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Carrabelle History Museum Extends Special Exhibit on Sponge Diving

March 1, 2022 - May 20, 2022

The Carrabelle History Museum is excited to announce that their special exhibit on Sponge Diving in Carrabelle and North Florida has been extended again. Thanks to the continuing generosity of a benefactor, we are able to extend this exhibit through the end of March. Interest in this exhibits continues to remain strong with guests and ongoing visitors. Therefore the exhibit will remain on display through May 20th. There is no charge for admission but donations are gladly accepted. The museum and exhibit are open Wednesdays 12-5 pm, Thursdays thru Saturdays 10 am – 5 pm and Sundays 12 – 5 pm.

After the sponge industry in Greece collapsed in the late 1800s, Greek divers brought their practices to Florida and created an extremely lucrative industry. Apalachicola, Tarpon Springs, and Key West emerged as top sponge trade ports. By 1900, Apalachicola was home to two sponge warehouses and employed around 100 men. Carrabelle developed a large sponge fleet of its own during that time.

Small sailboats embarked on month-long harvesting trips in the northern Gulf. Each vessel carried several small dinghies. A pair of men worked each dingy with one man rowing as the other looked for sponges using a glass viewing box pressed against the surface of the water.

The arrival of diving technology in the early 1900s, the diving suit, brought more efficiency to harvesting. The diving suit enabled the men to walk along the sea floor to more quickly harvest sponges. By around the 1930s a combination of overharvesting, blight, and the invention of synthetic sponges led to the depletion of the sponge industry which virtually closed in this area at that time. In recent years sponge harvesting has made a bit of a comeback and locally-sourced sponges can once again be found in Franklin County.

A turn-of-the-century Greek sponge diving suit complete with helmet and weight belt is the focal point of the exhibit. The Sponge Diving exhibit also includes an authentic, brass sponge diving helmet used by a former local diver as well as a diorama of the sponge docks, early images and historical photos of Carrabelle’s sponge boats and local sponge divers plus a fascinating video of sponge diving.

Carrabelle History Museum is located, one block from Carrabelle Harbor, at 106 SE Avenue B, Carrabelle, FL. Funding in part by the Franklin County Tourist Development Council. For more information, contact 850-697-2141 or go to www.carrabellehistorymuseum.org.

Details

Start:
March 1, 2022
End:
May 20, 2022

Venue

The Carrabelle History Museum
106 Avenue B SE
Carrabelle, FL 32322 United States

Organizer

Carrabelle History Museum
Phone
(850) 697-2141
View Organizer Website

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