, School of Library and Information Science
All rights reserved. No part of this booklet may be reproduced without
the permission in writing of the Friends of the Oldsmar Library. All
proceeds from the sale of this booklet will be used to benefit the Oldsmar
Library.
Ransom Eli Olds and the American Dream
Contributed by Ann Liebermann
The City of Oldsmar sits on the Eastern edge of Pinellas County at the
Northern end of Tampa Bay. A charming town with lovely oaks and
beautifully planted medians, it is like a breath of fresh air in the midst
of Pinellas County, the most densely populated county in the State. Strip
malls, fast food restaurants, and crowded highways dominate much of the
area, but the little town of Oldsmar has the distinct flavor of a sleepy
Florida town.
The raw essence of old Florida has been well preserved in Oldsmar.
There is a small town feel augmented by a feeling of space. The city is
thoughtfully planned with the streets fanning out from Shore Drive along
Tampa Bay. Many houses both new and old, grand and modest, sit on large
treed lots. The main street in town is State Street, home to City Hall,
the Library, and the fire station. Park Boulevard stretches from City Hall
on State Street to R. E. Olds Park located on the edge of the sparkling
waters of Old Tampa Bay. The view of the bay is spectacular from Shore
Drive. Much of the shore line is undeveloped parkland and is a gentile
reminder of the incredible natural beauty that remains in some parts of
Florida.
There were only a handful of settlers in the area in 1913 when Ransom
Eli Olds decided to purchase 37,541 acres on the northern tip of Tampa Bay
from Richard Peters in what is the present day Oldsmar. At the age of 52,
the inventor of the Oldsmobile and REO cars embarked on a grand
undertaking, turning the untamed land in northern Tampa Bay into a
bustling community. He paid \$400,000 for the land $200,000 in cash,
\$75,000 in bonds and a $125,000 apartment house in Daytona Beach. The town
was originally named R. E. Olds-On-The-Bay. The name was later changed to
Oldsmar. In 1927 the name was changed again to Tampa Shores, and finally
in 1937 it was changed back to Oldsmar.
The early settlers had to contend with water from cisterns and
individual wells. Cheesecloth was used to sieve the mosquito larva out of
the water. The city built a water tower in the twenties and water was
pumped into it every morning and sulfur water flowed from the taps.
Somehow a faucet with St. Petersburg water was installed by the railroad
tracks and everyone brought jugs to fill for drinking water. The nearest
stores were located in Tarpon Springs and Dunedin.
Strategically situated between Tampa and St. Petersburg, Oldsmar was
ripe for development. The long bridges across the bay had not yet been
built and the shortest way from Tampa to St. Petersburg was through
Oldsmar. Olds designed a community for working people rather than for the
wealthy. He used engineers and surveyors from Boston to design a
wellŽplatted community, modeled after Washington, D.C., with tree lined
boulevards leading from the bay to downtown. A power plant that served
parts of Safety Harbor, Dunedin, and Clearwater was constructed. The
streets were paved with oyster shells obtained nearby. R. E. Olds named
many streets himself. Woodward, Jefferson, and Congress reminded him of
Detroit. Olds named Gim Gong Road after a Chinese American horticulturist
from Deland Florida. Gim Gong was working on developing frost resistant
citrus crops. The streets of Oldsmar were unusually wide and more than 20
miles of sidewalk were installed. Over the years much of the sidewalk was
buried under a layer of sand.
Advertisements glorifying the virtues of Oldsmar were placed in the
Detroit papers. He used the slogan Oldsmar for Health, Wealth and
Happiness. He tried to entice Northern companies to move their businesses
to Oldsmar by offering cheap labor. Olds spent \$100,000 drilling the
infamous oil well that yielded water not oil. It has been said that oil
was poured into the well each morning to make it look like they had struck
black gold. The oil well is now capped and sits on the grounds of the
Tampa Bay Downs Racetrack. (There were three other oil wells in Florida,
one in Sarasota and two in the panhandle but none of them possessed the
technology to drill through the Florida aquifer).
