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Proposal would change place names that stir pain
sptimes ^ | January 25, 2004 | CHRISTOPHER GOFFARD

Posted on 01/26/2004 5:07:35 AM PST by stainlessbanner

TAMPA - No one lives on the island anymore.

The tiny, mangrove-covered speck of land near the Little Manatee River in Ruskin once bustled with bodies and saw blades, as workers bled pines for turpentine and hacked them for timber.

Many of these workers, local experts think, were black convicts sent by the state to labor without pay in the hellish turpentine camps of the early 20th century.

For as long as many locals can remember, the island has served chiefly as a landmark for boaters navigating local bays, its history and official name, Negro Island, largely forgotten.

But like equally obscure swamps, lakes, bays and bridges hidden on Florida maps, some see the island's name as a painful relic of uglier times. Recently proposed legislation aims to purge them from the landscape.

"A lot of people will be incensed, because they don't even know these places still have these names," said state Rep. Arthenia Joyner, D-Tampa, who is black and has sponsored a bill in the House that would direct local governments to identify and change place names deemed offensive.

"We still have vestiges of slavery, segregation, racism. This is a matter of rooting it out, changing it."

There is another Negro Island in Citrus County, a Negrotown Marsh in Highlands County, a Negro Jim Hammock Bridge in Hendry County and a Negro Jim Scrub in St. Lucie County.

The federal government in the 1960s conferred such names in lieu of the more derogatory version of the word, but the original names often still survive in local parlance or on maps.

"I grew up never hearing the word "negro,"' said Arthur "Mac" Miller, a 66-year-old literature professor who has lived in and around Ruskin most of his life. He remembers locals always referring to the nearby island by the racial epithet. "When I saw the map said Negro Island, I was astonished."

Miller, an expert on Ruskin history, said turpentine camps flourished in the area in the early 20th century, leaving acre after acre of pineland stripped.

"Not one of Florida's proudest historical moments," he said of black prisoners' forced labor at the camps.

Still, Miller said, there is value in preserving the island's name.

"I would say history is more important than whitewashing," he said. "If one does not allow the word "negro' officially to be used, one would have to heavily censor the speeches of Dr. Martin Luther King.

"The description of one era becomes the insult of a later era."

Aleta Maschek, who lives across the water from the island, has interviewed hundreds of longtime Ruskin residents for a series of articles for a local newspaper. One old man, now dead, told her that Negro Island got its name from long-vanished black "creek people": some of them escaped prisoners, some of them prisoners exiled to Florida on the assumption that they couldn't survive among the swamps, gators and American Indians.

"No one camps on it. No one lives on it," Maschek said of the island today. "The generation I interviewed is gone. This new generation probably doesn't even know it's there."

As for the renaming of the island, she said, "I don't think anyone around here cares."

State Sen. Steven Geller, D-Hallandale Beach, sponsored the renaming bill in the Senate after learning of Negro Jim Hammock Bridge in Hendry County, which used to be part of his district.

Geller said he has received "a lot of angry phone calls" from people who are "convinced I'm trying to erase Southern heritage" by changing the names of places such as Lee and Jackson counties.

He said the proposed bill would target only names that are inherently derogatory by race, religion or nationality and would allow local governments to decide what qualified as such. He said the bill would not include a specific list of derogatory words.

"I'm told that Negrotown would be a highly offensive term today," said Geller, who is white. "There's just no reason to have a needless irritant."

John W. Adams, commander of the Florida division of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, said names such as Negro Jim Hammock Bridge are "an embarrassment to the state" that should be changed, but wondered whether state legislation is necessary to make it happen.

Adams said he worries about more sweeping legislation that would enlarge the definition of what is offensive.

"If you start looking at who counties are named after, there's a good number who were Confederates," Adams said. "I live near Orlando. We've got Stonewall Jackson Road. Does it stop at the Confederacy? ... You open a Pandora's box. That's the concern."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: florida; history; names; places; revision

1 posted on 01/26/2004 5:07:36 AM PST by stainlessbanner
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To: stainlessbanner
Joyner's right. They should change the names.
2 posted on 01/26/2004 5:19:20 AM PST by Savage Beast (Whom will the terrorists vote for? Not George Bush--that's for sure! ~Happy2BMe)
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To: stainlessbanner
Interesting....history?...or political correctness?

