Rolling white-sand beaches and sparkling azure waters
combine with a sophistication and charm to make Sarasota the
gem of Florida’s
Gulf Coast. The endless array of activities and the exhilarating
mixture of attractions, restaurants, shopping, and accommodations
are a sure fit for any traveler.
Relax at a four-star resort or a quaint sea-side inn, explore master works of art, catch a round of golf, stroll through world-class shopping, canoe through unspoiled waterways lined with mangrove, dine on a bay front cruise, or just dig your feet in the sand and bask in the glow of an evening Gulf sunset, whatever your pleasure
How it All Began...
Sarasota first became a “modern” town in the 1880s
when the town was promoted in Scotland by the Florida Mortgage
and Investment Company in 1885. It was a breath of fresh
air, promising an abundance of fertile land, plentiful citrus
groves, and affordable housing. Scottish
families looking for a new start boarded steamer ships and set
sail for Sarasota. Unfortunately, upon their arrival, the town
was little more than a frontier camp. Needless to say, most of
them left. But among the hardy souls who stayed to complete their
dream was John Hamilton Gillespie, a Scottish aristocrat, lawyer,
and member of the Queen’s Bodyguard for Scotland. It was
this man who is believed to have built America’s first
golf course, right here in Sarasota. Quite an entrepreneur, Mr.
Gillespie also built the upscale DeSoto Hotel on Main Street
for tourists and prospective investors. For his efforts, he was
later elected as Sarasota’s first mayor in 1902.
A “Paradise for the Pampered” as
early as the 1910s, Sarasota began attracting some of America’s
most wealthy, who, with their own style, helped to define the county
of Sarasota. Today’s Historic Spanish Point was once
the posh waterfront winter estate and
gardens of Bertha Palmer, widow of Chicago developer Potter Palmer.
That’s not all—what is now Myakka River State Park
was once Palmer’s 30,000-acre ranch in eastern Sarasota,
called Meadowsweet Pastures.
Courtesy of Sarasota Convention & Visitors Bureau
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