A
winter morning in Panama City, and the temperature is hovering at around 90. I
pass a pawn shop where a mink coat is for sale for $229. Mink?
“I’m
originally from Mississippi,” says an American flag woman apropos of nothing: flag
on the front of her t-shirt, flag on her baseball cap, flag trousers. In her
arm is a large plant. “I’m here in town to see my son. He’s off to Koo – ate. Now
I live in the Keys.”
“I
knew the Keys years ago,” I say, a trifle unsure. Is she referring to the
Florida Keys? “Back in the 1950s, they were quite wild and beautiful.”
“Now
that’s all ruined,” she says. “All them tourists.”
“And
malls. And roads,” I add.
“Malls?
We got some beautiful malls. It’s the crimes that’s bad. We people have to be
armed these days against the criminals. I got a permit for a concealed weapon
in my car. All my friends do. We’re all widows.”
“Doesn’t
surprise me,” I say mildly.
“We
have a great time.”
Spanish explorers arrived here in the 1500s searching for
gold, but there was none to be found. Hurricanes destroyed their colonies, and thanks
to European-imported disease, there were too few natives round to be used for forced agricultural
labor, therefore Florida remained a backwater. It was, however, a handy hidey-hole for pirates preying on ships
traveling between Mexico and Spain, and they buried their treasure in the sandy
beaches, then forgot to come back, or were killed off before they could: in the
1800s, there were still plenty of doubloons to be found.
The
French arrived, built Fort Crevecoeur (broken heart), then left. The English settled, developed a thriving trade network with
the local Chatot as well as Creeks pushed out
of Alabama and Georgia by American settlers. After
independence, the British departed, and American settlers decided that the
native population was unnecessary. The natives naturally disagreed, and only after
the long and violent Seminole Wars (1816 to 1868) were they evicted en masse
and sent on to poverty and starvation in Oklahoma and Arkansas. Some managed to
stay on, hiding in the forests, becoming trappers, farmers, and lumbermen: only
recently have a few acknowledged their ancestry.
Panama
City is now a modern holiday paradise and snowbird refuge, and condominiums,
streets, restaurants, housing developments, and hotels all pay tribute to pelicans:
Pelican Walk, Pelican’s Nest, Pelican Pointe, the Pelican Grill, the Pelican
Ice Cream Bar, Pelican’s Peak. Pelicans are gregarious birds, traveling in
flocks, hunting together, breeding in colonies, and nesting on the ground; and
even enthusiastic tourist brochures cheerily encourage folks to go pelican
sighting. What isn’t mentioned is the very rocky relationship between humans and
these birds. Accused of competing with fishing, pelicans have been clubbed to
death and shot by “sportsmen” from ship decks. Their eggs have been deliberately
destroyed, and the young birds have been massacred. Feeding and nesting sites
are degraded by water management schemes and wetland drainage, and in the 1950s
and 1960s, DDT pollution was a major cause of decline. In Louisiana, the decrease
in the pelican population was so drastic, 500 pelicans were imported from
Florida: over 300 subsequently died from pesticide poisoning. In California in
1990 and 1991, 14,000 pelicans died perished from botulism or from eating fish
contaminated with neurotoxic
domoic acid, the result of
environmental damage. Today’s threats include oil spills; fish hooks that are swallowed,
caught in their skin and webbed feet; fishing lines that wind around their
necks, feet, bills, and cause crippling, starvation, and death.
Once
upon a time, where there are now condominiums, expensive homes, parking lots,
and flashy hotels along the beach drive, there was a tiny private cemetery with
the graves of John Clark (1766-1832), his wife Nancy (1874-1832), and several
of their descendants. Clark, once governor of Georgia, had come here to protect
the extensive oak forests used by the US navy for shipbuilding. But this was swampy
mosquito-infested country, and in 1832, both Clark and his wife died of yellow
fever. Their graves remained untouched for a hundred years until neighbors
began complaining: they couldn’t sleep comfortably at night because they could
hear haunted horses hooves clanking against the abandoned gravestones. The protests
increased, and the Daughters of the American Revolution finally raised enough money
to have the gravestones and coffins sent back to Georgia. However, when finally
excavated, only coffin handles and one silver dime were found.
