Graduation Year
2006
Document Type
Thesis
Degree
M.L.A.
Degree Granting Department
Liberal Studies
Major Professor
Gary D. Mormino, Ph.D.
Keywords
Florida, History of public works, Suburban development, Commercial-civic elite, Hegemony
Abstract
The late nineteenth and early twentieth century was a time of dynamic social and political change for Tampa, a growing city on Florida's west coast. These changes led Tampa's commercial-civic elite to look beyond the law, the militia, and the church for ways to maintain their sense of order. This thesis illustrates non-violent enforcement of the status quo via public works, specifically bridge construction over the Hillsborough River. Over a period of three decades, three different bridges were built at the same place, at Lafayette Street. Each time the bridge was built or replaced, it was ostensibly for a different reason. However, each time the financing, construction, and form of the bridge was the result of Tampa's social, political, and economic systems. Development and maintenance of public works involves questions of private rights, property ownership, acquisition of capital, fiscal policy, and labor relations. Thus, in Tampa, the history of a bridge over the Hillsborough River becomes a stud of class and power within a growing southern city.
Scholar Commons Citation
Jones, Lucy D., "Tampa's Lafayette Street bridge: Building a New South city" (2006). USF Tampa Graduate Theses and Dissertations.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/etd/2574