MyPinellas.com - Real People. Real Local. Real Stories. Real Estate.

MyPinellas.com - Real People. Real Local. Real Stories. Real Estate. Search...
Pinellas Stories Map
Categories
Topics
Translate
    Translate from:

    Translate to:

Most Popular
    • Thinking About Parades . . . And Sparklers . . .
    • Treasure Island
    • Dunedin
    • Madeira Beach
    • St. Pete Beach
    • New Home for American Stage

» Tarpon Springs

  • Tarpon Springs

    Written by MyPinellas.com No Comments
    Last Updated:: May 5, 2009
    Tarpon Springs
    In the later part of the 19th Century, Tarpon Springs was a small resort village named for the leaping fish splashing in Spring Bayou. Never mind that those fish were mullet and not tarpons because the town was shortly to become world famous for another sea creature - the sponge. The discovery of a plentiful supply just in the surrounding Gulf waters soon brought islander Greeks from the Mediterranean to harvest sponges, a trade that turned out to be very profitable. In the 1930s the sponge indu...
    • Leepa-Rattner Museum

      Written by MyPinellas.com No Comments
      Last Updated:: April 24, 2009
      Leepa-Rattner Museum
      Your adventure into 20th century art begins even before you walk into the Leepa-Rattner Museum in Tarpon Springs because the museum itself is a work of art. This award-winning architectural compression of three buildings in one offers a post-modernist spin on the bow of a ship, a tribute to the area’s rich fishing heritage. The experience intensifies inside. There you will discover the art of Abraham Rattner, a figurative expressionist who worked in Paris in the 1920s and 30s and became on...
      • Epiphany Day Celebration

        Written by MyPinellas.com No Comments
        Last Updated:: April 23, 2009
        Epiphany Day Celebration
        A year of good luck and blessings. That’s what’s at stake for the over 50 Greek Orthodox teens who dive into the chilly waters of Spring Bayou in Tarpon Springs on January 6 every year.  Each young man hopes to be the one who retrieves the cross tossed into the water by the Bishop, thus securing a blessing for himself and his church. The crowds - numbering in the tens of thousands - cheer as one youth surfaces triumphantly, cross in hand.  And the celebration begins! The celebratio...