Browse Items (42 total)

  • Tags: Sponge Industry

http://exhibits.lib.usf.edu/files/original/994cbf24bd734971f7cb0040fe4f006d.jpg
On the site of the old Sponge Exchange, a complex of boutique shops in a faux Cyclades Island architectural style opened on March 16, 1983. Several klouves on the north side of the Sponge Exchange were retained, originally intended for use by sponge…

http://exhibits.lib.usf.edu/files/original/98f992775a1b0e21431c66ff92759204.jpg
Piles of all types of sponges fill the courtyard of the Sponge Exchange on an auction day in 1921. Most of the men in the courtyard appear to be Greek, except for the African American man walking towards the camera. He was one of many who worked in…

http://exhibits.lib.usf.edu/files/original/20d78eeff1e106998c5b6b4b034d17cb.jpg
The elevated view reveals the sponge fleet at the Sponge Docks and the Sponge Exchange and view of bridge and surrounding area in 1932. Note the boat yard to the right of the Docks, where boats were built, repaired, and their hulls cleaned.

http://exhibits.lib.usf.edu/files/original/89080fcc741718706fe5f35df5e5f767.jpg
Sponge warehouses of the Greek-American Sponge Company of Chicago and the American Sponge & Chamois Company of New York, October 1932. In the past, there were many independent local sponge buyers, as well as agents of larger international merchant…

http://exhibits.lib.usf.edu/files/original/5d9b10fadd8812d30bed109b2ec685bf.jpg
A merchant surveys the street from the doorway of his tourist shop stocked with shells and sponges in 1936. In decades past, tourist shops near the Sponge Docks marketed items such as sponges, shells, curios, and Greek vases.

http://exhibits.lib.usf.edu/files/original/f20f64e0141ffee8e75d70a13c6b231c.jpg
A Greek saleswoman explains the properties of a vase sponge inside a tourist store near the Sponge Docks, 1936. Shops very similar to this one remain today, together with specialized and general tourist shops.

http://exhibits.lib.usf.edu/files/original/b2fbe45aeb94c982bc428f88cc854215.jpg
The family of a sponge fisherman poses for a photograph in front of their home on November 16, 1936. Although the talented Burgert Brothers photographers from Tampa found intriguing subjects in Tarpon Springs, they did not always record the names of…

http://exhibits.lib.usf.edu/files/original/032df19254e64e7597683ef336a06afa.jpg
Greek men gather in the courtyard at an early version of the Sponge Exchange. The Sponge Exchange was founded around 1907 or 1908 as a nonprofit corporation with shares owned by 50 buyers. At this cooperative space across the street from the Sponge…

http://exhibits.lib.usf.edu/files/original/76e9405a230f2e2883e27980d82c2f7e.jpg
Back in port, the crew finishes cleaning and sorting sponges for auction on October 10, 1969. Cleaning the animals entails allowing their skins to decompose, rinsing them with water and squeezing them to eliminate internal matter and bits of skin,…
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