Most
interestingly (for me) is Clark’s long-forgotten romance: In his younger days,
he fell passionately in love with an orphan, a Miss Chivers. It was a bad
choice: she was the sister-in-law of Jesse Mercer, a pastor, a fanatically
religious born again Christian. Mercer disapproved of the match, but Clark
defied him and eloped with his beloved. They rode for hours through a cold
winter night looking for a preacher who would marry them (supposedly no one
wanted to defy a man as influential as Mercer) until Miss Chivers took ill. The
couple finally found refuge in a friend’s home, but it was too late: Miss
Chivers died from pneumonia. Of course, Mercer held Clark responsible for her
death.
I
wander down Harrison Avenue, just another nondescript shopping street with the
usual stores, and roaring traffic, but it was once lined with tall noble oaks.
The local men despised these graceful giants, claiming they were a danger to
cars and wagons, but the town ladies protested that they provided both beauty
and shade, and rebelliously, mounted a guard to protect them. The men were
not to be foiled: meeting secretly one night when the ladies were safely tucked away, they cut every single one down.
Some
streets behind the city are still tree-lined and hint at a paradise lost: but a
potentially lovely little stream stinks terribly and pushed under the tangled vegetation
are Styrofoam cups, truck tires, used baby diapers, condoms, needles, and other
horrors.
“Are
you looking for a place to sleep?” asks a young, open-faced man in a cowboy
hat. He has seen me poking around and decided I’m one of the homeless, about to
cozy down.
“Well,
you’ve missed the mission dinner,” says another. He’s wearing a baseball cap and pushing a bicycle with myriad sacks hanging from the
handlebars and piled high with bundles, protest signs, a compass, large reflector light, and a small
electric guitar, which he immediately unpacks to quietly serenade me. Of
course, this is the one and only Jim Bikeman, local homeless celebrity, self-declared
activist fighting police abuse, bad treatment of the homeless, and noise: His office
is the local library where he reads up on things, learns all he can, checks his
email, prepares to fight cases in court, and keeps up his website (https://dirtycopperstopper.com/). As
he states in his, Poor Man’s Bill of Rights: I
will at all times treat people in a manner that I would want to be treated and
will expect that I will get treated just as harshly as I treat others,
especially those who are harmless, homeless, financially poor, confused, and
will never falsely arrest anybody out of hate, spite, power.
“Most
people think I’m nuts, but here’s my main message.” He points to the sign
strapped to the back of his bike: Be Nice.
He’s right, of course. All we have to do is be
as nice as possible. That doesn’t sound nuts to me.
More about my books and
passionate life can be found at http://www.j-arleneculiner.com
and on my story podcast
at https://soundcloud.com/j-arlene-culiner
What a fabulous blog, Arlene. I love history and find this all fascinating and sad in places...man's inhumanity to man, stealing land from people who have lived there for centuries. We need history like this to remind us from where we come from so that we don't make similar mistakes.
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately, we do keep on making them, Elizabeth. It would be nice to know that we learn from our dreadful mistakes...but greed always wins over conscience.
DeleteI especially liked the paragraph about the graves of Clark and his wife in which the neighbors complained about the haunting sound of horse hooves. It was also interesting that when the site was excavated to return the occupants to Georgia by the Daughters of the Revolution that all they found were the coffin handles and a dime. What on Earth happened? Revolutionary War soldiers were discovered buried under the Sisters of Mercy Convent here in Charlotte with the graves and bodies in tact (they were moved to a special cemetery), so why were Clark and his wife's graves empty? Send a few shivers down my spine.
ReplyDeleteA wonderfully researched article, Arlene.
Thank you, Sarah. Why were the graves empty? Perhaps they were never buried there, but the gravestones were put in place as a honor? We'll never know.
DeleteWow - Panama City - more than a place holder in the colonial history of Florida. Unfortunately, much of our remembrances of history have been white washed of the bad so the little good seems the majority. Lets hope we can continue to build on the good! Great post!
ReplyDeleteWe can try, Ruben.
DeleteYour story is fascinating as ever.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Mollie.
ReplyDelete