Old Brewster Hospital Historic Marker

Inscription: Built in 1885 as a private residence, Old Brewster Hospital and Nursing Training School was the first medical facility to serve Jacksonville’s African-American community. Located in the LaVilla neighborhood, the hospital opened in 1901 through the efforts of the Women’s Home Missionary Society of Read More …

Hank Aaron’s name to be added to local ball field

The Jacksonville City Council just voted unanimously in favor of adding baseball legend Hank Aaron’s name to a local ballpark Aaron had ties to Northeast Florida, playing one season for the Jacksonville Braves at J.P Small Park. The new name of the park will be Read More …

1960 Civil Rights Demonstration Historic Marker

Inscription.  On Saturday, August 27,1960, 40 Youth Council demonstrators from the Jacksonville Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) advised by local civil rights leader Rutledge H. Pearson (1929-1967), sat in at the W.T. Grant Department Store, then located at Read More …

Fair Housing Symposium, Equal Opportunity for All – Fair Housing: Safe, Accessible & Free of Harassment.

The Jacksonville Human Rights Commission is hosting the Fair Housing Symposium, “Equal Opportunity for All – Fair Housing: Safe, Accessible & Free of Harassment.” This informative event is free to the public this Saturday, April 10th at 10am at the Jacksonville Public Library Main Branch Read More …

Sig Haugdahl and the Wisconsin Special

  Sigurd Olson “Sig” Haugdahl broke the land speed record at Daytona Beach on this date in 1922. Sig reached a speed of 180 miles per hour in a car he built named the “Wisconsin Special.” The car had an 836-cubic inch, 6-cylinder, airplane engine Read More …

PEN/Faulkner Foundation announces that Jacksonville native, Deesha Philyaw has won the 2021 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction

“We are so excited to announce that Deesha Philyaw – Writer‘s “The Secret Lives of Church Ladies” (West Virginia University Press) has been selected as the winner of the 2021 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction!” “I’m deeply honored and thankful to receive the PEN/Faulkner Award for Read More …

First Coast Connect with Melissa Ross and Jacksonville Human Rights Commission Fair Housing Symposium

Tune in to First Coast Connect with Melissa Ross this Thursday, April 8th at 9:00am to hear Jacksonville Human Rights Commission Executive Director Wendy Byndloss discuss the upcoming Fair Housing Symposium on April 10th. You can listen to the show online at WJCT.org, on the Read More …

Catholic Charities Jacksonville drive through food distribution

Every Monday, Wednesday, & Friday Catholic Charities Jacksonville hosts a free, drive through food distribution open to everyone. If you are coming tomorrow (Friday), tickets are distributed at 8:30am, food is distributed at 10:30am. Go to https://www.ccbjax.org/food-assistance for more information on this amazing, ongoing event Read More …

Tiffany Leach art exhibition at JIA

Tiffany Leach, Visual Art Dept Chair and professor at Jacksonville University, has a new exhibition of ceramic art on display in the Connector Bridge and Haskell Art Gallery at Jacksonville International Airport.  The  exhibition runs  through June 30, 2021

Easter Free Adoption Weekend at Animal Care and Protective Services

Animal Care and Protective Services at 2020 Forest St. says the hunt is over to find your new best friend. Dogs and cats will be available for adoption free-of-charge thanks to a sponsorship from the Petco Foundation. City license fees may apply. “Hop on in Read More …

Easter Sunrise Services and egg hunts

Easter Sunrise Services – April 4, 2021 The Beaches Ministerial Association will hold its annual sunrise service at the Seawalk Pavilion Lawn (located at 75 1st St N in Jacksonville Beach) from 6 a.m. to 7:30 a.m. Families will be given coffee and donuts. You’re Read More …

A three-day riot between collegians and police during Spring Break began in Fort Lauderdale on this date in 1967

At least 500 people were arrested as a result. The riot started when a student lay in the middle of A1A and the police were forced to intervene. By the 1960s, sun, beaches, and beer made south Florida THE destination for college students on Spring Read More …

 Pedro Menéndez de Avilés

 Pedro Menéndez de Avilés received his “asiento,” or settlement orders, from the Spanish government to travel to La Florida on this date in 1565. Two years earlier, Don Juan Menéndez, Pedro Menéndez’s only son, was lost in a wreck near the Bahamas and Menéndez was Read More …