Fort Pierce history festival marks 100-year anniversary of a theater, school and ranch
The Treasure Coast History Festival is back this weekend for the first time since before the coronavirus pandemic.
The free event will be from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday on Second Street in downtown Fort Pierce, both in front of and inside the Sunrise Theatre. There will be historical exhibitions outside the theater and presentations inside the theater, said organizer Gregory Enns, publisher of Indian River Magazine.
The event celebrates the 100th anniversaries of three local institutions:
Lincoln Park Academy, one of Florida’s first high schools for black students
The land boom-era Sunrise Theatre in downtown Fort Pierce
Cow Creek Ranch, one of the region’s earliest cattle ranches.
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The festival will feature:
Historical re-enactors from the Seminole War who established Fort Pierce
Historical books for sale
Exhibits on the notorious Ashley Gang
Cow camp exhibition from Carlton family descendant Rick Modine
Spanish treasure fleet that sunk off the coast in 1715,
Navy SEAL Museum
Treasure Coast Genealogical Society
Port St. Lucie Historical Society
Fort Pierce Art Club
Daughters of the American Revolution
Fort Pierce Woman’s Club
Main Street Fort Pierce
The event also includes food vendors and a Summerlin family fish fry.
No tickets are required, but attendees to the popular presentations can guarantee a seat inside the theater by going online to indianrivermagazine.com.
Lincoln Park Academy
The first presentation inside the theater begins at 9 a.m. and celebrates the school that would become Lincoln Park Academy. In 1923, not many black students were able to attend high school because there wasn’t a black high school south of Palatka. Local parents banded together to start a high school in Fort Pierce that would provide an education for black teenagers. The presentation features eight panelists deeply tied to the school, including former St. Lucie County School Board member Samuel Gaines, who has written a history on Lincoln Park, as well as Veryl Moore, Francina Mimms, Hassie Russ, Harry B. Williams, Ernestine English, Dorothy Jackson and Dave Perry.
Sunrise Theatre
The second presentation begins at 10:30 a.m. and celebrates the Sunrise Theatre, which opened as a vaudeville theater in 1923 thanks to the vison of R.N. “Pop" Koblegard. Two of Koblegard’s granddaughters, Wendy Bishop and Mary Ann Bryan, will help recall the theater’s early days and transition to a movie theater while other panelists, including Main Street Fort Pierce Executive Director Doris Tillman and theater marketing director Anne Satterlee, will share how the theater was restored and reopened to its current splendor in 2006. The session includes a video presentation of rarely seen photographs of the theater’s history.
Cow Creek Ranch
The third presentation begins at 12:30 p.m. and brings together the people featured in Indian River Magazine’s Cow Creek Chronicles series. It followed the lives of C.F. Raulerson, who founded what would become the Cow Creek Ranch on the St. Lucie-Okeechobee line in 1923, and his descendants. Scheduled guests on the panel include Debra Sloan, Raulerson’s great-granddaughter; cowboys Buddy and Kent Mills; Deroy Arnold, now foreman of Triple S Ranch; Howard “Sport” Pickering, now an Okeechobee County sheriff’s detective; Bud Hallman, now a retired Sumter County circuit judge and rodeo performer; Bertice Harper, who lived on Cow Creek in the late 1940s and is the daughter of longtime Cow Creek foreman John Norman; and Woody Larson and Travis Larson, current owners of the home place at Cow Creek.
Laurie K. Blandford is TCPalm's entertainment reporter and columnist dedicated to finding the best things to do on the Treasure Coast. Follow her on Twitter @TCPalmLaurie and Facebook @TCPalmLaurie. Email her at laurie.blandford@tcpalm.com. Sign up for her What To Do in 772 weekly newsletter at profile.tcpalm.com/newsletters/manage.
This article originally appeared on Treasure Coast Newspapers: Sunrise Theater hosts Treasure Coast History Festival in Fort Pierce