Venice, FL
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1867 - John and Eliza Webb and children settled at Webb’s Point in Osprey, Florida
1868 - Reverend Jesse Knight, wife Caroline, and family arrived
1871 - Robert R. Roberts established residence on the south side of Roberts Bay
1881 - Frank Higel came to the area
1881 - John S. Blackburn settled in the area now called Nokomis
1888 - Venice Post Office established in area now known as Nokomis
1896 - First permanent school erected near the Jesse Knight Memorial Cemetery
1903 - Laurel Post Office began operations (closed 1909)
1903 - Rev. Jesse Knight deeded property for the first church, Knight’s Chapel (Methodist Episcopal)
1910 - Bertha Honoré Palmer acquired 140,000 acres (including most of current Venice) in what was then known as South Manatee County
1911 - Seaboard Airline Railway extended to current Venice
1912 - Waterway was dredged from Venice to Sarasota
1915 - Sarasota-Venice Company had a plat surveyed and filed for the town of Venice.
1915 - Voters passed a bond issue to construct a permanent road from Sarasota to Venice
1916 - Eagle Point Camp began operating
1917 - Dr. Fred and Louella Albee purchased land from Palmer family’s Sarasota-Venice Company
1918 - Manasota community founded
1921 - Sarasota County created from southern portion of Manatee County
1921 - Manasota renamed Woodmere by the Nocatee-Manatee Freight Company
1925 - John Nolen designed Venice city plan for Dr. Albee
1925 - Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers purchased land from the Albees
1926 - Venice incorporated as a town
1926 - Governor John Martin appointed Venice's first mayor and council
1926 - John Nolen revised Venice city plan for Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers
1927 - Town of Venice renamed City of Venice by Florida Legislature
1927 - Venice Train Depot completed; first airport constructed
1928 - Tamiami Trail opened from Tampa to Miami
1928 - Florida development boom ended
1930 - Venice-Nokomis High School's first graduating class had eight students
1930 - Fire destroyed Woodmere Sawmill and property was abandoned
1932 - Kentucky Military Institute moved its winter headquarters to Venice
1933 - Florida Medical Center opened in converted Park View Hotel
1937 - Venice Jetties constructed and channel between them dredged
1941 - War Department accepted Finn Caspersen’s offer of 3,000 acres for use as an Army camp
1942 - Venice Army Air Base began operations
1945 - Venice Army Air Base closed
1946 - First issue of the Venice Gondolier newspaper was printed
1947 - City of Venice takes over operation of airfields at former Venice Army Air Base
1950 - Venice Little Theatre performed first play
1952 - Development of South Venice began
1952 - Venice Hospital dedicated (closed 2022)
1953 - Venice Elementary School opened
1955 - Venice High School opened
1955 - Venice-Nokomis Presbyterian Drive-In Church featured in Life magazine
1960 - Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus relocated winter headquarters to Venice
1963 - Schools desegregated
1965 - Park View Hotel demolished
1966 - Venice Bypass (U.S. 41 Bypass) opened
1966 - Venice fishing pier opens with a 25 cent entrance fee
1967 - Dedication of completed West Coast Intracoastal Waterway
1970 - Kentucky Military Institute closed Venice operations
1971 - Seaboard Coastline Railroad ceased passenger train service to Venice
1971 - Gulf Theatre and Hotel Villa Nokomis demolished
1975 - Venice-Nokomis Bank demolished
1991 - Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus final performance at Venice winter headquarters
1996 - Venice Archives and Area Historical Collection relocated to restored historic Triangle Inn
2000 - Venetian Waterway extended to Gulf of Mexico
2001 - 9/11 terrorists trained at local flight school
2003 - Restoration of historic Venice Train depot completed
2004 - Venice Fishing Pier rebuilt
2004 - Three-year state widening of U.S. 41 Business, Hatchett Creek Bridge and Circus Bridge completed
2005 - First of five beach renourishments completed
2010 - Legacy Trail dedicated
2014 - Venice Performing Arts Center opened on the campus of Venice High School
2019 - Downtown Venice Beautification Project completed, reconstructing 14 blocks downtown
2019 - Venice Fishing Pier refurbished; deck and railing material replaced with longer-lasting ipe wood and pole lighting fixtures with sea turtle-friendly, under-handrail lights
2019 - Julia Cousins Laning and Dale Laning Archives & Research Center opened
2020 - New Venice Police Department opened on Public Safety Facility campus on East Venice Ave.
2021 - New Public Works facility opened in the old police department building on Ridgewood Ave.
2021 - New Fire Station 1 opened next to City Hall campus
2022 - City Hall expansion completed
2022 - Hurricane Ian caused more than $10 million in damage in Venice