Mayoral candidate Daniel Davis?

Most politicians won’t shut up, but Daniel Davis can’t seem to find his voice, at least not to answer any questions. The Jacksonville Daily Record invited the mayoral candidates to answer a list of questions via email. All the  candidates responded, except Davis. The Jacksonville Read More …

Crash course in cookies, Girl Scouts style

I doubt you need any pointers on the proper way to eat a Girl Scout cookie, so while you’re dipping that delicious cookie in a cup of hot coffee, or a tall glass of cold milk, dairy, almond, or otherwise, here are some interesting tidbits Read More …

Love for life: animals who believe in until death do we part

If you think that monogamous relationships have gone to the birds, you may be right. The World Wildlife Foundation, estimates that five percent of all mammal species and 90 percent of bird species  choose a partner and stick with them for life. Among the loyal Read More …

The Arizona Balloon Buster flies again

Earlier today, a pair of Lockheed Martin F-22 Raptor jets from Langley Air Force Base in Virginia shot down the  Chinese surveillance balloon that had been  floating across the United States. A pilot fired an AIM-9 sidewinder missile with an explosive warhead into the balloon Read More …

Alfred L. Cralle invented the ice cream scoop

Alfred L. Cralle was an African American inventor and businessman. While working as a porter in Markell Brothers drugstore and St. Charles Hotel in Pittsburgh, Pa, he noticed that ice cream stuck to the spoons and ladles the servers used, and they usually had to use two hands Read More …

DCPS shuts down Douglas Anderson School of the Arts “Indecent” play

A school play at Jacksonville’s Douglas Anderson School of the Arts has been canceled because of “content concerns”. The play “Indecent” won Tony awards during its Broadway run in 2017. Indecent is based on Sholem Asch’s play, God of Vengeance. The play’s plot involves a Read More …

Jacksonville City council could’ve should’ve would’ve, but they didn’t save the historic Ford Motor Plant, instead they voted for demolition

Nearly a hundred years ago (1923) Ford Motor Company purchased the former Bentley Shipyards property from the city of Jacksonville for $50,000. They commissioned architect  Albert Kahn to design a smaller version of the company’s River Rouge facility. The 115,200-square-foot, $2 million complex was completed Read More …

Jacksonville Civil Rights Conference

Saturday marks the 62nd anniversary of Ax Handle Saturday, a racially motivated attack that took place in Hemming Park in Jacksonville, Florida, on August 27, 1960. On that day, a group of white men attacked African Americans who were engaging in peaceful sit-in protests opposing Read More …

National Root Beer Float Day 2022

August 6th  is National Root Beer Float Day. Some root beer history: Sassafras root beverages were made by indigenous peoples of the Americas for culinary and medicinal reasons before the arrival of Europeans in North America, and European culinary techniques have been applied to making Read More …

Recent scandals involving Florida Power and Light would cause some to drink, many state lawmakers do just that at FPL’s private bar

Florida Power & Light (FPL)—the nation’s largest utility and one of the most politically connected and influential corporations in the state, operates an exclusive event space, located on the third floor of its downtown Tallahassee offices, within walking distance of the Florida state Capitol. The space Read More …

The Carnegie Library in Jacksonville

The Carnegie Library in Jacksonville was officially opened to the public on June 1, 1905. In May of 1901 a devastating fire destroyed most of the buildings in Jacksonville, including the city’s library. In 1902 industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie agreed to donate $50,000 toward Read More …

The Jacksonville Bicentennial Great Fire Run

 Join The Jacksonville Historical Society on Saturday, May 7th, 2022 in downtown Jacksonville for the Jacksonville Bicentennial Great Fire Run 5km. This race follows the outline of the Great Fire boundary of May 3rd, 1901. The Great Jacksonville Fire of 1901 was the largest metropolitan Read More …

Old stories from Jacksonville’s Black Community find a new home

Viola Muse, a Jacksonville hair salon owner and writer with the Negro Writers’ Division of the Florida Federal Writers Project conducted interviews in the Jacksonville Black Community during the 1930’s and 1940’s. Her interviews detailed the lives of children, former slaves and everyday people in Read More …