Recreation of newspaper advertisement c.1921 OLDSMAR NOW HAS ELECTRIC
LIGHTS FACTORIES WATER WORKS RAILROAD STATION GOOD RAILROAD WAREHOUSES
EXCELLENT AUTO ROAD PRODUCTIVE FARMS COMFORTABLE HOTEL PUBLIC HALL
BEAUTIFUL BAY SHORE BANK BUILDING MANY ARTISTIC BUNGALOWS All of this has
been accomplished in little more than one year. What will this progressive
be when it is five years old? NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY LAND Free Booklet
REOLDS FARM COMPANY OLDSMAR, FLORIDA
The first library in Oldsmar was started by the Woman's Club in 1919.
In 1977 the Oldsmar Library was donated to the city and moved from the
Woman's Club building to State Street in the City Hall Annex. At this time
the Friends of the Library was established to help promote the library.
The first school in town was located in a church at the intersection of
Buckingham and Jefferson Avenues. Another early school had one room for
first, second, third and fourth grades, a second room for sixth, seventh
and eighth grades, and high school was in the hall. The Post Office was
downtown in the middle of an animal display park featuring alligators.
During the 1921 hurricane, all the alligators escaped.
Original plans for Oldsmar included a golf course and a luxurious hotel
on the bay but neither ever materialized. A saw mill and foundry that made
cast iron engines for tractors and grove heaters became established. The
mill produced the Olds Chair (also called the Oldsmar Chair)--a sturdy
chair made out of either yellow pine or cypress. The Olds Chair was
similar to the Adirondack Chair and it was sold throughout the United
States.
Olds provided financial backing for Kardell Tractor and Truck Company
to move into town. Renamed Oldsmar Tractor Co., Olds was hoping they could
devise a machine to cut through the palmetto roots. Building roads and
clearing land was frustrating and expensive in Florida. The pal- metto
roots were impervious to bull dozers and other northern machines.
Oldsmar had dairy farms and farms of peppers, tomatoes, corn, gladioli
and grapes. In the early days, it was not uncommon for cattle and hogs to
run loose through town. A huge banana plantation was established on the
bay but the winters were too harsh for it to flourish for long. The waters
at the northern end of the bay were clean during the twenties and
thirties. Fishing, oystering and crabbing were wonderful. Towns people
could take their catch to the Rex Cafe to be cooked. Big fish fries and
dances were a weekly event.
Oldsmar sits like a plateau where the land elevation never rises higher
than 20 feet above sea level. In 1921, the town was hit by a devastating
hurricane. Large pine trees were uprooted and most of the town flooded by
water levels 14 feet above normal. Some of the oldest homes built in
Oldsmar remain on Park Boulevard. Many homes still standing after the
hurricane were moved by barge to St. Petersburg during the 1920s and
1930s.
Olds had over 4.5 million dollars invested in the community in 1923.
When he realized Oldsmar was not growing as he had anticipated, he started
liquidating his assets. He started selling the unplatted parcels of land.
The racetrack was nearly completed when he traded it for the Fort Harrison
Hotel in Clearwater. The rest of the land was traded for the Belerive
Hotel in Kansas. Ransom E. Olds left the town of Oldsmar after suffering a
financial loss of nearly \$3,000,000. Olds envisioned a city of 100,000.
The population of Oldsmar was only about 200 when he left.
Harry A. Prettyman, a St. Louis promoter, and his associates continued
to sell lots in town after Olds left. Prettyman staged promotional
gimmicks like Gold Rushes where pieces of gold were buried on a vacant lot
and everyone got to dig for it. In 1927 Prettyman was caught selling
underwater lots. To avoid scandal, the town of Oldsmar was renamed Tampa
Shores. It wasn't until 1935 that the last of the property owned by R. E.
Olds was finally sold.
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