Although the history of Negro Island appears dark, if no one is aware of why it's called that anymore, I could see the point.

When we were young, we used to camp at lake that was part of the underground railroad -- N!gger Lake. It had a rich history and the farm had been visited upon by some famous pioneering black people.
3 posted on 01/26/2004 5:29:26 AM PST by baltodog (So, can we assume that a job that an illegal alien won't do must be REALLY bad?....)
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To: stainlessbanner
State Rep. Geller is engaging in revisionist history. That was a specialty of the late, unlamented, USSR - and the various socialism impaired societies associated with it. As Rep. Geller represents a district with a large Jewish population, one wonders what has happened to the water supply in Hallandale that has caused such mass insanity?

There was a time when the Hallandale Jewish community had a reputation for academic excellence, not a propensity for the politically simplistic. Alas, as such reflex Liberalism, and its all too common race-based Democratic/socialist party line analysis, became the norm, I can only attribute such behavior to a dietary factor.

Something in the Hallandale diet is causing mass de-cerebration of an entire community.

Where is CDC when we need them?
4 posted on 01/26/2004 5:33:22 AM PST by GladesGuru (In a society predicated upon liberty, it is essential to examine principles - -)
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To: stainlessbanner
Bump for later reading...
5 posted on 01/26/2004 5:40:33 AM PST by TheBattman (Miserable failure = http://www.michaelmoore.com)
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To: stainlessbanner
What to do about Boston? I'm offended every time I think of that hell hole of leftwingers.
6 posted on 01/26/2004 5:42:29 AM PST by bert (Have you offended a liberal today?)
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To: stainlessbanner
What a can of worms! Does it only apply to names that offend negroes or does it apply to all names that offend all citizens of Florida?
7 posted on 01/26/2004 5:56:15 AM PST by em2vn
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To: stainlessbanner
It's ridiculous. People who live in the area should call things what they want.

Oceanside, Long Island used to be called Christian Hook. The name was changed by the people who live in it. Government shouldn't swoop down and tell you what your town or landmarks should be named.

As for me, I still like Idlewild better than JFK...
8 posted on 01/26/2004 6:13:58 AM PST by I still care
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To: em2vn
Does it only apply to names that offend negroes or does it apply to all names that offend all citizens of Florida?

Not Just Florida. Was reading a story the other day that someone in Philly is offended by the name of Chink's Steakhouse. Never mind that it has been Chink's since 1948.

http://www.philly.com/mld/dailynews/7667851.htm

9 posted on 01/26/2004 6:25:57 AM PST by barker ( "America will never seek a permission slip to defend the security of our country." - GW Bush)
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To: stainlessbanner
We need to rename all the cities and counties named Clinton, even if they aren't named for Bill Clinton. Just the fact that they are there gives pain to people who don't want to be reminded of the fact that Clinton was President of the United States.
10 posted on 01/26/2004 10:34:49 AM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: baltodog
Of course the PC police are ignoring the fact that the name has historical value. The problem is the stupid people (or is the correct term "ignorant?) who refuse to accept that some names have value. I would suggest that the name not be changed. What needs to happen is an effort needs to be made to help people be aware of the history of the island.

On a side note - I bet the majority of inmates in today's prisons would think twice about being "repeat offenders" if they were forced to work for no pay in such difficult conditions! Alas - prisoners have to live in better conditions than a sizeable portion of our citizens.....
11 posted on 01/26/2004 11:11:21 AM PST by TheBattman (Miserable failure = http://www.michaelmoore.com)
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To: Verginius Rufus
We need to rename all the cities and counties named Clinton

Bravo. Until the politicos are prepared to eliminate the name that is personally offensive to me, they should leave the others alone.

12 posted on 01/26/2004 12:11:09 PM PST by NautiNurse ('Rats will steal everything from your wallet to your underwear)
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