20 Years ago

Two men were arrested for trying to steal three young ospreys from their nest on Big Pine Key. At the time, the osprey was a species of special concern with less than 100 left in the Florida Keys.

Rumrunners, a bar at 218 Duval St., had been issued a notice to appear for violation the city's noise ordinance. Before Rumrunners, the building housed Delmonico Restaurant.
 
Is there still a noise ordinance?


I don't think they enforce it during the World's if there is one.
 
Who remembers Houseboat row??

20 YEARS AGO

Houseboat Row residents officially refused the city's demand that they decide by one week whether they were going to leave or stay.




100 YEARS AGO

Manuel Head, alias Islano, was arrested and charged with assault with intent to murder Policeman Thomas Lowe.


(Just a horrible name, no matter how you spin it)



tih_currenthouseboat row.jpg


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Key West police reported that a man was arrested for punching another tourist because he did not like the man's singing.
 
100 YEARS AGO

Manuel Head, alias Islano, was arrested and charged with assault with intent to murder Policeman Thomas Lowe.


(Just a horrible name, no matter how you spin it)


so maybe Otto Head would be more appropriate?


.[/QUOTE]
 
20 YEARS AGO

The deadline for the evictions from Houseboat Row was delayed because of confusion over the letter the city sent to the owners.

A man was arrested for forcibly kissing a police officer on duty on Duval Street in front of Sloppy Joe's Bar.
 
Hmmmm......

100 YEARS AGO

The Rev. S. Ray Darlington, who was struck by lightning, was up and about a few days after the strike.
 
Who remembers Houseboat row??





100 YEARS AGO

Manuel Head, alias Islano, was arrested and charged with assault with intent to murder Policeman Thomas Lowe.


(Just a horrible name, no matter how you spin it)



View attachment 73143


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Well this guy didn't fair too well. (same guy Head is Cabeza in Spanish)

Key West -- reputed to be a liberal, accepting town these days -- was not immune to Klan violence. Ten months after the Klan of the Keys charter was signed, the Keys had its only documented lynching.

The victim was Manuel Cabeza -- his nickname was El Isleno, Spanish for "the islander," a World War I veteran who owned a small bar and sporting club called the Red Rooster on Thomas Street. It was no secret he was dating a mixed-race woman named Angela, half-black and half-Cuban, and the two eventually moved in together.

On Dec. 21, 1921, he and Angela were awakened in the middle of the night by a group of hooded Klansmen who crashed through their bedroom door. Cabeza, who was known as a tough guy, managed to fight off several of them, but eventually was overpowered when they beat him with baseball bats. They tied him up with rope and carried him to Petronia Street, where they tarred and feathered him.

In the struggle, Cabeza managed to pull the hoods off two Klan members: William Decker, the manager of a cigar factory off Whitehead Street, and a Trumbo Point railroad terminal baggage handler, who was not at work when Cabeza went looking for him.

Cabeza exacted his revenge on Decker on Christmas Day.

Armed with an Army-issue Colt revolver, Cabeza hailed a taxicab and rode around Key West looking for Decker, whom he eventually spotted in his car in front of the Cuban Club on Upper Duval Street. The taxi made a U-turn in the street and Cabeza leaned out of the window and pointed the pistol at Decker.

He shot and killed him right there.

The taxi made its way to the Solana Building at the corner of Petronia and Whitehead streets. Cabeza ran inside and climbed to the cupola. A standoff began.

Sheriff Roland Curry persuaded local Navy officials to dispatch the Marines to help arrest Cabeza. Curry tried to persuade Cabeza to surrender and promised his safety, but Cabeza surrendered only when he was promised that deputy and former U.S. Marshal A.H. McGinnis, whom he trusted, would take him into custody.

Written accounts questioned how fairly Curry would have treated Cabeza, and suspicions about him grew as later events unfolded. Some speculated there were KKK members in the sheriff's ranks.

Cabeza was taken to the county jail, where Marines met him to protect him from a KKK reprisal. By midnight, Curry had relieved the Marines of their duty, telling them that tensions had eased and the situation was under control. Within an hour of the Marines leaving, five carloads of hooded Klansmen came to the jail, supposedly overpowered the sheriff, and made their way to Cabeza's second-floor jail cell.

They forcibly removed Cabeza, whose screams reportedly filled the jail as they beat him. Some accounts say he was dead by the time they dragged him out of the jail. They took him to a remote area off Flagler Avenue known as the dam, where they hanged him from a tree and riddled his body with bullets, according to published reports.

None of the men named on the 1921 charter was ever linked to the crime, Hambright said.

"There were never any suspects," Hambright said. "There were never any arrests."
 
But was it a White Whale !!!!

A homeowner on Lower Matecumbe was alerted by his dog that a 700- to 900-pound pygmy sperm whale was in the canal. The whale was taken by the Dolphin Research Center for care and treatment.
 
A man was on trial for shooting at another man at a softball game at Peary Court because the man had spread a rumor that the other man had wet his bed at the Navy firehouse.
 
20 Years Ago

A Realtor reported that a tenant moved out of a house and took everything, including the kitchen sink.

50 YEARS AGO

Munson Island (today Little Palm Island) was chosen as the site to film the movie "PT 109," the story of President Kennedy in World War II.
 
I've always thought this....

20 Years Ago

A man proposed that the Keys have its own time zone and remain on Daylight Saving Time year-round.
 
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